8
Summer semester 4_ » ? :' rn K(i V.., . •^»' ope college olland, michi^an VOLUME NO. 90 - ISSUE 19 APRIL 7,1978 Zimmer and Gildner: 44 Unpredictable Joy" comes to campus At 8:00 p.m. next Thursday, April 13, two highly regarded and wonderful poets, Paul Zimmer and Gary Gildner, will perform their poetry in Wichers Auditorium. GILDNER, who has published six books of poetry in the last ten years, is an editor of New Letters, a frequent contributor to antholo- gies and magazines, and has been awarded several fellowships, as well as the Theodore Roethke Prize. Of Gildner's poetry, X. J. Kennedy has said, "One likes him immediately, and recognizes his humor and his honesty." Zimmer, editor of the Pitt Poetry Series and Associate Director of the University of Pittsburgh Press, was chosen to be the judge of the Eerdman's Poetry and Prose Prizes and will announce the recipients during the reading. HE HAS published three books. Along with Gildner, Zimmer is a popular reader at college cam- uses and has recorded his poetry or the Library of Congress, "...poetry of real fulfillment," fc says the Partisan .Review of Zimmer's work, "...beats with an almost subliminal and yet some- how irrepressible gaiety." ONE CAN get a glimpse of Zimmer's art through some of his titles, like: "Cecil fishing for Love in Summer Moonlight," "Zimmer's Head Thudding Against the Blackboard," or "Leon Curses the Saucers Peeling from his Cabinet." "Zimmer is an unpredictable joy," announced The Chicago Daily News. A joy not to be missed. in Greece Like to spend this summer creatively? On a Greek island in the sun? And earn a semester's credit for writing about your Greek Experience? DR. JAMES A. Clark, a native of Holland and a graduate of Hope, will direct a summer program in Creative Writing and Greek Literature from June 6 to August 24 on the historic island of Paros in Greece. Participants may choose drama, poetry, fiction or/and composition. Or they may study Greek literature, either classical or modern. Since Paros has long been known for its art school, as well as its small colony of foreign artists, musicians and writers, students may also arrange course- work in painting, drawing, art history, photography and cine- matic history. AFTER visiting Greece and Paros in the 1960's, Jim and Katy Clark decided they had found their own personal paradise. In 1971, after both had taught English for several years at a university in eastern Kentucky, they gave up their positions, sold their house, took their savings and went to Paros. There they designed their own home, mastered the language and devoted themselves to the writing and art they would no longer neglect. Since then, Jim has contributed frequent articles to the New York Times and has recently co- authored a book on the history and culture of Paros. He will be assisted in the Creative Writing Program by Jeffrey Carson, a writer for the Athenian magazine in Athens. PAROS, located in the heart of the Cyclades, is surrounded by such islands as Mykonos and Thera (Santorini), Melos and Naxos. The island is known among archaeologists for its prehistoric remains, among classicists for its green-hued marble and the love poetry of Archilochus. Participants will have a unique opportunity seldom had by the visitor to Greece. They will live in, and experience, a seashore Greek island village of small white- washed houses. Using Paros as a base, they will explore nearby islands as well as visiting Athens and Crete. Up to 19 credit hours may be earned during the 12-week program. The program is spon- sored by Schiller College in Germany. Tuition for the full summer is $1150. Further information may be had by contacting Prof. James Prins or Prof. Jane Harrington in the English Department. Or students may write lor a catalogue on the Creative Writing Program in Paros, by writing to: Schiller College Europe, Friedrich-Ebert- Anlage 4, 6900 Heidelberg, West Germany. Washington semester offered in May Ridl featured at author's conference Jack Ridl, poet and facultv member in the Hope English Department, will be the featured speaker at the fifth annual Young Authors' Conference, to be held at Hope, Friday, April 14. SPONSORED BY the Hope Education department, the con- ference will involve approximately 475 elementary age children and 50 teachers from private, paro- chial, and public schools in the Holland, Zeeland, Grand Haven, Allegan, Grandville, Jenison, Coo- persville, and Hudsonville areas. Each child who attends the conference has already been selected for this honor on the basis of some creative writing which he has written and shared with his classmates. During the three-hour morning conference, each child will participate in three activities: a sharing period during which he will read his own poetry or story to a small group of his peers, a creative activity time during which each child will take part in creative movement and listen to a group of storytellers, and a large group session led by Ridl. RIDL, who was named Hope's Outstanding Professor-Educator in 1976, teaches courses in literature and writing. He fre- quently portrays, as part of his literature courses, such literary personalities as Blaise Pascal, Mark Twain, Henry David Tho- reau, and Walt Whitman. He has written radio shows, comedy sketches, music and lyrics, auto- biographical essays, critical re- views, children's stories, and poetry. His poetry has been published in such literary magazines as The Southern Poetry Review, The Journal of Popular Culture, and The Reformed Journal. His most recent work, a tribute to basket- ball star, the late Maurice Stokes, has been selected to be displayed permanently in the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass. He has also given readings and conducted workshops in several area schools and colleges and has appeared in campus theater productions. Faculty presents Chamber Concert The fifth and last Hope Faculty Chamber Music Concert of the year will be at 4:00 p.m. on April 9 in Wichers Auditorium. Gail Warnaar on oboe and Joan Conway on oiano will perform "Rondo for Oboe" composed by Carl Borgeson, "Siciliana' 1 com- posed by Michael Head and "Alchemy for Oboe and Tape Recorder, Op. 60" composed oy George Heussenstamm. After a short intermission Robert Ritsema on cello and Peter Spring on bass will perform "Prayer" by Ernest Bloch and "Duet for Cello and Contrabass" by Gioacchino Rossini. The last piece to be performed will be "Liebeslieder Waltzes, Op. 52" composed by Johannes Brahms. Tne soprano parts will be sung by Joyce Morrison and Mary Bierling; altos will be Margaret Sherman and Sarah Schendal; tenors will be Stuart Sharp and Charles Canin; basses will be Robert Coughenour and George Kraft. They will be accompanied by Joan Conway and Anthony Kooiker on the piano. Deadlines near ALL STUDENTS WHO WILL BE RETURNING TO HOPE NEXT FALL should have receiv- ed a Housing Application for the 1978-1979 school year. This appli- cation should be returned to the Dean of Students Office immedi- ately so that we will know each student's preferences for next year. Anyone who did not receive an application, please come to the Dean's Office, 102 Van Raalte, to pick up a duplicate. Any questions regarding olf-campus permission, housing assignments, or the room selection process should be directed to Bruce Johnston. ALSO SERVING as resource people for the conference will be the Kent County Story Spinners and Miss Julie Raabe. The Story Spinners are a group of highly- rated story tellers sponsored by the Kent County Library. Miss Raabe, a talented Hope senior, has had broad experience in dance and creative movement. She has recently worked as a teacher of creative movement for the Holland Community Education program. All interested parents, teachers, administrators and members of the community are invited to attend an informal open house on April 14 from 5-8 p.m. in the art gallery of the DeWitt Center to view the hand bound "books" brought to the conference by the children. Questions about the conference may be directed to Dr. Nancy Miller. Milliken to speak at luncheon Ottawa County Republicans today announced plans for a "78 Majority Luncheon" at Hope from noon til 1:30 P.M. Thursday, April 13. Featured speaker will be Governor William G. Milliken, and entertainment during the meal will be provided by the Tulip Time Tuners of Holland. Honored guests include the Latino Community, senior citizens, and students. "The Republican Party wants to earn the support of a majority of Michigan voters," commented luncheon co-chairper- son Jack Holmes, "and this is one effort in that direction." Co-chairperson Ella Aleman urged members of the Latino Community, senior citizens, and students to attend the event. She explained that the luncheon was not restricted to Republicans, and that those who attend are under no obiligation. Tickets are available to all interested persons at $4.00 each with special $2.00 tickets available to Latinos, senior citizens, and students upon request. Persons interested in attending should call Republican headouarters at 396- 3791 or one of tne luncheon co- chairpersons, Ella Aleman at 392-5004 or Jack Holmes at 399-3410, ext. 3044. Do you want to watch Jody Powell brief the press? Are you interested in speaking with a top White House official about urban problems? Do you want to speak to Senator Robert Griffen? Would you like an interview with a top Ford Administration aide? The Political Science Depart- ment is sponsoring a May Term course in Washington D.C. During the three week period (May 14 - June 2), the group of students will interview over 50 people in 35 government agencies and interest groups representing a wide range of viewpoints. Students will have a day with Congress, a day with the press, days with military agencies. White House agencies, energy and Vaughn urges 19 year veto environmental agencies, intelli- gence agencies, an elections 1978 day, and so forth. Students will have a first-hand look at such controversial groups as the C.I.A., F.B.I., National Rifle Assoc. Center for National Securi- ty Studies, the Congressional Budget Office, and others. The course is open to all students from freshmen to gradu- ating: seniors. Those who are thinking of applying for the Washington Honors Semester can benefit from a quick look at government agencies. Fees above tuition ($180) will be kept to a minimum ($280). If you are interested in this program call Professor Zoetewey (ext. 3040) or come to Lubbers 208. State Representative Jackie Vaugh III (D-Detroit) has hand delivered a personal letter to Governor William Milliken, urging him to veto legislation raising the legal drinking age in Michigan to 19 years of age. 'THIS discrimination in singling out our 18 year olds for punitive action must not become law," Vaughn stressed. Accompanying the letter were the Governor of Massachusetts' veto message of a similar bill raising the legal drinking age to 19 and a Detroit Free Press editorial opposing the action in Michigan. "AS LONG as we consider our young people responsible enough to marry, vote, hold office, and die for our country, we cannot deny them the right to drink," Vaughn pointed out to the Governor. "Rather, we must deal with any infraction of the law, whether driving or providing alcohol to minors, on the same level and in the same manner we punish other adult groups." Vaughn, a leader in the fight for the Age of Majority Act, which gave 18 year olds adult rights and responsibilities, said it is illogical to deny drinking rights to 18 year olds on the basis of traffic accidents, since statistics do not support the theory that 18 year olds are involved in more alcohol-related accidents than any other age group. "THE BILL may appear to be politically expedient in resolving the teenage drinking problem in our schools, however it is ludicrous to deny 18 year olds the right to drink as a means of eliminating drinking by 16 and 17 year olds,' Vaughn wrote. "With such a line of reasoning, it would be equally reasonable to deny all parents of minor children the right to drink so that young people would not have access to alcohol in the home." Statistics indicate that 98 percent of our young adults are good citizens with only two f )ercent having infractions of the aw. Since there is no firm evidence to support raising the drinking age, it should not be raised and the Governor should veto the bills. anchored inside Student designers display page 2 New York artists at Hope page 3 A "free"gift page 5 Wanted: Servants page 5

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Page 1: 04-07-1978

Summer semester

4 _

» ? :' • rn K ( i V.., . •^»'

ope college

olland, michi^an VOLUME NO. 90 - ISSUE 19 APRIL 7,1978

Zimmer and Gildner: 44 Unpredictable Joy" comes to campus

At 8:00 p.m. next Thursday, April 13, two highly regarded and wonderful poets, Paul Zimmer and Gary Gildner, will perform their poetry in Wichers Auditorium.

GILDNER, who has published six books of poetry in the last ten years, is an editor of New Letters, a frequent contributor to antholo-gies and magazines, and has been awarded several fellowships, as well as the Theodore Roethke Prize. Of Gildner's poetry, X. J . Kennedy has said, "One likes him immediately, and recognizes his

humor and his honesty." Zimmer, editor of the Pi t t

Poe t ry Series and Associate Direc tor of the Univers i ty of Pittsburgh Press, was chosen to be the judge of the Eerdman's Poetry and Prose Prizes and will announce the recipients during the reading.

HE HAS published three books. Along with Gildner, Zimmer is a popular reader at college cam-

uses and has recorded his poetry or the Library of Congress,

"...poetry of real fulfillment," fc

says the Partisan .Review of Zimmer's work, "...beats with an almost subliminal and yet some-how irrepressible gaiety."

ONE CAN get a glimpse of Zimmer's art through some of his titles, like: "Cecil fishing for Love in Summer Moonlight," "Zimmer's Head Thudding Against the Blackboard," or "Leon Curses the Saucers Peeling from his Cabinet."

