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$Ccci^ Queen's Coronation Thursday Night 7:30 p.m. Physics Math KuUdmt( anc OPE COLLEGE or OLLAND, MICHIGAN 78th ANNIVERSARY - 5 Hope College, Holland, Michigan October 15, 1965 Noted Chemist to Speak On Intellectual Structure MSA Conference Tomorrow Meeting Encourages Leaders DR. HAROLD G. CASSIDY "The Intellectual Structure of a College" is the title of the speech bcin^ presented on Tuesday, Oct. 19 at 10;30 a.m. in Dimnent Mem- orial chapel by Dr. Harold G. Gas- sidy. Dr. Cassidy, a distinguished chemist, professor and traveling lecturer, received his bachelor and master degrees from Oberlin col- lege and his Ph.D. in chemistry from Yale. After serving as an industrial chemist at William S. Merrel Pharmaceutical Company for three years, he served for one year as an acting instructor at Oberlin. From there. Dr. Cassidy look a teaching position at Yale where he has been since 1937. This past summer Dr. Cassidy led two seminars at Colorado col- lege in Colorado Springs which were attended by Dr. Phillip Crook from Hope's biology de- partment. The first seminar was concerned with the problems of Sludeut SeiKite Sldte Winners Are Announced The Student Senate held its elec- tions during the past two weeks to fill the vacancies for both dormitory representatives and Sen- ators-at-large. The students elected to repre- sent the dorms were: Sue Sonne- veldt, Mary Pat Russel, Jane Fieshour, and Sherry Weichman, Phelps; Laura Kupfrain and Bar- bara Timmer. Voorhees; Bob Thompson. Arcadian; and Phil Rauwerdink, Fraternal. Dormitory Also elected were Mary Pelon and Joan Vedder, Durfee; Shirley Lavreuse. Van Vleck; Mary Ann Colenbrander, Columbia; Dick Engstrom, Knickerbocker; Menno Kraai, Emersonian; Joan Woeder- hoff and Carol Shepherd. Gilmore; Preston Maring, Neal Sobania. Dennis Alexander, Dennis Junis, and Rohn Ritzema, Kollen; Dirk Van Beek. Cosmopolitan. Senator-At-Large Those elected to fill the post of Senators-at-large were: Floyd Brady, Dennis Farmer, Dave Van- derwel, Richard Valantasis, Ruth Meyer. Mary Lynn Koop, Pierre Sende and David DeVelder. The new Senators will meet with the Senate some time this week for their first banquet. teaching science to non science majors and the second was in the area of the "Interconnectiveness of Science". Dr. Cassidy, whose main inter- est is in the closer relationship of the sciences and the arts, has written the book concerning this topic, "The Sciences and The Arts—A New Alliance" and is now in the process of writing a second book on the subject. Also accred- ited to Dr. Cassidy's publications are a chemistry text book, of which he was co-author and over 80 scientific papers. While on campus next week. Dr. Cassidy will attend a luncheon with students and faculty at 12:15 p.m. and present two afternoon lectures. The first, dealing with cybernetics (the science of birth control* will be held at 2 p.m. and will be geared for science majors. The second lecture will be presented to the chemistry staff and chemistry students at 4 p..m. p.m. Dean VanderLugt urges all stu- dents to attend Dr. Cassidy's Tues- day morning speech. He feels it will be "a vastly rewarding learn- ing experience." Menno Kraai accentuated a problem which has become increas- ingly prevalent as Hope grows larger and a dynamic new ap- proach to its solution in saying. "Hope College organizations have problems. They range from student apathy to weak organiza- tions and administration relation- ships; therefore we feel that the Student Leadership Conference will fill a need among Hope students which is not presently being ap- pealed to." Last year Kraai served as chair- man of the committee to study freshmen orientation in various colleges while a member of the National Student Assn., an advisory organization to student govern- ments on some 300 campuses throughout the country. Their findings indicated thai "most college organizations are supported by upperclassmen and new students have no way of be- coming involved in these activities. There is little communication be- tween prospective leaders and or- ganizations, thus the new student is unaware of campus politics^and leadership opportunities and organ- izations are unaware of new stu- dent abilities." i :v MUSIC RESOUNDS—The Arcadian Four of the 1940 , s will re-form and sing at the Kletz Concert. Ail Reformed Church ministers, they are left to right: Bill Miedema, Ken Leetsma, Warren Hietbrink and Boh Schuler. Kletz Concert Features Four Mystery Directors Next Friday evening the college band will present the First Hope College Kletz Concert at 8:30 p.m. in the Holland Civic Center. The celebrated group from the '40's. the Arcadian Four, will stage a comeback. The quartet con- sists of Bill Miedema (Long Beach. Calif.), Ken Leestma (Sheldon. Iowa), Warren Hietbrink (Chica- go! and Bob Schuler (Garden Grove, Calif.). Now all Reformed Church ministers, they will be stepping down from their pulpits to re-form their foursome. Ac- companied by Yvonne Ritsema, they will sing such tunes as "Climbin' Up The Mountain." "Tell Me Why" and "You Tell Me Your Dream." The Hope Band with Robert Ce- cil conducting will perform Bern- stein's "Overture to Candide" and Alford's "The Purple Carnival March" in addition to a medley from "The Sound of Music." A special feature during the con- cert will be a conducting contest of nonconductors. Four mystery conductors will do " unheard of things with a baton. Victor Paul Barrymore will conduct "Under- neath Old Smokey," James Van Carnegie, "The T-Shirt Blues," George Hemingway, "Good to the Last Drop" and Pierce Flambeau. "My Son the Apple." The esteemed judges for this contest have had varied and ample experience in court. The words to go with the music will be supplied by emcees Bill Cathcart and Pete Paulson. Admis- sion to this unusual event is $.50 for students, $.75 general, and the cost of admission includes coffee, cider and donuts. Our own Student Senate, recog- nizing the problem, appointed Kraai to head the Student Leadership Committee. Last summer this group sent questionaires to pro- spective freshmen students request- ing information concerning their experience and skills which could bo valuable to campus organiza- tions. This information will be available to the officers of those organizations which may want to personally invite these students to join their groups. Also, students who indicated an inclination toward leadership were invited to the Student Leadership Conference to be held on campus tomorrow, Oct. 16. The morning session will be de- voted to meetings between lead- ers from each of Hope's organiza- tions and faculty members, to talk out leadership problems and stu- dent grievances. Says Kraai. "It Ls well known that quite often ten- sions arise between organizations and the administration, which, if not resolved, grow out of all pro- portion to their real sigmficane. In order to break down some of the barriers we would like to bring debatable items into the open in an informal atmosphere." New students will sit in on these discussions to acquaint themselves with campus organization prob- lems, although they will not par- ticipate. A noon banquet will follow with an address by Rev. Hillegonds on "Purpose and Involvement." An afternoon program will fol- low with a series of discussion groups in which the new students will take the lead by asking ques- tions. expressing their ideas and finding out what membership in each organization entails. Student Senate president, Wes Michaelson. expressed his concern that "too often new students stay out of organizations from which both they- and the school could have benefited tremendously; therefore, the Senate hopes that this unique new approach to stu- dent orientation will assure them of their welcome in campus grouns and lead to a better integrated student body." Turn of the Century' Flares Annual Homecoming Fanfare Centering around the theme "Turn of the Century," Homecom- ing 1965 will commemorate Hope's Centennial year with some tradi- tional and some new activities. The theme will hi' carried out on house decorations and floats with special emphasis on the turn of the last century. The weekend schedule will begin Oct. 21 with the coronation of the queen, which will be held under the arcade of the Physics-Math Build-, ing. The ceremony will begin at 7:30 p.m. The court will consist of eight girls, two from each class. The members of the court are chosen from eight nominees by class vote the week before homecoming. The queen is chosen from the court by a general student elec- tion the week of homecoming. Kletz Concert Is Friday Friday's activities will begin at 3 p.m. with a soccer game against Wheaton. At 4 p.m. and again at 8 p.m. house decoration will be judged. A new activity, the Kletz Con- cert. featuring the Hope College Band, will highlight Friday's ac- tivities. The band will present se- lections from the works of Leonard Bernstein and from the Broadway musical, "Sound of Music." Saturday's activities will begin with the parade of floats on Eighth Street at 10:30 a.m. when sorority and fraternity floats will be judged. At 11:30 a.m. the anchor in front of Graves Hall will be formally dedicated. The football game with Alma will begin at 2 p.m. Halftime activities will include presentation of the queen and her court and the an- nouncement of house decoration and float winners. Following the game there will be open house in all residences until 6 p.m. A Night in Arms The weekend will close with the homecoming ball at 8:30 p.m. in the Civic Center. The title of the ball will be "A Night in Arms," and will illustrate the theme for the week end. Tickets to the ball are $2 per couple. The Homecoming dance com- mittee urges students to support the dance which will feature a band and planned student enter- tainment during intermission. Those serving' as committee heads for Homecoming week end are as follows: general chairman, Dave Vanderwel and Thelma Leen- houts; chairmen of the parade. Shirley Van Raalte and Chuck Wal- voord; and chairmen of halftime and field decorations. Ginni Low- dermilk and Dave Heusinkveld. Also working on homecoming are: chairmen of coronation. Carol Witter and A1 Miedema; publicity. Ann Osbon and Sue Eenigenburg: election, Pam Reynold and Helen VerHoek; queen's float, GJen Gowens and Rick Rietveld; house decorations, Julie Postmus and Jeff Waldron. Opus Requests That Students Publish Works Opus, Hope's literary magazine, which each year publishes two issues of literature and art contri- buted by students, is making a plea to anyone who has poetry, short stories, sketches, critical re- views, original music, art or pho- tographs which he would like pub- lished to consider the Opus. This year critical reviews are being considered for the first time and also science projects. This year's Onus board, consists of Jenifer MiGilvray, Mary Hak- ken, Keith Tavlor, Bob Werge. Gordon Korstanee, Man' ^^s^n- baggers and chairman David Von Ins. Art works will be judeed bv John Killmaster. Contributions may be put in the Opus box in the Anchor office.

10-15-1965

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$ C c c i ^

Queen's Coronation

Thursday Night 7:30 p.m.

Physics Math KuUdmt( anc OPE COLLEGE

or OLLAND, MICHIGAN

78th ANNIVERSARY - 5 Hope College, Holland, Michigan October 15, 1965

Noted Chemist to Speak On Intellectual Structure

MSA Conference Tomorrow

Meeting Encourages Leaders

DR. HAROLD G. CASSIDY

" T h e In te l lec tua l S t r u c t u r e of a Col lege" is the t i t le of the speech bcin^ p re sen ted on Tuesday , Oct. 19 a t 10;30 a .m. in D i m n e n t Mem-orial chape l by Dr . Harold G. Gas-sidy.

Dr. Cass idy , a d i s t ingu i shed chemis t , p ro fe s so r and t r ave l ing l ec tu re r , r ece ived his bache lor and m a s t e r deg ree s f rom Oberl in col-

lege and his P h . D . in c h e m i s t r y f rom Y a l e . Af te r s e rv ing as an indus t r i a l c h e m i s t at Wil l iam S. Merre l P h a r m a c e u t i c a l Company for t h r e e yea r s , he se rved for one y e a r a s an ac t ing ins t ruc tor a t Oberl in. F r o m t h e r e . Dr . Cassidy look a t each ing posi t ion a t Yale w h e r e he has been s ince 1937.

