05-10-1968

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^ C c c ^ OPE COLLEGE anc or OLLAND, MICHIGAN 80th ANNIVERSARY - 25 Hope College, Holland, Michigan 49423 May 10, 1968 t Rocky Second McCarthy Wins in Choice 68 THREE MEN ON A HORSE — Mel Andringa calls a man about a horse as Barb Phail worries about his future. The Little Theatre production will be seen next weekend. 'Three Men on a Horse' Is Presented Next Week "Three Men on a Horse," a farce-comedy, will he presented Thursday at 8 p.m., Friday at 7 and 10 p.m. and Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Little Theatre. The basic theme of the play centers around Erwin Trow- bridge, played by Mel Andringa, who is employed by a greeting card company to write verses for the cards, and who has an un- canny sense for picking winning race horses. A group of fun-loving gangsters, played by Bob Kull- gren, Jeff Pruiksma and KenFeit, the leader, find out aboufhis tal- ent, and the laughs come when they meet up with Trowbridge. According to Donald Finn, di- rector of the play, the production is» "just for fun, with no deep hidden meaning at all." Other members of the cast in- clude Trowbridge's brother-in- law, Clarence, played by Tom Bast; Ron Schubin as Mr. Carv- er. Trowbridge's boss; Dave Pav- RCA Executive Committee Passes Trustee Revamp The Executive Committee of the General Synod of the Reformed Church in America has approved a proposed change in the com- position of the Hope College Board of Trustees. UNDER THE proposed plan, the number of Trustees will be re- duced from 53 to 26 over the course of three years. The plan will go up for a vote at the meeting of the entire Gen- eral Synod this summer. The plan provides for the se- lection by the General Synod of 13 of the Trustees on the reorganized Board. Among these there must be one representative from each of the six R.C.A. Particular Synods. Twelve of the remaining 14 Board members will be selected by the Board itself. AT LEAST 16 of the 24 mem- bers of the reorganized Board would have to be members of the R.C.A. Six of the 12 would have to be ordained ministers of the Reformed Church. lick as Harry, the bartender; and Charlie Lang as Al, the photo- grapher. Beth Mills plays Trowbridge's wife, Audrey. Barb Phail is the gangster leader's girl friend; Grace, the elevator girl is played by Sally Korstange. Additional cast members are Debby Noeand Laura Brown. Assistant director of the pro- duction is Bob Thompson. The set is designed by Keith Achepol of the art department. Tickets go on sale at $1.50 Monday in the basement of V a n Raalte. By George Arwady anchor Editor Senator Eugene McCarthy was the winner of Choice 68 in bal- loting both on the Hope campus and across the nation on April 26. SEN. MCCARTHY received 167 of the 537 votes cast at Hope and 285,988 first place votes out of 1,072,830 cast in the national collegiate presidential primary. Governor Nelson Rockefeller was second at Hope with 130 votes, Richard Nixon third and Senator Robert Kennedy fourth with 42 votes. Sen. Kennedy, however, finish- ed second in voting across the nation with 213,833; Mr. Nixon was third with 197,167 and Gov. Rockefeller fourth with 1 15,937. THE HOPE VOTING break- down indicated that, although Hope has double the percentage of declared Republican Party members than the average college campus, its students cast a higher percentage of votes both for Mc Carthy and against the Vietnam war than the average student body. Thirty per cent of the student body at Hope voted in Choice 68. Republican Party affiliation was indicated by 217 Hope voters. Democratic Party ties were indicated by 60 students and 165 voters said they were inde- pendents. THE SPERRY RANI) (Jnivac computer indicated that na- tionally 336,151 of the voters were Democrats; 303,329 were in- dependents and only 2 68,703 were Republicans. Voters could indicate a first, second and third choice for pre- sident in the balloting. Sen. Mc Carthy led both the nation and the Hope campus in total ballot- ing in all these categories. HOPE DIFF ERED from the na- tional figures in these categories in that Hopestudents gave a much higher percentage of their votes to liberal Republicans such as Gov. Rockefeller and New York Mayor John Lindsay and a much smaller percentage of their votes to Sen. Kennedy than the average student body in the nation. There were two questions on the Choice 68 ballot dealing with the war in Vietnam and one in reference to the urban crisis. SEVENTY EIGHT PER cent of the Hope College voters favored some form of reduction of our military action in Vietnam. The comparable national figure was 62 per cent. Seventy-one per cent of the Hope voters supported re- ducing the bombing of North Vi- etnam further than the current limited approach. The compara- ble national figure on the bomb- ing reduction was 58 per cent. At Hope College, 19 per cent voted for immediate withdrawal from the war; 59 per cent voted for a phased reduction; five oer cent favored the current policy; seven per cent voted for increas- ed military action and 1 1 per cent wanted an "all out" mili- tary effort. ACROSS THE NATION. 18 per cent voted for immediate with- drawal; 45 per cent voted for phased reduction of our military effort; seven per cent favored the current policy; nine per cent chose to increase our effort and 21 per cent wanted "all out" war. On the bombing north of the 17th parallel. 36 per cent of the Hope voters approved of per- manent cessation of bombing; 35 per cent favored a temporarysus- (Continued on page 1) Kresge, 'a Friend' Give $125,000 to SCSC Fund Hope College has been present- ed two grants totalling $125,000 to be used exclusively for the proposed Student Cultural-Social Center. THE COLLEGE has been giv- en $100,000 by an individual "friend of the College," accord- ing to President Calvin A. Van- derWerf. Dr. VanderWerf said that this individual designated his gift for the new student union. Hope has also been presented $25,000 by The Kresge Founda- tion for use in construction of the SCSC. The two gifts "increase the pro- bability that the Board will act favorably" in naming an early groundbreaking date for the stu- dent center, according to Presi- dent VanderWerf. The President could not predict the eventual groundbreaking date, however. DR. VANDERWERF SAIDthat the SCSC fund needed between $600,000 and $750,000 before these two grants were received. "We still have a ways to go," he observed. The President said that he ex- pected to be able to announce sev- eral additional grants to the stu- dent center fund before the end of the year. He cited the efforts of Board of Trustees chairman Huge De Pree and former chair- man Ekdal Buys in obtaining the $ UK),000 gift, noting that their efforts were "instrumental." 4 A Real Clean-Up' T ulipTime Festival Klompslnto Holland By Zelda Skagfang ranchor Reporter For the 39th time. Tulip Time, the annual replacement for the Maypole Dance, will klompen its way through the streets of Hol- land Wednesday through Satur- day this week. BUSINESS REALLY began booming for Tourist (oops!) Tul- ip Time after a 1950 Arthur God- jr.frey television show featured the Klompen Dancers. Since that time droves of eager Tulip fanciers have driven miles to view Hol- land's happy flower children. Tulip Time festivities will be kicked off with the traditional Volks Parade and Street Scrub- bing on Wednesday. There is no charge for attending these events, but a nominal fee for broom and soap suds rental will be levied. Rumor h a s it that the street scrub- bing fe co-sponsored by Lady Bird Johnson's Keep America Beautiful campaign and Hope's Keep Off the Grass appeal. "VARIETY IS the spice of life" and this cliche permeates the Tul- ip Time activities and prices. On Thursday, interested persons may participate in sidewalk scrubbing (differentiated from the previous- ly mentioned street scrubbing)free of charge if y o u use your own sidewalk. During this event, Hol- land's Board of Public Works will be soliciting a door-to-door free will offering for the purchase of a new Fire Engine. The old one was mistakenly sold as a souvenir during last year's Tul- ip Festival. Friday and Saturday are high lighted by more sidewalk and street scrubbing, these additional events being added because, ac- cording to Mayor Bosnian, "the Tulips planted at curbsides have been pollenating rather heavily this year, thus producing a sticky yellow substance which detracts from the appearance of the com- munity." NO TULIP TIME visitor should miss the Aqua-Ballet per- formed twice daily in the Black River. Climaxing each perform- ance will be the building of a py- ramid by a daredevil team of high school girls, clad in full Dutch regalia, watersking down the middle of the river. Another important part of the program is the Children's Cos- tume Parade composed of thou- sands of school children in Dutch costume portraying the customs of Old Holland as they march gaily along. ON SATURDAY, a Parade of Bands will organize and march outside of the Hope dorms; a treat to the ears of the gullible tourist and the bane to the exis- tence of students trying to study for final exams. The college administration has issued a special dispensation to students, permitting them to stock up from the local A & P and eat : n their rooms due to the double standard the Holland restaurants adopt during Tulip Time. A NOTE FROM the City Clerk's office reminds everyone that all "Welcom Vrienden" signs must be down immediately following the Tulip Time festivities. TULIP TIME Thousands of tourists will help keep Holland green by spending their paychecks next weekend during Tulip Time.

