Top Banner
b SISEE BY DANIEL FYLSTRA Several weeks ago Winston Churchill warned the Italian peo- ple that the amies of Great Brit- ian would tear the Italian African empire to tatters. What then seemed to be only a verbal threat has today developed into a tragic fact. The Italian possessions in Africa are being wrenched from her control by the military might of another empire. Already in one month all of east- em Libya has fallen to the inva- ders. The last stronghold, Ben- gazi, was surrendered last week. The British have taken so many prisoners and supplies that the es- timated remaining force of 50,000 is no match for the army of Gen- eral Wavell. So the remnant of Graziani's once-large army of 250- 000 men seems no longer to be bat- tling for its prestige and the hold- ing of its fortresses and bases, but rather for its very existense. Their occasional counterattacks are no indication of renewed strength or reinforcement. It is more like the last desperate lunge of a mortally wounded animal crawling to its re- treat of death. THERE IS BUT ONE END IN SIGHT . . . There seems to be an end in sight for the Italians—defeat, in- evitable and beyond the help of German divisions. Although Ger- man planes may cause the British some annoyance, and even become a considerable nuisance, the troops would need supplies, and the Ger- man panzer units are useless with- out oil. And the British control of the Meditteranean prevents the transportation of these vital essen- tials to Libya, and makes virtually impossible any relief for Italian East Africa. Hitler, who is very much a real- ist, must have accepted the Italian defeat in Africa by this time. And who ever heard of the mighty Ger- man leader being champion of a lost cause ? FREE FRENCH ASSISTING SEEN ON INCREASE While German relief for the Ital- ians seems impossible, allied as- sistance for the blitzkrieging Brit- ons is on its way. In the south the Free French forces are bending their efforts toward a British vic- tory. Their drive from the Chad region of equatorial Africa to the Fezzan Oasis has resulted in more than the destruction of the south- ernmost Italian airfield in Lybia a- mong the Senussi natives, a warlike religious caste whihh is hostile to the Fascist regime in Lybia. Native rebellion is also arising in Ethiopia and Eritrea which the British are methodically tearing loose from the grasp of the hapless Italians. General Wavell has de- tached an Indian division from his Army of the Nile and some reserv- es from Alexandria for service with General Pratt's Sudanese army. This seems indicative of a drive on Ethiopia in full force. And with it will undoubtedly come a native up- rising. This campaign is dreaded by the Italians. They know that although their troops in Lybia were made UV-IO V Two Hope Ttai Win Three Del At East Lansini Two.Hope teams participated in the state debate tournanent at Bast Lansing Saturday tnd re- turned with three victoriei in the two rounds. Anthony Dykrtra and Dwight Grotenhuis defeated a Wes- tern State Teachers' Collie team in the morning and a teim from Alma in the afternoon. Jojfn West- hof and John Hains lost ft Wayne tut defeated a Western S^te team in the afternoon round, frof. Wil- liam Schrier accompaniedthe team. Ten schools entered a Hal of 60 teams, Almost complete ^tums in- dicate that affirmative md nega- tive decisions were abcit equal. Schools participating wee: Alma, Albion, Calvin, Central ftate Tea- chers, Hillsdale, Hopej Michigan State, Michigan Statf Normal, Wayne University, am Western State Teachers college. o I— Publication Cbte For Milestone Set For Junfl>2 Blaise Levai, Mileage editor, announced today that^ork on the annual has been processing ac- cording to schedule art' a tentative date for publication iaiune 2. "The front section of the ook is near completion," he said.)Pictures of the Milestone and 4}chor staffs, and class officers fc've recently been completed and ;(torie8 about various college activfes are ready for the printer the annual are and Phil Harrington Official Publication pf the Students of Hope CoUege at Holland. Midrib 'BOWLER CAP" | i,, - sm Photo by Phil Harrlntrton Practicing for the first nlay to b 2 given in the drama revival being sponsored by Pclette and Masque are, left to right KENNETH LIN- COLN, JAMES BAAR, RUTH STEGENGA. GENE TEN BRINK DOR OTHY SHRAMEK, HERBERT LEIGH-MANUEL, and GEORGE LUM- SDEN on the floor. Palette and Masque will present "The Man in the Bowler Hat" late in February as the first in a series of plays intended to revive campus interest in Drama. The production is under the direction of Dolly Kamps, Holland junior. Included in the cast are Eugene Ten Brink as John; Ruth Stegenga as Mary; George Lumsden as Hero; Dorothy Shramek as Hero- Hope Squads Debate Three Tournaments; Several Practices Debate activity is at its height this month with three tournaments and several audience debates on the schedule. Practices are also being held with nearby schools anc among squad members. Last Thursday noon John Hains and John Westhof upheld "a Pan- American Union against Emily Beilefeld and Jeanette Rylaarsdam before the Rotary club at the Warm Friend Tavern. Saturday two men's teams participated in the state tournament which was held in Lansing. Next Saturday the state tournament for women will be held at Detroit with two rounds for each team. Beth Marcus and Corrine Poole, affirmative, and Emily Bielefeld and Jeanette Ry- laarsdam, negative, will partici- pate. They will be accompanied by Prof. William Schrier and Mary Felter, alternate. The Manchester-Huntington tournament, the largest in the country, will be held Feb. 21 and 22. Anthony Dykstra and Dwight Grotenhouse, negative, and the above-mentioned teams will each aS , ch, 1 ) Villian: en sage in six rounds of debate; Le.irh-M am „.I R „,, m„., Jeanne Horton and ^ Leigh-Manuel as Bad Man and Kenneth Lincoln as the Man with the Bowler Hat. Fate Weaves Strange Threads On St. Valentine's Day Poor Saint Valentine has most [about, it turns out that we are a Clarence DeGraaf will act"!'." critic likely worn out the padding in his | general pain in the neck and the coffin by this time "au cause de" so-and-so hasn't signed his name, affirmative, will have two rounds; Charles Stopples and Leslie Wat- kins, affirmative, will have five rounds in the B division as will Andrew Veldhuis and Clinton Har- rison, negative debaters. Daniel Fylstra has been named alternate and Prof. William Schrier and Prof. Men's Gle<*Club Leaves March 2! On 13-Ci+yTour the many misshappen images of -. Phojpraphers for that 0 n c e a r i s tocraticaIIy sentimen- e Eugte Ten Brink ta ' ( ^ a >' ' ove - Today it has grown to be the signal for all those who have carried a heartfelt grudge around for the last year to bury the hatchet in a missive that would In days went by, the tender admirer would spend hours in versi- fication, burning the midnight oil and probably a few strong cigars telling the fair receiver of his great admiration, etc., working up to the climax of "I love you". Touching. But Fate weaves strange threads into the loom of love. We do not fully realize this until we receive a quaint little card bearing all sorts of endearments working up to an anti-climax, after caus- ing us to wonder what it is all The Hope colleg<glee club has completed its itinerfy for its East- ern tour which befns March 21. and the group willfctuni April 5. The tour will indide concerts in thirteen cities andhore than that number of churchy In chronolog- ical order the Gli club will ap- pear in Detroit, MSiigan; Roches- ter, Herkimer, Apany, German- town, Kingston, aq Flushing, New York; Paterson,Passaic, Haw- thorne and Newat, New Jersey; Philadelphia, Pe^sylvania; and Cleveland, Ohio. On February the Glee club will render its fst full concert in Seventh Refcned church of Grand Rapids. TJ Glee club will then appear as itvill on the tour. Hope Registers 8 New Students Light new students have entered Hope for the second semester of 40-41. There was no graduate at the mid-term. Le Cercle Fancaise Gives Play 'pnight French Club tj^ts this evening, which is a good thing you're think- ing. We now have full representa- tion from the Bronx Zoo initiated into the holy realms of significant Valentine's greetings. Hearts and flowers have found themselves on the cveiffe of tewg-completely wafted away from the scene of two adoring cows, placidly munch- ing alfalfa, mooing sweet nothings in each others' ear —"I cud Love you for heifer and heifer". Now I ask you — Then there are those with full coverage insurance, fireproof and absolutely guaranteed to cost more than three cents to send— you. know the kind: 1 unfold and unfold and when 1 get to the last page I'm so mixed up I have to start all over again, which all in all con- vinces me that I had better stick to Style I — My heart pants for you stuff, a lot easier on the fellow at the other end. Another Valentine judges for other schools in the A division while Ruth Stryker, wom- en's debate manager, will judge in the B division. Four teams met teams from Grand Rapids Junior and Calvin college last Tuesday afternoon at Grand Rapids. Several girls' teams from Calvin were on the campus yesterday for two rounds of prac- tice debating. ^ Prof. Schrier has also announced that the Pi Kappa Delta provin- cial tournament will be in East Lansing this year. Michigan is in the Province of the Lakes with neighboring states. Dates for this year's tournament are, March 31 and April 1. which could hardl y Pass the censors of the The new students are: Harold j (Association for Amalga- ' mat ed Skunks) is the one with a suspicious disturbance in the con- tour of the surface. Upon a little curious investigation we find : rather poor example of the lasl rose of summer and way into the prisoners of war, their isolated po-1 with the progm in charge of sition in Ethiopia constitutes a far j Carolyn Kreme* The feature of more dangerous situation. Here the meeting wj be the play "Le they are confronted, not only by Prince au Bois Irmant" with roles treachery and desertion on the part of the Absynnian soldiers, but also by native guerilla warfare. And the Italians are fully aware of the horrors accompanying such native action. In Eritrea the British claim to have taken 3,500 Italian prisoners as well as an abundance of Italian war materials. They are now at- tacking Keren, and will follow any success there with an assault on Asmara .the Eritrean capital. The surrender of the capital may very easily mean the fall of the entire colpny to British armies. And in Italian Somaliland, some 2,000 miles from Libya, the British pa- trols are said to be enlarging the area of their penetration. MUSSOLINI'S MISTAKE TO COST HIM DEARLY The British have taken more than 100,000 prisoners as well as vast quantities of supplies and equipment. They have destroy- ed the Fascist national political and economic structure in Libya. They have strengthened the might of their own navy by extending the British-controlled coast line in the Mediterranean. And this extension brings the German airfields in Sicily and the French base of Bi- (See AS I SEE IT, p. 3) taken by Nof- Nies, Howard Local Technician Tells Pi Kap of New Lab Technique Mr. J. F. Jellema, research technician At the local hospital, spoke before the Pi Kappa Delta February 12, 1941 Practice Teachers Take Posts In Local Schools Practice teaching assignments announced Monday by Prof. Garrett Vander Borgh, supervisor of practice teaching, revealed one innovation for Hope's Education department and the possibility of a second. Henry Voogd will be the first education student ever to do his practice teaching in the field of instrumental music. He will work under the supervision'of Eugene F. Heeter, Holland high school instru- mental instructor. Page Plans Pending Arrangements for Oliver Page to become the first Hope student to *erve his teaching apprenticeship in a rural school are still pending. Mary Bolema became the first to perform her practice teaching as- signment in the field of vocal music when she served under Miss Trixie Moore last semester. Assignments in the elementary iepartment are all in Washington school this semester. They are as follows: Lois Glerum and Dorothy Zimmerman, teachng second grade under Miss Henshaw; Hulda Rig- terink and Alma Stegenga, teach- ing second and third grade under Miss Cathcart; Thelma Van "Dyke, teaching first grade under Miss Hardy. Secondary Assignments Given Secondary assignments are: Eng- lish department, Lester Diekema under Miss Dyke; Edgar Dibble un- der Miss Mulder; Bob Idema under Miss Brower, and Emily Bielefeld and Laura Roosenraad under Miss Shackson. In social sciences, Peter Hamel will teach American history under Miss Steketee.v I>on«ld- Van- der Haar will teach economics un- der Mr. Hanson, Robert Hudson will teach citizenship under Miss Denton, while Phil Dykstra will teach European history under Miss Bishop. In foreign languages, Kath- erine Douma will teach Latin under Miss Vander Werf, and Lois Jane Kronemeyer will teach German un- der Miss Randalls. Chester Toren will teach mathematics under Miss Shoup. Dates for Sorority Initiatibns Set Pan-Hellenic has recommended society last Wednesday evening at | February 20 for sorori the Cosmopolitan house. He dis- niormai Bangor, freshman and graduate of Holland high school; Gordon Henry Girod, junior from Grand Rapids; Pearl Scholten, sophomore transfer student from Central College, Pelia. Iowa; Peter VanLierop, medical student from Ghent, Belgium; John | autumn, too, or else the odor there- VanAalst, freshman from Roches-1 of. It's all the way you look at it cussed some of the cases in which skilled diagnosis has been made possible through laboratory work and which has resulted in saving many lives. "Research work has tripled in initiations and stated that formal initiations may be held at any time during the next week, February 24-28, each sorority choosing its own particular date. The girls ex- pecting to become members must ter, N. Y.; Lois Hall, senior from Hoekje, and Alti Schutmaat. Paul- Lowell, Mich.; Daniel Scheerens I T /Ami r o n rl 11 Ml *1 ine Loew and (Jrolyn Kremers will play a violin i^t. There will be games and relshments. special student from Rochester, N. Y.; and James White, sophomore from Holland. I guess —by their smells we shall know them. Well, every man to his own likmg —it's a free world after all. at least to the extent of Valentines. | business meeting. he stated. "It is only since the, 192()'s that we have been able to i speak of preventive medicine," he,' pointed out. Betty Daugherty presented two piano solos. Mary Felter was in charge of the program and Mary Ruth Jacobs presided over a short Thursday ^ning, February 6, in the librarja premier of some eight hundre^eet of film taken of Hope's campi was shown to the faculty. Saturday, ebruary 1, Miss Elizabeth Llty went to Detroit to attend a ;eting of the Execu- to Faculty were entertained at tea on Fridav ! 7vi it u x ar-fcs a t .-f (Z'' r^:l th : h0m , e . 0fMra - ^ M ' ss ^ t t a J. Ross and Mrs. Hall Appointed George E. Koilen, the only woman member of the City Board of Edu-\ cation. Palette and Masque has become a definite organization on the tive Board ohe State Association campus,.and has earned a place in of Deans ofVomen, of which she the yearbook. At the February 8 is presidentj / A new sofe of refreshment has been set up the dormitory. Soda pop can nope obtained in Peggy Light's roo During M Htay in Holland, Dr. jfas the house guest Wichers, and a as given in his honor evening, January 5. in and her daugh- visiting "Dot" this 4orm. We hope that taste of dorm life [ties. women and wires M. S. Ja of Dr. dinner ter Betty week in they like and col meeting, the Milestone picture was taken and play practice held. Blue Key's Hope college chapter will hold its regular monthly meet- ing at the Cosmopolitan ho Thursday night. Representatives of ^22 colleges and universities met in Chicago last week-end in connection with cooperative study in general educa- tion o^ the North Central associa- tion 6f colleges and universities. The^following Hope college faculty members attended the meet: Profs. Paui Brouwer, Garrett Vander Borgh, Teunis Vergeer, Gerrit Van _ _ _ _ _ _ _ W. Curtis Snow. A very lovely shower was given honor of Ruby Carpenter last iday afternoon in the Sibylline r0 ? >m ' attended Hope two years ago and was a member of the present senior class. She plans to be/married in April to Cornelius ^tekettee, Hope graduate of the ass of '39. 7 Lois Hall, senior from Lowell, Michigan, has been appointed clin- ical supervisor of Blodgett Hos- pital at Grand Rapids. She will begin her work July 1st. Dr Vergeer is planning to hold a health inventory of at least 50 freshman students of Hope. This check-up has bgen prepared by the cooperative stu.dy group of general information which is composed of representatives from twenty col- leges and universities. The purpose of the inventory is to find out, as Dr. Vergeer says, "whether we ought to teach what we do teach". In this way the fac- ulty can obtain objective informa- tion of what the freshmen know about health education before en- tering college. It seems strange that there were so many Hopeites who were not interested in the Kazoo basketball gama The reason we say this is because appronmately one hundred and tbirtjr students did not call for their activities tlekets before the game. t . Mi8s ; Jeanette Rylaarsdam spent last Tuesday afternoon at the home of Rabbi -Folkman of Grand Rap- ids Congregation Emmanuel. Her visit, was in line with work she is doing to prepare her oration on anti-semitism for the state contest to be held rtext month. the past ten years and will increase , , D Tr . jven more in the next ten years," f ^ ^ Pan-Hellenic scholastic ^ T * —... I standards. Each sorority arranges its own program of initiations. Dr. R. B. Drukker To Address Y. M. Monday Night On Monday evening, February 17, Dr. Raymond B. Drukker, Secre- tary of Young People's Work of the Board of Education, R. C. A., will be the guest speaker of the Y. M. The organization considers itself to be most fortunate in hav- ing been able to secure a speaker who is so popular. Dr. Drukker is known to many as "Uncle Ray". He will address the Y. M. on the theme, "Christianity and A World At War." Dr. James H. Warner, head of Hope's English department, was guest speaker at the Y. M. meeting on February 11. His subject was "Missions In The Philippine Is- lands." As Dr. Warner taught for some time in the Philippines, many per- jsonal experiences and observations were cited. Hearty hymns and spec- cial selections in charge of Music Chairman, John Westhof, also add- ed much inspiration to the well attended worship service. / i »!?
4
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: 02-12-1941