This p a s t s u m m e r Dr . Cass idy led two s e m i n a r s at Colorado col-lege in Colorado Spr ings which we re a t t ended by Dr . Phil l ip Crook f r o m Hope ' s biology de-p a r t m e n t . T h e f irst s e m i n a r was conce rned with the p r o b l e m s of

Sludeut SeiKite

Sldte Winners

Are Announced The S tuden t Sena t e held its elec-

tions du r ing the past two weeks to fill t h e v a c a n c i e s for both d o r m i t o r y r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s and Sen-a to r s -a t - l a rge .

The s t u d e n t s e lec ted to repre-sent the d o r m s w e r e : Sue Sonne-veldt , M a r y P a t Russe l , J a n e F i e s h o u r , and S h e r r y W e i c h m a n , P h e l p s ; Lau ra K u p f r a i n and Bar-ba ra T i m m e r . V o o r h e e s ; Bob Thompson . A r c a d i a n ; and Ph i l

Rauwerd ink , F r a t e r n a l .

Dormitory

Also e lec ted w e r e M a r y Pe lon

and J o a n Vedder , D u r f e e ; Shir ley L a v r e u s e . Van Vleck; Mary Ann C o l e n b r a n d e r , C o l u m b i a ; Dick E n g s t r o m , Kn icke rbocker ; Menno

Kraa i , E m e r s o n i a n ; J o a n Woeder-hoff and Carol Shephe rd . G i l m o r e ; P r e s t o n Maring, N e a l Soban ia . Dennis A l e x a n d e r , Dennis J u n i s ,

and Rohn R i t zema , Kollen; Dirk Van Beek . Cosmopol i tan .

Senator-At-Large

Those e lec ted to fill the post of S e n a t o r s - a t - l a r g e w e r e : F loyd B r a d y , Dennis F a r m e r , Dave Van-de rwe l , R i c h a r d Va lan t a s i s , R u t h Meyer . M a r y Lynn Koop, P i e r r e Sende and Dav id DeVelde r .

T h e new Sena to r s will m e e t with the S e n a t e s o m e t ime this week for t h e i r f i rs t b a n q u e t .

t e ach ing sc i ence to non sc i ence m a j o r s and the second was in the

a r e a of the " I n t e r c o n n e c t i v e n e s s of S c i e n c e " .

Dr . Cas s idy , whose ma in inter-es t is in t h e c loser re la t ionship of the sc i ences and the a r t s , has wr i t ten t h e book c o n c e r n i n g this topic, " T h e Sc iences a n d The Arts—A New Al l i ance" and is now in the p r o c e s s of wr i t ing a second

book on the sub jec t . Also acc red-ited to Dr . C a s s i d y ' s publ ica t ions a r e a c h e m i s t r y text book, of which he was co-author and over 80 sc ien t i f ic p a p e r s .

While on c a m p u s nex t week . Dr . Cass idy will a t t e n d a luncheon with s t u d e n t s and facu l ty at 12:15 p .m . a n d p re sen t two a f t e r n o o n l e c t u r e s . T h e f i rs t , dea l ing with c y b e r n e t i c s ( the sc ience of b i r th control* will be held a t 2 p .m .

and will be g e a r e d for sc ience m a j o r s . The second l e c tu r e will be p r e s e n t e d to the c h e m i s t r y s taff and c h e m i s t r y s tuden t s a t 4 p . .m. p . m .

Dean V a n d e r L u g t u r g e s all stu-den t s to a t t e n d Dr. C a s s i d y ' s Tues-day m o r n i n g speech . He fee l s it will be " a va s t l y r e w a r d i n g learn-ing e x p e r i e n c e . "

Menno Kraa i a c c e n t u a t e d a

p rob lem which has b e c o m e increas-

ingly p r e v a l e n t a s Hope g rows

l a rge r and a d y n a m i c new ap-

proach to its solution in say ing .

"Hope College o rgan iza t ions

have p r o b l e m s . They r a n g e f r o m

s tudent apa thy to weak organ iza-

t ions and admin i s t r a t i on re la t ion-

ships; t h e r e f o r e we feel tha t the

Student Leade r sh ip Confe rence will

fill a need among Hope s tuden t s

which is not p resen t ly being ap-

pealed t o . "

Las t y e a r Kraa i s e rved a s cha i r -

m a n of the c o m m i t t e e to s tudy

f r e s h m e n or ien ta t ion in va r ious

col leges while a m e m b e r of the

National Student Assn. , an adv i sory

organiza t ion to s tuden t govern-

m e n t s on some 300 c a m p u s e s

throughout the coun t ry .

Thei r f indings indicated t h a i

" m o s t college o rgan iza t ions a r e

suppor ted by u p p e r c l a s s m e n and

new s tuden t s h a v e no way of be-

coming involved in these act iv i t ies .

T h e r e is little c o m m u n i c a t i o n be-

tween prospec t ive l eade r s and or-

ganiza t ions , thus the new s tudent

is u n a w a r e of c a m p u s poli t ics^and

l eade r sh ip oppor tuni t ies and organ-

izat ions a r e u n a w a r e of new stu-

dent ab i l i t i es . "

i:v

MUSIC RESOUNDS—The Arcadian Four of the 1940,s will re-form

and sing at the Kletz Concert. Ail Reformed Church ministers, they

are left to right: Bill Miedema, Ken Leetsma, Warren Hietbrink and

Boh Schuler.

Kletz Concert Features Four Mystery Directors

N e x t F r i d a y even ing the college band will p resen t the F i r s t Hope College Kletz Concer t at 8:30 p .m . in the Hol land Civic Cen te r .

The c e l e b r a t e d g r o u p f r o m the '40's. the A r c a d i a n Four , will s t age a c o m e b a c k . The q u a r t e t con-s is ts of Bill M i e d e m a (Long Beach . Cal i f . ) , K e n L e e s t m a (She ldon . Iowa) , W a r r e n Hie tb r ink (Chica-go! and Bob Schuler (Garden

Grove , Cal i f . ) . Now all R e f o r m e d Church min i s t e r s , they will be s tepping down f r o m t h e i r pulpits to r e - fo rm the i r f o u r s o m e . Ac-c o m p a n i e d by Yvonne R i t s e m a , they will s ing such tunes as

" C l i m b i n ' U p The M o u n t a i n . " "Tel l Me W h y " and " Y o u Tell Me Your D r e a m . "

The Hope Band wi th Rober t Ce-cil c o n d u c t i n g will p e r f o r m Bern-s te in ' s " O v e r t u r e to C a n d i d e " and

Al fo rd ' s " T h e P u r p l e Ca rn iva l

M a r c h " in add i t ion to a med ley f rom " T h e Sound of Mus i c . "

A specia l f e a t u r e dur ing the con-cer t will be a conduc t ing contes t of nonconductors . F o u r m y s t e r y

conduc to r s will do " unhea rd of

th ings with a ba ton . Victor P a u l

B a r r y m o r e will conduct "Unde r -

nea th Old S m o k e y , " J a m e s Van

Carnegie , " T h e T-Shirt B lues , "

George Hemingway , "Good to the

Last D r o p " and P i e r c e F l a m b e a u .

" M y Son the Apple . " T h e e s t e e m e d

judges for this contes t have had

var ied and a m p l e expe r i ence in cour t .

The words to go with the mus ic will be suppl ied by e m c e e s Bill

C a t h c a r t and P e t e Pau l son . Admis-

sion to this unusual event is $.50 for s tuden t s , $.75 gene ra l , and the

cost of admiss ion includes cof fee ,

c ider and donuts .

Our own Student Senate , recog-

nizing the p rob lem, appointed K r a a i

to head the Student L e a d e r s h i p Commi t t ee . Las t s u m m e r this

g roup sent ques t iona i res to pro-

spec t ive f r e s h m e n s tudents reques t -

ing in fo rmat ion concern ing their

expe r i ence and skills which could

bo va luab le to c a m p u s organiza-

tions. Th is in format ion will be

ava i l ab l e to the of f ice rs of those o rgan iza t ions which m a y wan t to

persona l ly invi te these s tuden t s to join their g roups .

Also, s tuden t s who indicated an

inclination toward l eade r sh ip we re

invited to the Student Leade r sh ip

Confe rence to be held on c a m p u s tomor row, Oct. 16.

The m o r n i n g session will be de-

voted to mee t i ngs be tween lead-

e r s f r o m each of Hope ' s organiza-

tions and facu l ty m e m b e r s , to talk

out l eade r sh ip p rob l ems and stu-

dent g r i e v a n c e s . Says K r a a i . " I t

Ls well known that qui te of ten ten-

sions a r i s e be tween organiza t ions

and the admin i s t r a t i on , which, if not resolved, grow out of all pro-

portion to their real s igmf icane .

In o rde r to b r e a k down s o m e of

the b a r r i e r s we would like to b r ing

d e b a t a b l e i t ems into the open in

an in fo rma l a t m o s p h e r e . "

New s tuden t s will sit in on these

d iscuss ions to acqua in t t h e m s e l v e s

with c a m p u s organiza t ion prob-

lems, a l though they will not par -

t icipate. A noon banquet will follow

with an a d d r e s s by Rev. Hil legonds

on " P u r p o s e and I n v o l v e m e n t . "

An a f t e rnoon p r o g r a m will fol-

low with a s e r i e s of discussion

groups in which the new s tuden t s

will t a k e the lead by asking ques-

tions. exp re s s ing their ideas and

finding out wha t m e m b e r s h i p in each o rgan iza t ion entai ls .

Student Sena te pres ident , Wes

Michaelson. exp res sed his concern

that " too often new s tuden t s s tay

out of o rgan iza t ions f rom which

both they- and the school could

h a v e benef i ted t r e m e n d o u s l y ;

t he re fo re , the Sena t e hopes tha t this un ique new app roach to stu-dent o r i e n t a t i o n will a s s u r e t hem of their w e l c o m e in c a m p u s g r o u n s

and lead to a bet ter i n t eg ra t ed s tudent body . "

Turn of the Century' Flares

Annual Homecoming Fanfare Cente r ing a round the t h e m e

" T u r n of the C e n t u r y , " Homecom-

ing 1965 will c o m m e m o r a t e Hope 's

Centennia l y e a r with some t radi-

tional and s o m e new act iv i t ies .

The t h e m e will hi' c a r r i ed out on

house deco ra t ions and f loa ts with

special e m p h a s i s on the tu rn of the last c en tu ry .

The weekend schedu le will begin

Oct. 21 with t h e coronat ion of the queen, which will be held unde r the

a r c a d e of the Phys ics -Math Build-,

ing. T h e c e r e m o n y will begin at 7:30 p .m .

The court will consist of eight gi r ls , two f r o m each c lass . The

m e m b e r s of the court a r e chosen

f rom eight nominees by class

vote the week before homecoming .

The queen is chosen f r o m the

court by a gene ra l s tuden t elec-tion the week of h o m e c o m i n g .

Kletz Concert Is Friday

F r i d a y ' s ac t iv i t ies will begin at

3 p .m. with a soccer g a m e agains t

Wheaton. At 4 p .m. and aga in at 8

p .m. house decora t ion will be judged .

A new act ivi ty , t he Kletz Con-

cer t . f e a tu r i ng the Hope College

Band, will highlight F r i d a y ' s ac-

t ivi t ies. The band will p r e s e n t se-

lections f rom the works of L e o n a r d

Berns te in and f rom the B r o a d w a y mus ica l , "Sound of M u s i c . "

S a t u r d a y ' s ac t iv i t ies will begin

with the p a r a d e of f loats on Eighth

Street a t 10:30 a .m. when soror i ty

and f r a t e r n i t y f loats will be judged .

At 11:30 a .m. the anchor in f ront

of G r a v e s Hall will be f o r m a l l y ded ica ted .