"Zimmer is an unpredic table joy," announced The Chicago Daily News.

A joy not to be missed.

in Greece Like to spend this summer

creatively? On a Greek island in the sun? And earn a semester's c redi t for wr i t ing about your Greek Experience?

DR. JAMES A. Clark, a native of Holland and a graduate of Hope, will direct a summer program in Crea t ive Wri t ing and Greek Literature from June 6 to August 24 on the historic island of Paros in Greece. Participants may choose drama, poet ry , fiction or /and composition. Or they may study Greek literature, either classical or modern. Since Paros has long been known for its art school, as well as its small colony of foreign a r t i s t s , musicians and wr i te rs , students may also arrange course-work in paint ing, drawing, a r t h is tory , photography and cine-matic history.

AFTER vis i t ing Greece and Paros in the 1960's, Jim and Katy Clark decided they had found their own personal paradise. In 1971, after both had taught English for several years at a university in eastern Kentucky, they gave up their positions, sold their house, took their savings and went to Paros. There they designed their own home, mastered the language and devoted themse lves to the wri t ing and a r t they would no longer neglect.

Since then, Jim has contributed frequent articles to the New York Times and has recent ly co-

authored a book on the history and cul ture of Paros . He will be assisted in the Creative Writing Program by J e f f r e y Carson, a writer for the Athenian magazine in Athens.

PAROS, located in the heart of the Cyclades, is surrounded by such islands as Mykonos and Thera (Santorini) , Melos and Naxos. The island is known among archaeologists for its prehistoric remains, among classicists for its green-hued marble and the love poetry of Archilochus.

Participants will have a unique oppor tuni ty seldom had by the visitor to Greece. They will live in, and experience, a seashore Greek island village of small white-washed houses. Using Paros as a base, they will explore nearby islands as well as visiting Athens and Crete. Up to 19 credit hours may be earned during the 12-week program. The program is spon-sored by Schiller College in Germany. Tuition for the full summer is $1150.

Further information may be had by contacting Prof. James Prins or Prof . J ane Harr ington in the English Department. Or students may write lor a catalogue on the Creat ive Wri t ing Program in Paros , by wri t ing to: Schiller College Europe, Friedrich-Ebert-Anlage 4, 6900 Heidelberg, West Germany.

Washington semester offered in May

Ridl featured at author's conference Jack Ridl, poet and facultv

member in the Hope English Department, will be the featured speaker at the fifth annual Young Authors' Conference, to be held at Hope, Friday, April 14.

SPONSORED BY the Hope Educat ion depar tmen t , the con-ference will involve approximately 475 elementary age children and 50 t eachers from private , paro-chial, and public schools in the Holland, Zeeland, Grand Haven, Allegan, Grandville, Jenison, Coo-persville, and Hudsonville areas.

Each child who a t t ends the conference has already been selected for this honor on the basis of some creative writing which he has written and shared with his classmates. During the three-hour morning conference, each child will participate in three activities: a sharing period during which he will read his own poetry or story to a small group of his peers, a c rea t ive act ivi ty t ime dur ing which each child will take part in creative movement and listen to a group of storytellers, and a large

group session led by Ridl. RIDL, who was named Hope's

Outstanding Professor-Educator in 1976, teaches courses in l i t e r a tu re and wri t ing. He fre-quently portrays, as part of his literature courses, such literary personal i t ies as Blaise Pascal, Mark Twain, Henry David Tho-reau, and Walt Whitman. He has wr i t t en radio shows, comedy sketches, music and lyrics, auto-biographical essays, crit ical re-views, children's s tor ies , and poetry.

His poetry has been published in such l i te rary magazines as The Southern Poetry Review, The Journal of Popular Culture, and The Reformed Journal. His most recent work, a tribute to basket-ball star, the late Maurice Stokes, has been selected to be displayed permanently in the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass. He has also given readings and conducted workshops in several area schools and colleges and has appeared in campus t hea t e r productions.

Faculty presents Chamber Concert

The fifth and last Hope Faculty Chamber Music Concert of the year will be at 4:00 p.m. on April 9 in Wichers Auditor ium. Gail Warnaa r on oboe and Joan Conway on oiano will per form "Rondo for Oboe" composed by Carl Borgeson, "Siciliana'1 com-posed by Michael Head and "Alchemy for Oboe and Tape Recorder, Op. 60" composed oy George Heussenstamm.

Af t e r a short intermission Robert Ritsema on cello and Peter Spr ing on bass will per form " P r a y e r " by E rnes t Bloch and

"Duet for Cello and Contrabass" by Gioacchino Rossini.

The last piece to be performed will be "Liebeslieder Waltzes, Op. 52" composed by Johannes Brahms. Tne soprano parts will be sung by Joyce Morrison and Mary Bierling; altos will be Margaret Sherman and Sarah Schendal; tenors will be Stuart Sharp and Char les Canin; basses will be Rober t Coughenour and George Kraft. They will be accompanied by Joan Conway and Anthony Kooiker on the piano.

Deadlines near ALL STUDENTS WHO WILL

BE RETURNING TO HOPE NEXT FALL should have receiv-ed a Housing Application for the 1978-1979 school year. This appli-cation should be returned to the Dean of Students Office immedi-ately so that we will know each s tuden t ' s p re fe rences for next

year. Anyone who did not receive an

application, please come to the Dean's Office, 102 Van Raalte, to pick up a duplicate. Any questions regarding olf-campus permission, housing assignments, or the room selection process should be directed to Bruce Johnston.

ALSO SERVING as resource people for the conference will be the Kent County Story Spinners and Miss Julie Raabe. The Story Spinners are a group of highly-rated story tellers sponsored by the Kent County Library . Miss Raabe, a talented Hope senior, has had broad experience in dance and creat ive movement . She has recently worked as a teacher of creative movement for the Holland Community Education program.

All interested parents, teachers, admin is t ra to rs and members of the community are invited to attend an informal open house on April 14 from 5-8 p.m. in the art gallery of the DeWitt Center to view the hand bound "books" brought to the conference by the children. Quest ions about the conference may be directed to Dr. Nancy Miller.

Milliken to speak at luncheon

Ottawa County Republicans today announced plans for a "78 Majority Luncheon" at Hope from noon til 1:30 P.M. Thursday, April 13. Fea tu red speaker will be Governor William G. Milliken, and en t e r t a inmen t dur ing the meal will be provided by the Tulip Time Tuners of Holland.

Honored gues t s include the Latino Community, senior citizens, and s tuden t s . "The Republican Party wants to earn the support of a majority of Michigan voters," commented luncheon co-chairper-son Jack Holmes, "and this is one effort in that direction."

Co-chairperson Ella Aleman urged members of the Latino Community, senior citizens, and students to attend the event. She explained that the luncheon was not restricted to Republicans, and that those who attend are under no obiligation.

Tickets a re available to all interested persons at $4.00 each with special $2.00 tickets available to Lat inos, senior cit izens, and s tuden t s upon r eques t . Pe r sons interested in attending should call Republican headouarters at 396-3791 or one of tne luncheon co-chai rpersons , Ella Aleman at 392-5004 or Jack Holmes at 399-3410, ext. 3044.

Do you want to watch Jody Powell brief the press? Are you interested in speaking with a top White House official about urban problems? Do you want to speak to Sena tor Rober t Griffen? Would you like an interview with a top Ford Administration aide?

The Political Science Depart-ment is sponsoring a May Term course in Washington D.C. During the three week period (May 14 -June 2), the group of students will in terview over 50 people in 35 government agencies and interest groups representing a wide range of viewpoints.

Students will have a day with Congress, a day with the press, days with military agencies. White House agencies, energy and

Vaughn urges 19 year veto

environmental agencies, intelli-gence agencies, an elections 1978 day, and so forth.

Students will have a first-hand look at such controversial groups as the C.I.A., F.B.I., National Rifle Assoc. Center for National Securi-ty Studies , the Congressional Budget Office, and others.

The course is open to all students from freshmen to gradu-ating: seniors . Those who are th inking of applying for the Washington Honors Semester can benef i t f rom a quick look at government agencies. Fees above tuition ($180) will be kept to a minimum ($280). If you are in te res ted in this program call Professor Zoetewey (ext. 3040) or come to Lubbers 208.

S t a t e Represen ta t i ve Jackie Vaugh III (D-Detroit) has hand del ivered a personal le t te r to Governor William Milliken, urging him to veto legislation raising the legal drinking age in Michigan to 19 years of age.

'THIS discrimination in singling out our 18 year olds for punitive action must not become law," Vaughn stressed.

Accompanying the letter were the Governor of Massachuse t t s ' veto message of a similar bill raising the legal drinking age to 19 and a Detroit Free Press editorial opposing the action in Michigan.

"AS LONG as we consider our young people responsible enough to marry, vote, hold office, and die for our country, we cannot deny them the right to drink," Vaughn pointed out to the Governor. "Rather, we must deal with any infract ion of the law, whether dr iving or providing alcohol to minors, on the same level and in the same manner we punish other adult groups."

Vaughn, a leader in the fight for the Age of Majority Act, which gave 18 year olds adult rights and

responsibilities, said it is illogical to deny drinking rights to 18 year olds on the basis of t ra f f ic accidents, since statistics do not support the theory that 18 year olds are involved in more alcohol-related accidents than any other age group.

"THE BILL may appear to be politically expedient in resolving the teenage drinking problem in our schools, however it is ludicrous to deny 18 year olds the right to drink as a means of eliminating drinking by 16 and 17 year olds,' Vaughn wrote. "With such a line of reasoning, it would be equally reasonable to deny all parents of minor children the right to drink so that young people would not have access to alcohol in the home."

S ta t i s t ics indicate tha t 98 percent of our young adults are good cit izens with only two

f)ercent having infractions of the aw.

Since there is no firm evidence to suppor t ra is ing the dr inking age, it should not be raised and the Governor should veto the bills.

anchored inside

Student designers display page 2

New York artists at Hope page 3

A "free"gift page 5

Wanted: Servants page 5

Page 2: 04-07-1978

Page 2 Hope College anchor

Programs offered for film making

The Gray Film Atel ier , a non-profit. New York State pro-duction center, is offering a most unusual and creative opportunity to unde rg radua t e or g r adua t e students interested in filmmaking.

THE ATELIER is accept ing applications from students with little or no experience in filmmak-ing, but who have exhibited strong in t e re s t in e i ther l i t e r a tu re or creative writing, social sciences, and/or in the fine arts. The film program was designed for young persons who have a lot on their minds and who have always wanted the opportunity to express themselves in film.

This a l t e rna t ive apprent ice-study program, now in its seventh year, includes a number of unique f ea tu res . It is an intensive, full-time, one-year p rogram de-voted ent i re ly to tne s tudy of filmmaking.

MANY LEADING universities have granted full credit for study undertaken at the Atelier, mean-ing tha t s t uden t s need not interrupt their university careers. This program has filled a void for many scnools which have had to cut back their media programs for economic reasons.

The Gray Film Atel ier is organized as a professional pro-duction company modeled a f t e r the film studio of ye s t e ryea r . Student apprentices gain actual experience in each studio unit. For example, more than 30 student-apprentices have participated over tne past two vea r s in the production of the Atelier's feature film, EVERYMAN.

EVERYMAN, a full-length film.

is a contemporary version of the medieval moral i ty play and is intended for national distribution. The appren t ices filled all crew posit ions from Product ion Man-ager , to Ass i s tan t Director , to Cinematographer, to Gaffer and Grip.

EVERYMAN was sponsored by a seed grant from tne National Endowment for the Arts. Other Atelier films have represented the United States in major interna-tional film festivals at Grenoble, France and Trieste, Italy.

THE FORMAL classes at the Atelier are taught by its director, Paul Gray, who is both a film director and a teacher. During the 1960's, Gray was the Head of the Drama and Film Department at Bennington College in Vermont. The Atelier was started in 1971 in Brussels , Belgium and is now located in the village of Hoosick Falls, N.Y., equidistant between the Capital, District of New York State and the Vermont border.

The Atelier apprentice program represents a unique opportunity for women s tuden t s since thev share the funct ioning of all creative, technical, and producing roles. The Atelier is authorized to accept s t uden t s f rom abroad, provided they have good command of the English language.