b

SISEE BY

DANIEL

FYLSTRA

Several weeks ago Winston Churchill warned the Italian peo-ple tha t the a m i e s of Great Brit-ian would tear the Italian African empire to tat ters . What then seemed to be only a verbal threat has today developed into a tragic fact. The Italian possessions in Africa are being wrenched from her control by the military might of another empire.

Already in one month all of east-e m Libya has fallen to the inva-ders. The last stronghold, Ben-gazi, was surrendered last week. The British have taken so many prisoners and supplies that the es-timated remaining force of 50,000 is no match f o r the army of Gen-eral Wavell. So the remnant of Graziani's once-large army of 250-000 men seems no longer to be bat-tling for its prestige and the hold-ing of its fortresses and bases, but ra ther fo r its very existense. Their occasional counterattacks are no indication of renewed strength or reinforcement. It is more like the last desperate lunge of a mortally wounded animal crawling to its re-treat of death.

THERE IS BUT ONE END IN SIGHT . . .

There seems to be an end in sight for the Italians—defeat, in-evitable and beyond the help of German divisions. Although Ger-man planes may cause the British some annoyance, and even become a considerable nuisance, the troops would need supplies, and the Ger-man panzer units are useless with-out oil. And the British control of the Meditteranean prevents the transportation of these vital essen-tials to Libya, and makes virtually impossible any relief for Italian East Africa.

Hitler, who is very much a real-ist, must have accepted the Italian defeat in Africa by this time. And who ever heard of the mighty Ger-man leader being champion of a lost cause ?