The football g a m e with A l m a will

begin a t 2 p .m. H a l f t i m e act iv i t ies

will include presen ta t ion of the

queen and he r court and t h e an-

nouncemen t of house decora t ion

and f loat winners . Fol lowing the

g a m e the r e will be open house in all r e s idences until 6 p . m .

A Night in Arms

The weekend will close wi th the

h o m e c o m i n g bal l at 8:30 p . m . in

the Civic Cente r . The title of the

ball will be "A Night in A r m s , "

and will i l lus t ra te the t h e m e for

the week end. T icke t s to the ball a r e $2 per couple.

The H o m e c o m i n g d a n c e com-

mi t t ee u rges s t u d e n t s to suppor t

the d a n c e which will f e a t u r e a

band and p lanned s tudent en ter -

t a inment dur ing in termiss ion.

Those s e r v i n g ' as c o m m i t t e e

heads for Homecoming week end a r e as fol lows: genera l c h a i r m a n ,

Dave Vanderwe l and The lma Leen-

houts; c h a i r m e n of the p a r a d e .

Shirley Van R a a l t e and Chuck Wal-

voord; and c h a i r m e n of h a l f t i m e and field d e c o r a t i o n s . Ginni Low-dermi lk and D a v e Heus inkveld .

Also work ing on h o m e c o m i n g

a r e : c h a i r m e n of coronat ion . Carol Witter and A1 M i e d e m a ; publici ty .

Ann Osbon and Sue E e n i g e n b u r g :

election, P a m Reynold and Helen

VerHoek; queen ' s f loat , GJen

Gowens and Rick Rietveld; house

decora t ions , Ju l i e P o s t m u s and Je f f Waldron .

Opus Requests

That Students

Publish Works Opus, H o p e ' s l i t e r a ry m a g a z i n e ,

which e a c h y e a r pub l i shes two issues of l i t e r a tu r e and ar t con t r i -buted by s t u d e n t s , is m a k i n g a plea to a n y o n e who has poe t ry , short s to r ies , ske tches , c r i t i ca l re-views, or ig inal music , a r t or pho-

tog raphs which he would like pub-lished to cons ide r the Opus. This y e a r c r i t i ca l r ev iews a r e be ing cons ide red for the first t i m e and also sc i ence p r o j e c t s .

This y e a r ' s Onus b o a r d , cons i s t s of J e n i f e r MiGi lvray , M a r y Hak-ken, Ke i th Tav lo r , Bob W e r g e . Gordon K o r s t a n e e , M a n ' ^ ^ s ^ n -

b a g g e r s and c h a i r m a n David Von Ins. Art works will be j u d e e d bv J o h n K i l l m a s t e r . Cont r ibu t ions m a y b e put in the Opus box in the Anchor o f f i c e .

Page 2: 10-15-1965

Page t Hope College anchor October 15, 19(m

An Historical View

Phelps Strengthens College

I N T E N S E OBvSERVATION—Margo Naber ponders an exhibit of

jewelry and blown glass at the Fine Arts Show in the Van Zoeren

Library.

Art Department Presents Original Works Exhibit

The Hope College Art Depar t -

ment facul ty has begun its year ly se r ies of shows at Van Zoeren L i b r a r y with an exhibition of its own works. E x a m p l e s on display

include c rea t ive express ion in m e d i a ranging f rom blown glass to

w a t e r color and oil painting. Oct. 3 the m e m b e r s of the de-

p a r t m e n t opened the show with a reception for facul ty , s tudents and

townspeople. Phill ip Homes, chair-

man of the d e p a r t m e n t , and in-s t ruc to r s Delbert Michel and Don-

ald Rahl ick offered informal dis-cussions of their contr ibut ions.

Open to s tudents and facul ty dur-

ing this month , the exhibi t in-

cludes ce ramics , sculpture, jewel-ry, blown glass and oil paint ings .

Mr. Michel ' s work is p r imar i ly

represen ted by landscape paint ing in both oil and polymer paints , and Mr. Rah l i ck ' s work is compr i sed of an etching, a l i thograph and

water colors. The ar t d e p a r t m e n t plans month-

ly exhibi ts present ing s ignif icant

works by c o n t e m p o r a r y a r t i s t s ,

shows f rom m u s e u m s and p r iva t e collections, including works by the

m a s t e r s and an exhibition of con-t e m p o r a r y J a p a n e s e a r t . Mr. Michel also r epo r t s that the re will be a display of s tudent endeavors ,

with possible prizes.

By Joyce Pollitt

"I felt in my hear t that I was

called of God to the work; and under that conviction I went ,

whether to fa i lure or success I did not know." This was exempl-ary of the faith and de te rmina-

tion of Reverend Philip Phelps , when he es tabl ished Hope a s a college one hundred yea r s ago.

At eighteen yea r s of age he had g radua ted f rom Union College at

Schenectedy. N.Y. with the honors of the Latin Saluatory and of Phi Beta Kappa .

He suf fe red ill hea l th for several months , but as w a s so cha rac t e r -

istic of this man . he chose to m a k e this a t ime to deepen his Chris t ian views on life. He always m a d e the

most out of every si tuation. In 1859 Dr. Phelps accepted the

positions of both miss ionary pas tor

in the communi ty of Holland and principal at the Holland Academy.

Offer College Courses

He began to offer college level

courses at this young school. A college was . in e f fec t , being born.

The s tudents were inspired by this giant of a personal i ty .

Buildings began to appear , such as a g y m n a s i u m , which was built

chiefly by the s tudents themse lves according to plans developed by

their pr incipal . Eleven thousand feet of lumber were felled by the hands of these e a g e r youths.

On May 14, 1866. eight s tuden t s

g radua ted f rom the school which had been functioning on a college level for four years . On tha t da t e

this school b e c a m e incorporated as Hope College.

Dr. Phelps , principal of the Hol-

land Academy, now b e c a m e the first p r e s i d e n t of Hope College. Much t e a c h i n g fell on his should-ers , as his staff was small in num-ber. Many t imes Dr. Phelps turned

over a portion of his sa la ry to this

new college. P ro fessor Shields said of his

fr iend, " H e lived very close to the

Mas te r he rejoiced in serving. All tha t he had and was he g a v e to Hope College because it was of the

Church and the Church w a s of

God ." During this period Dr. Phe lps

was also busy organiz ing and serv-

ing as pas tor of the first Engl ish-speak ing church in Holland, which

today is Hope Church. In 1864 he received his Doctor

of Divinity degree f rom the Uni-

versi ty of New York and that s a m e year presided over the Genera l Synod of the Reformed Church as

its pres ident . The f i rs t g r adua t ing c l a s s of

Hope College presen ted a pet i t ion.

DR. PHILIP PHELPS

said to be somewha t encouraged by their pres ident , to study theol-

ogy at t he college. Thus w a s laid

the foundation of Western Theolog-

ical Semina ry .

Mindful of the social act ivi t ies of the s tudents . Dr. Phelps fo rmed

a l i te rary society on the c a m p u s

called the F r a t e r n a l Society, re-ceiving its a rch ives f rom his a l m a m a t e r . Union College. Schenec tady .

N Y . The mis s iona ry spirit of Dr.

Phelps is por t rayed in his relation-ship with a young J a p a n e s e stu-

dent who lacked funds but pos-

sessed a real des i re for an educa-

tion. Dr. Phelps had met this lad in

New York and brought him to

Hoik* College and personal ly saw that he received support and his

educat ional goal. The young m a n

was conver ted before he left for his homeland . Soon other J a p a n e s e s tudents c a m e to s tudy at Hope,

m a n y re turn ing home as Chris t ian min is te r s .

Her i t age Had a person of less e n d u r a n c e

and foresight been placed in t h ' s s a m e position. Hope College would

probably not be in exis tence today This school r e m a i n s a memor i a l

to the e n t h u s i a s m and devotion of Dr. Phi l ip Phelps .

S l id M ' w v E. Dosker . " I n what -ever sphere he may have excel led,

in wha teve r capac i ty he m a y have been loved, to us he will ever re-main 'Hope ' s first P r e s i d e n t . ' "

Career in ( \ To He Di scusscd At lwoj)p Oct. 25

In obse rvance of United Nat ions Day. Oct. 24. J a n e Weidlund of

the In ternat ional Secre ta r i a t of the

UN will speak informal ly about

c a r e e r s in the UN at a recept ion open to s tudents and facul ty at

the Alumni House at 9 p .m. Miss

Weiduund will also speak Oct. 25 in G r a v e s Auditor ium at 4 p . m .

on the topic of technical a ss i s t ance and special funds of the UN.

Miss Weidlund joined the UN

staff a f t e r g radua t ing f rom Barn-

ard College and the Universi ty of Michigan.

As a m e m b e r of the UN technical a s s i s t ance board . Miss Weidlund

has t rave led in Tangany ika . Ken-ya . U g a n d a . Zanzibar . Rhodesia

and Nyasa l and . At the t ime of her

appo in tment she was one of t h ree women and the only Amer ican wo-

m a n holding such a represen ta t ion-al position.

VanderWerf Is Board Di rector Of Research Corp.

Pres iden t Calvin VanderWerf

has been e lected to the boa rd of d i rec to r s of T h e R e s e a r c h Corp. , New York, an organizat ion which suppor t s through g r a n t s

l iberal a r t s colleges and smal l e r univers i t ies in r e s e a r c h p ro jec t s in the na tu ra l sciences .

P res iden t VanderWerf c a m e to Hope College two yea r s ago as a nat ional ly known chemis t , the

author of a chemis t ry textbook and seve ra l scientif ic a r t ic les .

J. William Hinkley, p res ident of the R e s e a r c h Corp. . extendod t h e offer to P r e s i d e n t V a n d e r W e r f , ef-fec t ive J u n e 28. 1965. He r e s o o n d e d by s t a t ing that he was "deep ly

honored by the invitat ion, delight-

ed to accept , and en thus ias t ic about joining the board in under-

taking the s ignif icant responsibil-ities with which it is e n t r u s t e d . "

MODEL LAUNDRY LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING

Daily Stop at All Dorms

9 7 East 8th Street Phone EX 1 - 3 6 3 5

THE GLATZ ETEN House Restaurant

Luncheons — Dinners (No Alcoholic Beverage* Served — lust Good Food)

14 Varied Noon Day Specials Everyday

A t $1.00 or Lest — You Can't Miss

Your Hosts: JOAN & HARRY GLATZ

(Former Owner* and Operator* of "GLATZ RESTAURANT"

Family Style Dinners Served Take Out Service Available on A l l Menu Items

We We/come Small Private Parties

THE SIZZLER Grilled Lean Tender Rib-Eye Stea!-: $1.45

(Include*) Hot roll & butler, choice oi potatoe*. crisp qre tn lettuce sa lad , and co i iee or tea .

OPEN EVERYDAY EXCEPT M O N D A Y

The Glatz Eten House HOLLAND

"Across The Bridge" — Telephone EX 6-8266

AND YET, N O ONE SHOULD TAKE THE ADVICE

TO G O OUT AND BECOME AN EXISTENTIALIST.

KIERKEGAARD, THE PIONEER, NEVER AIMED TO

BE A N EXISTENTIALIST. HE JUST TRIED TO BE

A N HONEST M A N . A N D THAT IS A G O O D

IDEA FOR EVERYONE.