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Page 1: 05-10-1968

^ C c c ^

OPE COLLEGE

anc or OLLAND, MICHIGAN

80th ANNIVERSARY - 25 Hope College, Holland, Michigan 49423 May 10, 1968

t

Rocky Second

McCarthy Wins in Choice 68

T H R E E M E N O N A H O R S E — Mel A n d r i n g a ca l l s a m a n a b o u t

a h o r s e a s B a r b Phail w o r r i e s a b o u t his fu tu re . T h e Little T h e a t r e p r o d u c t i o n will be seen next weekend .

'Three Men on a Horse' Is Presented Next Week

" T h r e e Men o n a H o r s e , " a f a rce -comedy , will he p resen ted T h u r s d a y at 8 p.m. , F r i d a y a t 7 a n d 10 p .m. a n d S a t u r d a y at 8 p .m. in the Little Thea t r e .

T h e bas ic theme of the p lay centers a r o u n d Erwin Trow-br idge , p layed b y Mel A n d r i n g a , w h o is emp loyed by a g ree t ing c a r d c o m p a n y to write ve r ses f o r the c a r d s , a n d w h o h a s a n un-c a n n y sense fo r p ick ing w i n n i n g race horses . A g r o u p of f u n - l o v i n g g a n g s t e r s , p l ayed by Bob Kull-g ren , Jeff P r u i k s m a and K e n F e i t , the leader , f ind out a b o u f h i s tal-ent, a n d the l a u g h s c o m e when they meet u p with T r o w b r i d g e .

A c c o r d i n g to Dona ld F i n n , di-rector of the p lay , the p r o d u c t i o n is» " jus t for fun , with no deep h idden m e a n i n g at a l l . "

Other m e m b e r s of the cast in-c lude T r o w b r i d g e ' s b ro the r - in -law, Clarence , p l ayed by T o m Bast; R o n S c h u b i n as Mr. C a r v -er. T r o w b r i d g e ' s boss ; D a v e Pav-

RCA Executive Committee Passes Trustee Revamp

The Execut ive Commi t t ee of the Genera l Synod of the Re fo rmed C h u r c h in Amer ica h a s a p p r o v e d a p r o p o s e d c h a n g e in the c o m -pos i t ion of the H o p e Co l l ege B o a r d of Trustees .

U N D E R T H E p r o p o s e d p l a n , the n u m b e r of Trus tees will be re-duced f r o m 5 3 to 2 6 over the cou r se of three years .

The p l a n will g o u p fo r a vote at the meet ing of the ent i re Gen-e r a l S y n o d this s u m m e r .

T h e p lan p r o v i d e s f o r the se-lection b y the Gene ra l S y n o d of 13 of the Trus tees o n the r e o r g a n i z e d B o a r d .

A m o n g these there mus t be o n e represen ta t ive f r o m each of the six R.C.A. Pa r t i cu l a r S y n o d s . Twelve of the r e m a i n i n g 14 B o a r d m e m b e r s will be selected by the B o a r d itself.

A T L E A S T 16 of the 2 4 mem-b e r s of the r e o r g a n i z e d B o a r d wou ld h a v e to be m e m b e r s of the R.C.A. Six of the 12 w o u l d h a v e to be o r d a i n e d minis te rs of the R e f o r m e d C h u r c h .

lick a s H a r r y , the b a r t e n d e r ; a n d C h a r l i e L a n g a s Al, the photo-g r a p h e r .

Beth Mills p l a y s T r o w b r i d g e ' s wife, Audrey . Ba rb Phail is the g a n g s t e r l e a d e r ' s girl f r i end ; Grace , the e l e v a t o r girl is p layed by Sa l ly K o r s t a n g e . Add i t i ona l cast m e m b e r s a r e Debby N o e a n d L a u r a Brown.

Ass i s tan t d i rec tor of the pro-duc t ion is Bob T h o m p s o n . The set is des igned by Keith Achepol of the ar t d e p a r t m e n t .

Tickets go on sa le at $ 1 . 5 0 M o n d a y in the b a s e m e n t of V a n Raal te .

By G e o r g e A r w a d y a n c h o r Ed i to r

S e n a t o r E u g e n e M c C a r t h y w a s the winner of Choice 6 8 in ba l -lo t ing bo th o n the H o p e c a m p u s a n d a c r o s s the n a t i o n o n Apri l 26 .

S E N . MCCARTHY received 167 of the 5 3 7 vo te s cast at H o p e a n d 2 8 5 , 9 8 8 first place votes ou t of 1 , 0 7 2 , 8 3 0 cast in the n a t i o n a l col legia te pres ident ia l p r i m a r y .

G o v e r n o r Ne l son Rockefeller w a s second at H o p e with 130 votes , R ichard N i x o n third a n d S e n a t o r Robert K e n n e d y fou r th with 4 2 votes .

Sen. K e n n e d y , however , f in ish-ed second in v o t i n g a c r o s s the n a t i o n with 2 1 3 , 8 3 3 ; Mr. N i x o n w a s thi rd with 1 9 7 , 1 6 7 and Gov . Rockefeller f o u r t h with 1 15 ,937 .

T H E HOPE V O T I N G b r e a k -d o w n indica ted that , a l t h o u g h H o p e h a s d o u b l e the p e r c e n t a g e

of declared R e p u b l i c a n Pa r ty m e m b e r s t h a n the a v e r a g e col lege c a m p u s , its s tuden t s cas t a h igher pe r cen t age of votes bo th fo r Mc C a r t h y a n d a g a i n s t the V i e t n a m w a r t h a n the a v e r a g e s tudent b o d y . Th i r ty per cent of the s tudent b o d y at H o p e vo ted in Choice 68.

R e p u b l i c a n Pa r ty a f f i l i a t ion w a s indicated b y 2 1 7 H o p e voters . Democra t i c Pa r ty ties were indicated b y 6 0 s t uden t s a n d 165 v o t e r s sa id they were inde-penden ts .

T H E SPERRY RANI) ( Jn ivac c o m p u t e r indica ted tha t na-t iona l ly 3 3 6 , 1 5 1 of the vo t e r s were Democra t s ; 3 0 3 , 3 2 9 were in-d e p e n d e n t s a n d on ly 2 6 8 , 7 0 3 were Repub l i cans .

Vote rs c o u l d indicate a first , second a n d th i rd choice for pre-sident in the ba l l o t i ng . Sen. Mc C a r t h y led both the n a t i o n a n d the H o p e c a m p u s in total ba l lo t -ing in all these ca tegor ies .

HOPE D I F F E R E D f r o m the na-t iona l f igures in these ca tegor ies

in tha t H o p e s t u d e n t s g a v e a m u c h h igher percen tage of their vo t e s to l ibe ra l Repub l i cans s u c h as Gov. Rockefeller a n d New York M a y o r J o h n L i n d s a y a n d a m u c h sma l l e r pe rcen tage of their vo tes to Sen. K e n n e d y t h a n the a v e r a g e s tudent b o d y in the na t ion .

T h e r e were two q u e s t i o n s on the Choice 68 ba l lo t d e a l i n g with the w a r in Vie tnam a n d one in reference to the u r b a n crisis .

S E V E N T Y E I G H T PER cent of the H o p e College vo te r s f a v o r e d s o m e f o r m of r e d u c t i o n of o u r mi l i t a ry ac t ion in V i e t n a m . T h e c o m p a r a b l e na t i ona l f igu re w a s 62 per cent. Seventy-one per cent of the H o p e vo te r s s u p p o r t e d re-d u c i n g the b o m b i n g of N o r t h Vi-e t n a m fu r the r t h a n the cu r ren t l imited a p p r o a c h . The c o m p a r a -ble n a t i o n a l f igure o n the b o m b -ing reduc t ion w a s 5 8 per cent.

At H o p e College, 19 per cent voted f o r i m m e d i a t e w i t h d r a w a l f r o m the w a r ; 5 9 per cent voted for a p h a s e d r educ t ion ; f ive oer

cent f a v o r e d the cur ren t policy; seven per cent voted f o r increas-ed mi l i t a ry act ion a n d 1 1 per cent w a n t e d a n "a l l o u t " mili-t a r y effort .

ACROSS T H E N A T I O N . 18 per cent vo ted for immed ia t e with-d r a w a l ; 4 5 per cent voted for phased reduc t ion of o u r mi l i t a ry effort; seven per cent f a v o r e d the cu r ren t pol icy; nine per cent chose to increase o u r effort a n d 21 per cent wan ted "a l l o u t " war .