F R E E FRENCH ASSISTING SEEN ON INCREASE

While German relief for the Ital-ians seems impossible, allied as-sistance for the blitzkrieging Brit-ons is on its way. In the south the Free French forces are bending their efforts toward a British vic-tory. Their drive from the Chad region of equatorial Africa to the Fezzan Oasis has resulted in more than the destruction of the south-ernmost Italian airfield in Lybia a-mong the Senussi natives, a warlike religious caste whihh is hostile to the Fascist regime in Lybia.

Native rebellion is also arising in Ethiopia and Eri trea which the British are methodically tearing loose from the grasp of the hapless Italians. General Wavell has de-tached an Indian division from his Army of the Nile and some reserv-es from Alexandria for service with General Prat t ' s Sudanese army. This seems indicative of a drive on Ethiopia in full force. And with it will undoubtedly come a native up-rising.

This campaign is dreaded by the Italians. They know that although their troops in Lybia were made

UV-IO

V

Two Hope Ttai Win Three Del At East Lansini

Two.Hope teams participated in

the state debate tournanent a t

Bast Lansing Saturday tnd re-

turned with three victoriei in the

two rounds. Anthony Dykrtra and

Dwight Grotenhuis defeated a Wes-

tern State Teachers' Col l ie team

in the morning and a teim from

Alma in the afternoon. Jojfn West-

hof and John Hains lost ft Wayne

t u t defeated a Western S^te team

in the afternoon round, frof. Wil-liam Schrier accompaniedthe team.

Ten schools entered a Hal of 60 teams, Almost complete ^ tums in-dicate tha t af f i rmat ive md nega-tive decisions were abcit equal. Schools participating wee: Alma, Albion, Calvin, Central ftate Tea-chers, Hillsdale, Hopej Michigan State, Michigan Statf Normal, Wayne University, am Western State Teachers college.

o I—

Publication Cbte For Milestone Set For Junfl>2

Blaise Levai, Mi leage editor, announced today tha t^ork on the annual has been processing ac-cording to schedule art' a tentative date for publication iaiune 2. "The f ront section of the ook is near completion," he said.)Pictures of the Milestone and 4}chor staffs, and class officers fc've recently been completed and ;(torie8 about various college activfes are ready for the printer the annual are and Phil Harr ington

Official Publication pf the Students of Hope CoUege at Holland. Midrib

'BOWLER CAP" | i,, -

sm

Photo by P h i l Ha r r l n t r t on

Practicing for the first nlay to b2 given in the drama revival being sponsored by Pclette and Masque are, left to right KENNETH LIN-COLN, JAMES BAAR, RUTH STEGENGA. GENE TEN BRINK DOR OTHY SHRAMEK, HERBERT LEIGH-MANUEL, and GEORGE LUM-SDEN on the floor.

Palette and Masque will present

"The Man in the Bowler Hat" late

in February as the first in a series

of plays intended to revive campus

interest in Drama. The production

is under the direction of Dolly Kamps, Holland junior.

Included in the cast are Eugene Ten Brink as John; Ruth Stegenga as Mary; George Lumsden as Hero; Dorothy Shramek as Hero-

Hope Squads Debate Three Tournaments; Several Practices

Debate activity is a t its height this month with three tournaments and several audience debates on the schedule. Practices are also being held with nearby schools anc among squad members.

Last Thursday noon John Hains and John Westhof upheld "a Pan-American Union against Emily Beilefeld and Jeanette Rylaarsdam before the Rotary club a t the Warm Friend T a v e r n . Saturday two men's teams participated in the s ta te tournament which was held in Lansing. Next Saturday the s ta te tournament for women will be held at Detroit with two rounds for each team. Beth Marcus and Corrine Poole, affirmative, and Emily Bielefeld and Jeanet te Ry-laarsdam, negative, will partici-pate. They will be accompanied by Prof. William Schrier and Mary Felter, alternate.

The M a n c h e s t e r - H u n t i n g t o n tournament, the largest in the country, will be held Feb. 21 and 22. Anthony Dykstra and Dwight Grotenhouse, n e g a t i v e , and the above-mentioned teams will each

a S , c h , 1 )V i l l i a n : e n s a g e in six rounds of debate;

Le.irh-Mam„.I R„,, m„., J e a n n e H o r t o n a n d ^ Leigh-Manuel as Bad Man and Kenneth Lincoln as the Man with the Bowler Hat.

Fate Weaves Strange Threads On St. Valentine's Day

Poor Saint Valentine has most [about, it turns out that we are a Clarence DeGraaf will act"!'." critic likely worn out the padding in his | general pain in the neck and the

coffin by this time "au cause de" so-and-so hasn't signed his name,

affirmative, will have two rounds; Charles Stopples and Leslie Wat-kins, affirmative, will have five rounds in the B division as will Andrew Veldhuis and Clinton Har-rison, negative debaters. Daniel Fylstra has been named alternate and Prof. William Schrier and Prof.

Men's Gle<*Club Leaves March 2! On 13-Ci+yTour

the many misshappen images of

-. Phojpraphers for t h a t 0 n c e a r i s tocrat icaIIy sentimen-

e Eugte Ten Brink t a ' (^a>' ' o v e - Today it has grown

to be the signal for all those who

have carried a heartfelt grudge

around for the last year to bury

the hatchet in a missive that would

In days went by, the tender admirer would spend hours in versi-fication, burning the midnight oil and probably a few strong cigars telling the fa i r receiver of his great admiration, etc., working up to the climax of "I love you". Touching. But Fate weaves strange threads into the loom of love. We do not fully realize this until we receive a quaint little card bearing all sorts of endearments working up to an anti-climax, a f te r caus-ing us to wonder what it is all

The Hope colleg<glee club has completed its itinerfy for its East-ern tour which befns March 21. and the group willfctuni April 5.

The tour will indide concerts in thirteen cities andhore than that number of churchy In chronolog-ical order the Gli club will ap-pear in Detroit, MSiigan; Roches-ter, Herkimer, Apany, German-town, Kingston, aq Flushing, New York; P a t e r s o n , P a s s a i c , Haw-thorne and Newat, New Jersey; Philadelphia, Pe^sylvania; and Cleveland, Ohio.

On February the Glee club will render its fst full concert in Seventh Refcned church of Grand Rapids. TJ Glee club will then appear as itvill on the tour.

Hope Registers 8 New Students

Light new students have entered Hope for the second semester of 40-41. There was no graduate at the mid-term.

Le Cercle Fancaise Gives Play 'pnight

French Club tj^ts this evening,

which is a good thing you're think-ing.

We now have full representa-

tion from the Bronx Zoo initiated

into the holy realms of significant

Valentine's greetings. Hearts and

flowers have found themselves on

the cveiffe of tewg-completely

wafted away from the scene of

two adoring cows, placidly munch-

ing alfalfa, mooing sweet nothings

in each others' ear — " I cud Love

you for heifer and heifer". Now

I ask you —

Then there are those with full

coverage insurance, fireproof and

absolutely guaranteed to cost more

than three cents to send— you.

know the kind: 1 unfold and unfold

and when 1 get to the last page

I'm so mixed up I have to start all over again, which all in all con-vinces me that I had better stick to Style I — My heart pants for you stuff, a lot easier on the fellow at the other end.

Another Valentine

judges for other schools in the A division while Ruth Stryker, wom-en's debate manager, will judge in the B division.

Four teams met teams from Grand Rapids Junior and Calvin college last Tuesday afternoon at Grand Rapids. Several girls' teams from Calvin were on the campus yesterday for two rounds of prac-tice debating.

^ Prof. Schrier has also announced that the Pi Kappa Delta provin-cial tournament will be in East Lansing this year. Michigan is in the Province of the Lakes with neighboring states. Dates for this year's tournament are, March 31 and April 1.

which could h a r d l y Pass the censors of the

The new students are: Harold j (Association for Amalga-

' m a t e d Skunks) is the one with a suspicious disturbance in the con-tour of the surface. Upon a little curious investigation we find : ra ther poor example of the lasl rose of summer and way into the

prisoners of war, their isolated po-1 with the progm in charge of sition in Ethiopia constitutes a f a r j Carolyn Kreme* The feature of more dangerous situation. Here the meeting wj be the play "Le they are confronted, not only by Prince au Bois I rmant" with roles treachery and desertion on the part of the Absynnian soldiers, but also by native guerilla warfare . And the Italians are fully aware of the horrors accompanying such native action.

In Eritrea the British claim to have taken 3,500 Italian prisoners as well as an abundance of Italian war materials. They are now at-tacking Keren, and will follow any success there with an assault on Asmara .the Eritrean capital. The surrender of the capital may very easily mean the fall of the entire colpny to British armies. And in Italian Somaliland, some 2,000 miles from Libya, the British pa-trols are said to be enlarging the area of their penetration.

MUSSOLINI'S MISTAKE TO COST HIM DEARLY

The British have taken more than 100,000 prisoners as well as vast quantities of supplies and equipment. They have destroy-ed the Fascist national political and economic structure in Libya. They have strengthened the might of their own navy by extending the British-controlled coast line in the Mediterranean. And this extension brings the German airfields in Sicily and the French base of Bi-

(See AS I SEE IT, p. 3)

taken by Nof- N i e s , Howard

Local Technician Tells Pi Kap of New Lab Technique

Mr. J. F. J e l l e m a , research technician At the local hospital, spoke before the Pi Kappa Delta

February 12, 1941

Practice Teachers Take Posts In Local Schools

Practice teaching assignments

announced M o n d a y b y Prof. Garret t Vander Borgh, supervisor

of practice teaching, revealed one

innovation fo r Hope's Education

department and the possibility of a

second. Henry Voogd will be the

first education student ever to do

his practice teaching in the field of

instrumental music. He will work

under the supervision'of Eugene F.