Students interested in obtaining additional information or applica-tion procedures should contact Ms. Judy Reynolds, Adminis t ra t ive Assistant, The Gray Film Atelier, P.O. Box 70, Hoosick Falls, N.Y. 12090. The program accepts a limited number of candidates each year.

Apply Early,

Job opportunities for summer employment good

PROSPECTS look good for National Pa rks , S t a t e Pa rks , Private Summer Camps and resort areas. Many new job opportunities exist in support industries adja-cent to Parks and recreation areas.

Careers in photography

offered Olden Camera, one of America's

most respected equipment supply houses selling directly to profes-sional, industrial and government marke t s , is now in te rv iewing graduates seeking challenging and permanent careers in the photo-graphic consumer sales field.

Applications are being accepted for numerous positions, including Conventional Sales, Technical Rep, Account Manager, Assistant Purchasing A^ent, Assistant Mer-chandis ing Manager , and Assis-tant Advertising Manager.

Candidates should have exten-sive technical knowledge and be thoroughly familiar with both new and formerly owned photographic equipment.

A career a t Olden of fers an excellent salary, a fine benefits package, and an opportunity for growth from within the company. Resumes should be sent to Robert Olden, President, Olden Camera and Lens Co., Inc., 1266 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 1265 .

Summer Job Research Analyst for the national Oppor tun i ty Research Program indicates that summer job opportunities for the summer of 1978 look excellent.

High School g r adua t e s and College students will find many oppor tun i t i es in t he recrea t ion areas. Some National Parks hire as many as 3,000 summer employees.

SEVERAL hundred p r iva te camps throughout the nation will be seeking summer employees in var ied capaci t ies as counselors , swimming ins t ruc to r s , music directors, and general activities such as cooking, maintenance, etc. Individuals with special t a l en t s and abili t ies in t he a rea of entertainment, livestock handling,

e tc . should inves t iga te these opportunities.

Dude ranches and guest resorts a re also good oppor tun i t i es for those who like tne out-of-doors, and a re willing to work on an operating ranch.

AS ALWAYS, it is emphasized that individuals desiring summer employment in the summer opportunities throughout the na-tion should apply early.

Students interested in obtaining addi t ional informat ion may re-ques t a F R E E brochure by sending a se l f -addressed STAMPED envelope to Oppor-tun i ty Research , Summer Job Dept. SJO, Lock Box 730, Coeur d'Alene, Idaho 83814.

GARBAGE* one cause that doesn't need your contribution.

I.V.C.F. presents "Lord, Lord 9 9

Student designers display garments

The manifes ta t ion of a new organization at Hope College is soon to take place. A multi-media production called LORD, LORD will be shown early this month, sponsored joint ly by the Chap-lain's office and a new group on campus, Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. It is a complex slide and soundtrack presenta t ion based on the verse "Why do you call me Lord, Lord and do not what I say?" from Luke 6:46 (RSV).

DEALING WITH themes on discipleship, the Will of God and the Lordship of Chris t , LORD, LORD will be presented twice - at 7:30 and 9:30 on Tuesday evening, April 11 in DeWitt's main theater. This production is made by Twenty-One Hundred Produc-tions, a branch minis t ry of Irtter-Varsity Christian Fellowship (I.V.C.F.) and everyone from the campus and community is wel-come to come.

I.V.C.F., or I.V. for short, is a Christian Fellowship organization on college and univers i ty cam-puses across the nation. It is a part of an in ternat ional organization called International Fellowship of Evangelistic Students. Each cam-pus involved has a chapter which is run and organized by the students.

THEY ARE helped in any wav by full and par t - t ime I.V. staff members who serve all the chapters in their area. The I.V. group of Hope began in September 1977 and, although they are not yet an official chapter, they are growing and becoming an active and influential force on campus.

Plans are underway now with the Relicious Life Board and the National In te r -Vars i ty Head-q u a r t e r s to form the official I.V.C.F. Chapter at Hope.

I.V. IS a unique fellowship on this campus in that it is run by students. Being part of a nation-wide organization also ties it to other colleges across the states. Many regional or in ter -campus conferences and r e t r e a t s are planned. As a non-denominational organizat ion, I.V. adheres to simple Christian doctrine. These beliefs are summarized in five basic points:

1. Belief in t he supreme authority of Scripture.

2. Belief in the diety of Christ. 3. The necessity and efficacy of

Christ's death for the atonement of sin.

4. The need for a personal response of an individual by the Holy Spirit for salvation.

5. Belief in the personal return of Christ.

Chapters vary from campus to campus in function, form and organizat ion. At p resen t the primary purpose of tne I.V. group on Hope's campus is fellowship and personal growth. The group meets every Thursday night at 9:45 in the fourth floor faculty lounge in Lubber ' s Hall for fellowship of prayer, singing and Bible devo-tions.

THE MEETING is led by students but occasionally a faculty member or area minister will lead devotions. A special activity that has been influential in strengthen-ing the group in fellowship and commitment has been weekly prayer pa r tne r s . Two or t h r ee meet during the week for prayer or to share concerns and to get to know one another.

The meet ings a re open to students and faculty. Everyone is welcome.

BESIDES the Thursday night meeting, I.V. has other activities and events planned. Small Group Bible Studies meet on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thurs-day evenings. Social act ivi t ies build f r iendships within the

groups. Since the group is young and new on its fee t , outreach programs have been minimal.

A big brother type ministry of prayer support with the Inner City Mission of Holland and a sharing outreach with the youth groups of local churches are a few of tnese programs.

THE CHAPTER and its mem-bers are in turn aided by other branch minis t r ies of I.V. like Twenty-One Hundred Produc-t ions. Besides the a rea staff members , t h e r e is a national h e a d q u a r t e r s in Madison, Wis-consin. The I.V. Press publishes books, Bible s tudy guides and devotionals. There are Bible and Life, and Leadersh ip t ra in ing conferences scheduled at different campuses th roughou t the aca-demic year.

And during the summer, week-long to month-long camps in discipleship, personal growtn and leadership t ra in ing a re held on Cedar Campus in t he Upper Peninsula.

The I.V.C.F. is just beginning on Hope's campus, but it promises to be a dynamic ana growing organizat ion. If you ' re curious, interested or have any questions, stop in on Thursday night and see what it's all about.

A fashion show f ea tu r i ng ap-proximately 50 creations designed by two Hope s t u d e n t s will be presented April 7 - 9 in Wichers Auditorium of the Nykerk Hall of Music.

The show on April 7 will begin at 9 p.m., on April 8 at 2 p.m., and on April 9 at 8 p.m.

The g a r m e n t s have been de-signed oy Isaac Myers, a junior

pre-med ma jo r f rom New York City, and Wanda Walker, a senior communicat ions ma jo r from Queens, New York.

Entertainment will be provided by Hope students Jeanne Moore and Shelia Sawyer.

The show is sponsored by the Hope Black Coalition. Admission will be $1.50 for adults and $1.00 for students.

Final senior day sponsored

Hope will sponsor its final high school senior day of the school year, Friday, April 14, according to admissions d i rec tor Thomas LaBaugh.

The purpose of senior day is to introduce high school seniors to

the academic program and campus life of Hope. Students will have an opportunity to attend classes, tour the campus, meet with faculty and students and participate in pre-professional conferences.

ACTIVITIES CALENDAR;

Mungall chosen for committee

Dr. William Mungall, associate professor of chemistry at Hope, nas been named a member of the organic chemis t ry examinat ion committee of the American Chemi-cal Society.

As a member of this committee. Dr. Mungall will join 16 other

chemis t s from all over the count ry in wri t ing , compiling, editing and testing out questions for standardized exams to be used in colleges and universities all over the world.

Dr. Mungall has been a mem-ber of the Hope faculty since 1971.

FRIDAY, APRIL 7 Film: "Dr. Zhivago." Winants Auditorium. 6:30 and 10:00 b m

$1 with I D. ' SATURDAY, APRIL 8 Dance. Ballroom. 9-12 p.m. Music by: The Whiz Kids. $1. Martha Bums in the Pit. 9:00 p. m. Senior Recital. Linda Pyle, clarinet and Judy McKenna, Soprano.

8:00p.m. Wichers Auditorium. SUNDAY, APRIL 9 Faculty Chamber Recital. 4:00p.m. Wichers Auditorium. Black Coalition Fashion Show. 8:00 p.m. Wichers Auditorium.

Admission $1. Senior Art Show. DeWitt Art Gallerx. TUESDAY, APRIL 11 Film: "Lord Lord." DeWitt Main Theater. 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.

WWMMA^AMML C(mCert' W*chers Au^orium. 8:00 p.m.

^SA C Arts and Crafts Exhibit. Demonstration and Sale.

Kleder appointed Phyllis Kleder has been ap-

pointed student employment coor-dinator at Hope.

In her new position she will coordinate the placement of students in campus jobs and assist »n pvflhiating financial needs of

students. A 1973 Hope g r adua t e . Miss

Kleder has been employed at Hope since September, 1973, first as an admissions r ec ru i t e r and most recently in the alumni office.

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Page 3: 04-07-1978

New York artists exhibit at Hope by Mary Bruins

On Sunday afternoon, April 9, in D e W i t t Cul tura l Cen te r a r t gallery, New York City's ar t scene comes to Hope. A group of recent prints and not so recent prints of the art ists of the Pop Movement of the 1960's will be on exhibit from April 9 through April 22.

SOME OF the art ists included in the show are Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenburg, Frank Stella and Andy Warhol (including his well-know Marilyn Monroe and soup can prints.)

The conception of t h e show resulted from a semester in New York on the GLCA program that Mary Bruins , a senior a r t and business major participated in last fall. She was an app ren t i ce at Castelli Graphics gallery on the upper eas t side of New York. Caste l l i ' s handles works of the forerunners of the Pop era, the "famous names" you read about during the 60's who are still very much on the art scene today.

FROM HER New York ex-perience, which ranged from doing the dishes to shipping works to selling art. Bruins has undertaken bringing a print show to Hope. The jobs of finding funding, selecting works, publicity, and cataloging the pieces are being done based on what she learned at Castelli's.

Castelli's is one of the busiest ga l ler ies in New York.- They handle pr imar i ly p r in t s and photography. It is run by Mrs. A n t o i n e t t e Caste l l i . Mr. Leo Castelli operates Castelli Graphics' Soho c o u n t e r p a r t where the pa in t ings and scu lp tu re of the artists are shown.

THE WORKS were selected to d e m o n s t r a t e t h e evolut ion t h a t occurs within a span of time in an artist 's career-what characteris-tics s tay t h e same and which change. Bruins' goal is for each viewer to be able to compare these traits for himself.

To f u r t h e r explore those dif-fe rences and s imi lar i t ies in the works in t h e show, Castel l i ' s Director of Graphics, Bob Monk will be on campus Wednesday , April 12 to give an informal gallery talk. The talk will be at 8 p.m. in the gallery.

BRUINS' p r imary reason for coordina t ing the show was her realization oi how little exposure this part of Western Michigan had with contemporary art. Being so far r emoved from a large a r t mecca such as New York, she felt there was an unfamiliarity with the work that "bred contempt" for it because of a lack of basic knowledge of how to look at the work and enjoy it.

Among Bruins ' immemorab le New York experiences was a visit to Rauschenberg's home, a four story converted orphanage com-ple te with a chapel and an Egyp t i an m u m m y . She also worked a longs ide J a s p e r Johns while hanging a show. He has a r e p u t a t i o n for solemni ty , but managed a smile when Bruins complimented his taste in boots, which happened to match her own.

BRUI NS is i n t e r e s t e d in a career in gallery management. She decided to try to stage a show at Hope to "test myself to see if I could do it on this scale."

Bruins has handled all aspects of organiz ing the show, including obtaining funding, selecting the works, publicizing the event, and hanging the show. Bruins is majoring in both art and business administration. She admits that the combination is a bit unusual.

"MOST ARTISTS aren't man-agers. They have little concept of how closely t h e two fields are related in the promotion of their work.

"As for me," she adds, "I'm a business major because I'm good at it. I'm an ar t major because I like it."

Also on display in the gallery at that time will be some prints of old masters, new acquisitions of the art department.