On the b o m b i n g nor th of the 17th pa ra l l e l . 3 6 per cent of the H o p e v o t e r s a p p r o v e d of per-m a n e n t c e s s a t i o n of b o m b i n g ; 3 5 per cent f a v o r e d a t e m p o r a r y s u s -

( C o n t i n u e d o n p a g e 1 )

Kresge, 'a Friend' Give $125,000 to SCSC Fund

H o p e College h a s been present-ed two g r a n t s to t a l l ing $ 1 2 5 , 0 0 0 to be used exc lus ive ly f o r the p r o p o s e d Student Cu l tu r a l -Soc i a l Center .

T H E C O L L E G E h a s been giv-en $ 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 by a n i n d i v i d u a l " f r i e n d of the Co l l ege , " a c c o r d -ing to President C a l v i n A. V a n -derWerf . Dr. Vande rWer f s a i d that this i nd iv idua l de s igna t ed his gift fo r the new student un ion .

H o p e has a l s o been presen ted $ 2 5 , 0 0 0 by T h e K r e s g e F o u n d a -tion fo r use in c o n s t r u c t i o n of the SCSC.

The two gifts " i n c r e a s e the pro-bab i l i t y that the B o a r d will act f a v o r a b l y " in n a m i n g a n e a r l y g r o u n d b r e a k i n g d a t e for the stu-

dent center , a c c o r d i n g to Presi-dent V a n d e r W e r f . T h e President could not predict the e v e n t u a l g r o u n d b r e a k i n g date , however .

DR. V A N D E R W E R F S A I D t h a t the SCSC f u n d needed between $ 6 0 0 , 0 0 0 a n d $ 7 5 0 , 0 0 0 before these two g r a n t s were received. " W e still h a v e a w a y s to g o , " he o b s e r v e d .

The President sa id tha t he ex-pected to be able to a n n o u n c e sev-era l a d d i t i o n a l g r a n t s to the stu-dent center f u n d before the end of the y e a r . He cited the effor ts of Boa rd of T rus t ees c h a i r m a n H u g e De Pree a n d f o r m e r cha i r -m a n E k d a l B u y s in o b t a i n i n g the $ UK),000 gift, no t i ng that their efforts were " i n s t r u m e n t a l . "

4A Real Clean-Up'

T ulipTime Festival Klompslnto Holland By Z e l d a S k a g f a n g

r a n c h o r Repor te r

F o r the 39 th time. T u l i p Time, the a n n u a l r ep lacemen t for the M a y p o l e Dance , will k l o m p e n its w a y t h r o u g h the streets of Hol-l and W e d n e s d a y t h r o u g h Satur-

d a y this week. B U S I N E S S R E A L L Y b e g a n

b o o m i n g for Tour i s t ( o o p s ! ) Tul-ip T i m e after a 1950 A r t h u r God-

jr . frey te levis ion s h o w f ea tu red the K l o m p e n Dancers . Since that t ime d r o v e s of e a g e r T u l i p fanc ie r s h a v e d r i v e n miles to view Hol-l a n d ' s h a p p y flower ch i ldren .

Tu l ip T ime festivities will be kicked off with the t r a d i t i o n a l Vo lks P a r a d e and Street Scrub-b i n g o n W e d n e s d a y . T h e r e is no c h a r g e fo r a t t e n d i n g these events, but a n o m i n a l fee f o r b r o o m a n d s o a p s u d s ren ta l will be levied. R u m o r h a s it that the street scrub-b ing fe c o - s p o n s o r e d b y L a d y Bird J o h n s o n ' s K e e p Amer ica Beaut i ful c a m p a i g n a n d H o p e ' s Keep Off the G r a s s a p p e a l .

" V A R I E T Y IS the spice of l ife" a n d this cliche p e r m e a t e s the Tul-ip T ime activities a n d prices. On T h u r s d a y , interested p e r s o n s m a y pa r t i c ipa t e in s idewalk s c r u b b i n g (d i f fe rent ia ted f r o m the p rev ious -ly men t ioned street s c r u b b i n g ) f r e e of c h a r g e if you use y o u r o w n s idewalk . D u r i n g this event , Hol-

l a n d ' s B o a r d of Public W o r k s will be so l ic i t ing a d o o r - t o - d o o r f ree will o f f e r i ng fo r the p u r c h a s e of a new Fi re Engine . The old one was m i s t a k e n l y sold as a souven i r d u r i n g last y e a r ' s Tul-ip Fes t iva l .

F r i d a y a n d S a t u r d a y are h igh l ighted by m o r e s idewalk a n d street s c r u b b i n g , these a d d i t i o n a l events be ing a d d e d because , ac-c o r d i n g to M a y o r B o s n i a n , " t h e Tu l ip s p lan ted at c u r b s i d e s h a v e been po l l ena t ing r a the r heav i l y this yea r , thus p r o d u c i n g a s t icky yel low s u b s t a n c e which de t r ac t s f r o m the a p p e a r a n c e of the com-m u n i t y . "

NO T U L I P TIME v i s i tor s h o u l d miss the Aqua-Ba l l e t per-f o r m e d twice da i ly in the Black River. C l i m a x i n g each p e r f o r m -ance will be the b u i l d i n g of a py-r a m i d by a d a r e d e v i l t eam of h igh school gir ls , c l ad in full Dutch r e g a l i a , w a t e r s k i n g d o w n the midd le of the river.

Ano the r i m p o r t a n t pa r t of the p r o g r a m is the C h i l d r e n ' s Cos-t u m e P a r a d e c o m p o s e d of thou-s a n d s of s choo l ch i ld ren in Dutch c o s t u m e p o r t r a y i n g the c u s t o m s of Old H o l l a n d as they m a r c h ga i ly a long .

O N S A T U R D A Y , a P a r a d e of B a n d s will o r g a n i z e a n d m a r c h outs ide of the H o p e d o r m s ; a t reat to the e a r s of the gul l ible tour is t a n d the b a n e to the exis-

tence of s tudents t r y i n g to s tudy for f ina l e x a m s .

T h e college a d m i n i s t r a t i o n has issued a special d i s p e n s a t i o n to s tudents , permi t t ing them to stock u p f r o m the local A & P a n d eat : n their r o o m s d u e to the d o u b l e

s t a n d a r d the H o l l a n d r e s t a u r a n t s adop t d u r i n g Tu l ip Time.

A N O T E FROM the City C l e r k ' s office r e m i n d s e v e r y o n e that all "Welcom V r i e n d e n " s igns mus t be d o w n immedia t e ly fo l lowing the Tu l ip T ime festivities.

T U L I P T I M E — T h o u s a n d s of tourists will help keep Hol land green by spending their paychecks next weekend during Tulip Time.

Page 2: 05-10-1968

Page 2 Hope College anchor May 10, 1968

anchor Essay By Dick Shiels

'Life's Like That • •• S a m m y D a v i s J r . , a p p e a r i n g a

m o n t h a g o o n the " T o n i g h t " S h o w , presented the w o r l d with a new g a m e mode led af te r " M o n o -p o l y . " This g a m e , he insisted, pre-sents the other s ide of life f r o m tha t presented by " M o n o p o l y . " All of the f o r t u n e c a r d s in this g a m e c o m e out b a d luck; all of the oppo r tun i t i e s for inves tment b e c o m e bo t tomles s pits f o r swal-l o w i n g u p o n e ' s h a r d - e a r n e d m o n -ey; little of the p r o p e r t y on the m a r k e t is a v a i l a b l e for jus t a n y p u r c h a s e r . Th i s g a m e , he sa id , " te l ls it the w a y it r ea l ly i s ; " this g a m e " a n y b o d y c a n p lay" - -a n d mil l ions do. The n a m e of the g a m e is " C U L U D . "

P U T T I N G "MONOPOLY" as ide , however , it seems a l m o s t trite to c la im to "tell it the w a y it r ea l ly is ." P'or w h a t is m o r e com-m o n in our cu l tu re t h a n the c la im to " r e a l i s m ? " T h e m o v i e that d a r e s to e x p o s e the o ther side, the novel that tells a s t o ry " n e v e r be fo re p o r t r a y e d so rea l i s t i ca l ly , " a n d even the co l lege p r o f e s s o r who a p o l o g i z e s if he is o f fens ive but feels he " h a s to be hones t with m y c l a s s " a r e h a r d l y the excep-t i o n F a r f r o m be ing difficult fo r the publ ic to d iges t , this is the stuff o n which the publ ic is fed d a y in a n d d a y out. T h e result is t h a t one of ten w o n d e r s if any -b o d y "tells it the w a y it rea l ly is;" the q u e s t i o n this ra i ses is whe the r k n o w i n g o n l y " t h e other s i d e " is k n o w i n g much of a n y -th ing .