Heeter, Holland high school instru-mental instructor.

Page Plans Pending

Arrangements for Oliver Page to

become the f i r s t Hope student to

*erve his teaching apprenticeship

in a rural school a re still pending.

Mary Bolema became the f irst to

perform her practice teaching as-

signment in the field of vocal music

when she served under Miss Trixie

Moore last semester.

Assignments in the elementary

iepartment are all in Washington

school this semester. They are as

follows: Lois Glerum and Dorothy

Zimmerman, teachng second grade

under Miss Henshaw; Hulda Rig-

terink and Alma Stegenga, teach-

ing second and third grade under

Miss Cathcart; Thelma Van "Dyke,

teaching f i rs t grade under Miss Hardy.

Secondary Assignments Given

Secondary assignments a re : Eng-

lish department, Lester Diekema

under Miss Dyke; Edgar Dibble un-

der Miss Mulder; Bob Idema under

Miss Brower, and Emily Bielefeld and Laura Roosenraad under Miss Shackson. In social sciences, Peter Hamel will teach American history under Miss Steketee.v I>on«ld- Van-der Haar will teach economics un-der Mr. Hanson, Robert Hudson will teach citizenship under Miss Denton, while Phil Dykstra will teach European history under Miss Bishop. In foreign languages, Kath-erine Douma will teach Latin under Miss Vander Werf, and Lois Jane Kronemeyer will teach German un-der Miss Randalls. Chester Toren will teach mathematics under Miss Shoup.

Dates for Sorority Initiatibns Set

Pan-Hellenic has recommended society last Wednesday evening at | F e b r u a r y 2 0 f o r s o r o r i

the Cosmopolitan house. He dis- niormai

Bangor, freshman and graduate of Holland high school; Gordon Henry Girod, junior from Grand Rapids; Pearl Scholten, sophomore t ransfer student from Central College, Pelia. Iowa; Peter VanLierop, medical

student from Ghent, Belgium; John | autumn, too, or else the odor there-VanAalst, freshman from Roches-1 of. It's all the way you look at it

cussed some of the cases in which skilled diagnosis has been made possible through laboratory work and which has resulted in saving many lives.

"Research work has tripled in

initiations and stated tha t formal

initiations may be held at any time

during the next week, February

24-28, each sorority choosing its

own particular date. The girls ex-

pecting to become members must

ter, N. Y.; Lois Hall, senior from Hoekje, and Alti Schutmaat. Paul- Lowell, Mich.; Daniel Scheerens I T /Ami r o n rl 11 Ml * 1 • ine Loew and (Jrolyn Kremers will play a violin i^t. There will be games and relshments.

special student from Rochester, N. Y.; and James White, sophomore from Holland.

I guess —by their smells we shall know them.

Well, every man to his own likmg —it ' s a free world af ter all.

a t least to the extent of Valentines. | business meeting.

he stated. " I t is only since the, 192()'s that we have been able to i speak of preventive medicine," he,' pointed out.

Betty Daugherty presented two piano solos. Mary Felter was in charge of the program and Mary Ruth Jacobs presided over a short

Thursday ^ning, February 6, in the l ibrar ja premier of some eight hundre^eet of film taken of Hope's campi was shown to the faculty.

Saturday, e b r u a r y 1, Miss Elizabeth Llty went to Detroit to attend a ;eting of the Execu-

to Faculty were entertained at tea on Fridav ! 7vi it u x

a r - f c s a t . - f ( Z ' ' r ^ : l t h : h 0 m , e . 0 f M r a - ^ M ' s s ^ t t a J . Ross and Mrs.

Hall Appointed George E. Koilen, the only woman member of the City Board of Edu-\ cation.

Palette and Masque has become a definite o r g a n i z a t i o n on the

tive Board ohe State Association campus,.and has earned a place in of Deans ofVomen, of which she the yearbook. At the February 8 is presidentj /

A new sofe of refreshment has been set up the dormitory. Soda pop can nope obtained in Peggy Light's roo

During M Htay in Holland, Dr. jfas the house guest

Wichers, and a a s given in his honor evening, January 5.

in and her daugh-visiting "Dot" this

4orm. We hope that tas te of dorm life [ties.

women and wires

M. S. J a of Dr. dinner

ter Betty week in they like and col

meeting, the Milestone picture was taken and play practice held.

Blue Key's Hope college chapter will hold its regular monthly meet-ing a t the Cosmopolitan ho Thursday night.

Representatives of ^22 colleges and universities met in Chicago last week-end in connection with cooperative study in general educa-tion o^ the North Central associa-tion 6f colleges and universities. The^following Hope college faculty members attended the meet: Profs. Paui Brouwer, G a r r e t t Vander Borgh, Teunis Vergeer, Gerrit Van

_ _ _ _ _ _ _

W. Curtis Snow.

A very lovely shower was given honor of Ruby Carpenter last

iday afternoon in the Sibylline r 0?> m ' attended Hope two years ago and was a member of the present senior class. She plans to be/married in April to Cornelius ^tekettee, Hope graduate of the

ass of '39.

7 Lois Hall, senior f rom Lowell, Michigan, has been appointed clin-ical supervisor of Blodgett Hos-pital at Grand Rapids. She will begin her work July 1st.

Dr Vergeer is planning to hold a health inventory of a t least 50 freshman students of Hope. This check-up has bgen prepared by the cooperative stu.dy group of general information which is composed of representatives from twenty col-

leges and universities.

The purpose of the inventory is to find out, as Dr. Vergeer says, "whether we ought to teach what we do teach". In this way the fac-ulty can obtain objective informa-tion of what the freshmen know about health education before en-tering college. •

It seems strange tha t there were so many Hopeites who were not interested in the Kazoo basketball g a m a The reason we say this is because appronmate ly one hundred and tbirtjr students did not call for their activities tlekets before the game. t .

Mi8s; Jeanet te Rylaarsdam spent last Tuesday afternoon a t the home of Rabbi -Folkman of Grand Rap-ids Congregation Emmanuel. Her visit, was in line with work she is doing to prepare her oration on anti-semitism for the s ta te contest to be held rtext month.

the past ten years and will increase , , D Tr „ . jven more in the next ten years," f ^ ^ Pan-Hellenic scholastic ^ T* —... I standards.

Each sorority ar ranges its own program of initiations.

Dr. R. B. Drukker To Address Y. M. Monday Night

On Monday evening, February 17,

Dr. Raymond B. Drukker, Secre-

tary of Young People's Work of

the Board of Education, R. C. A.,

will be the guest speaker of the

Y. M. The organization considers

itself to be most for tunate in hav-

ing been able to secure a speaker

who is so popular.

Dr. Drukker is known to many as

"Uncle Ray". He will address the

Y. M. on the theme, "Christianity and A World At War."

Dr. James H. Warner, head of Hope's English department, was guest speaker a t the Y. M. meeting on February 11. His subject was "Missions In The Philippine Is-lands."

As Dr. Warner taught fo r some time in the Philippines, many per-jsonal experiences and observations were cited. Hear ty hymns and spec-cial selections in charge of Music Chairman, John Westhof, also add-ed much inspiration t o the well attended worship service.

/

i

»!?

Page 2: 02-12-1941

I"all II ^MIIJ u p w i l 1.^. m m n r r n-wm*'- ^ f p ? . ! « ) jfi- v 1 - ' ^ ^ v - w m w

Page Two Hope College Anchor

Hope College flichor Publi ihed ev iry two « « V . d u r i n , t h c c K o o l year b , » ' « 0 « Kntprod HH necond claBa matter at the post o f f i ce of Holland. Mlcmgan. at in»

npeclal rate of iwHtaKe provided for in Section 1103 of Act of Congreaa, October 3, 19 . authorised October 19, 1918.

Mail subscriptions, one dollar per year Address — T h e Anchor. Hope College, Holland, Michigan.

Telephone 9436.

1 9 4 0 Membrr 1 9 4 1

ftssocidod Cblle6iate Press

Editor-in-chief F r i u B e r t s c h

Associate Editor Lorraine Timmer

Campus Capers • >. BY T H E THNOOPER

Kissing Booth at Carnival Creates Sensational Effects; Chaperons Share in Fun with Antics

EDITORIAL S T A F F News Editors Forres t Prindle, Milt Verburg

Sports Editor E d d i e D i b|b l e

Feature Editor R u t b S t r y " Photography Editor Eugene Ten Brink

Headlines F o r r e s t P r l n d l e

Faculty Adviser P a u ' B r o u w e r

MANAGERIAL S T A F F

Business Manager ^ a n

Jean Ruitcr, Louise Bcckcr, J a : k Timmer, Helen Leslie, Edith Rameau Circulation Manager Irma Stoeppels

"Why, oh why does everything

have to happen to u s ? " is the old

refrain among the various men and

women who like to sit in f ron t of

the students and talk, commonly

called the faculty — Poor dears —

first they have to bear with the

Hopeites as they cheerfully "skip"

their way through the first week

of the new semester, and now this

week they are suffering through

some unknown malady among the

fellows on the campus, never be-

Editorials and feature articles express the views of the writer. They

make no claim of representing official Hope College opinion.

