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anc OPE COLLEGE or OLLAND, MICHIGAN 79th ANNIVERSARY - 1 Hope College. Holland, Michigan September 16, 1966 Five Fill Key Posts Administration Is The Hope College Administra- tion was replenished and expand- ed with the appointment of five members to the Administration announced by President Calvin A. VanderWerf during the summer. Coming to the position of Direc- tor of Business Affairs is Clarence .1. Handlogten, and moved from his post in the admissions office to Acting Dean of Men is Robert De Young. The positions of Dean of the College and Vice President for Academic Affairs have been merged into the position of Dean of Academic Affairs. President VanderWerf has appointed Dr. William S. Mathis to this newly created post. In addition, an office of develop- ment has been established and named as Director of Development is William H. liender. Servingun- der him are the new Director of Public Relations, (leorge Wallace; Director of Public Information, Mrs. Wilma Bouman; Director of Church and Community Rela- tions, Stuart Post; Director of A- lumni Relations, Mrs. Marian Stryker; chairman of the cen- tennial I fomecoming. John Tysse; and Director of Capital Funds, Larry Ter Molen. Mr. Handlogten comes to Di- rector of Business Affairs at Hope from the De Witt Co. in Zeeland. He graduated from Davenport College and has done post grad- uate work at Honeywell, Inc., and C.rand Rapids Jr. College. Mr. De Young joined Hope Col- Expanded lege late last year as Associate Director of Admissions. Prior to that he worked in the admissions office of (Irand Valley State Col- lege in Allendale, Mich. Hope's new dean. Dr. William S. Mathis, earned a bachelor of Mus- ic degree from Stetson Cniverdty, a master's from the Cniversity of Michigan, and a Ph.D. from Flor- ida State Cniversity. He has also done advanced study at Harvard Cniversity and the Cniversity of Michigan. Before his appointment to the deanship at Hope he was dean of faculties of Hardin-Sim- mons Cniversity in Abilene, Tex- as, and also served as dean of the School of Music there. (Continued on page 6) DR. WILLIAM S. MATHIS Dean of Academic Affairs WILLIAM R. HENDER Director of Development CLARENCE J. HANDLOGTEN Director of Buiineia Affatn FIRST INSTRUCTION—Four terrifying sophomores and one unidenti- fied creature give a frightened frosh his first "potting" lesson at the freshman mixer in the Civic Center last Monday night. 495 Freshmen Are Welcomed; Enrollment at Ail-Time High Has anybody seen a building named Van Raalte? What kind of course is Vespers? These are the type of questions asked this week by the 495 mem- bers of the ff£shrrtan class as they were oriented into Hope College life. Although some sixty fewer than last year's freshmen, theclass of 1970, added to large numbers of returningstudents and 67 trans- fers, brought Hope's total enroll- ment to an all time high of 1837. Assisting the freshmen in their first week were 50 faculty advi- sors and 100 volunteer student advisors. The orientation pro- gram itself, under the leadership of Dave VanderWel, consisted of a series of events aimed both at welding the freshmen together and integrating them into the whole student body. A picnic, beach par- ty, student mixer and various meetings and discussions occu- pied the freshmen. Much of the spare time and energy of the bean- ied frosh was expended in water fights. According to Director of Ad- missions Roger Rietberg, the freshmen come from 26 states and six foreign countries. Thirteen are valedictorians, 43 attended pri- vate schools, 34 received recogni- tion from the National Merit Pro- gram and one was a National Merit winner. College Board scores averaged 516 for the ver- bal and 543 for the math test. A religious breakdown of the new students shows that 49.3 per cent belong to the Reformed Church, this markingthe first time that less than half of a class were affiliated with the RCA. This is a continuation of a trend toward increased student cosmopolitan- ism evident in recent years. Men Live in Hotel Warm Friend New Enrollment Causes Housing Problem In order to accommodate the 136 additional students attending Hope this fall, the college has cre- ated a number of new student residences. This fall's enrollment is a record 1,837 students, up from 1,701 last fall. Four new women's cottages have been opened, according to Mrs. Isla Van Fenenaam, Dean of Women. In addition, the Admini- stration has leased the fifth floor of the Warm Friend Hotel a n d is housing 30 upperclassmen in re- novated hotel rooms, accordingto Robert De Young, Dean of Men. Preparation in these buildings was not finished before school o- pened for freshmen last Saturday, however. Work on the hotel rooms and construction of study rooms there has not yet been completed, and students still sleep in the dou- ble beds belonging to the hotel instead of bunks as had been plan- ned. This was to have been fin- ished before the freshmen arrived, said Mr. De Young, and should be finished "any day." Nor are the women's residences complete. Two of the new women's cottages, \ oornees Auuca (recent- ly renamed Oggle Cottage) and Bouwma Cottage above the health clinic, do not have enough furni- ture to accommodate their occu- FRESHMEN BEDROOM—These mattresses are home to the ten resi- dents of Voorhees Annex. The beds and other furniture for this and other cottages has been ordered and will arrive shortly. pants. A freshman said living in Voorhees Annex is "like camping out. It's not bad, but it would be nice if we h a d some of the comforts of home, like window screens and mirrors." A tour of the building reveals a lounge with only one sofa and chair, a vestibule totally empty except for a telephone on the rug, and only one room with a bed. The rest of the 10 residents sleep on mattresses which lie directly on the floor. The furniture for these houses, said Mrs. Van Fenenaam, would be delivered soon. She added that the reason the equipment had not arrived was because it was ordered only a few weeks ago. The admissions com- mittee had opened up the waiting list at" the last minute, and all preparations for the additional women could not be made in time. Mr. DeYoung made a similar com- ment. He said that the men who lived in the Warm Friend were those who applied late; rather than deny them admission, the college sought new housing for them. According to Mr. Roger Riet- berg, Director of Admissions, the admissions committee had never closed admissions for men. It was concerned about the effect of the selective service on the male-fe- male ratio in the student body, and since men were permitted to live off campus, they planned to accept more men to maintain this ratio and house them in private homes. Mr. Rietberg said that ad- vertisements publicizing this were placed in local newpapers by for- mer Dean of Men Thomas Carey. The response was less than anti- cipated, and the arrangement with the hotel became necessary. Mr. Rietberg also noted that 24 women had been put on a wait- ing list last spring. However, late in the summer, faculty members vacated two cottages and created space for 10 more students. These are the places without the furni- ture. Tripling in rooms is also being done in 25 rooms in Phelps Hall, said Mrs. Van Fenenaam. This had been done last year and was fairly well accepted, according to the Dean, and no attempt was made to change it this year. One woman was auuea to eacn cottage used last year, she added. Some of the problems in men's housing occurred during the change of Deans. Mr. DeYoung, who said, "I inherited a tough situation," was not told of all room committments and did not plan on the return of a number of students. These were put in the Warm Friend also, according to Mr. Rietberg. Neither of the Deans anticipate the possibility or the need of find- ing new residences, and hope that after the needed furniture arrives and the construction is complete, the housing situation will remain a s it is until the end of the year. m STUDY LOUNGE—When completed, this will be part of the facilities provided tor the students living on the fifth floor of the Warm Friend Hotel. Thirty Hope students will be housed in the hoteL
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Page 1: 09-16-1966

anc OPE COLLEGE

or OLLAND, MICHIGAN

79th ANNIVERSARY - 1 Hope College. Holland, Michigan September 16, 1966

Five Fill Key Posts

Administration Is The H o p e College Admin i s t r a -

tion w a s rep len ished a n d e x p a n d -ed with the a p p o i n t m e n t of five m e m b e r s to the A d m i n i s t r a t i o n a n n o u n c e d by President C a l v i n A. VanderWerf d u r i n g the s u m m e r .

C o m i n g to the pos i t i on of Direc-tor of Bus iness Affa i r s is C la rence .1. H a n d l o g t e n , a n d m o v e d f rom his post in the a d m i s s i o n s office to Acting Dean of Men is Robert De Y o u n g . T h e pos i t i ons of Dean of the College a n d Vice President for A c a d e m i c Affa i r s h a v e been merged into the pos i t ion of Dean of Academic Affa i rs . President VanderWerf h a s a p p o i n t e d Dr. William S. Math i s to this newly crea ted pos t .

In a d d i t i o n , a n office of develop-ment h a s been e s t ab l i shed a n d

n a m e d as Director of Development is Wil l iam H. l i ende r . S e r v i n g u n -der him a re the new Director of Public Rela t ions , ( l eorge Wallace; Director of Public I n f o r m a t i o n , Mrs. Wilma B o u m a n ; Director of C h u r c h a n d C o m m u n i t y Rela-t ions , S tuar t Post; Director of A-lumni Rela t ions , Mrs. M a r i a n S t ryker ; c h a i r m a n of the cen-tennial I f o m e c o m i n g . J o h n Tysse ; a n d Director of Cap i ta l F u n d s , L a r r y Ter Molen.

Mr. H a n d l o g t e n comes to Di-rector of Bus iness Affa i rs at Hope f rom the De Witt Co. in Zee land . He g r a d u a t e d f r o m D a v e n p o r t College a n d h a s d o n e post g r a d -ua te w o r k at Honeywel l , Inc., a n d C.rand R a p i d s Jr . College.

Mr. De Y o u n g jo ined Hope Col-

Expanded lege late last yea r a s Assoc ia te Director of A d m i s s i o n s . Prior to tha t he w o r k e d in the a d m i s s i o n s

office of ( I r a n d Valley State Col-lege in Al lendale , Mich.

Hope ' s new d e a n . Dr. Will iam S. Mathis , e a r n e d a b a c h e l o r of Mus-ic degree f r o m Stetson C n i v e r d t y , a m a s t e r ' s f r o m the Cn ive r s i ty of Mich igan , a n d a Ph.D. f r o m Flor-ida State Cnivers i ty . He has a l s o d o n e a d v a n c e d s tudy at H a r v a r d Cnivers i ty a n d the Cn ive r s i ty of Michigan . Before his a p p o i n t m e n t to the d e a n s h i p at H o p e he w a s d e a n of facult ies of H a r d i n - S i m -m o n s Cn ive r s i ty in Abilene, Tex-as, a n d a l s o served a s dean of the School of Music there.

( C o n t i n u e d on p a g e 6)

DR. WILLIAM S. MATHIS

Dean of Academic Affai rs

WILLIAM R. HENDER

Director of Development

CLARENCE J. HANDLOGTEN

Director of Buiineia Af fa tn

FIRST INSTRUCTION—Four terr ifying sophomores and one unidenti-

fied c rea tu re give a fr ightened frosh his first "po t t ing" lesson a t the

f r e s h m a n mixer in the Civic Center last Monday night.

495 Freshmen Are Welcomed;

Enrollment at Ail-Time High H a s a n y b o d y seen a bu i l d ing

n a m e d Van Raal te? What kind of c o u r s e is Vespe r s?

These a re the type of ques t ions a s k e d this week by the 4 9 5 mem-bers of the ff£shrr tan c lass a s they were or iented into H o p e College life. A l though s o m e sixty fewer t h a n last y e a r ' s f r e s h m e n , t hec l a s s of 1970 , a d d e d to l a r g e n u m b e r s of r e t u r n i n g s t u d e n t s a n d 67 t rans -fers, b r o u g h t Hope ' s total enroll-ment to an all t ime h igh of 1837.

Ass i s t ing the f r e s h m e n in their first week were 50 facul ty advi-so r s a n d 100 vo lun tee r s tudent a d v i s o r s . The o r i en t a t i on pro-g r a m itself, u n d e r the l e a d e r s h i p of D a v e VanderWel , consis ted of a ser ies of events a imed bo th at we ld ing the f r e s h m e n toge ther a n d i n t eg ra t i ng them into the whole s tudent b o d y . A picnic, b e a c h pa r -ty, s tudent mixer a n d v a r i o u s

meet ings a n d d i s cus s ions occu-pied the f r e s h m e n . Much of the s p a r e time a n d e n e r g y of the bean-ied f ro sh w a s e x p e n d e d in water f ights .