Summer climbing program offered

Passage to indigestion by Neil Klotz

(CPS) - Each year t h e food service industry reaps $2.3 billion from the college and university m a r k e t . In 1975, f o u r t h - q u a r t e r p r o f i t s for AHA Services , the l a r g e s t ins t i tu t iona l food con-tractor were up 13 percent, and Saga's profits were up 50 per cent to a total of $5.5 million for the year.

In 1976, the s t u d e n t s were rattling their silverware in pro-test. For instance, at Washington Un ive r s i t y in S t . Louis, w h e r e students paid $3.46 per day for board , 60 p e r c e n t of those surveyed rated the food "poor". At the State University of New York (SUNY) in Albany, students rated

"on campus food qua l i ty" the i r th i rd b igges t concern, a f t e r "handl ing course c o n t e n t " and "finances". SUNY students had a little more provocation than most, however. The previous year 200 students there were hit with food poisoning a f t e r ea t ing in the cafeteria. The year before that, a similar mass incident occurred. As usual, hardly anybody's listening. Many food service managers seem to take student complaints about as seriously as they do the groans f rom the i r mechanical dish-washers . The classic caval ier attitude was best displayed by one food service manager who com-mented, "The food here can best be described as average. But if a person was very hungry, the food

Right to refuse Treatment" on trial u

BOSTON (LNS) - Seven pa-tients at Boston State Hospital in Boston have sued 15 psychiatric personnel for damages and, on the basis of their experiences at the hands of the staff, they are calling on the Federal Court to recognize r e f u s i n g ' ' t r e a t m e n t " as a legal r i g h t of p a t i e n t s in psych ia t r i c facilities.

The trial has been going on in Boston F e d e r a l Cour t since December, 1977. And in its course, has chal lenged many of the s t a n d a r d f e a t u r e s of c u r r e n t psychiatric practices. The exces-sive use of powerful, psychoactive d r u g s , the s igning of so-called "voluntary" forms in psychiatric hospitals, and the use of seclusion as r e s t r a i n t have all been questioned in the trial.

The case is complicated by the distinction between "emergency" and "non-emergency" situations in a psychiatric hospital. Even if the courts rule in favor of the patients' rights in non-emergency times on a ward a physician might be able to cancel the effect of the ruling simply by declaring a "crisis" or "emergency" in an individual.

A b u s e s of p a t i e n t s in non-

emergency times with involuntary drugging have already been cited by the p la in t i f fs in the i r case evidence. The routine involuntary d rugg ing of pa t i en t s has been defined as "assault and battery" by the lawyers for the patients, arguing that this practice violates personal sovereignity.

The seclusion feature of the case centers on a young woman who was forced to spend over 2000 hours alone in a barren room at Boston State Hospital. Testimony from several witnesses has ques-tioned the appropriateness of the incarceration.

Supporters of the patients' case have exp re s sed the hope tha t Federal Judge Joseph L. Tauro will yield a landmark decision by ruling for the patients' right to refuse treatment. Such a positive step will be a boost to the case of mental patients' liberation.

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might be classif ied as a l i t t le better than average."

Commercia l food serv ice con-tractors know they have a few things going for them. For one, many small schools have been convinced that they can't run their own food service and break even even though such an operat ion might be more responsive to the s t u d e n t s than a meal p rogram contracted to a large outside firm. It's true that schools that run their own food service have increasingly been hit wi th r i s ing costs, according to Clark DeHaven, Administrative Secretary of the Nat ional Associa t ion of College and University Food Services. But DeHaven goes on to state that a number of schools have cut costs by increas ing the use of self-service and self-busing. Despite all obstacles, says DeHaven, "any school can run its own" and need not t u rn to a con t r ac to r if it honestly cares about the quality of student food.

Runners rough on knees

Campus Digest News Service

The long-distance runner has a hard life.

Not only is he lonely, but doc to r s a r e now saying he's tearing up his knees as well.

One doctor says the knee is a "fitness freak's" main injury site.

But dedica ted r u n n e r s won't stop, he added. They may stop to see a doctor for quick repairs, but then they're off and running again.

Dr. James D. Key of Dallas told the Midwest Clinical Conference of the Chicago Medical Society that more and more runners between 30 and 50 a r e exh ib i t ing this "overuse syndrome."

P a t i e n t s wi th knees damaged from overuse were instructed to stop doing the activity in the past. Key ^aid. This usually resulted in the problem's clearing up.

However , many p a t i e n t s now will not stop on doctor's orders. Key believes this is a manifesta-tion of t h e c u r r e n t belief t ha t ca rd iovascu la r f i t n e s s leads to longevity.

Running is one of the best ways to improve endurance, lower pulse r a t e , and genera l ly have a stronger heart.

The knee was the main problem among a group of amateur athletes who had to stop their activities for up to two weeks because of pain, according to a survey.

O t h e r t r o u b l e a r e a s were inf lamed Achil les t endons , shin splints, pain in foot arches, ankle

(continued on page 7)

You stand braced against the granite edge of the mountain top, hung perilously between heaven and e a r t h . The wind r ipples th rough your clothing, and fa r below the tree tops sway. A heady mixture of fear and exhilaration tingles through your body.

YOU LEAN into the ropes, and moving your feet cautiously over the rock, back off the cliff edge into the sky. In a moment you find yourself facing the sheer rock of the cliff, and with a rush of elation, you glide down the ropes earthward.

This is one of the many expe r i ences provided by t h e Adirondack I n s t i t u t e in the i r summer mountain journeys. Lo-cated at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, New York, the I n s t i t u t e uses t h e Colorado Rockies, t h e Adirondack moun-tains, and the wilds of northern Ontario as departure points from the conventional in education by of fe r ing t h r ee -c r ed i t hour l i ter-ature courses where all instruction takes place outdoors.

P A R T I C I P A N T S c o m p l e t e their reading on their own before gathering at the field sites for ten days of field instruction-which in the mounta in courses includes rock climbing, rappeling, and river fording.

The p rog ram has been so successful over the past five years that it has attracted students from over 100 colleges in 25 states. The c red i t e a rned in t h e I n s t i t u t e courses is usually t r a n s f e r a b l e back to t h e s t u d e n t ' s home institution.

PROFESSOR J o n a t h a n Fai r -banks, creator and director of the Adi rondack I n s t i t u t e , expla ins that "the program is intended to be a variation on the traditional academic courses, and is meant to supplement, not replace them."

Wha t is d i f f e r e n t about the Institute's summer courses? "Most

literature courses taught in the c lassroom are essent ia l ly an intellectual exercise," Fairbanks expla ins . "This p rog ram t a k e s l i t e r a t u r e and t e s t s it aga ins t experience."

WITH EXCITEMENT he r e calls last summer hearing a pack of coyotes yelping along a mountain ridge directly above the group's camp. All of the students were spellbound as they lay in their sleeping bags listening to the wild sounds of coyotes running in the moonlight.

A fo rmer O u t w a r d Bound i n s t ruc to r in Colorado and in England, Fairbanks' wilderness experience ranges from climbing in t h e New Zealand Alps to canoeing whi te w a t e r in t h e Uni ted S t a t e s and Canada . He began his un ive r s i ty t each ing career in New Zealand and taught Engl ish for seven y e a r s a t t h e S t a t e Un ive r s i t y of New York be fo re e s t ab l i sh ing t h e Adiron-dack Institute at Skidmore.

THE ADIRONDACK course includes writings by Hemingway, Fau lkne r , London, and F r o s t , while titles such as "Tough Trip Through P a r a d i s e , " "Tne Big Sky , " and " T h e Comanches" sprinkle the Colorado reading list. The Canadian course emphasizes exploration literature.

The groups are co-ed and are comprised of 12 students and two instructors. Dr. Anne LaBastille, noted Adi rondack guide and au tho r of "Woodswoman , " is among the instructors who assist Fairbanks in the field.

The p r o g r a m is open to all u n d e r g r a d u a t e s and o ther in-t e r e s t e d adu l t s , and welcomes non-credit applicants as well as those seek ing c red i t . F u r t h e r in format ion can be obta ined by wr i t ing Adi rondack In s t i t u t e , Dana Hall, Sk idmore College, Sa r a toga Spr ings , New York 12866.

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Page 4: 04-07-1978

Page 4 Hope College anchor

*50 tuition deposit creates outrage 6

by Tim Griffin

I am writing to express my outrage at the recent decision to impose a non-refundable $50 deposit as a tuition credit in advance of a permit to register.

to re turn to school in the fall? This added $50 hassle might be just enough to convince a lot of those in turmoil tha t Hope isn't the place for them. Come onl In these tough times, college students ned all the encouragement they can get f rom the administrat ion to continue in school.

I have only one more point to make, but it is the one I feel most strongly about . Hope is a very expensive place to go to school. Oh , sure, you can ramble on about that $1000 less tha t the average

^ GLCA colleges, bu t let's face it - $4,500

This new rule serves no good purpose. ' o r an eight m o n t h stay is a lot of money T h e excuses for it are shaky, if not Ind.v.duals paying that m u c h money for ridiculous. One is that the rule is being tu . t ion in a year deserve to have a little put into effect to cut down on the number security associated with it.

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of students who sign u p for a class, never show up , and consequently rob another student of the rijght to be in the class. This s ta tement is pure malarkey.

Wha t on ear th is the drop-add period for? It is dur ing this t ime that a student who originally wanted to be in the class but was closed out can get into a class where one of the "thoughtless pre-registerers" has left a vacancy. The existing system that handles all drop-adds can also handle those who don' t show.

Another excuse for the rule is that dormitory occupancy and distribution of "pr ime living accommodat ions" is hurt by those who register and don' t bother to come to school. This sounds as if the administration is waving dorm assignments like they were really lucrative. Hahl

Anyone who has been around knows that living off campus , while lacking in some aspects, is much cheaper than living in the dorm, and , more importantly, provides a more responsible and free environment that adults are entitled to.

A lot of things can happen in a person's life in the months between re-gistration and matr icula t ion. No one can tell the fu ture . It would be grossly un-fair , or more correctly, cut-throat , to impose a non- re fundable deposit on a person who suddenly found himself strongly compelled not to come back to school because of some course of events in his life.

Here's another point . How about those students who, for financial or other reasons, aren't sure whether they want

at 4:00 in the basement of Van Raal te . Our average meet ing lasts an hour and 45 minutes or more . It is here we organize activites, assign people to be in charge of a specific event, finalize details, evaluate the past week's activities and make decisions for the fu ture .

SAC deserves recognition All of a sudden it s topped. During our

weekly SAC meet ing, discussion of ac-tivites ceased and the conversation turned toward the trials and tributes of being members of SAC. It is our purpose here to explain 5M's and I P concerning the Social Activities Commit tee .

First let us consider 2M's - Myths and Money. T h e reason we consider the two together is because most myths are about SAC money. Students have often ex-claimed to us: "How come you charge for dances? Don't we pay an activities fee?" It is t rue you pay a $25.00 per year activities fee.

Out of that amoun t (for the 77 - 78 school year) SAC received about seven dollars per s tudent for a total budget of $15,250. This f igure includes projected income from dances, etc. If you want to know where the remainder of the fee goes contact your student presentative.

congress re-

They should be able to have a placed they can count on to stay, study, andT" learn. But the administrat ion wants to take away this confidence that we all deserve. W h a t they are saying is, "Okay, you came this year, but what about the next? We don't trust you, and just so you don't cause us a little grief and p imp us, we're gonna make you put a little money on it this t ime."

I don't know about others, but tha t kind of c rap does not sit with mel Hey other students, remember that $50 "commitment" deposit we all paid before o ^ - • J enrolling? Well, now we are all being O A L j COtltlTlllGCl considered high school seniors. O u r past years of presence and support have done nothing to enhance our standing or pri-vileges. T h a t is truly disgusting!

Of course, there is an alternative to paying the deposit-register last. And lose all priority rightly earned in your college career . Wha t an insult!

W h a t it all boils down to is that the top brass is forgett ing who is paying their salaries. T h e students are what make this college go, the students are the ones who the place was intended for, and yet their

legitimate rights and needs are being under- w o u j ^ venture to say that each mined . This kind of thing cannot con- member spends 2 to 5 hours additionally t inue, and the best t ime to stop it is e a c ^ gett ing things ready. On the n o w * . , r i average, in a two week period, each one of

I would appreciate others who also feel u s ^ d e v o t e a F r i d a y o r S a t u r d a y

strongly about this to let their voices be • h t t o s u i s i n a S A C activity. O n heard . I, for one, know that I fu ly ^ m e weekends, certain members spend intend on both registering and a t tending a n d Saturday nights at SAC classes next fall-without paying a » 5 0 d e - activities.