Success of Prayer Week Addresses

Shows Opporluni+ies in Chapel Service The grea t and p leasant su rp r i se of P r a y e r week was the

consistent ly good a t t endance of the s tuden t body. In pre-vious years it was not uncommon f o r the chapel to be more

and more deserted each servicc, until F r iday m o r n i n g found it practical ly empty . This year the tide ^an the o ther way. S t a r t i n g with almost no th ing on Monday night , the a t tend-

ance progressed steadily unti l on F r iday m o r n i n g it appeared to be l a rger t h a n on any other day of the week. Of course

there were still some who thought t ha t a coke was mo ie impor t an t than the services, but these s tudents const i tuted

a negligible minor i ty .

This s i tuat ion was no accident. The quiet a t t en t iveness

of the audience a t each service indicated t h a t most of those

present realized t h a t Dr . J ames had someth ing to sa> to which it was well wor th the i r while to listen. It also indi-

cated tha t the s tudent body is becoming more sensit ive to

sp i r i tua l values.

Aside f r o m t h e inspira t ional wor th of Dr. J ames ' ad-

dresses, there a r e two impor t an t lessons to be lea ined f i o m this P r a y e r week : there is now a grea t oppor tun i ty for the

admin is t ra t ion and the \ ' s to make chapel services t ru ly produc t ive ; the way to make the most of th i s oppor tun i ty is to b r ing to Hope more speakers with the sp i r i tua l insight

of Dr . James . One suggest ion is t h a t we have a t least one

special chapel speaker a week. These speakers should not be b rough t in merely on the basis ol a t u r n for each Holland

min i s te r to do his duty and come to say a few words . Let us

have more speakers wi th real i n sp i ra t ion ! M. V.

Democracy's Dictatorship

Takes Control Our national defense p rog ram is now in full swing, and

we a re being assured t h a t within a few years our defenses

will be impregnab le ; At the same l ime we are sh ipping as much war ma te r i a l to Grea t Br i t a in as possible in order to

assure ourselves of a max imum of t ime in which to p repare

our own defenses . This defense p r o g r a m should have s ta r ted in 1916 and its

pace main ta ined normally trom tha t t ime to the present . Our haste now is leading us into a s i tuat ion tha t is causing

apprehension on the pa r t of all t h ink ing Amer icans , because

this p repara t ion is be ing supervised by about five men in Washington who are doing almost wha t they will with the

nat ion 's power. We had some hope of a minority-check when Mr. Willkie

made his post-election speech, but appea rances at present a re tha t he has th rown over the in teres ts of the minor i ty

and of his na t ion and taken a seat in the clique tha t is run-n ing America . A democracy cannot be successfully main-

tained if t h e r e is no opposition to the policies of the admin i s t r a t ion , and a t present many of us feel t h a t our democracy-defense is being run in a dic ta tor ia l manne r . If

the Wash ing ton clique feels like p lunging us into the war ,

we will be caught in the toils oi f a te .

M U51C

B o x

Vogan will play the prelude and i pcstlude. The choir, under the di-| rection of Mr. Cavanaugh will sing | a number. ..The speaker for the | meeting has not yet been an-

nounced.

L'il Abners Bow to Wiles Of Hope Coeds

The greates t thrill of the century

took place when the men (or are

they mice?) from Hope took beat-

ings from their respective co-eds

and bowed to the wills of their con-

querors. Many of those who were

added to the obituary column didn't

have a chance. They were soon

overpowered by tha t co-ed spirit

and the various Daisy Maes' deter-mination to get their men. If the man that D a i s y M a e g r a b b e d wasn't made to order, he was ushered first into the fortune-tell-ing booth to see if it was in the cards (or in the flour) tha t they should be m a t e d . If the cards weren't agin them, Daisy Mae rushed L'il Abner to another booth where he was taught how to woo and win her in the proper way. If the lessons were too strenuous, L'il Abner was brought to with the aid of three sponges thrown at his face (and Daisy Mae seldom missed).

The Daisy Mae-L'il Abner bouts at tracted many spectators to watch the stiff competition. The first round featured the Student Council prexy and his opponent, Margie Bilkert, armed with the wiles and artifices of the feminine race. Both started out strong, but Margie's skates were the fas ter , and she was soon "neck and neck" with Monty who was "taking the curves" at a dangerous rate of speed. The be-ginning of the end was already commencing. Monty began to lag, an expression of despair crept over! his brow, and he sank to his feet j in desperation. The victor dragged her captive from the floor.

The second event of the evening presented the struggle between Ken Newendorp, the Iowa husky, •ind Jane t Arnold, the Eastern warbler. The odds in bett ing were two to one in favor of Arnold, for the stamina of the corn busker soon began to slaken. The bout ended when the pride of the Emer-sonians hit the dust and was carried out of the ring. The adversary 's only statement was, "Eas t is east, and west is west; but who ever said the two wouldn't meet".

The next focus of attention was the technical skill displayed by Hope's blonde Queen and a black-haired Park fellow. Ken showed his fighting spirit, but his pursuer hit harder and s t ra ighter , and in the end he completely surrendered to the mercy of the fa i re r sex, showing as in the previous bouts

tha t : Hope's Daisy Maes went fo' to

catch And made themselves a proper

match With all the sweet L'il Abners

And now Hope's campus hasn' t a single batch.

fore observed or contacted and con-

sequently irremediable — it is char-

acterized by a starry-eyed, dreamy,

breathlessness hi therto unknown

among these masculine paragons —

Hot Lips Carry Lasting

Effects on Boys

Etz Kleinjan seems especially

to be living in another world, and

Marv DenHerder and Larry Belt-

man a r e n ' t f a r b e h i n d — who

would have guessed the kissing

booth at the Carnival could carry

such lasting effects even though it

was the most profitable concession

there (in more ways than one) —

But Marv certainly looked as if

something drastic had happened

with lipstick all over him i|i the

dizziest angles — Betty Daugherty

made the setting perfect bu t . jus t

in case you didn't know, Geofge

Prins was the actual lips in the

final scene — When he found this

out, Clarey Prins was heard to

dazedly ask "Well, how did I get

such a thrill ?"

And one girl who must have been

in on the inside dope was caught

trying to steal in, but you can' t

blame her for t rying because a f t e r

all, Doris VanderBorgh isn't in the

habit of lending George out fo r

general use — J a y Witte, the boy

who, when asking for the sugar,

calmly asks to "pass him his dis-

position" shyly demanded to ren t 1

the booth for a half-hour and of- j

fered all his tickets as sacrifice . . . j

Passing comment — what have the

faculty got to kick about — think of the poor Hope girls who find themselves outdone in their own field — what 's the saying that women are taking over the man's job today . . . WELL . . .

THE STUDENT PRINTS By Nola Nies and Peggy Hadden

4 Copy boy! Our galley proof — we l l go to press! i (F ree or Evening — your choice.)

Unlik« Browning we awoke one A.M. to find ourselves infamous.

COLYUM O N E : A new game is sweeping the campus. Have you heard of "Compli-

ments"? It goes like this: ^ Hooks and eyes,

Nuts and bolts, Hands and feet, Toes and HEELS!

And the* remind us of— COLYUlf TWO:

This ^#ek the ghost of Baron Maunchaussen was shocked by the spirit oft'bicarbonate looking for indigestion, and what did he find? Look in Jour clothes for clues. H in t : a fugi t ive f rom a bridge game. Who?

1 A jack ( ? ) of spades! O dash it al l! And we tho't we had been elected to that honored body of impon mt people known as Who's Who, who get mail f rom who, and hoo mo and toodle-oo . . . Ho-hum! And so to — COLYUWDTHREE:

"A dishund dash of corny hash rehashed" taken from Sadie Hawkins Skatin' P rty.

Chapter 1 How to jet knocked out in one easy skid. Who said, "The roof fell

down on Ue and that ' s all!" Come again? Or did the floor fall up a t you? May|e a certain P r o f s wife knows.

Chapter 2 We nevr said Jeanie with the light blonde hair got stuck in the

snow — oidid we? Or was it stuck period? Ask the man who drives one! COLYUM ROUR:

Blitz Quiz! We've luird about the woman of the house wearing the pants, but

whoever heml of the man of the house wearing the corset? (Page Mnty for the answer.)

COLYUM HVE: And she ho stoops to snoop also snoops to scoop. Maybe it 's pro-

fessional (?*jealousy, but we'll print our latest unless a dir ty digger comes cleanj— and we aren't talking about a soap campaign. Office hours from to 6 any day in any quiet l ibrary corner. This weak Abery:

What isVthe "Blue Flame"? Maybe certain Fraters can explain. So commcross. Who knows there might be a reward.

NOOSE NO' Here's anotter to hang one on. When Jay gets Witte there 's no '/i

way businessM)out it. Evidently he spends his time in a Dogpatch Daze. Sadie Hautois says: "Love is laughable. In fact, it's just two silly."

Chief speexmms are Lil Abner alias Joe W. and Daisy Mae alias Ditty B. One can ksily understand.

Bertsch sav he wants nothing in this colyum that isn't inspired. In other words l e long and short of our inspiration leaves us only a very mean qerage in a proportionate sort of way. And so the STUDENTS lint and print and print and print . . .