A c c o r d i n g to Director of Ad-mis s ions Roger Rietberg, the f r e s h m e n c o m e f r o m 2 6 states a n d six fo re ign count r ies . Thi r teen a re v a l e d i c t o r i a n s , 4 3 a t tended pri-v a t e schoo l s , 34 received recogni-t ion f r o m the N a t i o n a l Merit Pro-g r a m a n d one w a s a N a t i o n a l Merit winner . Col lege B o a r d scores a v e r a g e d 5 1 6 for the ver-ba l a n d 5 4 3 for the m a t h test.

A rel igious b r e a k d o w n of the new s tudents s h o w s tha t 4 9 . 3 per cent be long to the Reformed C h u r c h , this m a r k i n g t h e first time tha t less t h a n half of a c lass were affi l iated with the RCA. This is a c o n t i n u a t i o n of a t rend t o w a r d increased s tudent c o s m o p o l i t a n -ism evident in recent yea r s .

Men Live in Hotel Warm Friend

New Enrollment Causes Housing Problem In o r d e r to a c c o m m o d a t e the

136 a d d i t i o n a l s tudents a t t end ing H o p e this fall , the college h a s cre-ated a n u m b e r of new s tudent residences. Th i s fa l l ' s en ro l lmen t is a r ecord 1 ,837 s tuden t s , up f r o m 1,701 last fall .

F o u r new w o m e n ' s co t t ages h a v e been opened , a c c o r d i n g to Mrs. Isla V a n F e n e n a a m , Dean of Women. In a d d i t i o n , the Admini -s t r a t ion h a s leased the fifth f loor of the W a r m Fr i end Hotel a n d is h o u s i n g 30 u p p e r c l a s s m e n in re-n o v a t e d hotel r o o m s , a c c o r d i n g t o Robert De Y o u n g , Dean of Men.

P r e p a r a t i o n in these bu i ld ings w a s not f inished be fo re school o-

pened for f r e s h m e n last S a t u r d a y , however . W o r k on the hotel r o o m s a n d cons t ruc t i on of s tudy r o o m s there h a s not yet been completed, a n d s tudents still sleep in the dou-ble beds b e l o n g i n g to the hotel ins tead of b u n k s as h a d been plan-ned. This w a s to h a v e been fin-ished before the f r e s h m e n a r r i v e d , sa id Mr. De Y o u n g , a n d s h o u l d be f inished " a n y d a y . "

N o r a re the w o m e n ' s residences complete . T w o of the new w o m e n ' s co t tages , \ o o r n e e s Auuca (recent-ly r e n a m e d Oggle C o t t a g e ) a n d B o u w m a C o t t a g e a b o v e the heal th clinic, do not h a v e e n o u g h furni-ture to a c c o m m o d a t e their occu-

FRESHMEN BEDROOM—These mattresses are home to the ten resi-

dents of Voorhees Annex. The beds and other furniture for this and

other cottages has been ordered and will arrive shortly.

pants . A f r e s h m a n s a i d l iv ing in Voorhees Annex is " l i k e c a m p i n g out. It's not b a d , but it would be nice if we h a d some of the comfor t s of home, like window screens a n d m i r r o r s . "

A tour of the b u i l d i n g revea ls a l ounge with only o n e sofa a n d cha i r , a vest ibule to ta l ly empty except for a te lephone on the rug , a n d on ly one r o o m with a bed. The rest of the 10 res idents sleep on mat t resses which lie directly on the f loor . The f u r n i t u r e for these houses , sa id Mrs. V a n F e n e n a a m , would be del ivered s o o n .

She a d d e d that the r ea son the equ ipmen t h a d not a r r i v e d w a s because it w a s o rde red on ly a few weeks a g o . The a d m i s s i o n s com-mittee h a d opened u p the wa i t ing list at" the last minu te , a n d all p r e p a r a t i o n s for the add i t i ona l w o m e n cou ld not be m a d e in time. Mr. D e Y o u n g m a d e a s imi la r com-ment . He sa id that the men w h o lived in the W a r m Fr iend were those w h o appl ied late; r a the r t h a n deny them a d m i s s i o n , the college s o u g h t new h o u s i n g fo r them.

A c c o r d i n g to Mr. Roger Riet-berg , Director of Admis s ions , the a d m i s s i o n s commit tee h a d never closed a d m i s s i o n s f o r men. It w a s concerned abou t the effect of the selective service on the male-fe-ma le r a t i o in the s tudent b o d y , a n d since men were permit ted to live off c a m p u s , they p l a n n e d to accept m o r e men to m a i n t a i n this r a t io a n d house them in p r i v a t e homes . Mr. Rietberg sa id that ad -ver t i sements publ ic iz ing this were p laced in local n e w p a p e r s by for-

mer Dean of Men T h o m a s C a r e y . The r e sponse w a s less t h a n anti-c ipa ted , a n d the a r r a n g e m e n t with the hotel became necessa ry .

Mr. Rietberg a lso noted that 24 w o m e n h a d been put on a wait-ing list last s p r i n g . However , late in the s u m m e r , facul ty m e m b e r s v a c a t e d two cot tages a n d created s p a c e for 10 m o r e s tudents . These a re the places wi thout the furni-ture.

T r i p l i n g in r o o m s is a l so be ing d o n e in 2 5 r o o m s in Phelps Hall , s a i d Mrs. V a n F e n e n a a m . This h a d been d o n e last y e a r a n d was fa i r ly well accepted, a c c o r d i n g to the Dean, a n d no a t tempt was m a d e to c h a n g e it this y e a r . One

w o m a n was a u u e a to eacn co t tage used last yea r , she a d d e d .

S o m e of the p r o b l e m s in men ' s h o u s i n g occur red d u r i n g the c h a n g e of Deans. Mr. DeYoung , w h o sa id , " I inher i ted a t o u g h s i t u a t i o n , " was not told of all r o o m c o m m i t t m e n t s a n d did not p l a n on the re turn of a n u m b e r of s tudents . These were put in the W a r m Fr i end a l so , a c c o r d i n g to Mr. Rietberg.

Nei ther of the D e a n s an t ic ipa te the poss ib i l i ty o r the need of f ind-ing new residences, a n d h o p e that a f te r the needed f u r n i t u r e a r r i v e s a n d the cons t ruc t i on is complete , the h o u s i n g s i tua t ion will r e m a i n a s it is unti l the end of the year .

m

STUDY LOUNGE—When completed, this will be part of the facilities

provided tor the students living on the fifth floor of the Warm Friend

Hotel. Thirty Hope students will be housed in the hoteL

Page 2: 09-16-1966

P a g e 2 Hope College anchor September 16, 1966

27 New Members

Faculty Is Now Largest Ever

SPLASH—Sophomores relieve some pre-pull hostility in the direction of

some f r e s h m a n women in front of Phelps Hall Tuesday night. Similar

scenes were found at Kollen Hal! and nea r the f ra te rn i ty do rms as the

classes s ta r ted showing their spiri t .

Th i s fall the H o p e Col lege facul-ty h a s been e n l a r g e d to 117 full-t ime p r o f e s s o r s , a n all- t ime h igh . C o m i n g to the c a m p u s a re 27 new p r o f e s s o r s , the l a rges t n u m b e r in the s choo l ' s h i s to ry .

A c c o r d i n g to Dean of Academic Affa i r s Wil l iam Math i s , 10 of the new p r o f e s s o r s a r e r ep l acemen t s for facul ty m e m b e r s w h o left at the end of last y e a r a n d 18 re-present e x p a n s i o n s of v a r i o u s de-p a r t m e n t s of the s choo l . Fifteen of the new p r o f e s s o r s h a v e e a r n e d a Ph.D.

F o u r new men will teach in the h i s to ry d e p a r t m e n t this semester . War r en V a n d e r Hill c o m i n g as a s s i s t an t p r o f e s s o r of h i s t o ry h a s e a r n e d a n M.A. f r o m the Cniver -sity of Denver a n d is cu r ren t ly w o r k i n g for his Ph.D. . lames D u r a m , w h o is c o m p l e t i n g doc-

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t o r a l w o r k at W a y n e State Uni-vers i ty , will be a n ins t ruc to r in h i s to ry . Mr. V a n d e r Hill a n d Mr . D u r a m will be r ep lacemen t s f o r Dr. D a v i d Powell a n d Dr. Wil l iam Bar low .

Michael Pe t rov ich , a Y u g o s l a v by b i r t h a n d a f o r m e r State de-p a r t m e n t in te rp re te r a n d escor t officer, will be a n ins t ruc to r in h i s to ry a n d pol i t ica l science.

Dr. Rober t Peters, f o r m e r Fel-low of P e m b r o k e Col lege, C a m -br idge , K n g l a n d , h a s been ap-po in ted a n a s s i s t a n t p r o f e s s o r of h i s to ry . He o b t a i n e d a B.A. f r o m the C n i v e r s i t y of L ive rpoo l , a B. Litt. f r o m M a g d a l e n College, Ox-ford , a n d a n M.A. a n d Ph.D. f r o m Manches t e r Un ive r s i ty . He h a s pub l i shed a b o o k a n d seve ra l s c h o l a r l y ar t ic les on his r e sea rch into Bri t ish h i s to ry .

Dr. R icha rd Brockme ie r is a n a d d i t i o n to the phys i c s depa r t -ment. A g r a d u a t e of H o p e Col-lege, Dr. B r o c k m e i e r received his Ph.D. f r o m the C a l i f o r n i a Insti-tute of Techno logy where he a l s o p u r s u e d p o s t - d o c t o r a l w o r k . While at Hope , Dr. Brockmeie r was p res iden t of the Student Sena te a n d o r g a n i z e r of WTAS. He is a l so the resident f acu l ty a d v i s o r at F m e r s o n i a n Hall .

Dr. Wil l iam Bos, f o r m e r l y a m e m b e r of the facul ty of M a l o n e ColleKe in Ohio , is p r o f e s s o r of speech a n d c h a i r m a n of thespeech 1

d e p a r t m e n t . George Ralph as-s u m e s the d i r e c t o r s h i p of the Lit-tle T h e a t r e a n d is a s s i s t an t p ro -fessor of speech. Mr. Ralph h a s a B.D. f r o m U n i o n T h e o l o g i c a l S e m i n a r y a n d a n M.A. f r o m N o r t h w e s t e r n Univers i ty . He a n d Dr. Bos fill the g a p left by the de-p a r t u r e of Rober t Wegter a n d the leave of a b s e n c e t a k e n by . l ames Malco lm.

An a d d i t i o n to the Bible depar t -ment is Dr. Fit on Bruins , ho lde r of a Ph.D. f r o m New York Uni-vers i ty . Dr. B r u i n s will be assis-tant p r o f e s s o r of re l ig ion a n d Bi-ble. Also t e a c h i n g in the depar t -ment will be Rev. Rober t P a l m a , who received his B.D. f r o m Ca lv in T h e o l o g i c a l S e m i n a r y a n d is com-plet ing w o r k f o r his Ph.D. at the Univers i ty of F d i n b u r g h .

Kur t R o t h m a n n , a n a t i v e - b o r n C e r m a n w h o d id d o c t o r a l work at the U n i v e r s i t y of C inc inna t i , will be a n a s s i s t a n t p r o f e s s o r o r Ger-m a n .

Mrs. Paul Hostet ter will be vis i t ing i n s t ruc to r of Lat in , replac-ing re t i r ing Prof . F d w a r d Wolters.