P o s l t - How many of you are willing to do that to give your fellow students something to do?

It may appear the last comment was a little strong. In an a t tempt to explain let us move on to the four th M - Morale.

Many of you are thinking that $15,250 Group morale boosts and reinforcement looks like a lot of money. Well it is from outside sources is almost nonexistent, unless you consider some costs. The average All the comments we receive seem to be cost of a Pit act is $400. You get negative and come to us through the gossip in free - therefore, that 's pure expense, grapevine. The average band for a dance is paid about It is our belief that we would have a $400. You pay a $1.00, average attendance group faint if anyone ever dropped us a is 200, a loss of $200. note and said tha t SAC was doing a good

In the long run SAC uses your $7.00 job. Unlike other campus student staff to keep your cost down and to offer we receive no mone ta ry reward to per-"free" enter ta inment . pe tuate our enthusiasm. At times we look

Many laughed at us when we determined at one another and say "I don't under-our loss on the Maynard Ferguson concert s tand how we've kept going? How do to be over $1000. Maybe now you will we put u p with it? Doesn't anyone have realize that each one of you helped make anything good to say?" that loss. If the SAC members pooled This may sound like we dislike criticism, their entirp port ion of the activities fee Criticism is good when it says "We did it would only equal $170. It was not our not like that event, how about trying loss (SAC) but your loss (Hope). this next t ime" or "The organization

Myth n u m b e r two: SAC members are seemed a little shaky, I will be gald to pa id . It is difficult to explain how much help next t ime." If you like something that hurts. Student Congress officers and write us. If you have some extra t ime or their secretaries are paid , anchor staff a suggestion please let us know. are paid, W T A S staff are paid , Milestone W e are supposed to represent you, bu t staff are paid. SAC staff members are not how can we if we are unsure of what you paid . want?

This brings us to our third M- Members. It is our unders tand ing that the college There are 10 of us. We meet each Monday desires to keep t h e directorship of SAC

a par t t ime position (Management fif th M). As a commit te we feel this will d a m a g e the p rog ram offered to the stu-dent body and kill SAC members as if they are expendable . Oh great board of trustees in the sky, we are students in your college. W e are here to learn.

T h e r e are only 24 hours in a day. A par t t ime director can only do so m u c h as we can only do so m u c h . In order to offer a good p rogram at stan-dards as high as previously set the work load on the students would be tremendous. We could increase the membership, but it seems to work best at this size.

We could have stronger sub commit-tees bu t again we re turn to the question of reward. Sub commit tees seem to falter due to lack of re inforcement . A full-t ime director is a mus t .

Lastly our p rog ram (the P). We cannot please all of you all of the t ime. We a t t empt to put variety into our pro-g ramming . We a t t empt to br ing you the best at the smallest addi t ional cost. We want to expose you to the new ways of spending your free t ime. W e want you to enjoy what we sponsor.

Do you realize tha t there would be no Pull, no Nykerk, Homecoming , May Day or Winter Fantasia without SAC. No dances (which you say we never have enough) , no performers in the Pit and no movies.

About the movies. W h e r e are all of you who raked us over the coals about last semester's lack of a movie series. W e listened. T h e reason we had no series is because we were losing your money on a project that previously pa id for itself.

W e have m a d e an effor t to correct our "mistake" by br inging back a film series. T h e series is being f inanced on a "pray we break even because there's no budge t " budget . So fa r we have lost money on every movie. Are we wrong again? Remeber it's your money.

W e are asking for your support and un-ders tanding. W e are asking that you take our word seriously. W e are a part of you. W e are 10 students doing our best to give you what you will enjoy.

T h e Social Activites Committee Ann-Marie Helm us, Eileen Doyle, Steve Peachey, Bob Glover, Alan Murray, Paul Hayes, Deb Van Hoeven, Paula Nut ter , Gaye van den H o m b e r g h , Kathleen Francis.

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Page 5: 04-07-1978

Page 5

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A "free" gift Wanted: Servants

by Rick Vanderbie

(Editor's note: This is the first of a series of articles on the free

ILcl * J Upon reading the above, you've

bably p r e p a r e d yourself to

enterprise system.) idi

prooaoiy p - r -become informed of how you can get something for nothing. You've searched for the little coupon or the proof-of pu rchase seal, but found none. Why? Because this is not an offer that will give you a gift free of charge.

This has been wr i t t en and placed here for the sole purpose of directing you towards a gift that you have already been given.

The Free Enterprise system is a gift that has been bestowed upon all Americans, whether they know it or not. Free Enterprise is not actually "free" in the monetary sense because it does, indeed, generate certain costs for those involved in it.

When applied to Free Enter-prise, the word "Free" means that American businesses are allowed freedom in which to operate and

that the American public has been granted room in which to move when making financial decisions.

Due to the changing views of society du r ing t h e pas t two decades, the freedom contained in Free Enterprise has been severely cha l lenged . The saddes t p a r t about it is that the situation isn't getting any better . Free Enter-prise remains under constant fire from Washington.

Our political system, by continu-ing to pass legislation restricting it, is slowly nickel-and-diming the effectiveness of Free Enterprise to death.

You might be tempted to say "so what" or "what difference does it make?" This sort of attitude is the v e r y symptom of the second largest problem that Free Enter-prise faces.

By dealing with a public that is un in formed or mis in formed , it becomes very . easy for F r e e E n t e r p r i s e to c rea t e f r ic t ion between the public and itself. To avoid this, we must t e s t each other's knowledge of Free Enter-

Homosexuals at Hope: Do they exist?

Due to a genera l lack of u n d e r s t a n d i n g and acceptance , a t t e n d i n g Hope can be an extremely painful experience for homosexua l s . Even the homo-sexual who can talk openly with a compassionate heterosexual room-mate or friend will find it awkward and difficult to express what he or she is going through emotionally.

P e r h a p s only ano the r homo-sexual can fully comprehend the occasional fee l ings of lonel iness and anguish that come from not being a member of Hope's hetero-sexual majority.

A group of concerned students known as The Frontrunners have begun meeting weekly to share in discussion what it means to be homosexua l . P e r s o n s a t t e n d i n g are gaining a greater awareness of t h e va r ious mean ings of being homosexua l in a he t e ro sexua l

society. The group mee t ings a re not

meant to be therapy sessions, but it is believed that being able to talk freely about common concerns is therapeutic.

If you believe yourself to be homosexua l ( i t 's a m a t t e r of degree, not either/or), you may find this group worthwhile. For too long the main problem of homosexua l i ty has been the isolat ion and u t t e r lack of preparation for it.

Now open discussion is available to ameliorate that situation. There is no need to suffer alone when supportive understanding is avail-able. If this group could be for you, contact Bill Hillegonds (2400) or Sarah Schendell (2110) who have agreed only to serve as contact persons. Requests for information are confidential.

prise and see how informed we really are.

Truthfully now, how much do you know about Free Enterprise? Are you able to point out i ts components? More importantly, if you were asked to explain how it works, could you do it?

Most Americans couldn't! They might be able to indicate that it's played a key role in helping America to become one of the world's richest nations, but that's not enough. It 's most important that the American public maintain i ts u n d e r s t a n d i n g of how F ree Enterprise works if the system is to remain healthy and in opera-tion.

This article, and especially those that will follow, will shed light on F r e e E n t e r p r i s e ' s di lemma and provide i m p o r t a n t informat ion pertaining to it. Hopefully, those of you who were not yet acquainted with Free Enterprise will be given a better understand-ing of how it works.

As for those of you with revious knowledge of the subject,

. hope t h a t t he se a r t ic les will further your understanding and stimulate you to do all that you can to help preserve Free Enterprise.

Watch for next week's article: PROFITS

A Misunderstood Concept

F

by Reid Thurston and Larry Mannino

We have seen that there is a great need for a Christian column in th is pape r . In ta lk ing with f r i ends and a f t e r r ead ing last week's letters to the editor, we both have decided that we are willing and hopefully able to meet this need. For we firmly believe that going to a private Christian college doesn't mean that we are to be private Christians.

So, in our concern for Christian g rowth in th is communi ty , we would like to share our thoughts and experiences with you. We are not experts at theology nor do we consider it our job to present it. Nor is our's an expert opinion or the final word on any issue".

We are just growing Christians willing to share our joys and our ignorances with you. So our a t t e m p t will not be t ha t of teaching doctrine but of sharing what we have found to be true in our Christian walk.

Our goal in this is for you to grow, for us to grow, and to make public Christ's word. We cannot emphasize enough our desire for feedback, w h e t h e r posi t ive or negative. If you feel we are wrong, please feel f r ee to cor rec t us publicly or pirvately. We wish not to offend anyone. So please, in an effort to give us a chance at a greater quality article, communi-

cate with us! So now you know our purpose,

our goals, our reasons and our fears. What will be our subject matter? Servanthood. For the rest of the semester we wish to dwell on the topic of being a servant. This column will talk about Jesus as our example of a servant; about we as Christians being called to serve; about what it means to be a servant; and finally, about how to serve. It is truly our hope that you gain as much from our writing as we do in researching this subject which we feel is vital to the Christian life.

Your servants, Larry & Reid

HOW TO KEEP THE LIFE OF THE PARTY

ALIVE.

For free in format ion, wr i te to: D R U N K D R I V E R . Box 2345 Rockvi l le . Mary land 20852

I p i i i i i i B W i i i i i i i i r i i i i i 1 ' j : i i ^ • • J 1 « t -1 I I V.MI. - I I . i v . r T v

Middle-income student assistance defeated in House

The House r e f u s e d even to consider the Administration's mid-dle-income student-aid bill March 20 because it was brought up on sho r t notice under a p rocedu re which precluded any amendments in an effort to avoid attachment of a tuition tax-credit amendment. By a vote of 218-156 the House refused to second a motion to call up the bill under suspension of the rules-a p r o c e d u r e which l imits d e b a t e , b a r s a m e n d m e n t s , and r e q u i r e s a two- th i rds vote of approval.

T H E N O - A M E N D M E N T S s t r a t e g y was r e q u e s t e d by the White House and agreed to by the house Democratic leadership after the House agenda for the week of March 20 a l ready had been announced. The agenda put the bill (HR 11274) on the House calendar March 22 under the usual rules. Republicans, who had planned to offer a tuition tax-credit amend-ment, denounced the strategy as "a b l a t a n t political m a n e u v e r , " "chicanery, and "an out-of-bounds end run," among other things.

The House vote did not kill the bill, which can be b r o u g h t up unde r a ru le for cons idera t ion approved by the Rules Committee. The committee reportedly was set to grant a rule allowing tax-credit a m e n d m e n t s . Meanwhi le , t h e House Ways and Means Com-mittee scheduled consideration of tax-credit bills pending before it on April 10 and 11. Some of the bills allow credits only for post-secondary tu i t ion , while o t h e r s provide credits for private elemen-t a r y , secondary and vocat ional schools as well.

THE MIDDLE-INCOME s tu dent-aid bill conUins a $1.4 billion expansion of existing student-aid programs and is a revised version of President Carter 's proposal. As

approved by the House Education and Labor Committee March 8 the bill would make s t u d e n t s f rom middle-income families eligible for Basic Educa t iona l Oppor tun i ty Grants, authorize additional funds for Supplemental Educational Op-portunity Grants and the College Work-Study program, and remove the present family income limit on stuaents ' eligibility for interest subsidies on Guaranteed Student Loans (see Vol. XXVII, No. 10).

The Admin i s t r a t ion s t rong ly opposes the tax-credit approach to aiding middle-income families as too costly and not based on need. In another development. Attorney General Griffen B. Bell sent an opinion on the constitutionality of t ax c red i t s March 17 to HEW Secretary Joseph A. Califano, Jr . Bell stated that "in the light of ex i s t ing S u p r e m e Court prece-d e n t s , " he bel ieved tax c red i t s would be held uncons t i tu t iona l insofar as they prov ide aid at elementary and secondary school levels, but would be constitutional at the college level.