I m

The Grand Rapids Symphony

will play a concert on Saturday,

Feb. 15, with Guiomar Novaes,

Brazilian pianist, as soloist. Miss Novaes was a prodigy at the age of seven and made her debut as a mature art is t a t the age of sixteen. She has won a number of prizes, both here and abroad, including the coveted Prix de Conservatoire of Paris . She plans to play with the orchestra the first movement of a concerto by Travares , a Spanish composer, and the well-known Sym-phonic Variat ions of Cesar Franck. ....There will be a meeting of the western Michigan chapter of the Organ Guild in the chapel Sunday sf ternoon at 4 p.m. Mrs. Snow will preside a t the organ, while M. C.

w » l T U " A l

y n A M l N B ' coMPtex

"fev* con .Z ; p r*v tn* of 'ppfifm 4nd J: JOM

Telegrajaa Deliver Personal Confidences

LOST — one Aunt Minnie to whom the telegram reading "Hav-ing a wonderful time — Wish you were here — signed Twerp and Derp" is due — For collection see Sally Brannock and Marge Fr iesma who were the telegram deliverers last Friday — and if you want to know what Bill wrote in the tele-gram to your girl, ask them too — very confidentially of course . . .

Prof. Bast lost his dignity, smile, and probably some dirt when he was socked right in the kisser with a wet sponge . . . Dean Lichty once again took a graceful, elegant, and beautiful "PLOP" in the middle of the floor — but it just wouldn't be a "correct" skating party if tha t sight wasn ' t seen at least once . . .

Joe and Ditty Voted Daisy Mae and L'il Abner

. Truly Bolema and Kin Harrison were really "too, too" in their duet . . . and Joe Whitworth and Ditty Bonga as L'il Abner and Daisy Mae are a little bit of allright —r. Cor-rection, please — a little andiA big bit of allright — Ken Newendorp goes in for singing te legrami be-cause he very touchingly sent to Janet Arnold a telegram which was "The Nearness of You" . . y O n i member of the masculine sex re-ceived the song "Who Stole • My Gal" which seems to indicate * tri-angle somewhere . . . Which teems like a good place to end, you know, the element of suspense and all.

Your informer who knows all, sees all, and tells all hates to admit it but can anyone tell yours truly if Louis Chisman got the fire in his car out yet ? ? ? ?

AS I SEE IT zerte in Tunik, which the Ger-mans so g rea t l cove t , within easy bombing rangl' of British land-based planes. *

•But the moromportant result of the British actfities is the bring-ing of Weygante French army in Algeria and Tuis as a next door neighbor. Thisiondition will also strengthen the /ichy government in its bargaininiwith Hitler.

Today it seems evident tha t Mus-

solini made a grave mistake when

he cast his lot with the Marauding

Madmen of Europe. And Church-

ill's seemingly boastful warning is

ra]TWJy1#Wuming^a the luckless Italian people. The Italian empire, " torn to shreds and ta t ters ," is becoming a thing of the past. I ta ly has thus f a r failed to reap any benefit f rom her Axis al-liance.

With relaxing music...pause and

8 On. fC W , e y ^ ^ r ^ . v . p r o f . ^ 0 " ^

W

y f e M l A l

H E A T A M I N r o n d E X T R A C T

For Anything in Fine Printing . . .

S T E K E T E E - Y A N H U I S PRINTING HOUSE, I N C .

HOLLAND'S LEADING PRINTERS

9 East 10th St. Phones: 4337 and 9231

Holland, Michigan

KUITE'S MARKET & GROCERY

Phone 2847

BIRD'S-EYE FROSTED FOODS

W t Supply Your TebU Complete Free Delivery

i i v , - :

its pleating • t a cool, omplete re-you pause

y, make It tfcet with

Four generationiave enjoyed the refrethingjoodnett of ice-cold Coca-C< ta t te a lway t I clean after-tente frethment. So throughout the tfce pause that

ice-cold Coca-Coh

5 '

YOU TASTE ITS QUALITY

Bottled

COCA-COLA

Conveniently GOOD FOG

of The Coca-Colt Company by

to CO. OF GRAND RAPIDS

I P C A F E

59 East Eighth St. 1—3 minute walk from campus.

>W PRICES-QUICK SERVICE 0p e n A* y T 8:00 P» M, Daily except Sundays

, u - i n n - - - - r . ^

Page 3: 02-12-1941

WE ARE SUGGESTING If you a r e an apprec ia to r of the

modern r a t h e r rea l is t ic and im-pressionist ic t ype of l i t e r a tu re you rea l ly should not miss read-i n g t he book FOR WHOM T H E

B E L L T O L L S b y E r n e s t Hem-ingway. The s tory center around t he Fasc i s t and Communis t con-flict in Spa in and i t is a t ru ly "down to e a r t h " ta le . In addit ion to i t s charac ter i s t ics a s good wr i t i ng i t also h a s some very in-t e re s t ing a n d beneficial historical fac t s . You can ' t go w r o n g by making th is p a r t of your list of

' "Books I H a v e Read." if you gir ls have been having any

t rouble wi th your finger-nails sp l i t t ing a long t he edges, you a r e us ing your emery board

cevertson

HAVE YOUR E Y E S E X A M I N E D

W. R. St . 1;

Optometrist 24 East 8th Street

I] A

PETER A- SELLES E X P E R T J E W E L E R A N D

W A T C H M A K E R

6 East 8fh St. Phone 3055

BOWL FOR HEALTH AND RECREATION

UEVENSE BOWLING ALLEYS 215 Central Ave.

wrong. The file should be held a t r igh t angles to your nail and not paral le l . . . t r y th is and* you'll find your fingers look as 'you've a lways wished they would look,

if you ' re a l ready th ink ing about your spr ing outfi t , r emember t ha t you should have a f r ivolous and impractical ha t f o r your femme-f a t a l e moments and also a tail-ored spor ty fe l t f o r your All-American-Girl moods. I

if you a r e a swing-fan in <he 'nth degree, get J immie Lunceford 's record of L I K E A S H I P AT SEA. This recording has every-th ing that so many swin^s te rs should have and haven ' t . . . i t ' s smooth and rhythmical >but still in the Lunceford style . . . we'd ra te it A- l .

. . . for you hot-swing f a n s the new

label S igna ture which is fanned into fire by the Chicago Rhythm Kings will set your feet t ingling any t ime; — Duke Ell inton's p la t t e r s W a r m Valley and The F laming Sword a re really able to w a r m you up even on these f reez ing days . . .

Package Ice Cream Cones

Malteds Sundaes

MILLS ICE CREAM 206 College Ave.

Phone 2740 W e Deliver

NOTON

Have You Seen Our Assortment of

RECORDS? All Lates t N u m b e r s

If we do not have the number you want we will be glad to order it.

Allen's Radio Shop River Avemie

THTMARSILJE ACCIDENT I N S U R A N C E FOR

H O P E COLLEGE S T U D E N T S Holland S ta te Bank Bldg.

French Pastry Shop Try Our Line ol Dolicious

BAKED GOODS Phone 2542 We Deliver

"Hope's Pastry Ceuttr"

Visscher-Brooks A G E N C Y

No. 6 East 8th St. Holland, Mich.

Headquarters for . . . .

R O B L E E , A I R - S T E P A N D B U S T E R B R O W N

S H O E S

S P A U L D I N G ' S SHOE STORE

WHITE CROSS Barber Shop

Name on Stationery Printed to Order

VALENTINES and TYPEWRITERS

BRINK'S BOOK STORE

r ^ D R U G S T O I J E * . E I G H T H S T . - 1 6 6 W . I J ^ ST;

T. K E P P E L ' S SONS John Vander Broek, Mgr .

Established 1872

COAL — BUILDERS' SUPPLIES

SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS AND VARNISHES

FAIRBANKS-MORSE STOKERS S -

WE ARE PROUD TO HAVE HOPE COLLEGE

AS OUR NEIGHBORS.

i t ; " ' • . / BAKER FURNITURE FACTQRIES. INC.

MAKERS OF

CONNOISSEUR FURNITURE

A P P R C K I M A T E L Y 9 7 % OFTUE COLLEGE PRES-IDENTS H AVE COME FROM

TWO PROFESSIONS-TEACHING AND MINISTRC/

M

B H E YOUNGEST COLLEGE STUDENT WAS | | YEARS OLD/ A 6UAA-

CHEW1NG CONTEST HELD i AT DEPAUW uNivERsrry

WAS WON BY A STUDENT , WHO CHEWED ICG STICKS OF GUM AT

ONCE/

FOR TWD FULL YEARS, 1917-1916., NOT A VIRGINIA FOLY PLAYER WAS EJECTED

FROM ANY GAME FOR PERSONAL FOUL /

WHITMAN'S CHOCOLATE Hear t Shaped Box

25c. —50c. —$1.00

Beaut i fu l Satin Covered Hear t Boxes

$1.50—$2.25-$3.00

VAN HAPTEN'S Special Asso r tmen t

69c. —$1.19

Gilbert's Chocolates Always A Good Gif t !

OLATES

A L E N T I N E S D A Y I'M. . F e b r u a r y 14* %

The M O D E L DRUG STORE — The Walgreen Agency —

You're Always Welcome at The Model

A R C T I C . . . Pictures Cold

ARCTIC products are cold, delicious and palatable.

Our ice cream is the quickest help-out in a social

emergency. W i th all we have a warm spot for "Hope . "

A R C T I C I C E C R E A M C O .

IJ3 FAIRBANKS AVENUE Phone 3886 AT YOUR SERVICE

Ct |£ tmb^ r o f (Enmrnprc^ An essential branch of any pro-gressive city's activities is i ts

Chamber of Commerce. It fills t.he jjap between the official city body and pr ivate enterpr ise . l t is looked to for leadership in the promotion of commerce and industry .

The Chamber offers its services to Hope college and its s tudents . Feel f r ee to come in our off ice for any informat ion you may desire.