D a v i d F ros t a n d A n t o n y J a y , f o r m e r l y the t eam of wr i te r s be-h ind the te levis ion series " T h a t W a s T h e Week T h a t W a s , " h a v e wri t ten a sa t i re o n the British Isles entitled " T h e E n g l i s h . " The thesis , if a series of soc i a l a n d poli t ical j a b s c a n be sa id to be a thesis , is that " i n E n g l a n d , th ings a r e never the w a y the Eng l i sh s a y they a r e . " T h e r e a r e three m a i n trai ts to the E n g l i s h cha r -acter , a s these two tell it: snob-b e r y , f r ig id i ty a n d h y p o c r i s y . Out of pr ide, they s a y , the Engl i sh never es tab l i sh r e l a t i o n s h i p s c l o s e

e n o u g h to w a r r a n t h o n e s t y . But

listen to h o w the desc r ip t ion of wha t t h i s m e a n s s o u n d s l i k e A m e r -ica r a the r t h a n o u r British cous ins .

T H I S M E A N S that e v e r y rea lm of socia l , pol i t ical o r bus iness a f fa i r s h a s its own c o d e of double-ta lk . S o p h i s t i c a t i o n in a n y of these rea lms m e a n s little m o r e t h a n the abi l i ty to c o n v e r s e in these ambi -guities.

A bus ines s letter which r e a d s " the ma t t e r is u n d e r c o n s i d e r a -

t i o n " m e a n s m o r e b lun t ly that they lost y o u r file. Should the letter r e a d " a c t i v e c o n s i d e r a t i o n , " it p r o b a b l y m e a n s they h a v e in-structed the office b o y to look for it. A l o n g e r letter which r e a d s " T h i s r e m a i n s a n i m p o r t a n t , in-deed a v i t a l pa r t o f t h e c o m p a n y ' s policy, but there is n o i m m e d i a t e o p p o r t u n i t y fo r i m p l e m e n t i n g it" might better r e ad " F o r g e t it ."

Adver t i s ing , of c o u r s e , is p a r ex cell a nee the art of invent ing such a m b i g u i t i e s . " A n a m a z i n g of fer , " a n y housewife knows , m e a n s they will send you a fifty-cent s t e ak knife for n o m o r e t h a n a do l l a r . T h e d i s t r e s s ing th ing is that a n y housewife , a n d a n y of the rest of us, will p r o b a b l y send the do l l a r ! A n d we will p r o b a b l y vote for the c a n d i d a t e o n the poster o r in the tube a n d fo l low the instruc-t ions of the d o c t o r o n channe l two. If the a d were honest , if it read s i m p l y " R e c o m m e n d e d by 90 per cent of the ac to r s w h o p lay d o c t o r s on t e l ev i s ion , " we would b u y the p r o d u c t just the s a m e -- whether we needed it or not.

OF C O U R S E , the whole th ing is not tha t s imple . If o u r sophis -t icat ion a m o u n t s to doub le - t a lk , o u r doub le - t a lk is indeed sophis -t icated. We miss ta te t h i n g s in bo th direct ions; we bend t h i n g s to sup-port conf l ic t ing i m a g e s of the s a m e p roduc t s .

F o r e x a m p l e , the crit ics of ou r f i lms h a v e deve loped their own set of t e rms for desc r ib ing the m o d e r n m o v i e ' s d r a w i n g ca rd -

sin. The r ea l ly l i terate a m o n g us, insist F r o s t a n d J a y , u n d e r -

s t a n d them perfectly. " R a b e l a i -s i a n " s i m p l y m e a n s " f i l t h y ; " " A sens i t ive a n d tender love sto-r y " - " V e r y F i l t h y ; " " A b o o k I f ina l ly w a r m e d t o " -- " T h e d i r t y p a r t s a r e at the e n d ; " " A n ero-tic m a s t e r p i e c e " - " A piece of nineteenth cen tu ry s a d i s m ; " etc.

But o n the other h a n d , the peo-ple w h o m a k e the pos te r s fo r the f r o n t of the thea te r s g o t o t h e o t h e r ex t reme . If they a r e sel l ing Walt Disney ' s " G o l d i l o c k s , " they will p a i n t her r a c i n g f r o m the c a b i n with her d r e s s to rn , and wri te at the b o t t o m s o m e t h i n g like " T h e s t o r y of a y o u n g gir l and w h a t s h e encoun te r ed in the w o o d s . " F o r the c h i l d r e n ' s mat inee , it will s i m p l y read " W h o ' s been sleep-ing in m y b e d ? " T h e r e is no end to the k ind of t h ings these people cou ld d o with S n o w White, w h o l ived with seven d w a r f s . . . .

HOW R E F R E S H I N G it m i g h t be to see a preview which showed the m o v i e a s it rea l ly is. How-m u c h m o r e r e f r e sh ing if the m o v i e s h o w e d life the w a y it rea l ly is. C a n ' t y o u see the p rev iew? "We b r i n g to the screen the other s ide of M a r y , a s t r a n g e wor ld , the r ea lm of decency. Scenes never be fo re s h o w n -- a n I t a l i an ful ly d r e s s e d , o p e n i n g a c a n of s a r -d ines - a y o u n g girl at college, wr i t i ng h o m e to mo the r , a s k i n g her to send a cake - two school t eachers s p e n d i n g a n e v e n i n g in a well-lit a p a r t m e n t , d o i n g the c r o s s w o r d s f r o m the " C h i c a g o T r ibune" . . . . " We might not p a y

to see such a f i lm, bu t s o m e h o w it m i g h t be m o r e realist ic.

' a a # ' /

P E T E R P A N — S o r o s l t e s B o n n i e B r a n d 8 m a , A m y C o r t , J a n e L l o y d ,

Pat Dykstra, Nancy Lupton and S a n d y Lynk (left to right) re-

hearse their product ion of "Peter Pan" under the direction of Barb Timmer.

Sigma Sigma Presents 'Peter Pan' for SCSC

The mus ica l f a n t a s y "Pe te r P a n " will be presented by mem-be r s of S i g m a S i g m a tonight at 4 a n d 8 :30 p .m. a n d t o m o r r o w at 10 a .m. in the H o l l a n d Civic Center .

P roceeds f r o m the p e r f o r m a n c e s will be d o n a t e d to the Col lege f o r the p r o p o s e d Student Cu l tu ra l -Socia l Center.

T h e p lay is directed b y j u n i o r B a r b T i m m e r . Techn ica l a d v i s o r is D e n n y J o n e s a n d the m u s i c a l d i rec tor is B a r b Phail .

T h e p r o d u c t i o n s t a r s Bonn ie T o m p k i n s a s Peter P a n and Pol-ly Y o d e r as C a p t a i n H o o k . T h e r e m a i n d e r of the cas t of 3 5 in-

cludes Pam B e d a r d , Sue Broek-s t ra , S a n d y L y n k , Chr is t ine Z u v e r i n k . Lois McAllister a n d L a u r i e Lovell .

Tickets cost one d o l l a r fo r a d u l t s a n d fifty cents f o r ch i ld ren .

The mus i ca l is b a s e d o n the b o o k b y J a m e s M. Ba r r i e a n d uses lyr ics b y C a r o l y n Leigh a n d music b y M a r k C h a r l a p .

T h e Soros i tes h a v e received sev-e r a l c o n t r i b u t i o n s t o w a r d their project f r o m ou t s ide the Col lege . In a d d i t i o n , v a r i o u s f r a t e rn i t i e s a n d soror i t i es h a v e con t r ibu ted time a n d effort to a id S i g m a Sig-m a in seve ra l a r e a s of p r o d u c -t ion a n d publ ic i ty .

Seeks Varied Clientele

City Kitchen Gets New Image

Student Recital Features Eleven Hope Musicians

T h e H o p e College music de-p a r t m e n t will present a s tudent recital next T h u r s d a y at 7 p .m. in Dimnen t M e m o r i a l Chape l .

P e r f o r m i n g will be Rober t Jo-seph , pianis t , p l a y i n g a select ion by L u d w i g v o n Bee thoven , and L y n d a Dethmers , s o p r a n o , s ing-ing pieces b y Moza r t a n d Schu-m a n n . She will be a c c o m p a n i e d by D e a n V a n d e r Schaa f . S u s a n B r a y , flutist, will o l a v a selec-t ion by G e o r g e s - A d o l p h e Hue, a g a i n a c c o m p a n i e d by V a n d e r

Ser-pre-

Schaaf . A p i a n o piece by gey R a c h m a n i n o f f will be sented by Jef f rey Seise, a n d T im C r a n d a l l will p e r f o r m the first m o v e m e n t of a t r u m p e t cone r to by J o h a n n H u m m e l . He will be a c c o m p a n i e d by M a r g a r e t Stone.