Mrs. Hostet ter ho ld s a Ph.D. t r o m the U n i v e r s i t y of Il l inois a n d is a m e m b e r of the Phi Beta K a p p a h o n o r society. She h a s t augh t at bo th W h e a t o n -and N o r t h Pa rk Colleges. Both she a n d her hus-b a n d , Rev. P a u l F. Hostet ter , a r e t r a ined l ingu is t s a n d h a v e been in-vo lved in o v e r s e a s l inguist ic p ro-jects. Mrs. Hostet ter comes to H o p e o n l o a n f r o m the B o a r d of World Miss ions of the Reformed Church .

H o r a c e C h u a n g a n d J o h n Whit-tie a r e i n s t r u c t o r s of m a t h e m a t i c s . C h u a n g h a s a n M.S. f r o m Indi-a n a Sta te Un ive r s i t y a n d is work-ing f o r his Ph.D. at W a y n e State Univers i ty . Whittle h a s a n M.S. f r o m West K e n t u c k y State Uni-vers i ty . These two ins t ruc to r s en-l a r g e the m a t h e m a t i c s d e p a r t m e n t a n d rep lace . J o n a t h a n Skinner , w h o left H o p e in June .

Glenn V a n Wieren re tu rns to

H o p e to teach p h y s i c a l e d u c a t i o n a n d t o c o a c h t h e c r o s s c o u n t r y a n d JV b a s k e t b a l l t e a m s . Mr. V a n

Wieren, a n a l l -MIAA b a s k e t b a l l a n d b a s e b a l l p l a y e r at Hope , will be a n i n s t r u c t o r d u r i n g Dary l Sie-d e n t o p ' s l eave of absence .

Rep l ac ing Dr. E a r l Hal l in the s o c i o l o g y d e p a r t m e n t is Rober t V a n d e r h a m . Mr. V a n d e r h a m h o l d s a n M.A. f r o m D e P a u w Uni-vers i ty a n d a Mas te r of Social W o r k f r o m M i c h i g a n State Uni-vers i ty . Mr. V a n d e r h a m t a u g h t at H o p e in the pa s t , but h a s spen t the last seven y e a r s in g r a d u a t e s c h o o l a n d as a field soc ia l work -er.

Dr. Dwight Smi th fills out the c h e m i s t r y staff . Ho lde r o f a Ph.D. f r o m P e n n s y l v a n i a State U n i v e r -si ty, Dr. Smi th will be a s soc ia t e p r o f e s s o r of chemis t ry . He t augh t at Wes leyan Un ive r s i t y for the p a s t five y e a r s a n d h a s pub l i shed a g r a d u a t e - l e v e l b o o k a n d n u m e r -o u s ar t ic les in the ana ly t i c a l chem-istry field. Miss N a n c y T o o n e y is this y e a r ' s Ke t t e r ing Intern in Chemis t ry . Miss T o o n e y h a s a Ph.D. a n d will con t i nue her re-s e a r c h here.

Dr. C h a r l e s H u t t a r is p r o f e s s o r of F n g l i s h a n d Mrs . Kenne th T a y -lor is in s t ruc to r of F n g l i s h . Dr. H u t t a r h a s a Ph.D. f r o m Nor th -western U n i v e r s i t y a n d Mrs. T a y -lor h a s a n M.A. f r o m the Uni-ve r s i ty of W y o m i n g . T h e y a r e r e p l a c i n g Dr. F d w a r d S a v a g e a n d Dr. Fd i th Carwel l .

J a m e s Z o e t e w a y will be ass is -tant p r o f e s s o r in the pol i t ical sci-ence d e p a r t m e n t . He is n e a r i n g c o m p l e t i o n of the r e q u i r e m e n t s for his Ph.D.

Two new p r o f e s s o r s c o m e to the p s y c h o l o g y d e p a r t m e n t . Dr. J o h n B a r l o w is p r o f e s s o r of psy -c h o l o g y a n d Dr. Roger S teen land is a s s i s t an t p r o f e s s o r of p s y c h o l o -gy- Dr. B a r l o w t a u g h t at the Un ive r s i t y of I n d i a n a . Dr. Steen-l a n d h a s a d o c t o r a t e f r o m P u r d u e

Unive r s i ty a n d will be i nvo lved in c o m p l e t i o n of the r e q u i r e m e n t s fo r his Ph.D.

Two new p r o f e s s o r s c o m e to the p s y c h o l o g y d e p a r t m e n t . Dr. J o h n Ba r low is p r o f e s s o r of psy -c h o l o g y a n d Dr. Roger S t een l and is a s s i s t a n t p r o f e s s o r of p s y c h o l o -gy. Dr. B a r l o w t a u g h t at the Unive r s i ty of I n d i a n a . Dr. Steen-l and h a s a d o c t o r a t e f r o m l^ i rdue Un ive r s i t y a n d will be i nvo lved p r i m a r i l y in p s y c h o l o g i c a l coun-se l ing he re at H o p e .

Mrs. L i n d a P a l m a r is a n addi -t ion to the F r e n c h d e p a r t m e n t . She h a s a n M.S. f r o m M i d d l e b u r y College a n d h a s s tud ied at the Sor-b o n n e in Par is . Her pos i t i on will be i n s t ruc to r of F rench .

Dr. C l a u d C r a w f o r d , yvho h a s a d o c t o r a t e f r o m the Univers i ty of Wiscons in , will s e r v e as p r o f e s s o r of e d u c a t i o n r e p l a c i n g the retired Dr. 1 un is B a k e r . He t a u g h t at K n o x v i l l e Col lege in Tennessee. Daniel Pau l a l s o comes to the e d u c a t i o n staff a s a s s i s t an t pro-fessor . Mr. Pau l h a s a n M.A. f r o m the U n i v e r s i t y o f M i c h i g a n a n d a n

F.D.S. f r o m Western Mich igan . A n o t h e r two p r o f e s s o r s h a v e

been a d d e d to the b i o l o g y depar t -ment . Dr. A l l an B r a d y will be a s s i s t a n t p r o f e s s o r . He h a s a H a r v a r d Ph.D. a n d w a s fo rmer -ly a Ket te r ing Intern at Hope . Dr. R a l p h Ockerse , a l so a n as-s i s tan t p r o f e s s o r , received his Ph. D. f r o m Yale.

The STUDENT CHURCH

Dimnent Memorial Chapel

This Sunday, September 18

at 10:45 A.M.

Chaplain Hillegonds, preaching

Mr. Roger Davis, organist

Page 3: 09-16-1966

September 16, 1966 Hope College anchor Page 3

Trial Approval Given

Board Okays Campus Church

THOMAS CAREY DR. LARS GRANBERG

Granberg New Northwestern

President; Cary Also Resigns Dr. L a r s ( I r a n b e r g , ac t ing Vice

President fo r A c a d e m i c Affa i rs last y e a r a n d p r o f e s s o r in the psycho l -o g y d e p a r t m e n t , res igned f r o m the facul ty this s u m m e r to accept the p re s idency of N o r t h w e s t e r n Col-lege in O r a n g e City, Iowa. In ad-di t ion , Dean of Men T h o m a s C a r e y res igned his pos i t ion in the A d m i n i s t r a t i o n to become direc-tor of c o u n s e l i n g a n d g u i d a n c e for the H o l l a n d Public Schools .

Dr. ( I r a n b e r g will serve a s the p res iden t of N o r t h w e s t e r n , which is one of the three c o e d u c a t i o n a l , l ibera l a r t s col leges s u p p o r t e d by the Reformed C h u r c h in A m e r i c a . H o p e a n d Cen t r a l College in Pella, I owa , a r e the o the r two. His re-s i g n a t i o n c a m e af te r a l o n g p e r i o d of service which b e g a n in 1947. He held the pos i t i on of p r o f e s s o r of p s y c h o l o g y a n d w a s m a d e cha i r -m a n of tha t d e p a r t m e n t in 1952. F r o m 1954 to 1960 he was d e a n of s tudents a n d a s soc ia t e profess-o r of p a s t o r a l c o u n s e l i n g a n d psy-c h o l o g y at Fu l le r T h e o l o g i c a l S e m i n a r y in P a s a d e n a , Calif .

When he r e t u r n e d to Hope , he be-c a m e staff p s y c h o t h e r a p i s t in c h a r g e of s tuden t counse l ing ser-vices a n d r e s u m e d his t e a c h i n g dut ies as p r o f e s s o r of p s y c h o l o g y .

At N o r t h w e s t e r n he succeeded Dr. Preston J. S t egenga , w h o ac-cepted a n a c a d e m i c post in Afr ica . Dr. C . r anbe rg ' s a c a d e m i c b a c k -

Motion Picture, All-College Mixer

Weekend Spark T o n i g h t M o r t a r B o a r d will pre-

sent the full lenth m o t i o n p ic ture " O n the W a t e r f r o n t , " s t a r r i n g M a r l o n B r a n d o , F v a Mar ie Sa in t a n d Lee .1. C o b b . The s h o w i n g s , which a r e f i n a n c e d by the Cul-tu ra l Af fa i r s Commit tee , will be in Snow A u d i t o r i u m at 7 a n d 9 p . m .

T h e movie , which won eight A-c a d e m y A w a r d s inc lud ing " B e s t Picture of the Y e a r , " is the t rue s t o r y of a Jesui t priest w h o sets out to end the t e r r o r rule o f a m o b which h a s w o n con t ro l of a b ig c i ty ' s w a t e r f r o n t a r e a . Fi lmed on the New York wa te r f ron t , it w a s directed by Fl ia K a z a n a n d fea-tures a m u s i c score by L e o n a r d Bernstein.

T h e All-College Mixer will " h a p -p e n " t o m o r r o w night at the Civic Center fo l l owing the foo tba l l g a m e with A u g u s t a n a . T h e Penetra-t ions , a loca l b a n d , will p l a y at 9 : 3 0 p .m. T h e lead s inger fo r the g r o u p is Ted J o h n s o n , a j u n i o r at Hope . The a d m i s s i o n will be $ . 5 0 a pe r son .

HIGH INCOME JOBS O N CAMPUS

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for over forty magazines, American Airlines, Operation

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legiate Market ing, Dept. H# 27

E. 22 St., New York, N.Y. 10010.

g r o u n d includes a B.S. f r o m Wes-tern College in Whea ton , 111., a n d a n M.A. a n d a Ph.D. f r o m the Un ive r s i t y of Ch icago .

Mr. ( a r e y left H o p e after coming here in 1964 as ass i s tan t d i rec tor of A d m i s s i o n s . He is a g r a d u a t e of H o p e College a n d went on to o b t a i n a m a s t e r ' s degree in coun-se l ing a n d g u i d a n c e . Pr ior to his a p p o i n t m e n t at Hope , he se rved as c o u n s e l o r at H o l l a n d High School . He served as Dean of Men for o n e y e a r , appo in t ed to tha t post in Apri l , 1965.

At its a n n u a l mee t ing in J u n e the H o p e College B o a r d of Trus -tees a p p r o v e d on a t r ia l b a s i s the s tudent chu rch which w a s initiated by C h a p l a i n Wil l iam Hi l l egonds last y e a r .

The c a m p u s c h u r c h is des igned for H o p e College o n - c a m p u s stu-dents , a n d services a r e held every S u n d a y while the col lege is in ses-s ion . C h a p l a i n Hi l l egonds leads m a n y of the services but o ther min is te rs a r e a l so invited to par t i -

cipate. Accord ing to the C h a p l a i n , tl^e c h u r c h will offer to m e m b e r s of the s tudent b o d y the o p p o r -tuni ty to serve as s tudent e lders , d e a s o n s , b o a r d of e d u c a t i o n mem-bers , o r choi r m e m b e r s . The stu-dent cons i s to ry will act as a liai-s o n between the Student Senate a n d c a m p u s re l ig ious g r o u p s . The a i m s of the c h u r c h a re com-

m u n i t y service a n d the f u r t h e r i n g of Chr i s t i an d e v e l o p m e n t on cam-pus bes ides c o n d u c t i n g services of w o r s h i p , he sa id .