The opinion cited two Supreme Cour t decis ions which held un-constitutional state tuition relief for parents of parochial pupils.

BOTH A tax-credit bill and an expanded s tuden t -a id bill a re pending in the Senate, but are not expected to be brought up until after the close of debate on the Panama canal treaty. The Finance Committee Approved a tax-credit bill F e b . 23 and t h e Human Resources Committee approved a vers ion of t h e Admin i s t r a t i on ' s student-aid proposal the following day (see Vol. XXVII, No. 8),

There were these other develop-m e n t s of i n t e r e s t to h igher education before Congress started its Easter recess.

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Page 6: 04-07-1978

Page 6 Hope College anchor

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Zimmer plays the poet, and more in The Zimmer Poems by Kate Solms

Editor's note: This review is of The Zimmer Poems, an anthology of Paul Zimmer's work published by the Dryad Press. It is available in the Hope-Geneva Bookstore. This review was published in the anchor in the spring of 1977.

Who is Paul Zimmer? He is his own best character, that's who he is. In the anthology The Zimmer Poems, the reader can have a good look at Zimmer the poet studying, singing and celebrating Zimmer the cha rac t e r in a set of remarkably diverse and talented poems.

ZIMMER is a cha rac te r of almost legendary proportions. He

ii

faces love, dea th , f ishing and elephants with equal aplomb. He is the subject of such famous poems as "The Dea th of the Hired Zimmer," "A Zimmershire Lad," and "Zumer is Icumen In . " Obviously, he is a man who not only leaps centuries with a single bound, but survives the landings as well. But Zimmer- the-poe t never loses sight of Zimmer-the-character's humanity.

HE IS NOT Supe rman ; he wakes in the middle of the night and asks ques t ions of t h e darkness, like all of us. Zimmer is not only a poet with a fine vocabulary and a good sense of timing, he is also a man who is not a f ra id of fee l ings , of r ecord ing feel ings, of u n d e r s t a n d i n g feel-

The Runner'''' continues rehearsal process

Feelings or beliefs? Comfort or convict ions? Milan S t i t t has w r i t t e n a play which cons iders man ' s responsib i l i ty . . . i s he pri-marily responsible to "humanity," and the ins t i tu t ions and norms which define it? Or is it man's place first to respond to humans, to the needs of the persons with whom he comes in contact each day?

The Runner Stumbles is a play about convictions and the sense of being they provide. But more than t h a t , it is a play abou t the suffering which arises from the realization that convictions are not of necessity valid or true, simply because they are our convictions.

Stitt has chosen to write his play about the lives of a Catholic priest and nun in a small parish in

northern Michigan. He begins by posing the question: What does a priest and a nun experience when they real ize t hey are fal l ing in love?

Then, through the other char-ac te r s , pa r t i cu la r ly the p r i e s t ' s housekeeper, Stitt considers what e f fec t th is "fall of the Church" might have on the parishioners. Finally, he considers the suffering of the priest as he realizes he is failing not only his people and the church, but violating the will of God, as he perceives it.

The Runner Stumbles- will be produced in D e W i t t ' s S tudio Theater. It will be running April 27-29 and May 3-6. For further information, call the Department of Theatre, ext. 3131.

Humanities colloquium considers writing

On March 8 Hope's Humanities Division held its second colloquium of this academic year. The topic was "The Teaching of Writing," Dr. Bernard Van't Hul was the featured speaker. Dr. Van't Hul is the Director of Freshman Writing and a consultant to the English Composition Board at the Univer-sity of Michigan.

HIS ADDRESS described the r e q u i r e m e n t in English com-posi t ion to be in i t ia ted at the University of Michigan this fall. A f t e r an a s se s smen t of the e n t e r i n g s t u d e n t ' s wr i t ing , the student is either required to take a tu to r i a l in p repa ra t ion for the introductory composition course or is exempted from the course.

The introductory composition course is taught in the English department. The requirement in Engl ish composit ion will also include, however, a course in the junior and senior year which would concentrate on improving the qual i ty of s t u d e n t wr i t ing according to the special standards of the area of concentration chosen by the student.

THIS COURSE would not be taught within the English depart-ment but within each of the other

Editors to be selected

Student Communication Media Chairperson, Mrs. Nancy Taylor scheduled a meeting earlier in the week with the heads of the anchor, Opus Milestone, and WTAS staffs. The group was called to discuss and reassess the selection proce-d u r e for the new organizat ion heads.

Suggestions were elicited from current editors Bob Baker, Jane Visser, Dave VanHoven, and radio manager John Hoekstra.

Information concerning the ap-plications for these positions will be printed in an upcoming issue of t h e anchor and b roadcas t on

ings. Never for a moment do we lose

sight of Zimmer to admire a nice phrase or a good title. Zimmer, and Zimmer ' s persona l i ty , a re there every minute. The reader finished the book with a know-ledge that he will never finish with Zimmer - Zimmer is a personality beyond the fifty-eight pages.

THE POET is more diversified than I think many people who have heard his poems may realize. Many of Z immer ' s poems a re humorous; they are playful and exuberant. And the freshness and joy of th i s poe t ' s approach is woven into all of his work. But Paul Zimmer is not a man of unceasing smiles; he has a serious side too.

One or the other would have been enough to earn him a reputation of no little distinction. Both together - the serious and the comic - prove that Zimmer is not limited to, or satisfied with, one approach only. The reader must not suppose that just because this set of poems are all about the same character that Zimmer can only do one thing well.

ZIMMER'S pa rodies of o ther poets are exact and funny. His imitat ion Blake ("Zimmer , who made you? /Do you know who made you?") is good, and his Whitman ("You Zimmer! Whim-pering, heavy, mumbling, lewd;/ Does America sing you a sad song?") is even better. But the poet that he has bagged from the

greatest success in these parodies is Robert Frost.

"The Dea th of the Hired Zimmer" is full of Frost details: "She sat watching the moth at the candle", "You sit and watch the moon slide/Through that patch of clouds", "He went,/Came back, too soon, it seemed to her ..." I think t h a t F r o s t would have been sa t i s f ied with the s ty le . Ogden Nash wold have loved the punchline.

ZIMMER WRITES well also about his childhood; an existence filled with t h e Catholic church, guilt, and wonder. Here the detail is also precise, and the emotions carefully and beautifully delineat-ed: "The first Sunday I missed Mass on purpose/I waited all day for Christ to climb down/Like a wiry f lyweigh t f rom the cross a n d / C l u b me on my i r r e v e r a n t t e e t h . . . " " F a t h e r Animus asked who b r o k e / T h e window in the s a c r i s t y , / I wen t head-on into e v i l / L y i n g t h rough my new incisors." " 'Fix and fix, you're all bet ter , ' / ! would say/To the neigh-borhood wounded/As we fought the world war/Through the vacant lots of Ohio..."

Here is a good memory, and a lunchbox full of elementary-school feelings, undoctored by the adult. This is Zimmer the child speaking. He is a direct child, sensitive and honest.

BUT NO MORE so than Zimmer the adult, a man who still retains a child-like hones ty in facing a battalion of difficult, painful, or

ecstatic experiences. He is often forced to look at his "pecu l ia r emptiness:" "Everything is plumb and solid in the night,/The corners of lampl ight f a s t e n i n g th ings d o w n , / W h e r e v e r I move the darkness moves,/Because I have become my own shadow." He sees people who he dislikes, and fears: "Their faces are like fine watches/ Insinuating jewels./Their move-ments can buy or sell you./When the legs of the gentry dance for c h a r i t y , / M e a t sp l a shes in the soups of the poor."

BUT THERE are also days or moments of joy. Zimmer wisely does not consider them rewards for the times of suffering, and that is his most admirable quality. Joy is not a gift, a rarity - it is only the r e v e r s e s ide of t h e pain; both together are a unity.

When he writes "I feel my cells divide in fragile ecstacy," he is feeling and understanding fully. But he is also feel ing and understanding when he is rejec-ted, or has his face bashed in by the town bully. This whole-view vision gives his poetry a lovely sanity.

In a decade when it is fashionable to be a neurotic poet, Paul Zimmer is plodding the path of hea l th , fac ing t h i n g s wi th a b r a v e r y and a humor t ha t p roduces good p o e t r y . This an-thology will give you Zimmer - and whether he is laughing at himself, over-reacting, crying, or celebrat-ing, he is a person you will not regret knowing.

Invitation to space

WTAS 610 AM.

departments. The program thus sys temat ica l ly involves depar t -men t s bes ides Engl ish in the responsibility for the quality of student writing.

Dr. Van't Hul also described the process by which this p rog ram won faculty approval. He empha-sized the impor tance of the administration's insistence on im-proving the quality of writing and of its financial support enabling and encourag ing member s ol d e p a r t m e n t s bes ides Engl ish to provide courses concentrating on composition.

THE PRESENTATION was not intended as a model for Hope, but it did challenge the Humanities Division to continue its emphasis on wr i t ing and to s h a r e t h e responsibility for improvement of composit ion with the Engl ish department.

The f i r s t colloquium of the Humani t i es Division had con-centrated on research conducted by members of its faculty. The spring colloquium will feature the research of students within the division. That event, to which the whole college communi ty is in-vited, will be held this month.

SAC seeks new members

The Hope Social Act iv i t ies Committee (SAC) is in the process of looking for and selecting new members for the 1978-1979 school year. Information and applications are available in the SAC Office, ba semen t of Van Raa l te Hall. Applications are due on Friday, April 14, at 5:00 p.m.

Applicants will have an opportu-nity to give input into the program for next yea r and undergo an interview as a part of the selection process. Membership on the SAC committee is open to all presently enrolled Hope students who plan on attending Hope next year. SAC member sh ip is l imited to ten students.

QUEST/78 has reserved room for an experiment aboard an early flight of the U.S. Space Shuttle. P u r p o s e : to help make the program accessible to deserving experimenters who lack resources to develop and f inance such projects on their own.

Q U E S T / 7 8 invi tes g roups or individuals to submi t ideas for the bes t use of the Shu t t l e reservation and will donate it to the winner, in addition to sharing the e x p e r i m e n t e r ' s NASA fees and developmental costs, accord-ing to financial need.

The winning project can be in

a lmos t any f ield, r ang ing from a s t r o p h y s i c s to medicine, eco-nomics to molecular biology. But it must be an experiment that can be done ony aboard the Space S h u t t l e , fi t into a con ta iner m e a s u r i n g five cubic fee t , and weigh less than 200 pounds.

Most important, QUEST/78 will give special cons idera t ion to p roposa l s t h a t promise some tang ib le , s igni f icant benef i t to humankind (e.g., the eradication of disease, more efficient energy use, etc.). Sheer commercial or military projects will not be considered.

Dead l ine for the Q U E S T / 7 8

Summer jobs in Europe

Space Shuttle Experiment Compe-tition is September 1, 1978. If you have suf f ic ien t backg round to design and construct an appropri-a t e p ro j ec t , wr i t e a succinct desc r ip t ion of your idea in 500 words , enclosing any neces sa ry diagrams together with a resume of any o the r in fo rmat ion t ha t would indica te your abi l i ty to carry out such a project.

Send your proposal and creden-t ials , with a s t a m p e d , self-addressed envelope to: QUEST/78 Space Shuttle Experiment Compe-t i t ion , 1133 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10036. For additional information see the March/April issue of QUEST/78.

Hundreds of U.S. students will find jobs in France, Ireland and Grea t Br i ta in th is summer t h rough t h e Work in Europe program sponsored by the Council on International Educational Ex-change (CIEE).

For the past nine years, this popular p r o g r a m has provided students with the direct experi-ence of l iving and working in another country and, at the same time, helped them reduce the cost of their trip abroad. The Work in Europe program virtually elimi-nates the red tape that students faced in t h e pas t when they wanted to work abroad.

Participants must find their own jobs but will have t h e help of cooperating student travel organi-zations in each country. In France they may work dur ing the summer ; in Grea t Bri ta in they may work at any time of the year for up to six months; in Ireland they may work at any time of the

year for up to four months. The jobs are usually unskilled -

in factories, department stores, hotels, etc. Salaries are low, but students generally earn enough to pay for their room and board while they work. A typical job would be that of chambermaid in a hotel in London ' s Wes t End. But last summer one enterprising student found work as an app ren t i ce jockey for one of Ireland's racing stables.