A w o o d w i n d qu in te t , f e a t u r i n g Ca ro l Gaunt le t t , flutist , Patr icia White, obo i s t , Jul ie K o o i m a n , clar inet is t . Drew H i n d e r e r , bas -soonis t , a n d T h o m W o r k i n g , horn i s t , will present a se lec t ionby Paul H indemi th .

By Tom Hildehrandt anchor Editorial Assistant

R e g u l a r p a t r o n s of V e u r i n k ' s City Ki tchen were in for a sur-pr i se last F r i d a y m o r n i n g w h e n they f o u n d the u s u a l l oca t i on of the r e s t a u r a n t e m p t y . The only-w a y they could get their b r e a k -fas t w a s b y g o i n g t o w a r d the newly-pa in ted s ign a n d t h e s t r e a m of people en t e r ing the b u i l d i n g on the sou thwes t c o r n e r of E i g h t h Street a n d Col lege Avenue . V e u r i n k ' s h a s m o v e d !

T h e l o c a t i o n of the es tab l i sh men t is not all tha t h a s been c h a n g e d . C u s t o m e r s of the new V e u r i n k ' s will f ind a well-lit r o o m with a l m o s t t w i c e t h e s e a t i n g c a p a -city a s i n t h e old r e s t a u r a n t . M e n u s h a v e a l s o rep laced the s i g n s o n the wal ls .

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•ftra fM hook yaTnes yn Sarr/e /yncs curo/yn Jc/yk

•music ynarA ciar/ap

WLLAHD awe AUM my/o

Adultt $1.00

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IOOOA.U m/i/ •tiewnr of Hopes stuocmt uuiou

Children $.50

"WE MOVED because we want -ed to a t t rac t a m o r e va r i ed cli-en te le , " said G o r d o n V e u r i n k , o w n e r of the City Ki tchen. " T h i s is a better l o c a t i o n f o r s e r v i n g the people of the c o m m u n i t y a s well a s college s t u d e n t s . "

A l t h o u g h w i s h i n g to at t ract re-s iden ts of the a r e a , Mr. V e u r i n k e m p h a s i z e d that he still wan ted to cater to college s tudents . " I like college k i d s , " he sa id , "e s -pec ia l ly H o p e s tudents . I th ink they ' r e the c ream of the c r o p . I 've h a d a l m o s t a h u n d r e d w o r k for m e over the y e a r s , a n d there w a s n ' t one I c o u l d n ' t t rus t .

" I n the new place I feel we c a n offer more . We've b e g u n to se rve m o r e s a l a d s a n d l ight l unches t h a n we h a d before. Of c o u r s e , you can ' t s ta r t e v e r y t h i n g r igh t a w a y , " sa id Mr. Veur ink . F r e n c h fries, pop , cold d r i n k s , hot ro l ls a n d T - b o n e s t eak h a v e a l r e a d y been a d d e d to the m e n u .

" I T WAS A bit of a p r o b l e m to a d j u s t to the new e q u i p m e n t , " sa id the owner . "We a lso need s o m e more help, a n d the he lp we h a v e needed a few d a y s to a d j u s t to a new sys tem. We h a v e m o r e tables , a n d tha t m a k e s it a little r o u g h .

" T h e on ly poss ib le d i s a d v a n -t a g e s to the new l o c a t i o n will be tha t c l ean ing u p a l a r g e r a r e a t akes longer . We a l s o h a v e m o r e

ATTENTION STUDENTS!

Your Mother's Day Gifts and Cards

are at

aker ook House

4 8 E. 8th

B ALSO:

Graduation Gifts Peanuts Books & Cards Posters & Banners Special Bargain Dept.

e q u i p m e n t to m a i n t a i n , " com-mented Mr. V e u r i n k .

Mr. V e u r i n k is ve ry p leased with the r e s p o n s e to the new res-t a u r a n t . He o b s e r v e d tha t busi-ness is f a i r l y h e a v y at mea l t imes , a n d the coffee t r a d e c o n t i n u e s s t ead i l y t h r o u g h o u t the a f t e r n o o n

HOPE S T U D E N T S seem to be c o n t i n u i n g e a t i n g at the Ci ty Kit-chen despi te the o c c a s i o n a l scar-city of seats . Now- even s ee ing a H o p e facu l ty m e m b e r there is be-c o m i n g less of a r a r i t y .

" I t ' s rea l ly a nice place n o w , " c o m m e n t e d o n e s tudent c u s t o m -er. " I t ' s a s h a m e they h a d to ra i se s o m e of the prices, b u t you c a n still get a g o o d mea l f o r a r e a s o n a b l e p r i ce . "

Senator-at-Large Elections Held In Van Raalte

T h e s tudent b o d y will elect e ight s e n a t o r s - a t - l a r g e t o d a y . T h e vot-ing will t ake p lace in V a n R a a l t e l o b b y f r o m 8 a .m. to 4 p .m.

T h e r e a re 16 s tuden t s c o n t e n d -ing f o r the eight pos i t i ons of sen-a to r - a t - l a rge : nine f r e s h m e n a n d seven u p p e r c l a s s m e n .

T h e c a n d i d a t e s a r e J im Bos-m a n , R i c h a r d Brad ley , T o m B r u g g i n k , T i m De V o o g d , D o u g Duffy , Roger H u b r e g t s e , Jerry-M a y , Penny Morse , C r a i g Neck-ers, L o r r a i n e Price, R o b b Rob-bins , M a r k S a n t i a g o , K e n S c h r o e -der , J o y c e V a n H o u z e n , Steve V a n Pelt a n d Paul V a n Pernis .

T h e resul ts of the elect ions w ill be revea led at 8 : 0 0 t o n i g h t V a n Raal te .

in

STAMP IT! IT'S THE RACE

R E G U L A R

M O D E L

ANY S 3 LINE TEXT

TJwfiMst INDESTRUCTIBLE METAL W)CKET RUBBER STAMP. i 2".

Send' check or money order . Be su re to include your Zip Code. No postage or hmndling charges. Add sales tax .

Prompt thipmant. Satisfaction Guarantaad TMB M O P P C O .

P. 0. Boi 1B623 Lanox Square Station ATLANTA, OA., 30326

Page 3: 05-10-1968

Hope College anchor Page 3

Senate Passes Parietal Hours; Will Go to SLC

500 Families in Holland

Local Mexicans Face Problems By Wayne Vander Byl

anchor Reporter

The Student Senate p roposa l on parietal h o u r s was passed and the fu ture of the Hope-Hol land-Hamlet fund was considered at its

last meeting M o n d a y evening. The proposed budge t for 1968-1969 was a l so passed .

Senator Bruce White reported on the p roposa l fo r parietal hours . The p roposa l suggests that w o m e n be allowed in men 's r o o m s f rom 7 to 10:30 on two weekday evenings every week. Men would a lso be allowed women guests either F r i d a y or S a t u r d a y f r o m 7- p.m. to 1 a-m. Each S u n d a y men 's r o o m s would be open to women f r o m 1:30 to 10:30 p.m.

T H E S E S U G G E S T I O N S would serve on ly as limits. Spe-cific decisions on the use of the new f reedom would be m a d e by the indiv idual dormi tor ies . The p roposa l requires that d o o r s be left open a n d that the resident

adv i so r or one appoin ted by him be responsible for conduct in the open dormitor ies .

The p roposa l was passed by the Senate and will now be sent to the Student Life Commit tee for considerat ion.

Also considered at the Senate meeting- was a report by Sena to r Ai Pedersen concern ing the Hope-Hol land-Hamle t fund . T h e m o n e y is being t ransferred f rom Sa igon to Hol land a n d will p r o b a b l y ar-rive in Hol land sometime this summer . Pedersen moved that the money be immediate ly sent to the Amer ican Fr iends Service Com-mittee for its work in Vietnam.

T H E MOTIOM was defeated after Senator Glen Pontier sug-gested that the Senate wait until September to deal with the money. The delay is merely to give in-volved Hope students and Hol-land citizens an oppor tun i ty to discuss the use of the money .

The Senate accepted T reasu re r Tim Liggett 's p roposed budget with a n increase of $2 ,700 .

Editor's Note: This is the second in a three-part series dealing with the Spanish-American people liv-ing in Holland. This week's arti-cle describes some of the problems which Spanish-Americans face in this community.

By Tom Donia

Assistant News Ed i to r

A walk d o w n the streets of Hol-l and , Mich., reveals the unique cul tural m a k e u p of an u n u s u a l city. Read the signs: Vogelzang ' s , Lokker-Rutgers , San Diego's.

While the C h a m b e r of Com-merce is quick to p romote the city's Dutch heri tage to prospec-tive tourists, it never ment ions an ethnic g r o u p nearly a s large, the Spanish-Amer ican com-munity.