This S u n d a y ' s service will be held in Dimnent C h a p e l a n d C h a p -la in Hi l legonds will p r each .

In o the r ac t ion the B o a r d of I rustees, unde r the c h a i r m a n s h i p

of F k d a l Buys of G r a n d Rapids , reviewed a p l a n fo r the develop-ment of the c a m p u s . The B o a r d decided tha t two bu i ld ings of im-med ia t e concern a r e a new science bu i l d ing a n d a new s tudent center. P lans a r e now be ing m a d e so that the cons t ruc t ion of these bu i ld ings c a n beg in as s o o n as poss ib le .

but <hey a re subject to the m a s t e r p l a n which will be presented at the Centennia l H o m e c o m i n g . T h e C h a r l e s Stade Architects of Chi-c a g o a r e be ing re ta ined to d r a w up the mas te r p l an .

Also discussed at the June meet-ing were the p l a n s for the Cen-tenn ia l H o m e c o m i n g ce lebra t ion , Oct. 11-16. T h e p r o g r a m , u n d e r the di rect ion of J o h n Tysse , will

b r i n g s p e a k e r s in the fields of e d u c a t i o n , mus ic , a n d poli t ics to the c a m p u s .

Director of Cap i t a l F u n d s , Lar -ry Ter Molen , a n n o u n c e d to the

B o a r d tha t a g o a l of $ 2 2 6 , 0 0 0 h a d been set fo r this y e a r ' s a l u m -ni fund dr ive . T h e d r ive will be c o o r d i n a t e d t h r o u g h the newly es tab l i shed Office of Deve lopment .

Hesse link Opens Year Urging Search for Truth

Geneva Retreat Focuses On Campus Evangelism

C a m p u s e v a n g e l i s m : its m e a n -ing a n d its me thod is the theme of this y e a r ' s Ceneva Retreat next weekend . T h e Retreat p r o v i d e s H o p e s tuden t s a chance to t ake t ime out f r o m the a c a d e m i c g r i n d to p a r t i c i p a t e in a weekend of t h o u g h t a n d s e l f - examina t ion .

Interested s tuden t s m a y regis ter in the l o b b y of V a n Raal te Mon-d a y t h r o u g h W e d n e s d a y of next week; the cost is S 3 . 5 0 for b o a r d -ing a n d 8 5 fo r n o n - b o a r d i n g stu-dents . Buses will leave Phelps Hall at 2 p .m. a n d 5 p . m . on next F r i d a y for C a m p ( leneva a n d will r e tu rn a b o u t 8 : 3 0 a . m . Sun-d a y .

Rev. Fd Mulder , a n evange l i s t of the Reformed Church , will de-fine a n d exp l a in e v a n g e l i s m on

F r i d a y night ; on S a t u r d a y m o r n -ing r e s o u r c e people f r o m the Nav i -g a t o r s , Y o u n g Life, In ter -Vars i ty , a n d the Cni ted Chr i s t i an C a m p u s Fe l lowsh ip will exp l a in how their respect ive g r o u p s use e v a n g e l i s m with y o u n g people. A pane l dis-cus s ion m o d e r a t e d by Rev. Hille-g o n d s will be held S a t u r d a y n igh t ; the p u r p o s e of this d i scuss ion is to a i r differences of op in ion a b o u t e v a n g e l i s m between the fou r

g r o u p s a n d to keep s tuden t s re-s p o n s i v e a n d open to different m e t h o d s of e v a n g e l i s m .

Doreen A d o l p h s a n d d e n e Poll a r e co -cha i rmen for the weekend; the o the r m e m b e r s of the commi t -tee a re M a r s h a Hendr i cks , J ack ie N y b o e r , J im S c h o o n , Bernie V a n F n g e n a n d F r a n Webinga .

Wfho a m I? What a m I d o i n g he re? These are the ques t ions a sked by this uncommi t t ed gen-e r a t i o n of college s tudents .

The m a n n e r by which they c o m e to g r ip s with m e a n i n g in the s e a r c h for the answer s of y e s t e r d a y ' s C o n v o c a t i o n a d d r e s s by Dr. 1. J o h n Hessel ink, titled " T h e Quest for Authen t ic i ty . "

Dr. Hessel ink, p r o f e s s o r of the h i s to ry of doc t r ine a n d Lat in at T o k y o Theo log ica l S e m i n a r y , was g r a d u a t e d f r o m Cen t ra l Col-lege a n d Western Theo log ica l S e m i n a r y . He received his Ph.D. f r o m the Univers i ty of Basil , Swit-z e r l a n d , where he s tudied u n d e r the s u p e r v i s i o n of Dr. K a r l Bar th . He h a s lectured a n d p r e a c h e d ex-tens ively in J a p a n a n d will be t e a c h i n g this y e a r at Western.

Dr. Hessel ink e n u m e r a t e d m a n y w a y s tha t this " u n b e g u i l e d gener-a t i o n " h a s sea rched fo r real i ty in life. Answers h a v e been s o u g h t in sex, LSD, ac t iv i sm, m o d e r n lit-e r a t u r e a n d science. But " m a n will never f ind the a n s w e r s as l o n g as we reach into ourse lves ; we mus t t r a n s c e n d o u r s e l v e s , " he sa id . " U n d e r s t a n d i n g is a r e s p o n s e to G o d ' s call; m a n h a s a choice be-tween real i ty with God a n d unre-

al i ty with a n y t h i n g e l se , " accord-ing to the t h e o l o g i a n .

Also requ i red in the s e a r c h for authent ic i ty is a " c o m m i t m e n t to t r u t h , " s a i d Dr. Hesse l ink . " N e u -t r a l i sm is imposs ib le t o d a y , every-o n e mus t s e rve one g o d or a n o t h e r . " Dr. Hessel ink told the a s s e m b l a g e tha t " t o k n o w Him is to know the t r u t h " a n d a s k e d " d o we d a r e expose ou r se lves to tha t u l t imate t r u t h . "

JOHN HESSELINK

Tonight

Mortar Board Presents

"ON THE WATERFRONT" Starring: Marlon Brando

Eva Marie Saint Lee J. Cobb

Absolutely Free 7 & 9 P.M. Snow Auditor ium

Coming 9 / 2 9 & 3 0 "Macbeth" starring Judith Anderson

AMBASSADOR Shop Styl es In Accordance With The Tastes of

Discriminating Young Men

Featuring this Fall for Hope Men:

(and incidental ly, welcome back!)

Stanly Blacker sport coats; Enro dress shirts; McGregor sport shirts and outerwear; Jaymar dress pants; Bernard Altman sweaters

including the latest Shetland V-neck Pullovers

Open Tuesday — Saturday t i l l 5:30,

Monday and Friday Evenings t i l l 9:00

37 EAST 8th V K

Page 4: 09-16-1966

Page I Hope College anchor September 16, 1966

A

'I hear the R.A. is a Quaker.'

Greetings From the Presidents F o r F r e s h m e n Only

S o m e y e a r s a g o F r a n k Lloyd Wright w a s c o m m i s s i o n e d to de-s ign a church bu i l d ing for a c r a m p e d , d o w n t o w n site in Kan-sas City. F o r the c h u r c h en t ry he p l a n n e d a long , low-ceil inged hal l tha t t e rmina ted a b r u p t l y in a huge , d o m e d s a n c t u a r y . T h e con-t ras t of the lofty a u d i t o r i u m with the low p a s s a g e w a y s p r e a d a n a u r a of expec tancy a n d insp i ra -tion ove r all w h o entered.

Beginning college is m u c h like en ter ing the Wrigh t -des igned church . F r o m k n o w n a n d often restricted b o u n d a r i e s you step into a whole new wor ld of v a s t poten-tial. The f a m i l i a r a s soc i a t i ons a n d activities of h igh schoo l d a y s now be long to the pas t ; the fu ture opens b r igh t a n d big, a n d some-times b l ind ing .

It is to this vas t a n d exci t ing new fu ture that we at H o p e College wel-come you . We invite you to a new wor ld of grea t ideas , g rea t ideals , g rea t cha l lenges , a n d g rea t peo-ple. These, toge ther with a n eter-nal fa i th a n d p u r p o s e , c a n be a migh ty force ~ in y o u r life a n d in the society of which we a r e all a pa r t . May you , t h r o u g h G o d ' s g race , m a k e them so.

Ca lv in A. VanderWer f

This will be a n i m p o r t a n t y e a r at

Hope College — not b e c a u s e of the Centennia l ce lebra t ion , (al-t h o u g h this will a d d to its sig-n i f icance) but because eve ry yea r spent at Hope is a n i m p o r t a n t yea r . We will be h a v i n g such o u t s t a n d -

ing people vis i t ing o u r c a m p u s as Mich igan G o v e r n o r R o m n e y , So-cialist leader N o r m a n T h o m a s , Newsweek C o l u m n i s t Kenneth C r a w f o r d , a n d the Swingle Sing-ers. But we will a l s o h a v e out-s t a n d i n g people l iv ing here — 27 new facul ty m e m b e r s , s eve ra l new a d m i n i s t r a t o r s , a n d a c o r e o f m e n a n d w o m e n we h a v e l e a rned to re-spect a n d a d m i r e . We will be g iven o p p o r t u n i t i e s to

hea r a b o u t a n d d i scuss s tate a n d n a t i o n a l pol i t ical issues t h r o u g h events like the T h o m a s - C r a w f o r d deba te on Vie tnam a n d a f o r u m on ex tend ing the f r a n c h i s e to e ighteen-year -o lds , as Mich igan m a y do in N o v e m b e r . But at the s a m e time we will h a v e a chance to discuss local c a m p u s issues such as h o u s i n g , d i n i n g a n d clin-ic facilities. We will a l s o t ry to de-ve lop o u r o w n s tudent o r g a n i z a -tion t h r o u g h a l e a d e r s h i p confer-ence, s o m e w o r k s h o p s for offi-cers of c a m p u s o r g a n i z a t i o n s , a n d a n a t tempt at c la r i f i ca t ion a n d conso l ida t i on of s tudent s u p p o r t .

All this will be u n d e r t a k e n in the a t m o s p h e r e of a C h r i s t i a n l iberal a r t s school which is ce leb ra t ing its centennial t h r o u g h the o r g a n i -za t ion of a s tudent c h u r c h .

T h e r e is m o r e to life t h a n look-ing f o r w a r d to the fu tu r e or b a c k on the pas t — one a l s o h a s to be p a r t of the present . And so, a s 1 welcome you to a n i m p o r t a n t y e a r at this college, 1 h o p e its keyno te for y o u will be p a r t i c i p a t i o n — posi t ive p a r t i c i p a t i o n in creat ive , wor thwhi le activit ies.

Gene P e a r s o n

ancnor PRCS* OLLAND, MICHtOAN

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

ination periods by and for the students of Hope College, Holland, Michigan,

under the authority of the Student Senate Publication^ Board.

Entered as second class matter at the post office of Holland, Michigan. 19421, nt the special rate of postage proirided for in Section 1101 of Act of Subscription: $5 per yenr. Printed: /eeland Record, 'Iceland, Michigan. Congress, Oct. ). 1917. and authorized Ort. 19. 1917. Member: Associated Collegiate Press. Michigan Collegiate Press Assn. Office: Ground Floor of Graves Hall. Phone: 369 2122

Editor — John M. Mulder

anchor editorial

On Housing This week 1,837 of us r e t u r n e d to the cam-

pus and began our n ine m o n t h stay of

study. W e r e t u r n e d wi th d i f ferent a-

m o u n t s of joy, some t i red of vacat ion a n d

some wishing it never would have ended .