Roger Shinn, in

The Existentialist Posture

Hope Church

DIMNENT MEMORIAL CHAPEL

SUNDAY

11 :00 A. M.

meet

n s

at the

ambassador

s l , w P — today

MEENGS & DEBOER Standard Oil Products

STANDARD

1 6 t h a n d River

EX 2 - 3 3 5 3

a

"t

Page 3: 10-15-1965

October 15t IMS Hope College aackor Page 3

Our Man in E u r o p e

Dutch Are Not Stilted By Bob Donia

AMSTERDAM. The Ne the r l ands — J u s t one hundred y e a r s ago, th is g r e a t a c a d e m i c institution was founded by conscientious Dutch se t t l e r s who had recent ly a r r ived " f r o m ze olt coun t ry . " Being qu i te R e f o r m e d and e x t r e m e ly Dutch, and for most of my life thinking those two words were synonymous ,

this wri ter has a lways been inter-es ted in what those Dutch se t t l e r s left behind.

A related question, p e r h a p s m o r e impor tan t , is just how suc-cessful they were in t r anspor t ing

thei r cul ture ac ross the Atlantic. How. in fact , does the Dutch t rad i -tion as understood at Hope College

c o m p a r e to the real th ing as p r a c -ticed in the Ne ther lands today?

These a r e impor tan t questions, not easily answered , but a few

d a y s spent in A m s t e r d a m recent ly g a v e this wr i te r some inkling as

to what the answers m a y be. P e r -haps it is best if the impress ions I received speak for themselves .

The Real Holland A m s t e r d a m is a city of many-

cana l s , mos t of which add to the t r a f f i c problem but a lso beau t i fy

the city, dozens of original R e m -

b r a n d t ' s and one of the g rea te s t concent ra t ions of b a r s you'll f ind

anywhere . The sixty-miles of can-

als a re sai led by no less t h a n s ix ty four boats f r o m eight dif-f e r e n t dol lar-hungry compan ies

se rv ing the four million visitors a

y e a r — four t imes the populat ion of the city.

Within the city a r e two hundred churches . Sunday morn ing in Am-

s t e r d a m is about as act ive a s Sunday morn ing on the moon . Eve ryone e i ther s leeps in or goes

to church — at this point at l eas t , our fo re fa the r s successful ly im-por ted a Dutch cus tom to Hope.

One source e s t ima te s the re a r e th i r ty religions in the city, evident-

ly not including those who s leep

in, which would m a k e , thirty-one. T h e r e a r e sixteen political p a r -

ties. The m a y o r is a Socialist. He modes t ly r e f u s e s to l ive in his af-

f luent 32-room official res idence, p r e f e r r i ng a home on another p a r t of the city. Whether this is be-

c a u s e he is a Socialist or Dutch is not c lear to the touris t just pas-s ing through.

A Drinking Problem Too

Although possessing no s ta t is t ics to support his s t a t emen t , it a p p e a r s

to this wr i t e r tha t t he re a r e m o r e b a r s per block on the a v e r a g e t h a n in any other European cap i t a l

visi ted. T h e r e is still a large , gen-uine sa i lor ' s section possess ing all

those things which one c h a r a c t e r -is t ical ly f inds in a genuine sa i lo r ' s section.

- " B e e r and dr inks a r e r e m a r k a b l y cheap , which was apprec ia ted by U.S. Navy personnel who were in p o r t during this wr i t e r ' s so journ .

In general , it can be said tha t a hea l thy spiri t of good fun p reva i l s

throughout the ci ty 's var ious cen-

t e r s of e n t e r t a i n m e n t and diver-sion.

One in t res t ing sidelight on Am-

s t e r d a m is the world-famous "Can-al S t ree t " where both visi tors and na t ives can go "window shopp ing"

a n d , as a m a t t e r of fac t , they o f t en do.

It s eems that at some points at least our Dutch f o r e f a t h e r s neglect-ed to import some of the m o r e s igni f icant aspec ts of Holland 's nat ional life. P e r h a p s it is too l a t e ; however , it might be worth-while to fo rm a commi t t ee and invest igate the possibilities.

True Culture

But this leaves still untouched the most r eward ing pa r t of m y visit to A m s t e r d a m . This is the

realization that three centur ies ago the grea t Dutch m a s t e r Rem-b r a n d t . painted and wande red the s a m e nar row s t ree t s and saw the

s a m e quaint , modest houses tha t one sees today.

Many of his f inest paint ings a r e on display at the National Museum,

including t h e f a m o u s "Night Watch . " the power of which s imp-

ly cannot be cap tu red in pr ints . Many of his ske tches and e tchings a re displayed at his f o r m e r home

in another par t of the city. No doubt t rue of m a n y pa in ters , but

it s e e m s especial ly of R e m b r a n d t ,

is that his intense psychological in-sight can be seen only in the

or iginal : it is a genuine thrill to see his works f i r s thand .

The mix ture of impress ions l is ted above hardly answer s the ques-t ions of wha t the Dutch t radi t ion is rea l ly like. Of one thing this wr i t e r has become convinced: the superf ic ia l idea of the " D u t c h

T rad i t i on" that we receive at Hope College is quite mis leading and the whole idea d e s e r v e s a good dea l of considerat ion by all of us.

Emphasis Good and Bad

To dismiss this t radit ion lightly as a useless relic of the pas t , good only for jus t i fying the erec t ion

of a tour is t -catching windmill , is to ignore some genuinely positive

contr ibut ions of the Dutch people. On the other hand, to tenaciously

hold to tradit ion as the only repre-sen ta t ive of God and the Old T ime Religion is equally unfa i r and un-real is t ic .

The need on our c a m p u s is for a cri t ical ly positive a t t i tude to-

ward that her i tage . Too often stu-den ts and s tudent leadership , h a v e

ignored the possible positive re-

sults of emphas iz ing the good as-pects of our her i tage .

TRIINITY REFORMED CHURCH Welcomes You

Morning Service a ; 9 : 0 0 A.M.

Evening Service at 7 :00 P.M.

Both services are temporarily being held in Dimnent Memorial Chapel

College-age Sunday School class conducted by Rev. Van Oos-fenburg immediately following morning service. (In Chapel basement).

College Youth Fellowship

Following 7 P.M. service

Rev. Gordon Van Oostenburg, Pastor

Rev. Wilbur Daniels, Associate Pastor

Everything For The Total Man LEVI'S STA-PREST * ARROW

PURITAN * WALES * ADLER

JANTZEN * BOSTONIAN

PENDLETON A MALE CASUAL

OF HOLLAND

(14-16 West Eighth Street)

USE YOUR COLLEGE CREDIT CARD

Twelfth and Pine

STUDENTS

you are invited to worship with us at

THE THIRD REFORMED CHURCH

3 blocks west of the chapel

Morning Worship — 10:00 a.m.

Post High Church School Class — 11:20 a.m.

Evening Worship — 7:00 p.rr..

Russell W. Vande Bunte, Minister Roger J. Rietberg, Organist-Director

IRC Panel Answers Questions On 'Why Travel Abroad?'

In te rna t iona l Rela t ions Club for its October meet ing las t Wednesday held a sympos ium on "Why T r a v e l A b r o a d ? "

Speaking on thei r va r i ed exper i -e n c e s of foreign s tudy were senior Rob Werge, who spent the s u m m e r

in Oslo, Norway: senior J a c k Schr ie r , who studied at the Ameri -can Univers i ty of Beirut , in Beirut , Lebanon; and Barb T i m m e r . f resh-

m a n . whose fami ly h a s lived in P a r i s for the past four y e a r s . Other sympos ium m e m b e r s were

senior Mary Hakken. who t rave led and studied with the Hope Vienna S u m m e r School and Miss Jud i th Wrhen. Hope G e r m a n d e p a r t m e n t

f acu l ty m e m b e r , who spent h e r junior yea r of unde rg radua t e work in F re ibu rg . G e r m a n y and se rved

as a d i rec tor for Ohio Wesleyan ' s s u m m e r p r o g r a m in Salzburg, Aus-t r i a .

Modera ted by Dr. Pau l Fr ied ,

c h a i r m a n of the his tory depar t -m e n t and sponsor for IRC, the sympos ium discussed m a t t e r s of

European versus Amer i can educa-

tion-, at s y s t e m s with respect to the ctegree of a c a d e m i c f r eedom, they disbv^ssed the f r eedom Ameri -

can s t u d e n t ^ have as s t r a n g e r s in a s t r a n g e community- and they dis-

cussed the inevitable problem of f inances .

Dr. F r ied s t ressed the fact tha t s ince fbreign study h a s become

" t h e thing to do ," s tudents seek-ing foreign study should check ca re fu l l y into details of p r o g r a m s

of fe red , especial ly as to c r e s t s , s tudy a r r a n g e m e n t s , housing, ex-

t ra t ravel a r r a n g e m e n t s and s ide expenses .

Miss Wrhen s t ressed the fact tha t

E u r o p e a n univers i t ies a r e often crowded, a s i tuat ion which study p r o g r a m s sponsored by U.S. uni-

versi t ies avoid. She also ment ioned tha t European univers i t ies a r e closed during the s u m m e r for reg-u l a r s tudy. " H o w e v e r , the Euro-

pean student has m o r e f r eedom to

s tudy what he des i res instead of wha t professors r equ i re for t e s t s , " she s ta ted .

J a c k Schrier advised s tudents to t ake advan tage of p r o g r a m s which involve pay ing r egu l a r fees to

home colleges for s tudy in foreign countr ies , as Hope's p r o g r a m s in Beirut . J a p a n and Bogata , Colum-bia .

Rob Werge s t ressed the person-al growth involved in foreign study

as Amer icans learn to see them-se lves f rom the E u r o p e a n point

of view. " A m e r i c a n s often real ize tha t they a re doing things they

would never do at home, or not doing things they thought they would do." he r e m a r k e d .

B a r b T i m m e r revea led that she found herself doing much thinking

about what it was to be an Amer-ican who didn' t know the language of the country in which she was

living. This p rompted her to t ake cou r ses at the Sorbonne, an ex-

pe r i ence she found to be " v e r y

exci t ing as well as cha l lenging ."

Summar iz ing the evening ' s dis-

cussion Dr. Fr ied reminded stu-

den ts that a t r ip to Eu rope is no longer a "once- in-a- l i fe t ime" op-

portuni ty. With the m a n y s tudent p lans and low-cost f l ights , as well

as scholarship and work possibil-

ities, t ravel to Eu rope is becoming increasingly popular .

Meet Y our Friends

Bring Your Date

To the

POCKET BM.LIARDS BILLIARDS - SNOOKER

SNACKS - SOFT DRINKS

M

Bring Your Date and Mention This ad and Play at

HALF PRICE

River Ave at 11 th St.

Above Reliable

Use Rear Entrance

FREE PARKING

EAT OUT OFTEN! Choice. of

Homemade Soup

or

Chilled Juice

Choice of

Chef's Solad, Jello

and Fruit Salad

or Cottage Cheese

GOLDEN BROWN

Southern Fried Chicken

# Whipped Potatoes with Gravy • Candied

Sweet Potatoes • Assorted Fresh Vegetables

• French Fried Onion Rings • French Fried

Mushrooms • Homemade Rolls and Blueberry

Muf f ins • Beverage • Dessert

* 2 1 5 (all you can eat)

Al l Meals Served Family Style

fiacdi^ ZEELAND

Page 4: 10-15-1965

Pafe 4 Hope College anchor October 15, 1^5

f

IS Women Nominated for Homecoming Queen

/ JEANNE FRISSEL RUTH MEYER ANITA AW AD CAROL BORST CINDY CLARK

t

\ SUE DAMPMAN SANDRA SCHAPER JACKIE NYBOER SUE BORST PHYLLIS PEACOCK

f

f SUE ALBERS

BONNEY MILLER

GILDA DAVIS

Sixteen Hope College women,

each c l a s s represented by four can-didates , have been nomina ted to

preside over the Homecoming

weekend ' s act ivi tes as queen and court .