To qualify for CIEE's program, s t u d e n t s mus t be be tween the ages of 18 and 30 and must be able to prove their student status. To work in France, they must also be ab le to speak and u n d e r s t a n d French.

For more in format ion and application forms, contact CIEE, Dept. PR-A, 777 United Nations Plaza , New York, New York 10017; or 236 North Santa Cruz, No. 314, Los Gatos , California 95030.

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Page 7: 04-07-1978

April 7,1978 Page 7

Power struggle predicted on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation

(The following report is com-piled from dispatches from Candy Hamilton, LNS correspondent on the Fine Ridge Reservation.)

P I N E R I D G E , S o u t h D a k o t a (LNS) -- In the wake of a p r imary election for t r ibal chairman of the P i n e R i d ^ e R e s e r v a t i o n , m a n y O g l a l a S i o u x I n d i a n s f e a r t h a t the i r t r ibe is about to be set back s e v e r a l y e a r s to t h e p e r i o d of v i o l e n t and c o r r u p t r u l e u n d e r f o r m e r c h a i r m a n Dick W i l s o n . Wilson resoundingly voted out of o f f i c e t w o y e a r s ago , h a s now placed first in the F e b r u a r y 21 p r i m a r y . Wi l son had b e e n t h e t a r g e t of in tense opposition which reached a height in 1973 when a f t e r he had b locked fou r i m p e a c h m e n t a t t e m p t s Ogla la Sioux r e s iden t s and their Ameri-can Indian Movement suppor t e r s took over the village of Wounded Knee on the rese rva t ion .

In this yea r ' s runoff election, scheduled for March 21, Wilson will r u n a g a i n s t t h e man who f i n i s h e d s e c o n d in t h e p r i m a r y , E l i j a h W h i r l w i n d H o r s e . Whi r l -wind Horse has worked for more

t h a n 20 y e a r s fo r t h e F e d e r a l Bureau of Indian Affairs, long a t a r g e t of criticism by progress ive Na t ive Americans . Oglala Sioux c i t i z e n s feel t h a t t h e cho ice b e t w e e n W h i r l w i n d H o r s e and Wilson puts them "be tween a rock and a hard place."

" T h e only real d i f ference," one woman reservat ion res ident said, "is t h a t at least Whirlwind Horse i s n ' t a m u r d e r e r . " S h e w a s r e f e r r i n g to t h e p r e v a l e n c e of ser ious violence dur ing Wilson's p r e v i o u s c h a i r m a n s h i p f r o m 1972-76.

" P e o p l e a r e r e a l l y w o r r i e d , " a n o t h e r r e s i d e n t a d d e d , " t h a t under e i ther one of them, Wilson or Whir lwind Horse, the land and n a t u r a l r e s o u r c e s will g e t sold out ."

The People Stand to Lose The whit t l ing away of Oglala

Sioux lands, facilitated by federal legislation, has gone on for over a c e n t u r y . But Tribal Chairman A1 Tr imbal l had begun to r e v e r s e this t rend since he took office in 1976. Lands were bought back which had ear l ie r been sold out of the

t r i b e , to w h i t e r a n c h e r s , for example , and to one of the many missionary churches of the reser-v a t i o n . A n d T r i m b a l l i n i t i a t e d p l a n s fo r d e v e l o p i n g t h e r e s e r -va t ions^ considerable r e sou rce s -coal, na tura l gas, industr ial gravel, uranium and underground wate r .

Other lands rich in resources , such as the Black Hills with their gold, have long been taken from the Oglala Sioux. Now tha t o ther resources a r e known to lie beneath thei r land, t h e federal government and ene rgy corporat ions clearly would not like to see them used for the benef i t of the Nat ive Ameri-cans of Pine Ridge who have lived in ex t r eme ly poor conditions for decades .

"I think tha t ' s one reason that t he re ' s been such a s t rugg le over t h i s r e s e r v a t i o n , " n o t e d one res ident , "and so much opposition from the federal gove rnmen t to having the people he re have any control over this reserva t ion ."

W h e t h e r Wilson or Whirlwind Horse are elected, Oglala Sioux p e o p l e s t a n d to lose po l i t i ca l c o n t r o l o v e r t h e r e s e r v a t i o n as well as the land itself. Both have s t a t e d t h e i r o p p o s i t i o n to t h e

. - • » »

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Greeks turn Irish W e r e you a w a r e that m e m b e r s

of t h e Knickerbocker F r a t e r n i t y and theCSigma Iota Beta So ro r i t y^ collected $3UD for Muscular DysT t r o p h y .

On F r i d a y , M a r c h 17, S t . P a t r i c k ' s D a y , t h e M u s c u l a r D y s t r o p h y Association sponsored " S h a m r o c k s f o r M u s c u l a r Dys-t r o p h y . " Bo th S I B s and K n i c k s posi t ioned themse lves downtown in f r o n t of b a n k s , s t o r e s and r e s t a u r a n t s .

E a c h p e r s o n d o n a t i n g to t h i s a n n u a l c h a r i t y w a s g i v e n a " S h a m r o c k s f o r M u s c u l a r Dys-

t r o h p y " pin. La rge quant i t ies of q u a r t e r s , nickles and dimes were collected with a number of dollar bills in the green shamrock-clad can i s t e r s .

P o s t e r s of J e r r y Lewis, National C h a i r m a n , w i t h t h e M u s c u l a r D y s t r o p h y poster child were put up with the SIBs and Knicks name on t h e m . All worke r s wore name t a g s t o i d e n t i f y t h e m w i t h t h e char i ty .

E v e n though it was a sunny but r a t h e r cold day, Knick P res iden t Thomas Pierson said, "I jus t can't help bu t feel good about this ."

Runners (continued from page 3)

in jur ies , foot f r a c t u r e s and pain in calf m u s c l e s , h i p s , t h i g h s and m a j o r leg bones.

H o w e v e r , t he lower back, of ten called " the soft underbel ly of the jogge r , " was not p rominent in the poll, Key said.

In The Complete Book of Running,, J a m e s E . F i x x , a conf i rmed runne r , winner of the C o n n e c t i c u t a g e - g r o u p 10,000 m e t e r championship and Boston

m a r a t h o n par t ic ipant , says these t roub les a re of ten due to improper or insufficient warming up exer-cises.

A m a t e u r r u n n e r s of ten t r y to do too much too fast , Fixx says.

The a v e r a g e r u n n e r can pro tec t h is b o d y by w a r m i n g up su f -ficiently and not t r y i n g to push himself beyond his personal limits.

The loneliness is ano the r problem.

FOR SALE: Mayima Sekor 35mm

Camera plus all lenses and fi lters, flash

and close-up k i t . Phone 396-1016 after 5:00

SUMMER JOB? Stop by and discuss your plans and needs w i th us. Of f -

Campus Jobs, Phelps lobby.

JOB OPENINGS NOW: For any of the fo l lowing, see Off-Campus Jobs, Phelps

lobby. LT. T R U C K DRIVER - Route delivery, 8 a.m. - noon, M-F. Wil l split work week between two students. $3/

hr. Job open unt i l end of the term and/or through summer. LUMBER Y A R D WORKERS, Fri . night and Sat., up to 30 - 35 hrs./wk. if desired. Three openings, $2.65/hr . to start. Need own transportat ion. M A I L R O O M WORK-

ERS, 1:30 - 4 p.m., M-F. Wil l split work week between two students. $2.75/hr . Close to campus.

I A M A LONELY PRISONER who de-sires to correspond wi th anyone who is

wi l l ing to share a few moments of their

t ime. I have lost all ties w i th the free

wor ld and now wi l l be released in 18 months -- HELP! Anyone wishing to

wr i te can do so to ; Ricardo Ochoa

22801-149, Box 1000, Ox ford . Wl 53952.

WANTED: Apar tment for the year

beginning after graduation. 2 bedroom,

close to campus. Contact Marcia at ext. 4871.

"cont rac t ing" that has proceeded unde r Trimbal l . Although Tribal Councils a r e answerab le to. and soc ia l s e r v i c e s on I n d i a n r e s e r -vat ions a r e adminis te red directly by the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) , an a g e n c y of t h e U .S . f e d e r a l g o v e r n m e n t , t h e t r i b e i t se l f c an " c o n t r a c t " o u t any function it wan t s to take over. U n d e r t h i s p r o v i s i o n , a local ly elected board was able to take c o n t r o l of t w o s c h o o l s on t h e r e se rva t ion f rom the BIA in 1976. And in 1977 the t r ibe took over the BIA police, health p rogram and a fos ter g r a n d p a r e n t p rogram.

Both were seen as significant d e v e l o p m e n t s s i n c e t h e BIA schools a r e widely viewed as the main tool of forced assimiliation and the police the main tools of repress ion on Pine Ridge.

T h e n e w l y l o c a l l y - r u n s choo l s h a v e b e e n t e a c h i n g S ioux language and cul ture and s t r e s s a posi t ive view of Indian people in h i s t o r y . A n d pol ice o p e r a t i o n s have been decentral ized through-out the large rese rva t ion with the police review board made up of e l e c t e d , r a t h e r t h a n a p p o i n t e d m e m b e r s . Police off icers must live in the dis tr ic t whe re they work, so they are well known and available when needed. Progress ives , AIM s u p p o r t e r s and women now hold k e y p o s i t i o n s in t h e pol ice d e p a r t m e n t .

Bo th W i l s o n a n d W h i r l w i n d H o r s e had p l e d g e d to end c o n t r a c t i n g and r e v e r s e t h e s e changes tha t have been made.

Conflict Ahead " E v e r y o n e s a y s , ' T h i s is t e r -

rible!' 'Wha t a re we going to do?' ' I t ' s hard to think they have so m u c h s u p p o r t . ' E v e r y o n e w a s m a d and u p s e t . B u t s t i l l it happened , " one res iden t told LNS.

According to the unofficial tally, Wilson had 972 votes . Whirlwind

Horse had over 500, and incum-bant A1 Trimball came in third. The re a re 100 challenged votes. A p r imary election held in J a n u a r y had b a s i c a l l y t h e s a m e r e s u l t s proport ionally, though each candi-d a t e had a s m a l l e r t o t a l . T h a t p r i m a r y w a s vo ided b e c a u s e of i r r e g u l a r i t i e s in v o t i n g proce-d u r e s . T h e l a t e s t p r i m a r y w a s m o n i t o r e d by t h e A m e r i c a n Arb i t r a t ion Association and can not be re-challenged.

S o m e i n s t a n c e s of v o t i n g by n o n - t r i b a l m e m b e r s , a s well as b r ibery by Wilson are known, but not e n o u g h to add up to t h e number of votes won by Wilson and W h i r l w i n d H o r s e . " N o one really has a full explanat ion yet ," sa id o n e r e s i d e n t i m m e d i a t e l y a f t e r the pr imary .

T o add to t h e a n t i c i p a t e d conflict, some of the candidates who won pr imary votes for Tribal Council sea t s were progress ives , including American Indian Move-ment leaders Russel Means and a c t i v e c o m m u n i t y o r g a n i z e r G e r a l d i n e J a n i s . S o m e AIM m e m b e r s and suppor t e r s t ake an act ive par t in the Tribal govern-ment as a way to move towards r e f o r m and s e l f - d e t e r m i n a t i o n , t h o u g h AIM d o e s not r u n candida tes as a par ty and gives s u p p o r t to t h e L a k o t a T r e a t y C o u n c i l , a s t h e i r l e g i t i m a t e govern ing body.

Wilson has been known to t ry to c i rcumvent his Council, composed of severa l elected m e m b e r s from each of t h e r e s e r v a t i o n ' s n ine dis tr icts , and he of ten r e fuses even to call a Counc i l m e e t i n g . But given the pr imary resul ts , " the re ' s b o u n d to be a p o w e r s t r u g g l e b e t w e e n t h e Counc i l and t h e C h a i r m a n , " one r e s i d e n t p re -dicted. "One th ing I know is that people he re a ren ' t going to sit back and let t h e c h a i r m a n g i v e t h e rese rva t ion away."

The Puffin fare for youths.

One of the first things young Puffins learn to do

is fly Icelandic. Beginning April 1,

1978, Icelandic will fly any youth (Puffin

or person) from 12 thru 23 years old

roundtrip from New Yorit to Luxembourg

for just $400. $430 from Chicago. Re-turn tickets are good for a full

year. Fares are subject to change. Book

anytime.