APPROXIMATELY 5 0 0 fami-lies of Lat in Amer ican descent reside in Hol land . The Spanish-American c o m m u n i t y is m a d e up p r imar i ly of Mexicans and Tex-

Reviews Freshman Block

EPC Drops Freshman Speech By Garrett DeGraff

anchor Reporter

The Educa t iona l Policies Com-mittee Wednesday voted to d r o p the Speech 11 requirement for next yea r ' s f r eshmen .

In other act ion, the EPC a p p r o v -ed the h o n o r s courses in chem-istry a s p roposed by the chemis-try depar tment .

T H E D E C I S I O N t o d r o p s p e e c h as a requirement for next yea r ' s f r eshmen resulted in part f rom a genera l feeling a m o n g the com-mitteemen that the f reshmen sec-tion In t roduct ion to Liberal Stud-ies, as now organ ized , is not meet-ing its p lanned objectives.

The immediate cause for the action on speech a s a requirement was a survey k n o w n as the Hay-wood Report.

The H a y w o o d Report was con-ceived earlier in the school year when the EPC decided the Intro-duct ion to Liberal Studies pro-g r a m was not w o r k i n g as plan-ned. It was then decided to invite someone , not a member of the Hope c o m m u n i t y , to examine the p r o g r a m . Dean Bruce H a y w o o d of K e n y o n College in Ohio was chosen to make the study.

T H E REPORT IS a crit ique of the In t roduc t ion to Liberal Studies section at Hope. It criti-cizes all three segments of the Hope p r o g r a m : Phi losophy, En-glish and Speech. Dr. D. I v a n D y k -s t ra ' s course receives praise as the only one of the three that meet the objectives of the or ig ina l p r o p o s a l for the Introduct ion to Liberal Studies section.

The Report r ecommends that speech be d ropped a s a distinct part of the p r o g r a m and instead be worked into the other two seg-ments. He recommends r evamp-ing f r e s h m a n p]nglish so as to r emove some of the differences exis t ing between different sections, and incorpora t ing i n t h e English p r o g r a m more of the ideas de-veloped in Phi losophy.

MR. HAYWOOD ALSO pro-poses a possible eight hour block for all f reshmen a s a n a l ternat ive to the present p r o g r a m . This would include two hours of Dr. Dyks t ra , sp read over two semes-ters, one hour of lecture a week by Dr. J o h n Hollenbach on ideas in l i terature, a n d a one hour dis-cuss ion section.

In this p r o g r a m would also be included four h o u r s of English to be taken in two semesters.

The virtues of this p r o g r a m , accord ing to Mr. H a y w o o d , a re that all f reshmen would begin and end together, and Dr. Hol-lenbach ' s lectures "wou ld provide a b r idge between the English in-s t ruct ion and Mr. Dyks t r a ' s con-cerns . " Other virtues listed are less chance of overexposure to Dr. Dyks t ra and development of better writing skills.

D i s c u s s i o n concerning the speech requirement occupk'd the greater por t ion of two EPC meet-ings, those of May 1 and May 8.

Dr. David Klein moved that speech be d ropped next year be-cause of the general agreement with the H a y w o o d Report con-

Chorus. Orchestra To Present /

Poulenc's 'Gloria' on Tuesday The Hope College C h o r u s and

Orchestra will present F ranc i s Poulenc's " G l o r i a " in a combined concert in Dimnent Memoria l Cha-pel T u e s d a y evening at 8:15.

" G l o r i a " is designed for sopra -no solo, mixed chorus , a n d or-chestra . Roger Davis will direct the orchestra and 130-voice choir .

P O U L E N C , A MEMBER of that f a m o u s g r o u p of contempor-a r y French compose r s called " L e s Six," b e g a n wri t ing in a sophisti-cated style of enter ta inment music in the p o p u l a r idiom. Later in his career , he wrote m a n y sacred works including a " S t a b a t Ma-ter , " a Mass, a religious ope ra , a n d a can ta ta .

The " G l o r i a " was composed between May of 1959 a n d June of 1960 on commiss ion f r o m the Koussevi tzky Music F o u n d a t i o n in the L i b r a r y of Congress . The first oe r fo rmance was g iven b y the Bos ton S y m p h o n y Orchestra in J a n u a r y , 1961, with the Chor-us Pro Musica, Adele Add i son a s

soloist and Char les Munch con-ducting.

T H E SOPRANO soloist for the Hope College pe r fo rmance will be Mrs. Ann DePree Reisig.

Mrs. Reisig is a native of Hol-land and a 1959 g r a d u a t e of Hope College where she studied voice under N o r m a B a a g h m a n . She continued voice s tudy fo r a year with Richard Miller at the Universi ty of Michigan.

FOR THIS pe r formance of the " G l o r i a , " the s tage h a s been ex-tended out and over the first two pews in the chapel.

Prior to.the " G l o r i a , " the Hope College Orchestra, under the di-rection of Mr. Robert Ritsema, will per form three works , each employ ing a different section of the orchestra . Firs t will be " F a n -fare for the C o m m o n M a n " by A a r o n Copeland , which uses only b r a s s and percuss ion. Next will be a Mozart Serenade fo r Winds, a n d finally a Hande l Concer to Grosso for Strings.

cerning speech, and because of the difficulties involved in find-ing a good speech staff for next year.

Dr. J o a n Mueller recommended that there be added some kind of p rov i s ion for the re-evalua-tion of the present p r o g r a m and the possible development of a new p r o g r a m . This met with little op-position and was included in the motion to d r o p speech. Provis ion was made f o r a committee to be appointed b y Dean for Academic Affairs Morrette Rider, to develop a new p r o g r a m for a n Introduc-tion to Liberal Studies.

To assure that the committee which is to be o rgan ized to find a new solution does occupy it-self with this problem to the de-gree it should , another motion was passed to r ecommend that the c h a i r m a n of this committee be released f rom a por t ion of his teaching duties to work on the new p r o g r a m .

The H o n o r s courses in chem-istry a p p r o v e d by the EPC will involve 24 first year chemistry students. These students will take one hour each semester of Lab-o ra to ry of Quant i ta t ive Chemis-try, instead of two h o u r s second semester as the other chemistry students will be tak ing .

Eight-Year-Old Rietberg Child Dies of Cancer

T h o m a s Rietberg, son of Di-rector of Admiss ions Roger Riet-berg, died last F r i d a y of a ma-l ignant b r a i n tumor . H e w a s e i g h t yet?rs old.

Funera l services were held Mon-d a y in the Third Reformed Church of Hol land. Rev. Russell Vande Bunte and Rev. Mark Walvoord officiated.

The youngster had u n d e r g o n e su rge ry fo r the tumor in J a n u a r y at Chi ldren 's Memor ia l Hospi ta l in Ch icago a n d had returned home for convalescence.

He was a third g r ade r at South Side Chr is t ian School and a mem-ber of Third Reformed Church Sunday School.

He is survived by his parents , a b ro ther and a sister.

CTt

VEURINK'S

a n s of Mexican descent. In addi-tion, there are m a n y C u b a n re-fugees, a n d several Puerto Rican families.

These families face individual and v a r y i n g problems, but basic-ally the p rob lems fall into three m a i n categories: hous ing , educa-tion, a n d e m p l o y m e n t

Of these three, the largest pro-blem encountered by the newly-a r r i v i n g fami ly is housing. Wil-l iam C. DeRoo, b roke r f o r D e R o o Heal Estate of Hol land , said that a p a r t m e n t s a n d rented homes are scarce in this a rea , especially those which l a rge families might wish to occupy.

M A N Y OF T H E Spanish-Amer-ican families are large, hav ing 10 or more children. The Mexi-can and Texas-Mexican families a re par t i cu la r ly large, and it is these families which most often have the poorest credit rat ing. Unable to ra ise more than $500-$1,0(K) for a down payment on the pu rchase of a home, they are limited to lower-cost housing.

Some families have reported dis-c r imina to ry practises in rent ing and selling local housing. Mrs. Lupita Reyes, president of the Latin Amer ican Society, reported

that one family searched for a n apa r tmen t and followed up sev-eral a d s in the Hol land Sentinel. They m a d e a r r a n g e m e n t s to in-spect the dwelling, and when the owner discovered they were not "whi te , " he told the family that the apa r tmen t was a l ready rented. When Mrs. Reyes viewed the apar t -ment several weeks later, the a p a r t m e n t was still not occupied.

O T H E R A P A R T M E N T seekers have been told by l and lo rds that their families a re too large to in-habit a par t icu lar apar tment . Some apa r tmen t owners set ex-tremely high rent rates when they speak with Spanish-Americans .