When asked to c o m m e n t on the role of the Homecoming queen,

most of the cand ida t e s responded

that the woman chosen should be a responsible r ep re sen ta t ive of the

college and should enthusias t ica l ly

welcome re turn ing a lumni to the c a m p u s .

Voting for the queen and court

will De conducted Monday and Tuesday of next week. T h e queen

will be crowned in a special cere-mony and pep ral ly on Thursday night.

The sixteen cand ida tes for the Homecoming position a r e :

Twenty year old Anita Awad f rom Manila, Phi l ippines, heads

the list of senior candida tes . A Spanish m a j o r , Miss Awad is a chee r leader and a m e m b e r of

Alpha Phi sorori ty, and IRC, SEA

and the Spanish Club. She feels

tha t " t h e role of the Homecoming queen is that of being herse l f , a

s tudent and fr iend and one who c a r e s and in this m a n n e r repre-

sen t s h e r college 's c reed and stu-den t ' s ideal all through the y e a r

as well a s on Homecoming week-e n d . "

Nominee Carol Borst of Midland P a r k , N . J . is a 21 yea r old senior.

An Engl ish m a j o r . Miss Borst is a m e m b e r of Delta Ph i sorori ty

and act ively pa r t i c ipa te s in the Higher Horizons p r o g r a m .

Jeanne Frissel, 21 y e a r old Ger-

m a n m a j o r , is a senior f r o m Hol-

land, Mich. Miss Fr i sse l is a mem-ber of S igma Sigma soror i ty and G e r m a n club.

Biology m a j o r Ruth Meyer f r o m

Woodhaven, N.V. s ta ted tha t " T h e Homecoming queen is a represen-

ta t ive of the ent i re s tudent body to our visi tors and as such she should

convey to them the specia l spirit of Hope, through the w a r m t h of her personal i ty and c h a r a c t e r . "

The 21 y e a r old senior is a m e m -ber of Alpha Phi soror i ty and SCSC commi t t ee . She is a lso a Student

Senator a n d co -cha i rman of Mom and Dad ' s Day weekend .

Junior nominee Cindy Clark is a 20 y e a r old Engl ish m a j o r f r o m

E l m h u r s t , 111. She bel ieves " T h e

H o m e c o m i n g queen should feel

honored to represent the s tudent

body for the re tu rn ing a lumni and

she should do her best to m a k e the weekend a m e m o r a b l e one for

eve ryone involved." Miss Clark is a chee r l eade r . Young Life leader

and a m e m b e r of the WAA Board.

A social studies composi te m a j o r

f r o m Teaneck, N.J . , junior can-d ida te Sue Dampman feels "The

Homecoming queen should be an

ac t ive , well-rounded m e m b e r of the s tudent body. She should be a

r eo resen t ive of the c reed and ideals

of Hope: she should be p roud and happy to welcome back visiting

a l u m n i . " Sue is a m e m b e r of

Del ta Phi soror i ty and Higher Horizons.

J a c k i e Nyboer, a junior m a j o r -

ing in speech, is 20 y e a r s old. A

na t ive of Rockford, III., she is a m e m b e r of Delta Phi soror i ty . SEA, WAA Board and Young Life.

West Sayville, L. I., N.Y. is the

h o m e of 20 year old junior Sandra Schaper. Miss Schaper is vice

pres ident of Alpha Phi soror i ty , a

res ident advisor in Belt cot tage,

a m e m b e r of SCA and the execu-tive board of the junior class. Miss Schaper said of the role o^ the queen , " I think she should sym-bolize the a t t i tudes and the char-ac te r i s t i cs of the s tudent body she r ep re sen t s and should be chosen

on the basis of her 'all - round-ness . ' "

Sophomore Susan Borst f r o m Midland Park , . N . J . is m a j o r i n g in biology. The 18 year old Miss

Borst is a m e m b e r of Del ta P h i soror i ty and Higher Horizons.

T h e role of Homecoming queen should be " a n impor tan t p a r t of

the Homecoming t rad i t ion; the Homecoming queen should repre-

sent the best quali t ies of the wo-m e n on c a m p u s , " s ta ted 19 y e a r old Phyllis Peacock of Sag inaw, Mich. A sophomore G e r m a n m a -jor , Miss Peacock is a m e m b e r of S igma Sigma soror i ty and is

s e c r e t a r y of AWS Board .

Susan Albers, a 19 year old hum-ani t ies m a j o r f rom Saginaw, Mich,

c o m m e n t e d that " T h e Homecoming queen should r ep resen t t he spiri t of t h e s tudent body in welcoming

the a lumni and gues ts to the ac-t ivi t ies du r ing the Homecoming

weekend . " She is a m e m b e r of S igma Sigma sorori ty and secre-t a ry of AWS Activities Board .

Sophomore Engl ish m a j o r Linda Patterson is a 19 year old f rom

P a r k Ridge, 111. Miss Pa t t e r son is a m e m b e r of Del ta Phi sorori ty ,

the Milestone staff and P a l e t t e

and Masque for the Little Thea te r . Concerning the role of the queen, she commented tha t the "queen

should be a d iverse individual who is a very dist inct and beneficial pa r t of the c a m p u s . "

F r e s h m a n cand ida te Gilda Davis is pursuing a his tory m a j o r . The

18 year old f rom Char lo t te , N.C.

is present ly s e c r e t a r y of the fresh-m a n class and w a s a m o r a l e girl

in the pull. Miss Davis said " I feel

tha t the Homecoming queen should e x e m p l i f y the highest quali t ies .

She should be someone t h a t the s tuden t s would be proud to have a s their r e p r e s e n t a t i v e . "

Eighteen year old Pat Dykstra is a f r e s h m a n f rom Schenectady , N.Y. Miss Dykstra h a s par t ic ipa ted

as a f rosh mora le gir l , on the pull

d a n c e commi t tee , a s a m o d e l for the AWS style show, and is a m e m b e r of AWS. She c o m m e n t e d tha t "A H o m e c o m i n g queen , in my opinion should m o r e o r less be the ideal Hope college girl. She should r e p r e s e n t t he char -a c t e r . personal i ty and leadership o t h e r s on c a m p u s s t r ive f o r . "

Rosal ie Hudnut is a f r e s h m a n sociology m a j o r f r o m Lans ing ,

Mich. The 18 year old Miss Hudnut is co -cha i rman of t he f r e s h m a n f loat commi t t ee , a m e m b e r of WAA tennis , and a n Alpha schol-a r . "The Homecoming queen doesn ' t play a role on homecom-ing d a y ; being h o m e c o m i n g queen m e a n s tha t a g i r l has a l r e a d y p l ayed h e r role in an ac t i ve school life, that she e m b o d i e s those c h a r a c t e r i s t i c s wh ich her f r i e n d s mos t a d m i r e and appre-c i a t e . . . . It is a g r ea t h o n o r . "

Homecoming nominee Bonney Miller said " . . . I th ink the queen

should be the girl t h a t the s tuden t s

feel is the most dese rv ing b e c a u s e

of her contribution to the success and well being of the whole school . " Miss Miller, an 18 y e a r old f resh-m a n f r o m Wes te rn Spr ings , HI., is m a j o r i n g in religion. She is pres-

ently f r e s h m a n c lass t r e a s u r e r .

T h e queen and h e r court , a f t e r being announced T h u r s d a y night , will pa r t i c ipa te in the Homecoming

weekend ce remonies including the

p a r a d e and g a m e on Sa tu rday , Oct. 23.

i LINDA PATTERSON

PAT DYKSTRA

i ROSALIE HUDNUT

Page 5: 10-15-1965

October 15, 1965 Hope College anchor P a g e 5

Tanzanian Education

Editor's note: Werner Heine, assistant professor of German and geography instructor, spent last summer in the newly-independent East African nation of Tanzania. While there he studied agricultural projects, Tanzanian education and economic development. Mr. Heine had previously been in East Africa during 1934-1939.

By Werner Heine

Tanzan ia , a Fede ra l Republ ic since April 1964 'is compr i sed of the federa l s t a t e s of T a n g a n y i k a

and Zanzibar ." Tangany ika , inde-

pendent since December 1961, lies

just south of the equator , be tween the Indian Ocean and the g rea t

lakes of Central Afr ica, and has a

population of app rox ima te ly ten million. A m a j o r i t y of the 9.4 mil-lion a r e Af r i cans whose e s t i m a t e d annua l income is now s o m e t h i n g like $50 per cap i t a . The i r way of living d i f fe r s l i t t le f rom the way the i r f o r e f a t h e r s lived cen tu r i e s ago. The mor ta l i ty r a t e of chi ldren under two y e a r s is still 40 pe rcen t . Fi f ty percent of the people a r e i l l i terate . Subs is tence f a r m i n g Pis the p r e d o m i n a n t economy. T h e g o v e r n m e n t f a c e s a S i sphean pro-blem in its e n d e a v o r to develop the coun t ry , al though the l e ade r s d e s e r v e a d m i r a t i o n for their op-t imism. industry and ene rgy in taking e n o r m o u s pa ins to tackle thei r t a sk .

Four Major Deficiencies

T h e r e is ac tua l ly a lack of every-thing in a lmost all a r e a s in Tan-

zania. But fou r m a j o r f ie lds of

deficiency rank before all o thers ;

1. T h e educat ion.

2. The health improvemen t con-

cerning hygiene and the

f ight aga ins t t ropical d i seases

3. The development of the agri-

cul tura l f a r m i n g economy, for 85 per cent of the people de-pend on f a r m i n g . It is tne ef-fect ive d e m a n d for c o n s u m e r and producer goods which sets

the pace for the expansion of the non-agr icul tura l sec tors .

4. The building of a suff icient road sys tem.

The Ministry- of Educa t ion has given priori ty to the secondary

school level in the f irst T h r e e Year Plan f rom 1961 to 1964 and in the

F ive Yea r Development P l an f r o m 1964 to 1969 a s well.

T h e r e exist only 76 secondary schools in the Eas t Afr ican country

at p r e sen t ; 53 for boys and 23 for girls. For ty-four thousand gir ls ap-

plied for admiss ion to secondary schools this fall, but only 6000 vacanc ies a re avai lable . Thus the

supply of t e ache r s is f a r behind

for even this small n u m b e r of schools. But the e a g e r n e s s to learn

and the des i re for knowledge among the young Tanzan ians is str iking. M i s s i o n a r y schools

throughout the country do their

best to meet the i m m e n s e want for

t eachers . One Amer ican ment ioned .

"We have scheduled seve ra l sub-jec ts wi th no one to teach t h e m . " The supply of young Af r i cans

g radua t ing f rom the t e a c h e r t rain-ing school in the capital of Dar-es-

Sa l aam cannot mee t the d e m a n d of the upper p r i m a r y schools (f if th

to e ighth g rade . ) Three hundred

Amer ican P e a c e Corps workers , many of them in teaching positions,

help to fill the gap between de-mand and supply.

Evening schools, offer ing English

and Swahili for adults have been establ ished in the country by the

Ministry of Communi ty Develop-

ment . The enro l lment su rpas se s the expec ta t ions . English speaking people could hard ly be found in

the country twenty five y e a r s ago.

Now however, one m e e t s Af r i cans unders tand ing ei ther Engl ish or

Swahili . the Lingua F r a n c e ol Eas t Af r ica , in m a n y places .

New Universities T h r e e universi t ies were built in

the Eas t A f r i c a n countr ies dur ing

the last d e c a u e : the M a k r e r e Uni-vers i ty at Kampa la in Uganda , the Universi ty at Nairobi in Kenya,

and the University-College near

Dar-es -Sa laam in Tanzania . The la t te r lies amid beauti lul s cene ry about twelve miles above the

cap i ta l on hills exposed to a re-f resh ing breeze blowing f r o m tne

sea . Four hundred s tuden t s had enrolled last s e m e s t e r . The uni-

versity. will be expanded to a ca-pac i ty of probably 2000 s tudents .