After our arr ival we not iced immedia te ly tha t

things were d i f ferent this year. Mope Col lege

has grown.

We saw the sudden g rowth evidenced in

many places—in a sea of green beanies which

seem to engulf everything, in the reorganized

office system of offices in Van Raa l t e , in longer

lines than last year, and in an endless pa r ade

of new faculty and s tuden t faces. However , wc

also saw and heard of how all these new and

old s tudents were packed in to the hous ing

which the College had assigned to them.

T h i s year H o p e College s tuden t s are pay-

ing a tu i t ion , room and b o a r d which is a t a

record a m o u n t . T h e e n r o l l m e n t too has reach-

ed a new high as well as the size of the facul ty .

However , somewhere s tuden t s are be ing cheat-

ed, cheated because the College is not provid-

ing adequa te ly for the hous ing of its s tudents .

As ou t l ined in the ar t ic le on Page 1, H o p e

College s tuden t s are l iving in the W a r m

Fr iend Hotel , cottages scat tered in the area

a r o u n d the campus , a n d even in the hea l th

clinic. And , as the p ic tures graphica l ly illus-

trate, l iving condi t ions are some th ing less t h a n

ideal. Renova t i on of pa r t of the s tuden t l iving

qua r t e r s in the W a r m Fr iend is still going on;

women in Voorhees A n n e x (why anyone

would want to a n n e x Voorhees in the first

place is a l i t t le beyond us) have no beds ex-

cept mattresses on the floor. In add i t ion , wo-

men s tudents are t r ipp led u p in rooms design-

ed for two people. Last year the n u m b e r of

triples was negligible, b u t this year it is so

prevalent that we ques t ion the possibility of

studv in such a sardine-l ike s i tua t ion .

IT IS F A I R L Y E V I D E N T t h a t this hor -

ribly overcrowded cond i t i on is a de l iber -

ate move on the par t of the Admin i s t r a -

t ion. H o p e College mus t grow, as Pres iden t

Vande rWer f and the Board of T r u s t e e s have

asserted many times. O n e of the resul ts of th is /

growth is a cer ta in a m o u n t of d i scomfor t to

all those caught in the g r o w i n g pains. I t if

q u i t e p la in that the College c a n n o t get money ,

e i ther f r o m f o u n d a t i o n s or a l u m n i or t he

G o v e r n m e n t , if it c anno t d e m o n s t r a t e a cry-

ing need for more classroom and d o r m i t o r y

space.

Nevertheless, a s tudent w h o a t t ends H o p e

this yeai is paying $1,800 for his educa t ion ,

which includes a room for n ine mon ths . T h i s

year the inequi ty in hous ing is severe and the

result is tha t many s tuden t s are be ing chea ted .

T h o s e s tuden t s w h o are l iv ing in the h e a l t h

clinic or the W a r m Fr iend are pay ing just as

much foi their i n a d e q u a t e h o u s i n g as those

w h o arc staying in the c o m f o r t a b l e rooms of

the f r a t e rn i ty houses or G i l m o r e or e lsewhere.

It is u n f a i r to s tudents to re legate t h e m to

cubicles which are clearly i n a d e q u a t e . W e also

have the impression tha t since m a n y of the

s tuden t s w h o are l iving in the in fe r io r r o o m s

were accepted late, the College is on a n all-

out c a m p a i g n to push u p the e n r o l l m e n t fig-

ure, w i t h o u t enough regard for the p rob lems

and d iscomfor t which it causes.

WE H E A R T I L Y A G R E E that H o p e

College mus t grow. However , its

g rowth this fall indica tes a ser ious

lack of p l a n n i n g a n d p r e p a r a t i o n . P e r h a p s

new admin i s t r a to r s canno t be expec ted to

solve every th ing overn ight , b u t the Col lege

has a responsibi l i ty to its present s tudents ,

whatever the f u t u r e plans m i g h t be, to offer

the best educa t ion a n d the best cond i t i ons for

p u r s u i n g that educa t ion . A r o o m in the W a r m

Fr iend or s leeping on mattresses on the floor

doesn ' t q u i t e fit tha t bill.

Review of the News National Guardsmen were sent

to Dayton. Ohio, on September 1 when Negroes rioted a f t e r a Negro was fatal ly shot f r o m a moving car . Twenty-three were injured.

Wauwatosa, Wis., a suburb of Milwaukee, was the next site where Guardsmen were sent . The NAACP's picketing of J u d g e Robert Cannon's home drew large, heckling crowds of whites. Cannon, Judge Christ Se raph im, and Congressman Clement Zab-locki, all picketed by the NA-

ACP, a re m e m b e r s of the all-white F ra t e rna l Order of Eag les .

Guardsmen were aler ted but not used during three nights of Negro violence in Benton Har-bor, Mich. Negroes rioted for three nights in Waukegan, 111. Gangs of white and Negro youths clashed in the s t ree ts of J ack -son, Mich, in two successive nights of violence.

Atlanta, Ga. , long considered a model ci ty of rac ia l under-s tanding and cooperation, erupt-ed into rioting which was insti-gated by a sound t ruck and pamphle ts belonging to the Stu-dent Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Stokley Carmichae l , newly elected head of SNCC, along with fourteen o thers w e r e a r res ted for rioting while Car-michael w a s speaking by phone on WBBM in Chicago. This week, violence f lared again in this Southern city for t h ree m o r e nights.

Washington, D.C. Fo r the f i rs t t ime, a Negro

woman will sit as a Fede ra l judge. The Senate confirmed the appointment of 45-year-old Mrs. Constance Baker Motley as the U.S. Distr ict Judge for Southern New York.

Pres iden t Lyndon B. Johnson, whose populari ty is somewhat less than overwhelming, is en-gaging in a ser ies of political and "non-poli t ical" tr ips.

The Senate Fore ign Relat ions Committee, under the cha i rman-ship of J . William Fullbright , has been holding hear ings into news m a n a g e m e n t by agencies of the Fede ra l Government . 'The results a r e not in yet, but all those accused of manag ing news have denied that it occur-ed, except in ca ses of a nat ional emergency . There was also no definition of a "na t ional emerg -e n c y " that was generally ac-cepted by the s a m e people.)

Kansas City, Mo. Never one to mince words,

fo rmer Pres iden t H a r r y S. Tru-m a n re leased a load of political buckshot. He s tated that the "d ras t i c increase in interest r a t e s " tha t was " imposed on the American economy" m a y , instead of mere ly forstal l ing in-flation, "b r ing on a precipi tous deflation. This could br ing on a serious depress ion." The Pres ident denied that his move to curb inflation would resul t in a depression.

New York U Thant prec ip i ta ted turmoi l

in the U.N. by declining a sec-ond t e r m as Secre ta ry-Genera l .

California Ronald Reagan , Republ ican

hopeful for governor of tha t s tate , is now running sca red since incumbant Governor Ed-mund G. ( " P a t " ) Brown h a s closed Reagan ' s lead to only a few percen tage points. Las Ve-gas odds run 9 to 5 against Rea-gan.

Peking, China Red Chinese youths, m e m b e r s

of the Red Guard youth organ-ization, have been ordered to cease their act ivi t ies to pu rge China of capi tal is t cul ture and go out into the fields to ha rves t the crops..

Around the World President Char les de Gaulle

is making a round-the-world tour, seen by some as an at-tempt by de Gaulle to take the place of the late Nehru of India and Pres ident Tito of Yugo-slavia as the influential leader of the world's neut ra ls .

Space Two U.S. as t ronau ts have been

up two and a half days in wha t may be called a nea r per fec t flight. Flight plans called for 44 orbits , a walk in space , a record dis tance f r o m the ea r th of 865 miles, and a record 94-minute rendezvous with an At-las Agena rocket .

Saigon P e r h a p s the g rea tes t victory

of the Vie tnamese w a r took place in a democra t i c election. The Communis t s said tha t every-one should not vote but roughly 80 percent did. i

Page 5: 09-16-1966

September 16, 1966 Hope College anchor Page 5

Decision Requires Energy and Action

Bellow: Man Must Face War and Decide By Bob Schwegler

Wars tend to be aggrava t ing . They ask questions before a m a n has answers and they ask for action when a m a n is most comfor tably resting. Saul Bellow's f i rs t novel, "Dangling M a n , " tells the story of Joseph, a Chicago intel lectual and businessman who has left his job and is awai t ing his d r a f t call to serve in World War II.

The war has become an agg rava -tion for him because it has re fused to remain as impersonal as a busi-ness deal and has in t ruded into his private life. As an alien living in the U.S., Joseph is subjec t to the draf t , but his o rde r s have not yet come through. This period of uncertainty turns into a t ime of self-examination in which all the disparities of his inner life and the superficialit ies in his re lat ions with other people a re highlighted by the pressing eventual i ty of the war . He says of himself that he "began to dangle ," and all the endless self-justifications, self-accusat ions, and petty problems of the dangling, uncertain m a n a re revealed by Bel-low in this fictional journal .

An Indirect War The war does not affect Joseph

directly by dropping bombs on his house, but acts r a the r as a spot-

light which sends its probing fing-e r s towards him reveal ing his alien-ation and confusion. Interest ingly enough, his s ta te is quite s imi lar to that of the modern Amer ican student. Joseph, the intellectual bus inessman, has moderately good relations with his family, a seem-ingly happy m a r r i a g e , and vague plans for the fu ture which include his emergence as an authori ty on the Enl ightenment . Every th ing is ca lm and fixed in its place. So too with the student who proceeds to-ward his degree, and his job with modera te a s surance of success and future happiness .

Rut wars tend to be aggrava t ing . They upset Joseph ' s ra t ional and progressive little universe and force him to place his well-made intel-lectual world outlook up agains t a disturbing reality — disturbing be-cause it re fuses to listen to plans or theories. Bellow's c h a r a c t e r is caught without an explanat ion of this reali ty and likewise the s tudent is faced with d e m a n d s which he had never bothered to include in his plans.

As a result of this aggrava t ion Joseph hangs in a s ta te of limbo waiting for his call and the s tudent lives in a shadowy status of 2-S contingent upon his test score and

his grades . Joseph is caught with-out means of help. His f r iends and family a re either too occupied with problems of their own or very practical suggestions which never seem to make up for his broken plans or shat tered ideals.

The Aggravation of War Only Joseph himself is left to

give meaning to his life in this d i l emma. Yet he is not ready to admit that his fo rmer thoughts might have ignored even one exig-ency of the fu ture nor is "he able to deny that some force which he, of course, has no responsibility for, has disrupted things and proven too big to be controlled and too impolite to go away. In short his obstinacy and pride hold him fas t and his t emper becomes short . Joseph b lames all those around him foi their human imperfect ions and snaps at them while he spends his t ime day-dreaming.

Quite a s imilar situation may be found with the s tudent who. wor-ried about the d ra f t , b ickers with his paren ts and his girl and worries about his marks . Guardedly he begins to discuss the Vie tnam war while secretly he begins to ask questions about himself. But the student really can ' t be given this much credit . He would never have

begun to discuss something as dis-tant as Asia if the war h a d n ' t begun to ask if what he was thinking and doing was so important that it couldn't s tand the added exper-ience of a two-year hitch in the rice paddies.

Likewise, even Saul Bellow's com-placent Joseph is forced to ask questions of himself and the world around him. If the ear l ie r Joseph could have his way, he would re-main so, for he has been deprived of his ear l ier energy and remains a dangling man unable to restore his person to its fo rmer order. Yet the war pressures him towards a decision which he cannot fully unders tand but which he must un-der take .