Another m a j o r problem which m a n y indiv iduals in this ethnic

g r o u p encounter is that in gen-eral they are not educated as well as their "whi te" counterpar t . Many Mexican-Americans fail to realize the va lue of f o r m a l edu-cat ion, and therefore do not en-c o u r a g e their chi ldren to attend school. Youngsters d r o p out of the educat ional system as s o o n as they turn 16, and find jobs to help suppor t their paren ts and their l a rge families.

ALSO, SINCE MANY pa ren ts have on ly a second or third g r a d e educat ion , they are unab le to help their children with homework and ass ignments .

Very few Mex ican-Americans l iving in Hol land enter college, due to a general lack of mot iva-tion and f inancial problems. One student enrolled at Hope College, but could not cont inue her edu-ca t ion because she could not find f inancia l suppor t for her studies.

T H I S POOR educa t iona l back-g r o u n d tends to lead to fewer em-ployment opportuni t ies . How-ever, accord ing to Mrs. Reyes, employment is ava i l ab le for near-ly all local citizens, and the situa-tion is improving . Mrs. America T a p i a - R u a n o , a C u b a n refugee, indicated that near ly all m a j o r industr ies in the communi ty now employ Spanish-Americans . A few minor i ty residents are pro-fessionals.

In m a n y cases, C u b a n s have better l iving condi t ions a n d better j obs than Mexicans or Tex ans. They seem to have better employ-ment records, and tend to buy their homes ra ther t h a n rent.

FOR T H E MEXICAN and Tex an-Amer ican , Hol land offers far super ior hous ing and much bet ter-paying j o b s than a re avai l -able in Texas or Mexico. But the Spanish-Amer ican will encounter p rob lems here, too, and these pro-blems are being studied and solved by v a r i o u s c o m m u n i t y g roups .

RLC Acts on Motions Of Chapel Committee

The Religious Life Committee voted Wednesday a f t e r n o o n t o a p -prove two changes concerning chapel which were recommended by the Blue Ribbon Committee.

The changes involve c h a n g i n g T u e s d a y and T h u r s d a y chapel services f rom 8 a .m. to 10 a .m. and m a k i n g F r i d a y chapel en-tirely v o l u n t a r y . Both changes were a p p r o v e d by the RLC. If passed th rough the faculty and by the Boa rd of Trustees, they will take effect next year.

The Commit tee also discussed a p r o p o s a l in the Prel iminary Report of the Special Committee on Commit tee Structure that the Chapel Boa rd be made a per-manent subcommittee of the RLC. There was objection to this on the g r o u n d s t h a t t h e C h a p e l Boa rd is an adminis t ra t ive committee set u p to assist the Dean of Stu-dents in enforc ing school policy.

On the basis of this discussion, it was recommended to the SCCS " tha t the Chapel B o a r d r e m a i n in its present re la t ionship to the Dean of Students as a n autono-mous body and under no cir-cumstances become related with the R L C . "

Speeds Modern Motel

TV and Sauna Bath Free 5 9 4 1 Washington S.

Phone 3 9 6 - 4 0 6 4

Some Rooms Still Avai labe for

Graduation and Tulip Time!

W EJUNS"

5 T A Y L 0 R S '

I {| •r-;

So casual, so comfortable . . .

ihe moc thcl goes with

ell your 'eazy clo'hes."

Bass Weejuns^ moccasins,

in a choice of stylos and colors

for women.

$15.00

Page 4: 05-10-1968

Page 4 \

Hope College anchor May 10, 1968

cmdjor editorials

On Parietal Hours THK S T U D E N T S E N A T E h a s passed

a mo t ion permi t t ing par ie ta l h o u r s a n d referred it to the Student Life

Committee. We feel that the p lan p r o p o s e d by this m o t i o n would be a grea t benefit to the iile ol H o p e College and that it should be passed by the SLC.

In the lirst place, par ie ta l h o u r s at H o p e would give s tudents m o r e responsibi l i ty lor their ac t ions . E d a c a t i o n should p r e p a r e the s tudent lor lu ture liie, a n d strict s eg rega t ion ol the sexes is not something he will f ind there. The p l a n would give the I reedom, su bject to ce rt a i n p rescribed co nt rols, w h ich Is the best w a y to teach responsibi l i ty .

These con t ro l s limit bu t ce r t a in ly do not el iminate the " d a n g e r " invo lved . But the

Our Sympathy

WE E X P R E S S O U R deepest sym-p a t h y to the fami ly and f r iends ol T h o m a s Mark Rie tberg ,e igh t

year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Riet-berg. T o m m y passed a w a y on F r i d a y ot last week.

k t d a n g e r , , is cer ta inly not absent elsewhere, and a regula ted system such a s the one ad-

vocated by the Senate would remove the roman t i ca l l y c landes t ine element.

Second, par ie ta l h o u r s would be a wel-come add i t ion to the H o p e social life. At present, there is a lmos t n o w h e r e t h a t a H o p e in ale can talk with a w o m a n , be she da te or s imply a g o o d fr iend ( the latter c a t e g o r y is

not excluded by the p l a n ) without h a v i n g to spend m o n e y — a c o m m o d i t y not in a b u n -

dance at this college. Exc lud ing the l i b r a r y , there is a l s o nowhere that two c lassmates who h a p p e n to be ol the opposi te sex c a n s tudy a given subject together. Parietal h o u r s would do much to alleviate this.

PA R I E T A L H O U R S N E E D not be a b u r d e n on those men who d o not

wish to t ake a d v a n t a g e ol it. T h e time per iods in the mot ion a re suggested limits which m a y or m a y not be accepted by given d o r m i t o r y . The p l a n hour s need not be a n inconvenience to a n y o n e .

For these r e a s o n s , we feel that the Sen-ate p r o p o s a l lor par ie ta l h o u r s would im-p rove the a t m o s p h e r e on the Hope Col lege c a m p u s . We hope that the Student Ltfe

Commit tee agrees , a n d shows this agree-ment by p a s s i n g the mot ion T u e s d a y n i g h t .

On Choice 6S TH E R E S U L T S OF Choice 68, both

on this c a m p u s a n d a r o u n d the na t ion , p rovide s o m e f a s c i n a t i n g

insights into the political th ink ing ol this genera t ion ol college students.

The 1968 college student is decidedly l iberal . T h e Democra t i c Par ty pulled clown

a clear p lura l i ty of the voters in the na t ion-al s ample . 11 D e m o c r a t i c a l legiance wasn ' t indicated, it was m o r e likely tha t the voter would term himself a n independent r ad i e r than a Republ ican . Even s tudents who said

they were Repub l i can tended to cast a h igh percentage ol their votes for D e m o c r a t s or for l iberal Republ icans .

T h e college student t o d a y would clearl y prefer to see Sena to r Eugene McCar thy in

the White H o u s e in J a n u a r y . Sen. Mc-C a r t h y ' s s t and aga in s t the w a r in Vie tnam, his " C l e a n Gene , , image as a poli t ician and his i m a g e as the " i n t e l l e c t u a r ' c a n d i -date g a v e him grea t appea l in the c a m p u s ba l lo t ing .

S e n a t o r Robert K e n n e d y does not fa i r quite so well with the college s tudent . Al-d i o u g h his views co r r e spond a lmos t ex-actly with Sen. McCar thy and he is better

k n o w n and more exper ienced. Sen. Ken-nedy suffers f r o m a c a m p u s image a s a political oppor tun i s t who has c o m e fur ther on his b r o t h e r ' s m e m o r y t h a n his own abilities.

FO R ME R VICE- PR E S I D E N T R ic h -a rd N i x o n and G o v e r n o r Ne l son Rockefeller both trailed the two

D e m o c r a t s in na t iona l vot ing on the cam-

pus. Mr. N i x o n ' s m o d e r a t e l y hawkish views on the war and c a m p u s uncer ta in ty a b o u t Gov . Rockefeller 's posi t ion were pri-m a r y r e a s o n s lor their defeat in Choice 6 8 . "

On the issue ques t ions o n the bal lot , there Ls even less doub t a b o u t the na tu re ot s tudent views. Large major i t i es of stu-dents, feeling the p ressure ol the d r a f t

and revolted by the effectiveness of the United States b o m b i n g ol N o r t h V ie tnam, cast their bal lots lo r a reduct ion in both o u r mi l i ta ry c o m m i t m e n t to South Vie tnam and o u r b o m b i n g of the N o r t h .

Vot ing on the u r b a n crisis, college s tudents indicated that they felt aid in the n r e a s ol e d u c a t i o n and j o b t ra in ing was ol the highest pr ior i ty . Riot control legis-

lat ion was r a n k e d as i m p o r t a n t by on ly a smal l percentage.