Builuings and facil i t ies in the in-sti tution a re up to da t e and it re-

sembles Amer ican univers i t ies of the s a m e size. The s tudents live

in single rooms, the p rofessors in

nice cot tages . The United States and the United Kingdom a re fi-nancing the project . The ma jo r i ty

of the facul ty is British w t h some

Amer i cans and Scandinavians . American Students Welcome

The Tanzanian Minister of Edu-

cation would welcome Amer i can s tuden t s in teres ted in enrol l ing

at the Universi ty - College. Besides

the Law School, a medica l school

is aff i l ia ted with the Univers i ty and has twenty s tudents in its in-

itial course p rog ram. Until last

yea r , youngs te r s of Tanzania inter-es ted in medic ine had to a t tend the

M a k e r e r e Universi ty in Uganda .

Both Amer i can t e ache r s at sec-onda ry schools and P e a c e Corps

workers I ta lked with a r e enthus-ias t ic and in tensely ded ica ted to t h e i r work, which they consider the i r contr ibut ion to the fo rming of a be t te r unde r s t and ing among people.

The Changeling

The Loud Sound By Rob Werge

Harvey Bates , c a m p u s sage ,

with one ea r encased in a wrap-around radio (its an tenna a p p e a r e d

to go out his other ea r ) sa id , " B a c h

is not what is happening. I m e a n the poor deaf m a n was nice, but

he ' s defini tely 'out ' this s e m e s t e r . "

Alas and a lack! The c lass ica l

scene is not wha t it used to be. The spec ter of the Beach Boys

haun t s the mus ic d e p a r t m e n t . I t ' s

been seriously said tha t the concer t

Monday would have been upda ted

if the organis t had his hai r combed over his eyes or if a g roup had

been swaying back and for th in the choir loft chant ing softly-, "Ooblie,

oobile, ooblie, d ip . "

T i m e s a re a ' changing . T h e chan-

cel choir has repor tedly switched

its n a m e to The Windmills. A group

cal led the Vander Beat les is down in G r a v e s r e h e a r s i n g e thn ic tunes like " T h e r e But For P redes t i na -

tion Go You Or I " and " R e p e n t " (the R e f o r m e d answer to " H e l p " ) .

S tudents a r e r u m o u r e d to l isten to s t e r eos disguised as I n t e r m e d i -a te G e r m a n books and at least one

humani t i e s prof has a comple te

collection of The Animal s . I t ' s sp read ing ; s ince his operat ion,

L.B.J, has been elected a m e m b e r of t he Rolling Stones. (The Birch-

e r s h a v e t r a c e d the whole move-

ment to a demoral iza t ion plot by

the Viet Cong).

"If you decide to listen to the

new sound , " w a r n e d Mr . Ba tes ( ro ta t ing his head for be t te r re-

ception), " i t ' s impor tan t to sus-pend all belief, thought and judge-

ment (i t 's like reading a Slater menu for the f irst t ime) . You a r e

a s sumed into an ever -ever land of bright colors, ten cent angels and

constant d r u m m i n g . The mind

ceases to function and is suspend-ed somewhere between h e r e and Zeeland. It 's wha t ' s happenin . ' "

Of course the re is a violent clash when all of this is mass -b las ted

over the radio ( the idiot-box where you don ' t have to look at the idiot). Monday this old t i red body

awoke to hea r in quick succes-

sion: t he news that the Pres iden t had jus t signed 57 new bills (all

of t h e m giving money to people other than myse l f ) , " Y o u ' v e Got

Your Troubles , I 've Got Mine ," a deoderan t c o m m e r c i a l and the

P r a y e r for the Day. I had to skip th ree morn ing c lasses jus t to get

over the shock.

The c o m m e r c i a l s sound as if

they 've been shot f r o m cannons . Growing in audience appea l is the

adve r t i smen t for the " G r e a t e s t

Drag Strip in the Midwes t " (no, i t 's

not Eighth S t ree t ) . "See theraceof -

t heCENTURY. See " T h e Ki l ler ,"

" T h e Mons te r , " "The Mad Dog"

a l l inanexci t ingandwildcontes t for $300 (countit) $300 pr izemoney.

I sn ' t i t a g a s ? " The whole thing sounds as if it were wri t ten by a psychot ic drop-out.

* But the r eassur ing note for us s tuden t s (and the t e r m is used

somewha t loosely) will be to tu rn

on some Chicago s tat ion a f t e r s tudying th ree days for a final

in Advanced Aerodynamic-Molecu-lar Design III (a new a r t course)

and soothe your nerves with di t t ies like "Got ta Get Outta This P l a c e "

and "World War T h r e e Blues . " It puts every th ing into such a human-ly absurd perspect ive .

Fellini's 'La Strada' Shows Despair, Anguish

By John Elfring Editor's Note: "La Strada" can

be seen tonight, free of charge, at Western Michigan £ University, in Kalamazoo. The showings are at 6:30 p.m., 8:30 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. in Sangren Hall.

Many of the best of pos twar

European f i lms have deal t with the age-old problem of despa i r ,

loneliness and dis i l lusionment . And in a sense "La S t r a d a " p resen t s such a s t ruggle .

It is the story of a c i rcus per-

fo rmer . a s t rong man . who knows nothing but s t reng th . Zampano , played by Anthony Quinn, is a lone

wolf, t ravel l ing about Italy on a motorcycle- t ra i le r , hoping to find

places at which to p e r f o r m . In need of a helper and concu-

bine. he buys a s imple minded girl . Gelsomina . played by direct-

or Fel l ini ' s wife Guilietta Masina , and together they tour the country-side. She is at f i rst fearful of her newly " f o u n d " husband, but as

sorn a s her dut ies a r e expla ined

she becomes cheer fu l and helps him in his act .

Gelsomina Saves Show Z a m p a n o has only one act . T ime

and l ime again he b reaks a chain

looped around his chest through the s h e e r power of his lungs. Soon

that act becomes t i r ing and with-out appeal , but through Gelsom-

ina 's clowning the show is saved. Indeed, she becomes the rea l s t a r

of the ac t . It is in her helping that she im-

par t s her g r ea t humani ty . She rep resen t s that side of life which

Z a m p a n o lacks. Seldom in the his-

tory of the movies has an ac t r e s s so well conveyed this humani ty . To descr ibe the g r i m a c e s and con-

tortions of her face is indeed im-possible.

Half-Witted Fool She presents the pic ture of a

half-witted fool never the less cap-able of more unders tand ing than

anyone in the f i lm. Gelsomina is reminiscent of Chaplin at his best

and is pe rhaps the g rea tes t t ragi-comic ac t ress of all t ime.

But this humani ty of Gelsomina has a purpose only if it is needed

by the s t rong man . Slowly she begins to realize that Z a m p a n o

does not need her . But when she

does decide to run away, she real-izes tha t she needs her bru ta l

lover, and pe rhaps m o r e import-

JOHN ELFERING

ant, she begins to unders tand that he unknowingly needs her .

Finds Life's Meaning She finds that the search for

mean ing and the s t ruggle for life a r e comprehens ib le on.y in t e r m s

of the fusion of our lives with those we love and those who need us.

But Zampano r e m a i n s bound in his forever b reak ing chain. A pro-

fessional fool mocks his s imple

act . and not m u c h later Z a m p a n o inadver tent ly kills h i m. Tha t

happens tance is also a fatal blow to Gelsomina, s ince that Fool rep-

resented a d i f ferent form of Zam-pano.

Through the Fool she was able

to love the s t rong m a n . but with his dea th Z a m p a n o also dies for

her . And the m a n with the aging

chest also notices the d i f ference in Gelsomina. and with an impulse

that has m a d e his cha rac t e r , he

abandons her. as leep, in a war ruined house.

Gelsomina Dies

Gelsomina, left alone, dies of grief. Zampano upon hearing of

her death unders t ands for the f i rs t t ime in his life the agonizing t ru th

tha t he has killed his own h u m a n -ity.

Structural ly the film is p e r h a p s

not as sound as some of Fel l in i ' s

others. The at tention to detail is at t imes haphaza rd and ill chosen. But, a s has been said by m a n ,

through the charac te r iza t ions of

Gelsomina and Zampano, we can

be assured that here we have a fi lm which will outlast all of these

imperfect ions .

WTAS The Sound Media of Hope

presents

play by play action of the

Flying Dutch

Hope vs. Albion

pre-game 2:15

game time 2:30

Saturday, October 16

NIGHT IN ARMS Homecoming Dance Saturday, Oct. 23

8:30 - 12p.m. Civic Center

In Nearby SAUGATUCK It's

IL FORISO'S For the Best in Food and Dining Atmosphere

• famous pizza

• gourmet table

• banquet and party accommodations

OPEN YEAR 'ROUND

Just a Quick 15-Minute Hop Down 1-196

Page 6: 10-15-1965

Page 6 Hope College anebor 0€tol>er 15. 1965

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Page 7: 10-15-1965

October 15, 1965 Hope College anchor Pa^e 7

Phelps Hall 7a.m

l ) c a ^ i j o r d j 6 I c s s i h » s f o o j f o w y

k o ^ y a n c A - a n < ( - <\nd - f H c c e . \ \

o t + h c a m m a l K a s a C Y ^ o p l a s w u c

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r i b o s e r v e s 4 n < A - H v t w i + o t h o ^ n A

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a n d - a n d * o h ^ y € « . t \

W t o s k - f K i s a l l i n T T i y n a n t c /

M&l

Coming Events S A T U R D A Y . OCTOBER 16

Footba l l—Alb ion . A w a y . 2:00 p . m .

S t u d e n t S e n a t e L e a d e r s h i p Confer -

ence , 9 a . m . — 4:30 p .m.

T U E S D A Y , OCTOBER 19

All-college A s s e m b l y , P ro f . Ha ro ld

Cas s idy . chape l , 10:30 a . m .

THURSDAY. OCTOBER 21

Corona t ion of H o m e c o m i n g Q u e e n

A r c a d e of P h y s i c s Ma th Hal l ,

7:30 p . m .

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22

Socce r g a m e , Hope vs. Whea ton .

Van R a a l t e F ie ld

J u d g i n g of H o u s e D e c o r a t i o n s .

4-8 p . m .

Hope College Kletz Conce r t , C iv ic

C e n t e r , 8:30-10 p . m .

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23

Soro r i ty and F r a t e r n i t y B r e a k -

f a s t s and L u n c h e o n s

P a r a d e of F l o a t s , E i g h t h S t r e e t ,

10:30 a . m .

L u n c h e o n f o r Hi s to ry M a j o r Alum-

ni. C o n f e r e n c e Room, P h e l p s

Hal l , 11:30 a . m .

A n c h o r Ded ica t i on , f ron t of G r a v e s

Hal l , 11:30 a . m .

Hope vs. A l m a . R i v e r v i e w P a r k .

2 p . m .

Ch icken B a r b e q u e , P h e l p s Hall

t e r r a c e . A f t e r G a m e Until 6:30

p . m .

H o m e c o m i n g Ball , Civic C e n t e r ,

8:30- p . m .

M e e t i n g of A lumni B o a r d a n d

Alumni F u n d C h a i r m e n , A l u m n i

House , 8:30 a . m . ^

COUMI

anchor PRESS OLLAND, MICHIOAN

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

ination periods h\ and for the students of H tpe College. Holland.

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

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

i (i423. at the special rate of postage provided for in Section 1103 of Act of

Congress, Oct. 3, 1917, and authorized Oct. 19. 1917.