But there's more to Icelandic than just

low fares. You 11 get a

great dinner and A excellent service

on your trip. And Icelandic will set you down right in the mid-dle of the Euro-

pean Continent, :: where youH be

just hours away by train from Europe's

most famous landmarks.

So take a travel tip from Iceland's

favorite bird. Learn to fly Icelandic.

See your travel agent. Or write DepL #C352, Icelandic Airlines, P.O. Box 105, West Hempstead, N.Y. 11552. Call 800-555-1212 for

• toll-free number in your area.

Roundtrip 14-45 day APEX fare from N-Y.*

$400 Roundtrip Youth Fare. Good thru age 23.

Icelandic to Europe *$295 from Chicago. Tickets must be reserved 45 days prior to departure and

paid for wdhm 8 days of reservation. Add $15 each way far travd on weekends.

Page 8: 04-07-1978

PageS Hope College anchor

Baseball faces rebuilding season

The Dutchmen face a major rebuilding job in their bid for a th i rd s t ra igh t winning season. Hope won its f i r s t league championship under Bultman last sprin? behind a 14-11 record, the only MIAA team to finish above .500 in overall competi t ion. Bultman is beginning his eighth season as coach. An all-MIAA shortstop himself while at Hope in the eO's, his teams have compiled a 75-112-1 record.

Bultman must replace four all-MIAA performers, including pi tcher Bill Fobare who was chosen the league's most valuable p layer . Other al l- leaguers tha t must be replaced include catcher Tony Terracciano, outfielder Jeff Wate r s tone and shor t s top Rick McLouth.

Seniors Bill Harrison of Grand Rapids and Paul S tea rs of Fennville will be the heart of the pitching staff. Stears was Hope's most active pitcher last spring, throwing 55 innings in 10 games. Jun ior Bob Angle of Allegan should also see considerable action and the addition of junior college transfers Brian Boss, a junior from Zeeland, and Kevin Watson, a sophmore from St . Louis, Mo. gives the staff depth.

Watson posted a 5-0 record at F lor i ssent Junior College, St .

Louis, Mo. last year and as a high school senior earned all-state honors a f t e r recording a 10-1 mark. Boss had a 6-2 record last year at Grand Rapids Junior College.

Senior Mike Wojda of Alpena and sophomore Gary Hutchins of Flint are returning veterans in the outfield. Wojda carries a lifetime Hope batting average of .342.

Junior A1 Watson of South Haven appears ready to assume the catching chores. Watson was a regular as a freshman. He will be challenged by senior Steve Lorenz of Whitehall, Mich, who will also see action at shortstop.

Three veterans return to the infield, but inexperience at short-stop is a major concern. Infield r e t u r n e e s include two-time all-MIAA second baseman Terry Lock of Grand Rapids, third baseman John VandeGuchte of Fond du Lac, Wise, and f irst baseman Jeff Welch of Allen Park.

Lock owns an impressive .346 career average and last spring was fifth in the MIAA batting race with a hefty .389 average. He was also outstanding on defense last year, committing just one error in 25 (james.

April 12 against Olivet.

) games MIAA action ge ts underway

LaCrosse optimistic The Hope Lacrosse Club enters

its fifth year filled with optimism. The 35-man pre-season ros te r includes 13 seniors.

Seniors Hank Heneveld of Alton, Joe DeVette of Holland and Dave Wrieden of Phoenix, Ariz, provide experience at the mid-field positions, while seniors Brad Helmus of Grand Rapids, Scott Morey of Downers Grove, III. and Tom Kampers of Roch, Minn, control the attack.

Leading defensemen include Rick Van Hassel of Wyckoff, N.J. and Dale Van Dahm of Elmhurst, III.

Key areas for coach Tim Van Heest to fill will be the second midfield line and the crucial goalie position.

High scoring juniors Don Williams of Wayzata, Mn. and Gale Easton of Jackson will be pursuing club founder Bob Klein's alltime scoring records. Easton led the team in scoring last spring with 23 points (18 goals and five assists) while Williams had 13 goals and three assists for 16 points.

Easton and Williams rank third and fourth on the alltime scoring list with 32 and 31 points respec-tively. The alltime record is 51 points by Klein from 1974-76.

ACROSS 1. Victim

5. Ju te or hemp

10. Crazy: tUny

11. National League members

13. Hawaiian island

14. At full strength

16. Lying face-down

18. Man's name

19. Passageway

20. Helsinki native

21. Steeples

23. Section

24. "Take me to your —"

25. Slices

26. F rag ran t rootstock

27. Breaks down sentences

28. Boxer's "weopon"

29. Celestinl body

30. Capacity unit

32. Tidy

36. Valise

37. Rus i i an t ea

38. Deceived: slang

39. TicUnga

40. Planted 41. Canute wm

one

DOWN 1. Drop heavily

2. Bellow

3. Lovelorn nymph

4. And how!: 3 wds.

5. Tournament events

6. Incensed

7. I n f a n t

8. Greek letter

9. Get back

11. Ship's offi-cer

12. Spiritualistic get-togethers

15. Uni ts of force

Other r e t u rn ing players who were among the team's leading scorers last year are Helmus who netted 17 points and sophomore Henry Loudermilk of Norfolk, Va. who had 16 points.

Hope's Lacrosse Club is the product of the work of many individuals at the College, both students and administration. The idea came from former s tudent Bob Klein.

In the spring of 1973 Klein and other in te res ted s t uden t s sold light bulbs as a fund-raising project to purchase uniforms and support the team. With matching support from the College, the Club took to the field for the first time in the spring of 1973 and beat Albion College and the Notre Dame Jayvees enroute to a 2-3 record.

The Club's best season was in 1976 when they broke even at 6-6. Last season the Club made its first spring trip. A highlight of the 3-6 season was an overtime triumph over the Notre Dame varsity.

The regular season begins April 8 at Albion. Home games will be against Notre Dame JV (April 12), Purdue (April 15), Lake Forest (April 29) and Michigan Sta te (May 3).

C R O S S W O R D S

17.

20.

21. 22.

23.

24.

25.

27.

29.

31.

32.

33.

34.

36.

Auto acces-sories

Direct from the source Grave

Root vege-tables

Trims, as a budget

Bam attica

Bivouacked

Balanced

I r r i ta te by rubbing

Barge

Range

Chess piece

Otherwise

Overly

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 a 9

To" i r TT"

14" I T

IT" 17 • w

19 r i 20

zT" r i 23

ST" rw: 26" ^27

zi" J29 • j yr • on W s r P on W s r

35 P VT —i

sr s r | 43" r JT I

Tennis to be a contender Five r e tu rn ing l e t t e rmen and

what ve t e ran coach Lawrence "Doc" Green describes as the best group of freshman prospects in several years should help the Hope men's tennis team continue their drive toward becoming an MIAA contender again.

Green begins his 19th year as head coach. His teams have had only four losing MIAA seasons during that span while posting a 70-38 record against league foes. However , t h r ee of those losing campaigns have come during the past five years.

Las t spr ing the Dutchmen that

way back toward MIAA respect-•ilil

served notice that they are on the

ability by posting a 10-6 overall and 3-3 league dual meet record. They finished right in the middle of the seven- team MIAA pack. MIAA action starts April 8 against Alma.

Re tu rn ing l e t t e rmen include Mark Boelkins, a junior from Muskegon, Mich.; Nick Hodgman, a sophomore f rom Kalamazoo,

Pothole season in full swing

Mich.; John Neville, a sophmore f rom Frankl in , Mich.; Bruce VanderSchaaf , a junior from Westmont, 111.; and captain Greg Van Heest, a senior from Delmar, N.Y.

Van Heest tied for the best singles record last spring with a 14-6 mark while VanderSchaaf was 13-6, Neville 11-8 and Hodgman 8-9. Neville won the consolation championship in the first flight of the MIAA t o u r n a m e n t while VanderSchaaf was consolation champ in the sixth f l ight . The doubles team of Neville and Van Heest posted a 9-6 record.

"As many as half of our front line players could be freshmen," predicts Green.

F re shmen prospects on the re-season roster include Delwyn ozeman and Steve Elman, both

of Holland, Douglas Ruch of Zeeland and Mark S tevens of South Holland, 111. Rounding out the t en-member team is sopho-more Gordon Herwig of Fairlawn, N.J.

by Sidney Jay Lazarus Campus Digest News Service

Yes, winter is almost over, and spring is nearly here. But first, there s a little known season that falls between them; the season of potholes.

Some of the more historical, or hys ter ica l moments from this season include: -Richard Gaskill of Glenview, Illinois, who while driving to work one win te r ' s day fel t a sinking sensation. Result: two blown tires, two bent wheel r ims, a lost hubcap, and a bill for $191.14. -Boston Pa t ro lman William Mahoney and his 1,000 pound horse, who while patroll ing a pa thway in the city 's Public Gardens, found themselves in a 3 foot-by-3 foot crevasse. It took 20 men to extricate patrolman and his horse. -In Manhattan, city officials watch as claims briskly mount up against the city as a result of damaged roadways.

Help wanted Spor ts r e p o r t e r s are des-

perately needed to cover all of the Spring sports. It doesn't require a lot of time but one person can't do it all. Get involved. This is your paper, make of it what you will! Interested parties contact Karl, ext. 4757 now! Thank you.

After a frigid season of record snows, the nat ion 's potholes appear to be of record size and quan t i ty . The House of Repre-sentatives has already votea to spend $250 million to fill them.

Joseph Ewing, research director of t h e Transpor ta t ion Road In-format ion P rog ram in Washing-ton, estimates the grand number of potholes to be filled at 116.4 million.

Many wonder how Ewing arrived at such a number, and so he explained it: first, add the total tons of asphalt mix purchased by public works departments across the country; 6.4 million. Second, divide by the amount required to fill the ave rage pothole: 110 pounds.

The resulting figure is no more than an elaborate guess, of course. But by simple magic, Ewing estimates Americans will consume an extra $626 million of gas to swerve around the potholes.

Then the re ' s M a s s a c h u s e t t s Tuft University physics professor Jack Tessman, who, to win a local television station contest, calcu-lated the number of snowflakes to fall on Boston during February's snowstorms.

His formula: multiply the average snowfall depth (27 inches) by the area of Boston (43 square miles), then divide the result by the volume of an average snowflake (one-ten thousandth cubic inch).

Tessman's answer, 50 quadril-lion snowflakes, won nim a Tessman family portrait-in-snow.

IRC meeting scheduled S t u d e n t s i n t e r e s t ed in world

a f f a i r s a re invited to an In ter -national Relations Club meeting on Thursday, April 13, at 8 p.m. in the DeWi t t Facul ty Lounge. A student committee will be selected at t ha t t ime to plan fu tu re meetings of the Club.

The Hope IRC was established in 1946. P ro fes so r Met ta Ross, who taught history at Hope from 1926 to 1960, was instrumental in the formation of the club here. Hope faculty members who have served as advisors to the IRC are Dr . Paul Fr ied , Director of International Education, and Dr. Renze Hoeksema, Professor of Political Science.

All students are invited to the Thursday night meeting. Refresh-m e n t s will be se rved . S tuden t s who wish additional information may call extensions 3265 or 2170.

Faculty auction scheduled

The Alpha Phi Omega Service Fraternity will be sponsoring a Faculty Auction tonight, Friday, April 7, at 7:00 in the Kletz. No, we are not auctioning off profes-sors, but items the faculty have donated.

Some of these i tems are: an afternoon of sailing for four on a 30 foot yacht from Dr. Tharin, six dozen chocolate chip cookies from Joyce Lewis, a $10.00 gift certificate for two to Mr. Steak f rom Mr. S t eke t ee , and an a f t e rnoon of wa te r sk i ing from Vicki-Jo Van Hervelen.

Chaplain Hillegonds will be the auctioneer. The proceeds from the auction will go to the Community Action House. Hope to see you there!

i f

• people keep •

• telling you to

• quit smoking

I cigarettes

• don't listen . . .

they're

probably trying to

trick you

\ into

living /

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Old Crow Bar NOW O P E N

Friday & Saturday 8 p.m. - 2 a.m.

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