E. P. Stephan, Secre ta ry -Manager

Check master Checking Accounts.

No Min imum Balance requ i red .

Cos t less than Money Orde rs .

C o n v e n i e n t and Businesslike.

H O L L A N D S T A T E B A N K H O L L A N D , M I C H I G A N

S P E C I A L

5 9 c Cash and Carry

Michigan Cleaners

ALL PLAIN COATS PLAIN DRESSES

AND SUITS

I. HOLLEMANS. Prop.

232 River Ave. Open Saturday Evenings

SOCIAL LIFE LINES DELPHI

Thir ty- two gi r l s of Delta Phi and the i r escor ts a t tended "The Capta in ' s Dinner , " the winter fo r -

mal, a t the W a r m Fr iend Tavern, Sa tu rday n igh t . Mar jor ie Las t ,

ac t ing as chief s teward, introduced each "kno t " of the program which was charted by Mar jor ie Brouwer. A chorus of nine "whi te c aps" dressed in sa l ing costume s a n g "Anchors Aweigh," and "The Sail-ing Song" f r o m the opere t ta The Buccaneers; Bos'ns B r o u w e r ,

Bolema and Wins t rom s a n g in t r io "Sai lboat of Dreams" — agains t an e laborate nautical background.

J ean Ruiter , Jeane t te Rylaars-dam and Nola Nies then presented a ski t called BILGEWATER, which culminated in the appearance of a ta lented mar ine monster named Seabiscuit .

BREAKERS, the finale, was a s m a r t sailor's hornpipe tapped out very well by Lucille Voss and so the par ty " b r o k e " up. Mr. and

Mrs. Vernon Ten Cate graciously acted the roles of chaperones fo r the affair .

SOROSIS

Las t Thursday Sorosis held its t radi t ional Pot Luck supper before the Kalamazoo game, a f t e r which the society repaired en masse to the a rmory .

At the business meeting preced-ing the Pot Luck, President Ruth S t ryker announced that the Alumni would enter ta in the active chapter on Fr iday night , February 14th at the home of Mrs. Vernon Ten Cate. Jeanne Horton was appointed to take charge of informal ini t iat ions which will be held on February

20. The date of the Sorosis sp r ing! formal was announced as May i 22.

***"" * » - nn ixr-irvuxrcn

ated with t iny red h e a r t s and valentines. J enn ie Spoels t ra , presi-dent of the soror i ty , poured. A f t e r

the tea a business mee t ing was held and the mee t ing was brought to a close by the s inging of the Dorian songs.

A L E T H E A N

The Alethean society m e t a t four o'clock Fr iday a f t e rnoon fo r a

Lincoln Tea. Pres ident Lois Glerum presided a t the business meet ing a f t e r which Arlene DeVries took charge as p rogram cha i rman. "Lin-coln and the Law Book" was the

theme of the devotions which were followed by group s inging of "Songs that Lincoln Knew." Jean Vander Wege presented the serious paper entitled "Lincoln, the Rail-Spl i t ter ." Arlene DeVries played a medley of Stephen Fos te r songs under the caption of "Lincoln the Dreamer" . The h u m o r paper , "Lincoln, the Side-Spl i t ter ," was given by Blanche Decker. The Alethean song concluded the pro-g ram.

COSMOPOLITAN

The Cosmopolitan society met for a short business meet ing on Feb. 7. Prexy Cy Voogd conducted the session. A f t e r discussing old business, the meet ing was ad-journed so the members could a t tend the WAL ska t ing pa r ty .

DORIAN

The Dorians held a Valentine 's Day Tea in the Dorian room, Feb. 7 at four o'clock. Nelvie Vander-bilt was in cha rge of the affair . The room was a t t rac t ively decor-

F R A T E R N A L

The Fra te rna l society opened its l i terary meeting of Feb. 5 with a prayer by Roger Koeppe. Prexy Phil Waalkes presided a t the ses-sion. Robert Geldart read a serious paper on socialized medicine, with

William Pelon as the critic. Char les Holcomb read a humor paper on the "Blue Flame Club". Jack

Ja lv ing gave the mas te r crit ic 's re-port fo r the evening. A short busi-ness session followed the l i terary meet ing at which plans f o r the F r a t e r Frolics to be held Februa ry 14 were discussed.

From the North Pole to the South Pole

And wherever people move

They have come to our new restaurant

And most of them approve.

New Mary Jane Restaurant South River A v e n u e

Attention . . . Hope Students! Have You Ever Tried Our Economy Fluffed Dry

Service at 9c per Pound? S A M P L E B U N D L E : 3 s h i r t s , 2 d r a w e r s , 2 u n d e r -shir ts . 1 pa jama , 3 pair socks, 6 handkerchiefs , 3 soft collars, 3 towels, 3 wash cloths. Average weight, four pounds — 36 cents. NOTE 1. This is p robably less than the parcel post

charge for sending home and re turn .

NOTE I I . You m a y have a n y or al l of the s h i r t s in

this bundle finished at 10 cents each.

MODEL L A U N D R Y , I n c . 97 EAST EIGHTH STREET, HOLLAND PHONE 3M5

This Hotel

Specializes in

Catering for

Class and

Society

Functions

The Tavern with Best Cuisine — Pleasing

Surroundings

m

vm

THE IDEAL DRY CLEANERS

"The House of Service?9 j

CLEANING AND STEAM PRESSING;

Phone 2465 • We Call For and Deliver

CORNER COLLEGE AVENUE AND SIXTH STREET HOLLAND

Page 4: 02-12-1941

Page Four Hope College Anchor

Comets Will Play Hope at Olivet This Friday Night

Season Play Shows Olivet Lacking in Power to Finish

This Friday night, Hope's cagers shall again meet Olivet to at tempt a repeat of the 61-28 victory earned last month on our own court. This game will be played at Olivet.

Comets Tire at Finish

At that time, af ter an exciting first half, Hope opened up and seemed to score against a tired Olivet team at will. Olivet has a smoothly operating team which plays excellent ball for the fir^t half. In the first game between these schools, Olivet played heads-up ball through the first period, but bogged down in the final heat. Against Kazoo, they led 24-21 at the half only to lose out in the second half. Last week, against Albion they led all the way to lose a heart-breaker in the last few minutes, 37-35. Olivet is dangerous with a scoring punch that is limited only by their stay-ing power.

Observers see this second half let-up as a result of Barnes, Olivet's lanky sophomore center and team barometer t iring more easily than more e x p e r i e n c e d players, thereby causing a slight let-down in the offense and defense, giving a team of veterans a long advantage in the closing period

Visser Returns

Another factor in the game will be the condition of the Hope quin-tet, and especially of Hope's Long John Visser. After a long forced rest, Visser has returned to put additional spirit and p u n c h in Hope's team. His ability to take the ball off the board and to tap a free ball through the hoop makes a great difference in the Hope esprit de corps (French for spiri t) .

Visser's return will reunite the original five who started the season. The lineup will read, Van Wieren and VandenBerg at forwards, Mont-gomery and Kleinjans at guards and Vissers a t center.

Hingamen Uncork Surprise Beating Ypsilanti 53-45

After losing their first game in 18 starts to the MIAA leaders from Alma, the Hope cagers came back with the type of ball with which they defeated Western State, to pin a loss on Michigan State Normal. Going into the game as the weaker team, the Dutch came out on top of a 53-45 score.

Playing a fas t game, with no constant tying up of the ball, and no wild shooting, the Hope five not only held the lead all the way, but looked better all the way. Etz Kleinjans was outstanding on de-fense, and Jack Baas, although not high man for the night, packed a terrific offense. For the first time in a Dutch uniform, Jack got loose and fast, scoring ten points to prove that basketball players do come in small sizes. High scorer for the Hopemen was Ken Vanden-Berg, with 13 points, and for the Ypsi outfit, Miersen, a forward, with 22 points.

Only man absent from the Ypsi lineup was their ace guard, Shada, who did not make the trip. KALAMAZOO FG FT T F

Kazoo Wins Over Hope Quint By One Point Margin

Kazoo Lemmer Leads Team in 36-35 Win; Evens Earlier Loss

Last February 7, the cage team

of the Kazoo Hornets came to Hol-

land to hang the crepe on the

Dutch, pushing them out of their

nineteenth v i c t o r y in eighteen

s tar ts with one point lead. The

final score gave the Hornets 36

points, Hope 35.

Hornets Open

The Dutch opened the game off

form, and the Hornets unloaded

seven points before they got their

guns out of their holsters. Ollie

Siewert, Kazoo forward, tallied

with a foul, Dick Lemmer hoisted

a field goal, and Jer ry Oilman held a pair, all, as has been said, before the Hingamen scored.

At the close of the first half, the battle was localized beneath the Kazoo basket. The Hornets were trying to tap the ball, loose on the bangboard, through the hoop, and the Dutch wanted to take it down to the other end of the floor. As the horn blew ending the half, the ball dropped through the hoop. Immedi-ately there arose the question of whether or not the score counted. Was or was not the ball in the air when the horn blew ? A ten minute discussion, c a r r i e d on by the officials, Coach Hinga. and Coach Barnard, gave the two points to Kazoo. Theoretically, these two points were the ones that won the game for the Hornets.

Hope Men Gain

In the second half, the Hope quint came back fast , pulling from the 20-10 position in which they stood at half time, to less than three points behind. Kazoo would not relinquish the lead. In the last minute of play, Captain Bob Mont-gomery picked up a bad Kazoo pass, bowled down the floor, coming into the basket, where he snapped a short pass to VandenBerg on his left, who scored Hope's last points on a difficult dog shot.