Subscription: S3 per year. Printed: /eeland Record, /eeland, Michigan.

Member: Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Collegiate Press Assn.

Office: ('.round Floor of Craves Hall. Phone: 396-2122.

Editor John M. Mulder

Faculty Advisor ... .Charles S. Rock

Managing Editor ... Paul Verduin

News Editor Randy Miller Hoard of Editors

Editorial Assistant Neal Sobania

Features Joyce Pollitt

Sports James Mace

Business Jack Koch

Adxtertising Hob Schroeder Critiques Barbara Kouw

Headlines Maren Kiefcr Copy Ellen Itorger

Mars' Hakken

Proof ;.. Lib by Conklin Harriet Heerschap

Social Nancy Aumann

Exchange Dick Shiels Columnists Robert Donia

Gordon Korstange Rob Werge

Secretary Lynn Archamhean

Leadership and Involvement

TH I S W E E K E N D I R K SI I M E N S T LI-D E N T S a l o n g wi th r ep i c scn t a l i ve s I rom var ious c a m p u s o r g a n i / a l i o n s will be

i n c t i i n " toge the r to d isu iss the ( l i l l n c n l g r o u p s a n d c a d i I r c shman p a r i i c i p a n t will be c i k o u r a g e d to involve Imnscll or hcrscll in o n e or m o r e ol the activi t ies.

I I r s mee t ing , t h e S tuden t l e a d e r s h i p ( i on l e i ence , was env i s ioned by the leaders ol the N a t i o n a l S t u d e n t Assn. here at H o p e , a n d we c o n n n e n d this i n n o v a t i o n . T h e r e is, wi th ou t d o u b t , a g rea t dea l ol ta lent in o u r stu den t body which r e m a i n e d dead and d o r m a n t be lo re because an elfect ive way ol seeking these s t u d e n t s out had not been f o u n d . T h i s ( o n l e r e n c e seems to be. at least on p a p e r , a m e a n s ol s t i m u l a t i n g a n d invo lv ing newly-ar r ived s t u d e n t s in the social a n d c u l t u r a l o r g a n i / a l i o n of the college.

W e e n c o u r a g e those I reshmen w h o were asked a n d those w h o are in teres led to a t t e n d iliis ( o n l e r e n c e cons ider care lu l ly the re la t ive mer i t s and d e m e r i t s oi each o r g a n i / a t i o n , a n d ln-ally become act ively involved in o n e or i n o r g r o u p s . W e see the i r i nvo lvemen t as necessary because obviouslv each year cam pus onNin i / a t i ons need to receive a d d i t i o n a l m e m b e i s to rep lace seniors w h o a re g r adu -a t ed . More to the p o i n t , however , is tha t the present leaders ol m a n y g r o u p s on c a m p u s a re sea rch ing lor new wavs a n d new ideas lor social act ivi t ies on th is c a m p u s . T h i s is o f t en p rov ided by you . And for you, the I reshmen it o i le rs an o p p o r t u n i t y to become a p.u i of-1 l o p e college.

RK . H T N O W NOLI are p a r t i c i p a t i n g m t h e academic p r o g r a m ol H o p e , bu t m j n y ol you a re not involved in a m

subs t an i i a l way in its social life. O n e t eacher in reco .nmencl ing ex t r a - cu r r i cu l a r act ivi t ies , said the reason m a n y s t u d e n t s leel e s t r anged Irom a school is tha t its history has not be-come theirs . H e m a i n t a i n e d , a n d we second his pos i t ion , tha t this p a r t i c i p a t i o n in his tory occurs when a s t u d e n t becomes socially in-volved it t he school, ou t s i de the a c a d e m i c life.

Of course the re a re m o r e reasons for b e c o m i n g involved in a n d l ead ing the social

o rgan iza t ions on c a m p u s , such as con t r i bu t -ing to the b e t t e r m e n t ol the Col lege , the feel-ing ol a ccompl i shmen t when an act ivi ty is e l lec t iv f ly p l a n n e d a n d e n j o y e d by m a n y , the o p p o r t u n i t y to meet o t h e r s t u d e n t s a n d re-cogn i t ion ol your el lorts I rom o thers .

Howeve i . lest you th ink i n v o l v e m e n t and l eade r sh ip are easy a n d a t t rac t ive , we wish to m a k e you a w a r e ol some ol the responsi-bil i t ies a n d d i s advan t ages of p u r s u i n g this ideal . A l t h o u g h a d v o c a t i n g act iv ism by stu-dents , we want to m a k e , it c lear wha t some ol you might be ge t t i ng into.

FO R M A N Y S T U D E N T S a n d in the minds ol o thers , becoming a leader on this c a m p u s has come to m e a n a lower

academic record , poor hea l th an in su la t ion Irom Ir iends because of f ana t i ca l des i re to get a job d o n e , and subsecpient lonel iness. We insist that it doesn ' t have to be this way. A l t h o u g h there seems to be some evidence to subs f an t i a t e the idea that l e a d e r s h i p on a large scale is finally des t ruc t ive to the leader , ii need not be on a small scale such as this c a m p u s .

O u r c o n t e n t i o n is tha t m a n y of the dis-advan tages ol l e ade r sh ip are oflset w h e n the leader realizes tha t his p r i m a r y respons ib i l i ty is not to d o all the work or even a large part ol it bu t to trv to f igure o u t how he can get o t h e r peop le to d o the work tha t he norm-ally does. By invo lv ing m o r e p e o p l e , his respons ib i l i ty c hanges f r o m 4cloing the work to wa tch ing o the r s d o it a n d m a k i n g sure that eve rv th ing r u n s smoo th ly . In this way, a leadei does not suffer f r o m lower grades des t ruc t ion ol f r i endsh ips , a n d o t h e r detr i -m e n t a l ellects. bu t ac tua l ly t h r o u g h the in-v o l v e m r n t of m o r e s tuden t s , he lps s t u d e n t s to m a k e par t of the his tory of H o p e college the i r his tory.

II S N O T EASY; we ' re fu l ly a w a r e of tha t . But the t h i n g which dr ives us on . and p e r h a p s it 's all a de lus ion , is t ha t fmal lv

the advan t ages of i nvo lvemen t a n d l eade r sh ip out-wei;di its de s t ruc t i ve effects.

i

Review of the News

Edited by Jack L. Shrier

An old n a m e reappears in t h e

n e w s a g a i n this w e e k . Cuban

p r e m i e r F i d e l C a s t r o sa id t h a t

Cuban i n d u s t r i e s m i n i s t e r E r n -

e s t o ( C h e G u e v a r a had lef t

Cuba for " a new field of b a t t l e

in t he s t r u g g l e a g a i n s t i m p e r i a l -

i s m . " Shor t ly a f t e r th is an-

n o u n c e m e n t . t he n e w s p a p e r El

Sol. in Cuzco. P e r u , r e p o r t e d

t h a t Che had been c a p t u r e d a t a

g u e r r i l l a c a m p in the r u g g e d

j u n g l e zone of M e s a P e l a d a .

He a p p a r e n t l y w a s t r a in ing

g u e r r i l l a f i g h t e r s t h e r e .

Other n e w s r e l a t i n g to Cuba

f inds the US S t a t e D e p a r t m e n t

s t a t i n g t h a t a r r a n g e m e n t s for

t he p e r m i t t e d e x o d u s of thous-

a n d s of a n t i - C a s t r o C u b a n s will

t a k e abou t 10 d a y s . A r r a n g e -

m e n t s a r e be ing m a d e t h r o u g h

the Swiss e m b a s s y . S e v e r a l

b o a t l o a d s of r e f u g e e s h a v e al-

r e a d y a r r i v e d and m o r e a r e re-

po r t ed on the i r w a y . T h e s e im-

m i g r a n t s a r e i l legal until a r -

r a n g e m e n t s h a v e been macfe.

R a d i o H a v a n a b l a s t e d the US

wi th an a c c u s a t i o n t h a t a Cuban

c o a s t g u a r d s m a n w a s kil led by

ex i l e s who w e r e e v a c u a t i n g ant i -

C a s t r o C u b a n s .

Pakistan and India still c a n ' t

m a k e p e a c e . W a r f l a r e d a n e w .

India c l a i m e d 35 P a k i s t a n i s

ki l led. P a k i s t a n c h a r g e d t h a t

2.000 or m o r e I n d i a n s a t t a c k e d

on a n^w f ron t 'but w e r e re -

pu l sed wi th " h e a v y c a s u a l t i e s . "

P a k i s t a n f u r t h e r a c c u s e d Ind i a ' s

a r m y of c o m m i t t i n g 105 viola-

t ions of t he UN cease - f i r e . She

a l so c l a i m e d to h a v e found a n

Ind ian " m a s t e r p l a n " for invad-

ing E a s t P a k i s t a n . In t h e ear l -

ier f igh t ing it h a s been p r a c t -

ical ly u n d i s t u r b e d .

The a f termath of the a t t e m p t -

e d le f t i s t coup in Indones ia

f i n d s : a ' S u k a r n o tel l ing his

g o v e r n m e n t to " n o r m a l i z e the

s i t u a t i o n . " b) the a r m y c r a c k -

ing down on I n d o n e s i a ' s Com-

m u n i s t p a r t y , c ' S u k a r n o giv-

ing v e r b a l d i s a p p r o v a l of t he

a r m y ' s c a m p a i g n , - yet d ) J a -

k a r t a r ad io g iv ing the i m p r e s -

sion t h a t the c r a c k d o w n is be-

ing conduc t ed on S u k a r n o ' s

o r d e r s .

" T h e army wasn't there ."

Thi s s u m s up the b igges t of iens-

ive ac t ion by the Allies in t he

w a r in V i e t n a m . T h e Allies

c losed a h u g e p ince r s in the

c e n t r a l h igh lands . T h e y found

p len ty of e v i d e n c e of p r e v i o u s

Viet Cong o c c u p a t i o n b u t no

VC. However , n e a r Saigon we

w e r e a l i t t le bit l uck i e r ( ? ) .

U.S. p a r a t r o o p e r s and Aus t ra l i -

ian f o r c e s w e r e a t t e m p t i n g to

c l e a r an a r e a known a s the

" I r o n T r i a n g l e . " At l e a s t 75

VC w e r e kil led. Our losses w e r e

t e r m e d " l igh t to m o d e r a t e . " A

n e w s c o r r e s p o n d e n t on the

s c e n e s a w the VC a m b u s h and

w ipe out an e n t i r e U.S. p la toon.

A pla toon is c o m p o s e d of 44

m e n . Le t ' s hope our l o s s e s don ' t ge t h e a v y !

Ian Smith, the P r i m e Minister

.of R h o d e s i a , s t a t e s t h a t Rho-

d e s i a will d e c l a r e itself inde-

p e n d e n t of B r i t a in with o r with-

out h e r p e r m i s s i o n by Chris t -

m a s . His g o v e r n m e n t fo l lows

pol ic ies not unlike those of South

A f r i c a . Br i ta in ins is ts on m o r e

p a r t i c i p a t i o n of the n e g r o m a -

jor i ty in g o v e r n m e n t a l a f f a i r s

b e f o r e she ' l l l i be ra t e R h o d e s i a .

T h e U.S. and the UN s t a t e d

t h a t they to ta l ly b a c k B r i t a i n ' s

posi t ion.

In the Congo. P r e s i d e n t K a s a -

vubu d i s m i s s e d P r e m i e r Tsh-

o m b e and a p p o i n t e d an i n t e r i m

p r e m i e r .