The Necessity of Action But a real decision. Bellows says,

requires energy and action to back up words. And a decision, if it is to be binding, must represent the will of the total man since it com-mits the total man to action in the fulfi l lment of its conditions. The very war which has shat tered Joseph has demanded of h im a de-cision which requires that he ques-tion each par t of himself so that he may put it into its proper place to p repare himself for action. Jo-seph finally m a n a g e s to do this

BOB SCHWEGLER

and enlists in the a r m e d forces. One must not suppose that Bel-

low is suggesting enl is tment as the solution to everyone ' s problems. But it does represent the act of will which Joseph (and the s tudent) must exper ience in order to show that they have faced the challenge of the war and m a d e themselves into whole men again .

The Fifth Column 269 Attend Summer School; 7

Many Foreign Students Enroll

For six weeks this s u m m e r 209 students at tended classes and par-ticipated in m a n y of the cultural activit ies sponsored b^ the college. These activities included concer ts of both popular and class ical music plus a variety of f i lms. This sum-m e r festival of music and f i lms was also open to the genera l public but was not well a t tended by the townspeople.

Another phase of Hope 's sum-m e r activities was the internat ional program. Forty-two s tudents f r o m several J apanese , Dutch, Yugo-slav, and G e r m a n universi t ies par -ticipated in an intensive s tudy of Amer icana . During the f i r s t three weeks they stayed in the dormitor-ies with American s u m m e r s tudents a f t e r which they b e c a m e the tem-porary " s o n s " or " d a u g h t e r s " of local families.

The academic aspect of their ex-periences consisted of lec tures and discussions in history, social sci-ences. and education. Although the group 's academic p r o g r a m w a s sepa ra t e f rom the courses of the regular s u m m e r session, the for-eign students were given severa l opportunities to sit in on lectures and discussions of other courses. An important dimension of the in-ternational p rog ram was its in-clusion in the ext ra-curr icular and social events of the Hope S u m m e r p rogram.

Hope also held a s u m m e r " t r i a l " p rog ram in which 21 pre- f reshmen were given a chance to improve their academic work and increase their motivation. Nineteen of these s tudents were accepted as fresh-men this fall.

the s u m m e r p r o g r a m , said. "This yea r ' s s u m m e r session was more successful and also more complex than in previous years . Enro l lment was increased by 19 percent and we had more nationali t ies repres-ented. Also we succeeded in our aim to promote a g rea te r amount of s u m m e r c a m p u s activity while retaining a sense of homogenei ty ."

A Freshman Speaks By Gordy Kors tange

" F r e s h m e n of the world unite, you have nothing to lose except your d ra f t s t a t u s ! "

With those s t i r r ing wortls Maxine Van der Kraaked (1A at the t ime) began his campaign for f r e s h m a n

Happiness Is Working

on the anchor

Come to the anchor office in Graves basement to-

morrow at 1 p .m. and discover happiness .

class president . I met Maxie yes-te rday just as he was in the middle of throwing a pot. After listening to his p la t form I agreed to support h im and his Progress ive Reforma-tion par ty .

Maxie comes to us directly f rom four successful years at Orange City High School in Iowa. His fa ther is a Reformed minister , and his mother is a famed hostess of pro-gressive dinners—hence his par ty ' s name . In high school Maxie d ) was president of his class, '2) won 16 letters in athletics, (3) placed as a National Merit finalist , (4) contributed regular ly to the Church Herald , (5) didn't smoke, swear , or drink, '6) was tall, blond and fair-skinned, (7) was pres ident of the OCHS student body, youth fel-lowship. Boy Scout troop, 4H club, and "Young lowans for Goldwater" chapter . (8) and loved his mother .

After coming to Hope College Maxie changed his somewhat con-serva t ive viewpoint. "Ya , I 'm gon-na take lots of courses and get a real liberal education, and who ever heard of a conservat ive get-ting a liberal education?'- he said.

As for his future plans in college Maxie says, "I ' l l probably ma jo r in chemist ry and become a doctor, cause tha t ' s where the money is. Right, ha ha. I'll only se rve one t e r m as class president then get myself elected Student Senate pres-ident next year . After all, I got a friendly manne r and a winning smile. My only real problem is fit-ting myself out with an image, but that shouldn't take too long."

As I listened to Maxie I could see that he was quite typical as f reshmen go. But then he went on

to tell about his p la t form which sounded ext remely interest ing: "F i r s t we haf ta change the pull. I saw it and Nykerk last year , and they were f rankly quite boring. I mean, you stand out in the boon-docks watching these guys seriously pulling on this rope. As for class unity, that ' s only in high school. It 's a dog-eat-dog world baby.

"Anyway 1 propose a switch. We let the girls do the pull, and the guys do Nykerk! Think of it, an entirely new perspect ive. And what a terr i f ic publicity angle. Almost every school has a tug-of-war, but how many of them have girls doing the pulling? I can see it in Life magaz ine now.

"This idea would put some kicks into Nykerk too. What has been a m e r e sent imental , foolish waste of t ime would become a real event. With guys doing the orations, may-be we could judge a speech on what it has to say. not how it's said. Because men will be doing the act-ing there will be a wider selection of plays compared to the all f emale concoction that have been put on in the past . And finally we wouldn't sec 200 guys out there weeping af te r the thing was ove r . "

So said Maxie Van der Kraaked between pots the other day, and for a typical, inane f r e s h m a n it was a good idea. The pull and Ny-kerk, however s t rong in tradition, a re less than excit ing as events . After four yea r s of listening to Hope College campa ign ora tory , Maxie 's p la t form comes as an ex-citing revelation. So f reshmen , I say, unite. Let the girls do the pull and save yourself for basic training.

Dr. Phillip Van Eyl , d i rec tor of

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Page 6: 09-16-1966

Page • Hope College anchor September 16, 1966

Vienna Summer School Students Visit

Western Europe and Communist Bloc

GEORGE WALLACE

Director of Public Relations

ROBERT DE YOUNG

Dean of Men

Administration Expanded With Naming of Five

(Continued from page 1)

H o p e ' s Director of Development , Mr. Hender , is a g r a d u a t e of Hob Jones Univers i ty where he receiv-ed his B.A. in Knglish in 1955. He e a r n e d his B.D. f r o m Pi t t sburgh Theo log ica l S e m i n a r y a n d enter-ed the p a r i s h min is t ry fo r two years . I n l 9 6 0 h e j o i n e d Ke tchum, Inc., the n a t i o n ' s la rges t fund ra is-ing f i rm where he worked fo r two yea r s a s a s soc ia t e d i rec tor a n d for fou r y e a r s a s director of cap i ta l f u n d s efforts a c ro s s the n a t i o n fo r

v a r i o u s types of c h a r i t a b l e insti-tut ions inc lud ing severa l colleges.

Mr. Wal lace , the new Director of Public Relat ions, w a s educa ted at L y n c h b u r g College a n d Ohio Cn-iversity. He h a s se rved a s p ro -fess ional consu l t an t in the field of hosp i ta l a n d college d e v e l o p m e n t a n d publ ic re la t ions , a n d w o r k e d on the Danvi l le Bee as a news re-por te r a n d spor t s edi tor . His fur-ther j o u r n a l i s t i c exper ience in-cludes r a d i o p r o d u c t i o n a n d writ-ing.

In the o r g a n i z a t i o n of the office of deve lopmen t , Mrs. B o u m a n h a s been a p p o i n t e d to the p o s i t i o n of Director of Public I n f o r m a t i o n af-ter s e r v i n g f o r a p p r o x i m a t e l y nine m o n t h s as Director of Public Hela-

Sixty s tudents f r o m 2 5 colleges a c r o s s the U.S. a t tended the 11th sess ion of the H o p e College Vi-e n n a S u m m e r School this sum-mer . A m o n g the 60 were 3 0 s tuden t s f r o m Hope .

The g r o u p e m b a r k e d f r o m New-York , J u n e 7 on the s tudent sh ip , the C a b o S a n Vincinte, a n d a r -r ived in S o u t h a m p t o n , K n g l a n d , .June 15. After five d a y s in Berlin, where s tudents a t tended a s e m i n a r entitled "Be r l i n : Kncounte r Be-tween Kast a n d West ," the g r o u p d iv ided , 2 8 s tudents v is i t ing F r a n c e , Switzer land a n d I taly, a n d 27 t r ave l ing behind the I ron C u r t a i n in Po land , Czechos lova-k ia , H u n g a r y a n d V u g o s l o a v i a .

T h e t o u r beh ind the I ron Cur-ta in w a s one of the i n n o v a t i o n s of this y e a r ' s p r o g r a m . S tudents h a d the o p p o r t u n i t y to witness f i r s t -hand the life of people in a c o m m u n i s t coun t ry . The t o u r w a s not wi thout incident as s tuden t s f o u n d themselves in the midd le of the W a r s a w d e m o n s t r a t i o n s which d e m a n d e d g rea t e r f r e e d o m of re l ig ion. Poles m a r c h e d th ru the streets chan t i ng , " D e s i d e r a -

m u s Dei! (We wan t G o d ! ) " In add i t i on , the Kastern g r o u p spent the night a b o a r d their b u s when they were refused en t ry into Hun-g a r y for one night .

The Western t o u r spent mos t of their 19 d a y s in Italy, v is i t ing a r t t r e a s u r e s in Florence, Rome, Mi-l an , Venice, a n d R a v e n n a . They were a l s o t reated to one d a y on the I ta l ian Riviera. L e a d i n g the West-ern t o u r were Mr. a n d Mrs. S tanley H a r r i n g t o n . The Kastern t o u r was conducted by Mr. a n d Mrs.

In Vienna , s tuden t s s tud ied un-der K u r o p e a n p r o f e s s o r s a n d took c o u r s e s in ( J e r m a n , Kast Kuro-p e a n h i s to ry , mus ic , a r t o r con-t e m p o r a r y l i te ra ture . T h e aca-demic p r o g r a m w a s s u p p l e m e n t e d with s p e a k e r s a n d a r t i s t s f r o m Vi-e n n a a n d o ther cities in Kurope . Weekends, s tuden t s of ten went t r a v e l i n g to S a l z b u r g , Venice, Bu-dapes t , o r the B u r g e n l a n d , the ea s t e rn -mos t p a r t of Aus t r i a .

After the conc lu s ion of the s u m -

Three

m e r school , the 6 0 s tuden t s left V ienna for three weeks of indepen-dent t ravel . M a n y s tuden t s t rave l -ed t h r o u g h G e r m a n y a n d u p to C o p e n h a g e n , then visited Amster -d a m , L o n d o n a n d f ina l ly Pa r i s . S o m e of the g r o u p left on a G L C A cha r t e r flight f r o m Par i s on Sept. 2 a n d the r e m a i n d e r left on Sept. 10.

Student r eac t ions a n d ref lect ions on the s u m m e r were collected in a 2 8 - p a g e m a g a z i n e , entitled " K u -r o p e a n Sketch B o o k . "

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TULIP CITY LAUNDROMAT The Last Word in Convenience

OPEN 24 HOURS

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To Assist Campus Drama This y e a r for the first t ime H o p e

Col lege h a s secured the services of three exper ienced B r o a d w a y technic ians to w o r k with d r a m a -tic p r o d u c t i o n s on c a m p u s .

A c c o r d i n g to Dr. G e o r g e Bos, c h a i r m a n of the speech depa r t -ment , each of the three p rofess -i o n a l s will spend six weeks at H o p e w o r k i n g on s t age a n d cos-tume des ign for three m a j o r p ro-duc t ions . They will assis t G e o r g e Ra lph , ass i s tan t p r o f e s s o r of speech, w h o will direct all the p l a y s . While they a r e here , each will a l s o conduc t a s e m i n a r on the technical aspects of d r a m a t i c s .