Don't Forget the

Frater Frolics

amm

Kerthner, forward . S'ewert, forward .... Drier, center Lemmer, Kuard .... ... G'Iman, guard

0 0 (I i 1 9 I 2 4 4 7 1 3 2 8

12 12 3fi HOPI? FC FT TP VandenBerc, forward 0 2 1(1 Van Wieren, forward 4 (I H Kleinjans, center 4 2 in Montvomery, guard 2 2 6 DeFouw, guard 0 ! 1

Total* 10 7 3:i

T«tJ'l» 'E

At Hope and Away By Eddie Dibble

Tim# grows short for what has been an

eventful and unusual cage season. When the

Anchor again appears on the campus, it will

be finished. 'Tempus figits," to quote an old sage. None will deny tha t the ups and downs of this years quintet ( referr ing to a basket ball team as a basketball team is fast becom-ing unheard of) have been sensational. Star t -ing with strength unknown, the Dutch com-

bination went through the league, with one exception, in grand style. The exception saw the Hopemen outclassed sadly, main-ly because of the toll taken by physical disabilities among the team members. To founder miserably a f te r beating one of the f trongest teams in the state, Central Sta te Teacher's, was bitter medicine. However, the defeat was no freak, for the vic-tors from Alma were picked as the probable pennant winners at the opening of the season, and have lived up to their press notices throughout. Last week's defeat by Kalamazoo struck a different note. It came

as much more of a surprise. Even though Coach Hinga and the team members all were aware of the rapid improvement of the Hornet's, none expected a loss. The unfortunate incident of the questionable bucket at the close of the f i r s t half made the defeat even more difficult to swallow. Strangely enough, when the officials are in doubt as to whether or not the ball is in the air before the horn sounds^ the re-sponsibility falls upon the timer, who is supposed to be watching his clock. If he is not certain, the basket counts, and this was the case in the Kazoo game, where the two points took on inproportionate import-ance when viewed in relation to the final score of 35-36.

We justify all this retrospection and reflection with the fact that the season will soon close. League standings a t this time, February 10, give Alma a perfect percentage with 5 wins and no losses. Hope and Albion a tie, with 4 wins and 2 losses, Kazoo, 3 wins and 2 losses, Adrian, 1 win and four losses, and Hillsdale, cellar position with 5 losses. Contrasting with the Dales position in the standings is the fact that Eklund, of that team, has been averaging about 15 points a game. The return of John Visser in the Kazoo game met with loud ap-

proval. John was forced to leave the lineup because he sympathized with Hinga (I said Mister) too realistiially, and developed a similar stomach ailment. Although John still has h.U, he has doctor's permis-sion to play.

The gentleman's disagreement that developed between Kazooman Dick Lemmer and Hope captain. Bob Montgomery, brings to mind the thought that while both mens' names are linked with Hopeite Margaret Bilkert's, it is Montgomery who insists that Lemmer's link is in the past tense.

FORWARD

H O L L A N D F U R N A C E

"Makes Warm Friends"

World ' s Larges t Ins ta l le rs of Home Hea t ing and

Air Condi t ioning Systems

WARM FRIENDS of Hove College

N I C K D Y K E M A S U I T S • $23 .50 u p

The Tailor I 9 i /2 West 8th Street

Dutch-Boy is the new

"BUY WORD IN BREAD"

Inform Your Grocer You want Dutch-Boy

Seat Cover Headquarters Complete New Stock

All C a r s - ' 2 9 — ' 4 1 Models " S t r e a m l i n e " — " D e L u x e "

P a t t e r n s

SAVE AT

Main Auto Supply Holland, Michigan

Post Jewelry & Gift Shop 10 West Sth Street

D iamonds may be Selected in O u r Pr ivate Diamond Room.

mm 7 "

" T R Y B O T E R ' S F I R S T ' '

P . S . B O T E R & C O . C L O T H I N G , F U R N I S H I N G S , S H O E S

H O L L A N D , M I C H .

Hamilton Westfield

B . H . W I L L I A M S JEWELERS

Watch Inspectors for P. M. Railroad Elgin Bulova

ZD

Deedle de(?dle dunnp l in^ , m y son John W e n 1 1o b e d w i l h

( f t

h i b n e c K h e o n . ,

Hi!) c l o t h e b w e r e . w r m K l e d . b u t n o t hii. \ \e.

F o r Coro r i c^do is o n e s m o o t h b u v V-s j

jtbronado Xies o n e ^ d o l l a r ,

'UZf £St I r t L .

fMRY) HOUTING'S MEN'S STORE T H E B E S T F O O D F O R T H E L E A S T E X P E N S E

THE COLLEGE STUDENT'S MONEY BUYS MORE AT PECK'S TOASTED or GRILLED SANDWICHES, with Potato Chips, Pickle and Olive, 10c.

H'SpBSSr PECK'S DRUG STORE c n ^ y ' -

KENNETH VANDENBERG, Hope forwaid in his second year of varsity play, who often plays ace-in-the-hcle as well. Ken was pre-•eded here by his brother, Bob, who

was also a first string forward.

-o—

Cubs and Badgers Progress in Girls' Cage League

Tuesday, February 4, the Bears, captained by Lorraine Timmer, played the Cubs, captained by Ruth Klaasen. Even though the Bears forfeited for lack of players, they found a substitute from another team and the game was played off. The score was 12-2 for the Bears though officially they lost the game.

In the second game of the eve-ning, the Lions also forfeited to the Badgers for lack of players.

ELECTRICAL? —-That's Our Business

. \

De Fouw's Electric Shop A F T E R T H E G A M E ^

A S A N D W I C H A T

KEEPER'S RESTAURANT T H E BEST IN MEALS AND

SANDWICHES

Fresh Remain Unbeaten Af ter Six Tough Bouts

Sextet Led by Dalman Sure to Strengthen Next Year's Varsity

With a winning Btreak of six games behind them, the Frosh team has high hopes of an unbeaten season. G. R. Catholic, Jr . , Alma Frosh, Muskegon, Howell, Kazoo Frosh, Fra ters , and Cosmos have all bowed before the onslaught of Messrs. Dalman, Van Dort, Slager, Nienhuis, Van Lier, and Rothi. These six felows should greatly Strengthen next year 's Varsity. The very fact tha t the first four of these men are over six feet should cause Coach Hinga to smile.

George Dalman must receive a great deal of credit for the success of the Freshmen. His smooth pars-ing and shooting have been an in-spiration to the team and the home crowd. Paul Van Dort is especially known for his pivot shot which he makes from his offensive center position. [George -i Slager is the defensive s tar of th$ team, but also manages to sink several pop shots during each game. Long Les Nien-huis, the tallest man on the team, has developed rapidly into an offen-sive and defensive powerhouse un-der the boards. Clancy Van Lier and Gene Rothi alternated at a guard position. Both made up for their lack of height by speed and clever ball handling.

Jack S c h o u t e n , frosh coach, thinks this year's team is one of the best in the past few years, and should know.

Feb. 21, the Frosh go to Alma with the varsity, when they play their return match. There they will again meet the Alma Frosh, which will be their last game.

DU SAAR

PHOTO and GIFT SHOP

10 EAST EIGHTH STREET

Kodaks and Kodak Finishing,

F r a m i n g and G i f t s

HOLLAND, MICHIGAN

WINSLOW STUDIO The Studio of

Hope Cagers Cut Down Bulldogs; Final Score: 55-30

After a slow start , the Hope quintet trampled on Adrian to take honors to the tune of 55-30, at Adrian, Feb. 5, fo r its fifth MIAA victory of this season.

The whistle blew out the first half with the scoreboard sttindhig:" Hope, 25; Adrian, 17. In the second half, however, Hope broke loose and netted 30 points to Adrian's 13.

Adrian Opens Scoring The game started with Adrian

scoring the initial points, giving her a lead of 4-0 before Van Wieren and Ed Kleinjans tied it up. Darnton then cashed in on a f ree toss, tipping the lead again to Adrian, 5-4.

Two buckets from Van Wieren and one f rom Kleinjans put the Dutch into a. decided lead which they maintained all through the game. The first half saw the Dutch ahead by at least a seven point lead.

Timmer Fouls Out Rink and Darton of Adrian went

out on fouls late in the second half. Art Timmer also bagged his limit, and went to the bench.

Gil Van Wieren placed high fo r Hope with a total of 19 points, and Ken Brown, Adrian guard, topped the Bulldogs' scoring list with 14. Personal foul penalties were about even with 15 being called on Adrian and 14 on Hope players. Van Wieren, De Fouw and Montgomery were each penalized by two, VandenBerg had t h r e e , Baas one, Kleinjans none, and Tim-mer four. HOPE FG VuidenBerr , forward 4 V«n Wieren. forward 8 3 Montgomery, center 0 4 Kleinjans. guard 4 0 De Fouw, guard i e Baas, forward a « Timmer, guard

FT T P

19

.0 10 1.

Quality Photography Totals

Total i ADRIAN Rink, forward Wocrner, forward Wink, center Brown, gmard Darton, center Foltz, forward Weet , guard

22 11 55 FG FT T P

-..1 3 5

14

Yonker's Drug Store Sweet Heart Sundae - - 15c.

o

M/VLENTlNe

Two scoops of Peppermint and two scoops of Vanilla Ice Cream with Hot Fudge and Whipped Cream,

. It's Delicious . Try It Today

PEOPLES STATE BANK wishes for Hdpe College and The Anchor

the Success it Merits