Back in t h e Uni ted S t a t e s , t he

big news w a s P r e s i d e n t J o h n -

s o n ' s s u c c e s s f u l g a l l - b l a d d e r

and kndney-s tune o p e r a t i o n . The

ope ra t ion took 2lA hours . L B J

is a l r e a d y doing s o m e work a n d

WdiMug aoout .

The N e w York T i m e s and the

f ive o the r da i l i e s wh ich s y m -

p a t h e t i c a l l y shut down wi th it

a r e r e s u m i n g pub l i ca t ion a f t e r

t he New York T i m e s uni t unan -

imous ly r a t i f i e d a m e d i a t o r ' s

p roposa l f o r t he s e t t l e m e n t of

t he s t r ike . The s t r i k e l a s t e d 23 d a y s .

A bill to repeal Sec t ion 14 (b)

of t he T a f t - H a r t l e y Act is be ing

t a lked to dea th . An e f f o r t to

s top the f i l ibus te r a g a i n s t it w a s

m a d e by S e n a t o r M i k e M a n s -

f ie ld , but w a s d e f e a t e d 47-4o, f a r

s h o r t of t h e two t h i r d s m a j o r i t y

vo te t h a t was n e e d e d . Sect ion

14 (b) p e r m i t s S t a t e s to b a n

l abo r c o n r a c t s t h a t r e q u i r e

w o r k e r s to join a union. A h igh

A d m i n i s t r a t i o n o f f i c i a l r e m a r k -

e d t h a t " r e p e a l is d e a d e r t h a n

d e a d " d u r i n g this ses s ion .

17.

Page 8: 10-15-1965

P a g e 8 Hope College anchor October 15, 1965

4 § y * • S m , ( I

#

SCRAMBLE!—Olivet's Karl Wilson (31) fumbles bal l while going around end. In the end the ball was

rewarded to Olivet, even though Hope's Paul Wassenaar ended up on top of it.

First League Loss

Comets Down Flying Dulcb By James Mace

Hope ' s inability to g e n e r a t e an o f fense cost the F ly ing Dutch dea r ly last Sa tu rday at Riverview P a r k as 18(K) fans watched Hope drop a 7-0 decision to Olivet.

Coming f rom a two-game win-ning s t reak , the Hope offensive unit w a s unable to dent the Comet goal line and a costly fumble g a v e the Comets the opportunity for victory.

Olivet, who domina ted the of-fens ive aspect of the contest , even-ed its record at 2-2 and 1-1 in the MIAA, while the loss produced the s a m e effect on the D u t c h m e n ' s ledger . The Comets rolled up more t h a n twice the total offense of t he Dutch and it w a s n ' t until the waning minu tes of the game t h a t Hope put on its lone sus ta ined d r ive .

The only tally of the g a m e c a m e in the second q u a r t e r a f t e r Haydon Moorman recovered a s t r ay pitchout f r o m Hope signal-cal ler Har l an Hyink. Seven plays la te r Comet ha l fback Tony Gri-maldi went over f rom the one for t he lone touchdown. J i m Pobursky conver ted for the seven th point.

Hope, who totaled only 98 y a r d s in overal l o f fense went without a f irst down in the f irst half , and the Dutch did not get into Olivet t e r r i to ry until the third period. Hope net ted only 12 y a r d s rushing in the first half to account for i ts inabilities.

Bill Keur . Flying Dutch half-back, opened up the thi rd s tanza with an 18-yard run that put the Dutch in Olivet t e r r i to ry , but Den-nis Wilder fumbled on the Olivet 42 and the Comets r ecovered .

La te in the contes t , Hyink 's pas-sing fea tured the lone Hope th rea t of the a f te rnoon . The senior quar-t e rback found ha l fback Keith Abel for 21 y a r d s and then hit end Bruce Menning for 20 more y a r d s to give Hope a first down on t h e Olivet 39.

However . Hyink threw four s t ra ight incomple te passes and the Comets took over with only 50 seconds to p lay . Three plays killed the clock and the hopes of the Dutch .

Kar l Wilson, hard-charg ing full-back for the Comets , r an for 109 ya rds , while Keur gained 28 y a r d s in four ca r r i e s to lead the Hope

MIAA Standings W L

Kalamazoo 2 0

Albion 1 0

Hope 1 1

Olivet 1 1

Adrian 0 1

Mma 0 2

r u n n e r s . Fine work on the par t of the

Hope defens ive t e am kept the score f rom mount ing any higher than it did. Tom Pelon recovered a fumble on the Hope 19 in the first q u a r t e r to kill a Comet threat , and Pau l W a s s e n a a r hit Wilson for an 11-yard loss to end a second period dr ive by the vis i tors .

F r e s h m a n s a f e t y m a n Walt Reed in te rcepted a pass on the Hope 12 late in the third s tanza to finish off ano the r Olivet c h a r g e . Gary F r e n s , Hope 's back up quar te r -back and the t e a m ' s l ead ing punt-er , kicked ten t imes for an aver-age of 35.2 y a r d s .

Lack of blocking by the offens-ive line, par t ia l ly due to the fac t

t ha t f irst s tr ing tack le Max Schip-per was in the g a m e for only three plays, hurt the Dutch, whi le sec-ond yea r man Don Kroodsma mis-sed the ent i re g a m e with an in-jury.

Once again the Hope pass ing at-tack proved to be valueless as Hyink connected on only five of 24 ae r i a l s for 46 ya rds . T h e run ning a t tack was just as impotent and there in lies the tale.

The Flying Dutch t ravel to Al-bion tomorrow to do ba t t le with the defend ing champion Albion Bri tons. A concer ted e f fo r t on the par t s of both o f fense and defense will be needed to handle Morley F r a s e r ' s powerhouse.

I f - . 3 ^ . i \

RIGHT MEETS LEFT—Kansas City pitcher, Joe Bosworth (left)

and Minnesota's World Series hurler Jim Kaat met in Kansas City to

talk of past t imes as Hope students.

Ex-Hopeites in Majors:

Kaat Wins Series Game Hope College has good reason to

feel proud of two of its recent

a thlet ic s tudents .

J i m Kaat and J o e Bosworth, both

of whom a t tended Hope, h a v e made it to the m a j o r leagues and Kaa t

has reached the near zenith of a basebal l c a ree r , an a p p e a r a n c e in the World Ser ies (at this writ ing Kaat was p repa r ing to pitch the

f inal g a m e of the 1965 Series aga ins t Don Drysda le of the Los Angeles Dodgers ) .

Kaa t , who went to Hope in 1957 and is a close fr iend of present Hope basebal l coach Daryl Sieden-

top, h a s a l ready m a d e two appear -ances in the Fal l Classic with a v ic tory and a loss. Big J i m hurled the Minnesota Twins to a 5-1 win

in the second g a m e of t he Series best ing Sandy Koufax in the pro-

cess. K a a t w a s hi t p r e t t y h a r d in his

second outing in the f i f th g a m e

and absorbed a 7-0 de fea t . How-ever, the Zeeland nat ive will have shot for all the m a r b l e s in Thurs-

day ' s contest. The big le f thander was a .19-game winner for the

Twins t h i s , yea r and along with J im Grant and Camil io Pascua l ,

one of the big reasons for the

- Twins ' m a r c h to the Amer ican League pennant .

Bosworth. meanwhi le , who signed with the Kansas City Athletics

a f t e r the 1964 MIAA basebal l sea-son, is present ly in the Army

Medical Corps a f t e r spending this s u m m e r in minor league basebal l

and the month of S e p t e m b e r t rav-eling with the Athlet ics.

Joe , who hurled the Flying Dutch

to the 1964 MIAA basebal l crown, is one of two youngs te r s t h a t the A's plan to protect in the winter basebal l d r a f t . It looks like an ex-t r eme ly bright f u t u r e f o r two young Hopeites.

IN THE AIR—Harlan Hyink throws a pass up center lo cnarne

Langland (43). It was incomplete.

Second Place Britons Host Dutchmen Next Saturday

By (iraydon Blank Albion, unbea ten in MIAA play,

will host the Big Dutch of Hope

College tomorrow af te rnoon at 2

p .m. Albion's Bri tons a re present-

ly holding a 1-0 record in the Mich-

igan In tercol legia te Athletic Asso-

ciation. while the Flying Du tchman

have a 1-1 record in the MIAA.

Albion won its only g a m e in the

confe rence with a victory over the Alma Scots, while Hope has a

victory over the Bullodgs of Adrian

and a loss at the hands of the Comets of Olivet.

By the looks of records , the t e a m s seem to be qui te equal ly m a t c h e d , but a s of last week ' s g a m e with Olivet. Albion looks to be the favor i te . T h e Dutch looked very poor agains t the Comets and were unable to get their offense

moving at all. which has been their biggest problem all year . However , last Sa tu rday , the usually s t rong

defense did all it could to hold the Comets to one touchdown, as it

seemed tha t the Comet ' s Kar l Wil-son would break through for a TD

at any moment .

P e r h a p s the end runs w e r e what

kept the g a m e in Hope's reach

till the very end. But it is still hard to win a football g a m e with-

out scoring. One of the br ight spots

in the game , and there weren ' t many , was the p e r f o r m a n c e of

G a r y F rens , r e se rve quar te r -

back. F r e n s seemed to pep up the

offense a little, but it was too late and too little. A s t rong, f i red-up

Hope squad will have to prove it-

self against Albion tomor row, if victory is to be had.

The Britons, coached by Mor-ley F r a s e r . should be very rugged, and up for the g a m e . The Britons

a r e defending the MIAA title, and don' t intend to have it slip away

f rom them. Coach F r a s e r ' s squad

includes m a n y re turn ing letter-men . including seasoned quar te r -

back Dave Neilson which give his Britons the power they have

showed thus f a r on of fense , and

on defense . Albion has won two in a row. and will be t ry ing to

m a k e their winning s t r eak three .

The Big Dutch should be out for

r evenge this y e a r , for the Albion

squad spoiled a Hope Homecom-

ing last year , with a 27-^ victory over the Dutch.

If Coach DeVet te ' s squad intends to do anything by the way of a

MIAA championsh ip , a victory is

a m u s t in tomorrow a f t e rnoon ' s hall g a m e .

Silksters Fall To Last Place In Olivet Loss

Hope dropped its second MIAA dual cross count ry meet last Sat-u rday at the Van R a a l t e Field course when t h e visi t ing Olivet Comets took a 25-30 t r i umph over the Hope s i lks ters .

Cal Os t e rhaven again t u r n e d in an ou t s t and ing p e r f o r m a n c e taking f irst in the t i m e of 22:37. How-eve r . Wayne M e e r m a n of Hope w a s only able to take four th and that cost 'Hope t h e win. Co-cap-tain Dan Berry w a s seventh . Dan-ny Howe was eighth a n d Rich Shalek f in ished 10th.

The loss l eaves the Du tch in last p lace in the MIAA with an 0-2 record and the locals f a c e the a lways s trong Albion Br i t tons to-mor row af te rnoon at Albion.

Most of the t e a m s in the MIAA cross country circui t a r e fair ly s t rong this year a n d the loss of co-cap ta in Gary P e i p e r and sopho-more Pau l H a r t m a n have hur t the Dutch in thei r two previous nar -row de fea t s .

N e i t h e r man has seen anv r^al act ion this season and c h a n c e s a r c so-so for the i r r e tu rn ing th i s sea-son. H a r t m a n hopes to get back into action in t i m e for t he C a M n meet on Oct. 20. P r o s e n t l v Adrian leads the MIAA with a 2-0 record a f t e r topping Hope and Calvin .

(Elje H l m b m i U

S t e a t a u n m t

In The

Heart Of

Downtown

HOLLAND

Serving Food at lis Fines/ in a Pleasant Atmosphere

28 W. 8th Sf. Tel.: 392-2726