R ichard Bianchi , one of the p ro-duc t ion des igners , h a s a B.F .A. f r o m the M a s s a c h u s s e t t s College of Art a n d a M.F .A f r o m the Vale School of D r a m a . A m o n g the New York p r o d u c t i o n s o n which he h a s worked a r e " A n Knemy of the Peop le" , " C a l l It V i r tue" , a n d "Win te r se t . " He h a s been Art Di-rector for seve ra l f i lms a n d work-ed fo r WPIX a n d N B C a s a De-s ign Consu l t an t .

Richard Cas le r , a l s o a Vale g r a d u a t e , h a s been a thea t r i ca l scenery a n d l i gh t ing des igner fo r o v e r twenty B r o a d w a y Produc-t ions, a m o n g them " G y p s y " , " F u n n y Gi r l " , " M a m i e " , a n d " F i d d l e r on the R o o f . " He h a s served a s Ass is tan t Designer to Dona ld Dens lager , Wil l iam a n d .lean Kckart , George Jenk ins , a n d Rouben T e r - A r u t u n i a n . At U n i o n Theological S e m i n a r y , Cas le r lec-

tured a n d did d e s i g n i n g w o r k f o r the p r o g r a m in re l ig ious d r a m a .

The thi rd scenic ar t is t is Kliza-beth Matta , a g r a d u a t e of U C L A who h a s a l so s tudied at P a r s o n s School of Design a n d the Lester P o l a k o v S tudio of Scenic Design. A m o n g the p l a y s with which she h a s been connected a re " The T a m -ing of the S h r e w " , " T h e Best M a n " , a n d the " D i a r y of A n n F r a n k . " She is cu r ren t ly on the de-s ign staff for the Me t ropo l i t an Op-e ra at Lincoln Center in New York . Miss Mat t a w a s f o r m e r l y technical a s s i s t an t at Queens Col-lege a n d a n ins t ruc to r in scene p a i p t i n g at B r o o k l y n College.

SUMMER TRAVEL—Stanley Harrington, art instructor at Hope and

leader of the Western tour of the Vienna Summer School, points out

some of the beauties of the Cathedral of Pisa to Carol Dalehout, Anna

Jean Syperda and Anita Joeckel.

The CO-ED'S FASHION CENTER

CAMPUS MISS The Apparel Shop for fall styles in clothes

The Beauty Salon for fall styles in hair

46 East 8th

(Only 1 block f rom Campus)

For Salon Appointments Call 396-6614

Page 7: 09-16-1966

a -v

September 16, 1966 Hope College anchor

$3.5 Million Appropriated

Romney Signs Education Bill On .luly 19, 1966, M i c h i g a n Oov-

e r n o r ( l eo rge R o m n e y s igned Sen-ate Mill 780 , which p r o v i d e s tui-tion g r a n t s on a non -compe t i t i ve bas i s to t h o u s a n d s of M i c h i g a n s tuden t s w h o wish to a t tend pri-vate col leges in the state. U n d e r it, s t uden t s m a y receive up to $ 5 0 0 per y e a r , the a m o u n t d e p e n d i n g solely o n f inanc ia l need. $ 3 . 5 mil-lion h a s been a p p r o p r i a t e d fo r the p r o g r a m .

The a m o u n t of the f a m i l y i n c o m e on which the g r a n t s a r e b a s e d is c o m p u t e d by s u b t r a c t i n g the feder-al i n c o m e tax p a i d fo r 1965, the deduc t ions c l a imed , a n d e x e m p -tions f r o m the a m o u n t of i n c o m e subject to federa l i n c o m e t ax . T h e g r a n t s r a n g e f r o m $ 5 0 0 to $100, d e p e n d i n g on this "effect ive in-c o m e . " If this r e m a i n i n g f i gu re is $ 2 , 0 0 0 or less, the s tudent c a n get the m a x i m u m a m o u n t ; if It exceeds $10,000, the s tudent is in-eligible for a g r a n t .

To be eligible, the s tudent mus t a lso h a v e been a Mich igan resi-dent three y e a r s p r i o r to A u g u s t 15. 1966. l ie mus t a l s o be a per-son of g o o d m o r a l c h a r a c t e r a n d must be enrol led a s an en t e r ing f r e s h m a n for 1966-67 at a pri-vate Mich igan college. A l t h o u g h the bill w a s r a t h e r late

in b e c o m i n g law, it is effective im-media te ly . S o m e 8,()()() i n c o m i n g f r e s h m e n a re expected to a p p l y fo r

Struik Named Higher Horizons Program Chief

Bruce Struik h a s ueen a p p o i n t -ed d i r ec to r of the Office of H ighe r H o r i z o n s . A na t ive of . lames-town, Mich., a n d a recent g r a d -ua te of Western Mich igan I ' n ive r -sity, Mr. Struik will face the chal-lenge of o r g a n i z i n g a n d recruit-ing s tuden t s for this p r o g r a m .

Kstabl ished u n d e r a g r a n t of S11,()()() f r o m the Office of Kco-nomic O p p o r t u n i t y , the Office of Higher H o r i z o n s hopes to w o r k with ch i ld ren f r o m St. 1 ' ranees de Sales a n d o ther local s c h o o l s of H o l l a n d a n d Zee land .

Mr. Struik, w h o did s o m e simi-lar w o r k d u r i n g his s tudent teach-ing p e r i o d at Western M i c h i g a n Unive r s i ty , would like to e x p a n d the presen t Higher H o r i z o n s p ro -g r a m " t o include m o r e men stu-dents o n c a m p u s as v o l u n t e e r s . " To b r i n g out the crea t iv i ty in chil-d ren , Mr. Struik s a y s he w o u l d like " t o initiate w o r k s h o p s in a r t , music , l i tera ture , a n d c h i l d r e n ' s t h e a t e r . "

p r i v a t e college tui t ion aid fo r which they a re eligible. Of all the p r i v a t e a n d independent col-leges a n d univers i t ies in the s tate of Mich igan , there a re a p p r o x i -ma te ly 4 0 which meet the require-men t s spelled out in the bill. Ad-m i n i s t r a t o r s f r o m these schools , i nc lud ing President Ca lv in Van-d e r Werf a n d Vice President , Fi-n a n c e , Henry Steffens of Hope College, lobbied s t r o n g l y for its p a s s a g e .

Since the g r a n t s a r e g iven on a non-compet i t ive bas i s , m a n y stu-dents who could not a t tend p r iva t e colleges for v a r i o u s r e a s o n s m a y now find themse lves in a pos i t ion to do so. " P r i v a t e col leges ," sa id O o v e r n o r R o m n e y , " a r e a n im-p o r t a n t c o m p o n e n t of o u r total sys tem of h igher e d u c a t i o n . " P a s s a g e of the bill " s h o u l d result in s a v i n g s to the s tate as well as con t r ibu te to hea l thy d ivers i ty in o u r total e d u c a t i o n a l s t r u c t u r e . "

SYNOD BEGINS—Delegates to the Genera l Synod of the Reformed

Church in America attend the opening session. The assembly was held

on Hope's campus in honor of the Centennial celebrat ion.

Synod Pledges Hope One Million Dollars

H o p e College w a s the host to the Regu la r Sess ion of the ( ienera l S y n o d of the Reformed Church in Amer i ca , which c o n v e n e d on . Iune 9-15. Rev. H e r m a n .1. Ridder, pres ident of Western Theo log ica l S e m i n a r y , w a s the host p a s t o r . T h e sess ion w a s held at Hope be-c a u s e of the Centennia l celebra-t ion.

Hope College p l a y e d a l a r g e p a r t in the p roceed ings . It w a s a n n o u n c e d that the g o a l for con-t r ibu t ions to the Col lege f r o m the C h u r c h w a s set at one mil l ion d o l l a r s in the next two yea r s . At the M o n d a y e v e n i n g sess ion , a "Co l l ege Night ' 6 6 " w a s held in Dimnent M e m o r i a l Chape l . The p r o g r a m fea tured music , read-

ings, ed i tor ia ls a n d p l a y s present-ed by Hope College s tudents .

President Ca lv in A. VanderWerf a d d r e s s e d the a s s e m b l y , ou t l in ing the p l a n s for the s c h o o l ' s Cen-tennia l yea r , a n d a s se r t i ng that the chal lenges a n d oppor tun i t i e s f ac ing the college c a n be met on ly with " u n b o u n d e d f a i t h " if the col-lege is to r e m a i n effective in " a f -f o r d i n g a q u a l i t y e d u c a t i o n that is Chr i s t ian e d u c a t i o n . "

In other p roceed ings , the Chris-t i an Action C o m m i s s i o n presented a s ta tement a d v o c a t i n g tha t Com-munis t Ch ina be admi t t ed to the United Na t ions . After lively de-ba te the S y n o d a d o p t e d the state-ment , 105-100.

The next sess ion will be held at Kings College in Bristol, Tenn .

•an /A

i

Ca&l

Everything In Magazines* Neivspapers, Paperbacks

Contemporary Cards - Cliff's Notes

CORNER of RIVER and EIGHTH

Open Everyday

Winton Johnson Killed In Automobile Accident A H o p e s o p h o m o r e w a s killed

in a n a u t o m o b i l e accident o v e r the L a b o r Day weekend in the midst of p r e p a r i n g to re turn to school .

Winton P. J o h n s o n , 18, died of injuries received when the c a r dr iv-en by his y o u n g e r b r o t h e r hurt led f rom a w ind ing r o a d in r u r a l Sus-sex C o u n t y , N. .1. State police said the accident a p p a r e n t l y oc-cur red when the y o u n g e r J o h n s o n was u n a b l e to negot ia te the second turn of a s h a r p S-curve , lost con-trol of the ca r , a n d s t ruck a tree. The elder J o h n s o n was t h r o w n t h r o u g h the windsh ie ld , sus ta in-ing injur ies which led to his dea th eight h o u r s la ter in Dover ( ienera l Hospi ta l . Winton J o h n s o n w a s a resident

of H a c k e n s a c k , N.J . , a n d a 1965 g r a d u a t e of h igh school there. He is su rv ived by his p a r e n t s , two b ro the r s , Ro land a n d Fred-erick, a n d a sister Kmily, all liv-ing ;if home.

Roland J o h n s o n , 17, w h o w a s d r i v ing the c a r , suffered a b r o k e n jaw a n d v a r i o u s cuts a n d bru i ses . He w a s repor ted in s a t i s f ac to ry

condi t ion by a hosp i ta l spokes -m a n .

At Hope Winton will be remem-bered as a fa i r ly quiet s tudent . He was pre-med a n d w a s enro l l ed in the H o n o r s C h e m i s t r y pro-g r a m .

WINTON P. JOHNSON

• B i l l

I# J r' i teii

•n

OF HOLLAND

(14-16 West Eighth Street)

Page 8: 09-16-1966

Page • Hope College anchor September 16, 1966 V

Lack of Depth a Problem

Football Team to Depend on Potent Offense By Glenn Gouwens

On August 31 when most Hope students were just beginning to realize that s u m m e r was coming to an end, 52 men including 20 le t te rmen and 21 f r e s h m e n reported to Carnegie Gym for the grueling two-sessions-a-day pre-season foot-ball prac t ice .

"Condit ioning" was the by-word of coach Russ De Vet te ' s charges as they were led through their pre-season dri l ls at a ha rde r and fas te r pace than usuai.

Hope will depend heavily on its good offense potential to bet ter their 4-4 m a r k of last yea r which earned them a tie for second place in the MIAA. Depth seems to be a problem with the t e a m since De Vette will have to de te rmine which players will go both ways. Accord-ing to De Vette, Hope will be play-ing a m o r e open g a m e this season. Sophomore Gary F rens , lef thanded quar t e rback , will be a big factor in using this offense: he has shown in the pas t to be a scrambl ing quar te rback with the ability to roil out and pass, a talent especially suited to this type of offense.

Leading the Flying Dutchmen will be senior captain Charl ie Lange-land, Hope's 200-pound fullback, slated to be the top receiver for F rens ' passes .

Langeland ' s "I 'd rather-run-over-them-than-around- them" type run-ning has made other t e a m s well a w a r e of his threat to them.

Aiding F r e n s and Langeland in the backfield will be junior Keith Abel. Adept at broken-field run-ning. Abel has proven to be a valuable asset to the t eam. Sopho-mores H a r r y Meyers and Walt Reed will also add to the backfield forces.

Depth in the line is a big concern to line coaches Gordon Brewer and Larry Ter Molen. Exper ienced at these spots a re seniors Carl Van Wyke and John Huisman at the

m Rjg|

SCRIMMAGE Sophomore quarterback Gary Frens prepares to lateral to Dick Holman as he is swamped

by opposing Unemen in the inter-squad scrimmage Tuesday night. The team opens its season Saturday evening against Augustana College.

tackle positions, and at the guard spots junior Mark Menning and Steve P i e r sma . Ken Carpenter has been working at center .

At f irst-str ing end a re Gary Hol-vick, All-MIAA selection in 1964 and Junior Ray Cooper. MIAA sprint champion. End coach Ken Weller has been ha rdes t hit by graduat ion as he lost four ends, Roger Kroodsma. Bill Hultgren, Bruce Menning and Joe Kusak. All were regulars on the t eam.

Also adding to Weller 's problems is the loss of junior Tom Pelon who is out for the season because of mononucleosis. Pelon was a regular end for the past two seas-ons. H a r r y Meyers may be used in the split end position in addition to his backfield responsibilities.

There have been several fresh-men who have looked impressive

and will see action. Among these. Herb iTom> Thomas has been run-ning at the halfback position while al l-stater Bill Plochowi has been doing double duty in working out in both the fullback and halfback slots. Rich Frank and Mike Han-sen have proven to be good pros-pects for the end position while John Oonk has been working out at the guard spot. Harry Rumohr is at both the quar te rback and hal fback positions.

Behind Langeland at fullback are F r a n k Lundell and Harold Work-m a n . Clint Schilstra is at the quar-te rback spot behind Frens , along with Ken Feit and Joe Masvero .

Vying for halfback a re junior ior Dick Holman and f reshmen Steve Marco, Ron Rector, Boyd Rasmusen , Bill S t rample and Greg Gorman .

At the center position Jeff Green is backing up Carpenter along with J im Slager and John Osborn.

Vying for end a re Gary R y p m a , Rill Beebe, Bruce Ming along with f reshmen Jeff Kling. Terry Childs and Scott Van Hoven. Adding line s t rength will be Steve Wesseling and Coert Vanderhill at tackle while at guard will be A1 Kinney. Rich Herbig, Jeff Jorgenson and f r e shman Bill Bauer .

Tomorrow will open the season with the Dutchmen against Augus-tana College of Rock Island, Illinois at 7:30 p .m. at Riverview P a r k . It will be the first meet ing between the Dutch and the perennial ly strong Augustana t eam.

Augustana , a Lutheran school with an enrol lment of approximate-ly 1500 students , is coached by Ralph Starenko as head coach and assist-

Returning Runners Promise to Make

ed by Ted Kess inger and Charles E m e r y . Af te r the opener the Fly-ing Du tchmen will t r ave l to Whea-ton to t ry to repea t las t y e a r ' s 7-0 victory. It m a y prove to be a dif-ficult task as Wheaton promises to be s t ronger than last y e a r .

MIAA competi t ion will begin Oct. 1 with the contes t agains t Adrian at home. Adrian is going for the championship and should p rove to be a fo rmidab le opponent.

The following week will br ing Hope to Olivet where the Dutch-men suffered a 7-0 upset last year and m a d e them sha re their second-place birth with Kalamazoo.

Homecoming is the next week and Hope will meet Albion which consistently produces fine football teams. The Bulldogs will be going for their third MIAA crown in a row and although they lost severa l key f igures through graduat ion they a lways m a n a g e to find additional s t rength to fill the gap.

Hope then t ravels to Alma where a repeat pe r fo rmance of Hope's 48-6 win would be welcome, but Alma coach Denny Staltz is sup-posed to have a s t ronger t e am than his '65 squad. The Kalamazoo Hor-nets will provide Hope with its last MIAA g a m e , which will also be the t radi t ional "Mom and Dad ' s D a y . " And again the Dutchmen would like to have a repeat p e r f o r m a n c e . The Flying Dutchmen blanked the Hornets 34-0 in last y e a r ' s victory.

Hope's last game of the season will take place at Bluffton, Ohio, against a t e am that handed Hope a 23-6 loss last year . All six t e a m s appea r to be s t ronger than last yea r and the league itself s eems more ba lanced . Any t eam could possibly take the crown.

Albion, last yea r ' s champion, will be the t e a m to beat , and Kalam-azoo, Olivet and Hope a r e also slated to be top contenders . What-ever the outcome, however, this season should prove to be one of the most exciting.

The H o p e College c ro s s - coun t ry team with a new c o a c h a n d key let termen r e t u r n i n g a p p e a r s in a g o o d pos i t i on to r a n k h igh in this s e a s o n ' s contests .

Glenn V a n Wieren, a 1964 g r a d -uate of H o p e , h a s t aken a pos i t ion on the H o p e phys ica l e d u c a t i o n staff a n d will coach the c r o s s coun-try t eam a n d the j u n i o r v a r s i t y ba ske tba l l t eam. Mr. V a n Wieren was a n All-MIAA b a s k e t b a l l a n d baseba l l p l a y e r .

Mr. V a n Wieren se rved a s super-

MIAA v i so r of the e l e m e n t a r y phys i ca l e d u c a t i o n p r o g r a m in ( i r a n d Ha-v a n pub l i c schools . Mr. V a n Wieren is t a k i n g the p lace of Dary l S iedentop , who is now w o r k i n g on a n a d v a n c e d degree at the Cniver -sity of I n d i a n a .

Let termen re turnees w h o pro-mise to m a k e it a g o o d y e a r for the Dutch include c a p t a i n Paul H a r t m a n a n d Cal Oos t e rhaven . O o s t e r h a v e n placed h igh in the 1965 l e a g u e meet by c o m i n g in second beh ind Alb ion ' s .lim Dow.

'• 'i; ifSsfes

^ - g s t - i t i . •?-

Record ho lde r D o u g F o r m s m a , w h o set new school r eco rds in the mile a n d two-mile in a d d i t i o n to a new MIAA record in the two-mile will be a n o t h e r b i g asset to the tea m .

T h e f r e shmen l o o k g o o d a n d s h o u l d help Van Wieren to better last y e a r ' s m a r k of a tie for fou r th place. H o p e is l o o k i n g fo r its s econd c h a m p i o n s h i p in the his-t o r y of the school . T h e on ly c r o w n w a s won in 1953 when the Dutch s h a r e d it with Alb ion .

Experienced Soccer Squad Should Improve Ask mos t a n y K u r o p e a n w h a t

the grea tes t g a m e in the w o r l d is a n d he s ap t to s a y soccer; a n d for the second y e a r H o p e will e n g a g e in this spo r t on a v a r s i t y level. T h e first g a m e will be a-ga ins t ( a l v i n , w h o m H o p e de-feated in las t y e a r ' s opene r .

1 he o n l y m a j o r losses f r o m las t y e a r ' s t e a m a r e J im Knot t , a goa l i e a n d J a i m e Zeas , last y e a r ' s c e n t e r - f o r w a r d a n d cap t a in . T h e loss of Knot t , the b a c k u p goa l i e , could be a se r ious one. T h i s

Kroodsma and Van Wieren

Are Gold Key Recipients

GROUP SINGS-Randy Sparks and ine seven members of his newest

singing group, the New Society, performed at the Civic Center last

night for the Hope student body. The group, whose repertoire ranges

from old English pieces to gospel songs, has given a command per-

fermance for Prince Phillip, although they have been singing together

for less than a year. The program was the first of this year's enter-

toimmai seriei * w s o r e d by the Cultural Affairs Committee.

Roger K r o o d s m a a n d C la r e

\ a n Wieren were recipients of the g o l d key, a l l - c a m p u s a w a r d pre-sented a n n u a l l y by Dr. Otto v a n der Velde of H o l l a n d since the 1931-32 schoo l y e a r .

J he a w a r d w a s presented at H o p e Col lege 's c o m m e n c e m e n t in J u n e a n d is b a s e d on 4 0 per cent athletics, 4 0 p e r cent scho-last ic abi l i ty a n d 2 0 per cent ex-t r a c u r r i c u l a r activities. Selection w a s de termined by the H o p e Col-lege athletic commit tee .

Both K r o o d s m a a n d V a n Wier-en were n a m e d mos t v a l u a b l e p l a y e r s in the MIAA. K r o o d s m a w a s the mos t v a l u a b l e b a s e b a l l p l a y e r while Van Wieren w o n the R a n d a l l C. Bosch A w a r d a s the MVP in baske tba l l .

V a n Wieren was a f o r w a r d on the b a s k e t b a l l t e am and p l a y e d first b a s e o n the b a s e b a l l t eam. K r o o d s m a w a s a p i tcher a n d th i rd b a s e m a n f o r the b a s e b a l l t e am a n d p l a y e d end o n the foo tba l l t e a m .

Bo th were two-year c a p t a i n s , V a n Wieren for b a s k e t b a l l a n d K r o o d s m a f o r baseba l l .

Th i s fall K r o o d s m a will a t t end N o r t h D a k o t a State Cn ive r s i ty a n d will beg in w o r k on his Ph.D.

in z o o l o g y . He h a s been a w a r d e d a th ree-year X a t i o n a l Defense Fel-lowship.

V a n Wieren will a t tend the Cni-vers i ty of Tennessee Medical Cen-ter in Memph i s , Tenn . , w o r k i n g t o w a r d his m a s t e r ' s degree in bio-l o g y p r i o r to en t e r ing m e d i c a l school .

leaves H o p e with on ly one goa l i e , Br ian Bai ley , who w a s in ju red severa l t imes last yea r .

Zeas s p o k e with e n t h u s i a s m a-bout this y e a r ' s t eam. Th i s b e i n g Hope ' s s e c o n d v a r s i t y soccer sea-son , with a l m o s t all r e t u r n i n g p l a y e r s , there will be m u c h m o r e exper ience .

I he f o r w a r d line r e m a i n s the s a m e except fo r Jeff Alper in , the r ight wing , a n d Fred S c h u t m a a t , the new c a p t a i n w h o will be p l a y -ing cen t e r - fo rwa rd this yea r .

" M a n y of the p l a y e r s a r e m u c h i m p r o v e d o v e r last yea r , espe-cially T o n y Mock , D a v e DeVelder a n d Dave Pie t , " sa id Zeas .

I he t e am will be a n in te rna-t iona l one . T h e r e a re p l a y e r s f r o m C o l o m b i a , Venezuela , C a m a -r o o n s . H o n g K o n g , a n d T a n g a n -y i k a , a n d U.S. T h e l e a g u e will be a new o n e

a n d , a c c o r d i n g to S c h u t m a a t , " a t o u g h one , with a h igh q u a l i t y of p l a y e r s . " It is cal led the Mich.-Ind.-111.-Collegiate Soccer Confe r -ence, a n d will f ea tu re H o p e a-ga ins t s u c h b i g schoo l s as I l l inois this year .

THIRD REFORMED CHURCH

Twelfth St. and Pine

You are invited to

worship with us. Ser-

vices Sunday are at

10 A.M. and 7 A.M.