T h e results I rom H o p e College showed that the 30 per cent of the s tudent b o d y who voted in the p r i m a r y a re r o u g h l y c o m p a r a -ble in their political views to students else-where in the United States. Students here a l so like Sen. M c C a r t h y , a re doves on the Vietnam issue a n d see the need for educa-tion and j o b t r a i n i n g in die inner city.

HOPE COLLEGE IS D I F F E R E N T IN that twice as high a percentage of the students vo t ing were Republi-

cans . The H o p e vote, however , was even

m o r e l iberal t h a n the a v e r a g e c a m p u s vote, with the Republ ican aff i l ia t ion c o m i n g t h r o u g h only in a b n o r m a l l y high sup-por t lor l iberal Repub l i cans such a s Gov .

Rockefeller a n d New York M a y o r J o h n Lindsay .

This college then, is in the m a i n s t r e a m of n a t i o n a l c a m p u s op in ion . Students here, however , have a s ineffective a voice in na t iona l a f fa i r s a s elsewhere a r o u n d the

c o u n t r y . Only 44 per cent of the part ici-pan t s in Choice 68 will be old e n o u g h to vote in N o v e m b e r .

The course ol ac t ion to be followed by H o p e s tudents i s therefore very clear. E v e r y student should push for the vote at 18, work this s u m m e r for the cand ida te he f a v o r s , a n d strive to impress his point of view on those eligible to vote. If the mill ions of col-lege s tudents all t ake such act ion in the up-c o m i n g m o n t h s , we m a y indeed be ab le to m a k e the " C h o i c e " in 1968.

Coming Events Friday, May 10

"Peter P a n , " Civic Center, 4 and 8 p.m. S a t u r d a y , May 11

Golf at Olivet, 9 :30 a .m. Tennis vs. Olivet, 2 p.m. Baseball vs. Olivet, 2 p .m. Track vs. Olivet, 2 p.m. "Peter P a n , " Civic Center, 10 a .m. Alpha Phi, A r c a d i a n , Centur ian , F r a t e r n a l In fo rmal s Knickerbocker F o r m a l

Sunday, May 11 Motet Choir Concert , Dimnent Memor ia l Chapel , 11 a .m.

Tuesday, May 14 Golf vs. Albion, 1 p.m. track vs. Albion, 3 :45 p.m. Pouiene " G l o r i a , " Dimnent Memorial Chapel , 8 :15 p.m.

Wednesday, May 15

Basebal l at Albion, 2 p .m. Tennis at Albion, 3 :30 p.m.

Thursday, May 16 Student Recital, Dimnent Memoria l Chapel , 7 p.m. "Three Men on a H o r s e , " Little Theater , 8 :15 p.m.

Friday, May 17 MIAA Golf Field Day at Albion, 8 a .m. MIAA Tennis Field Day at Albion, 9 :30 a .m. "Por t r a i t s in O p e r a , " Dimnent Memor ia l Chapel , 8 :15 p .m. " T h r e e Men o n a H o r s e , " Little Theater , 7 and 10 p .m. F r e s h m a n F o r m a l

Affer tlccfions:

Thtrt w.|| bt Pxfir tnve

5C6C

Art Buchwald

The Establishment

Woe to the person in this count ry who a t tacks the Es tabl ishment . It isn't jail, nor even physical ha rm, that he must fear. His main problem is that by a t tacking the Establ ishment , he au tomat ica l ly becomes a member of it, and there is no greater punishment in the world .

L E T US T A K E the case of Samuel Suehard , a pro-Maoist , an t iwar , ant idraft Leninist-anarchist . H a v i n g led demons t r a -tions aga ins t the White House, the Penta-gon, the U.S. aircraft carr ier Enterprise a n d the YWCA, Suehard was f inal ly caught by the Establ ishment and d r a g g e d down to the Metropol i tan Club for lunch.

There he faced a table of smiling, f r iendly faces.

" S u e h a r d , " one of the Establ ishment members sa id , "We've h a d our eye on you for some time and we think you h a v e what it takes to be one of us . "

"A POX ON Y O U , " Suehard said. " I ' m against the Establ ishment with its s t inking rules and fancy clothes a n d bloat-ed imbeciles. 1 despise you a l l . " To make his point, Suehard threw his s o u p on the f loor.

Instead of getting a n g r y , the rest of the people at the table a p p l a u d e d .

"Of course, you d o , " said a second member of the par ty . " A n d y o u h a v e e v e r y right to hate us. It's fo r this r e a s o n that we think you would m a k e a marve lous member of the power structure. How would you like a g ran t f rom the Fo rd F o u n d a -tion so when you attack the Establ ishment , you won't h a v e to w o r r y about f inancia l p rob lems?"

" T O H E L L WITH a g r a n t f rom the F o r d Founda t i on , man . I 'm not selling out for any lousy grant . I'm a revolu-t ionis t . "

Suehard picked up his steak and start-ed to eat it with his f ingers .

A third member at the table spoke up. " Y o u don' t have to t ake the F o r d gran t if you don' t want to. Would you consider a lecture tour under our s p o n s o r s h i p ? You could go a r o u n d the coun t ry speak ing be-fore Rotary and Kiwanis luncheons ex-pla in ing why you ' re d isenchanted with so-ciety, and what we h a v e done wrong. I here 's a big d e m a n d for such speakers now."

For the first time Sueha rd started los-ing some of his cool. "Wha t a re you g u y s t ry ing to do to me? Don't you u n d e r s t a n d ? I'm aga ins t every Amer ican insti tution f r o m the F l a g to the Space P r o g r a m . 1 want to tear the very fabr ic of this society a p a r t . "

" O F C O U R S E , YOU do , Suehard , . , and we respect you for it. The Establ ish-ment is a l w a y s open to criticism in spite of th ings you hear . We could even ar-r a n g e for you to be on Meet the Press where you could voice your discon-tent to mil l ions and mil l ions of people at one time. Or, if you prefer, we could give you y o u r own television show where you could discuss your own op in ions in the m a n n e r of David Sus sk ind . "

Suehard wiped his mouth with his sleeve. " I—I—I—you g u y s are t ry ing to t r a p me. I want to get out of here ."

The m a n sitting next to Suehard put his hand gently on Sucha rd ' s a rm , and said almost in a whisper, " S a m , how would you like to be on the cover of Time m a g a -zine, a s s p o k e s m a n for all a l ienated you th?"

S U C H A R D L O O K E D f r o m face to face. "I couldn ' t do it. I mean , what would the guys s a y ? "

"We'd even throw in the cover of News-week, S a m . "

Suehard said d reami ly , " T h e e o v e r s o f Time and Newsweek."

"I t wouldn ' t just end there, Sam. We could get you appointed to a government commiss ion to s tudy violence a m o n g our youth. We could m a k e you a director of a poverty p r o g r a m ; you could meet with the President at the White House, lunch with David Rockefeller, get an h o n o r a r y degree f rom H a r v a r d , become a member of the Burn ing Tree Golf Club, and the beau ty of it is, you wouldn ' t h a v e to g ive up o n e of y o u r ideals ."

" A L L R I G H T , A L R E A D Y , " cried Su-ehard . " I ' l l d o any th ing you ask me. .Just leave me a lone . "

"We knew you 'd see it our way, Sam. Would you like to come d o w n to the Rac-quet club with us after lunch fo r a few sets of s q u a s h ? "

Copyr igh t (c) 1968, T h e W a s h i ng ton Post Co. Distributed by Los Angeles T imes Syndicate.

anc OLLAND, MICMIOAN

yeau ZCltion- h0liday and """"'""lion periods hy Cc J Z Z ^ s BoarJ. P Und" th' "I the Student

Enfrediis second class matter at the post office of Holland, Michigan. 49423

w T T ^ ^ Prin"d: 7"'and Record- Z",a"d' Michigan. Member, Associated Collegiate Press Assn.

Office: Ground floor of Graves Hall. Phone: 396-2122: 396-4611, ext. 285.

BOARD OF EDITORS

* George Arwady

Mann^L ST"' ' ' ' Tom "Mebrandt

NZspEduor ; : ; : RichaP

ra1 c M Asst. News Editor Tom D^la

B X R W •. •. •. -. A i z

DEPARTMENT HEADS Critiques Bruce Ronda Sports Bob Vanderbcrg National News Harold Kamm Columnist ;0^n Niva]a

Cartoonists . . . . . . Mark Menning Greg Phillies

Proof Lynn Koop Jan Dzurina

Nancy Warner

Page 5: 05-10-1968

May 10. 1968 Hope College anchor Page 5

• review . " '1. A ugp

. m

Opus Works Suffer From Tourism, Other Faults

OPUS -

Editor's note: This year's Opus is re-viewed by Dr. Stanley Wiersma, professor of English at Calv in College. Dr. Wiersma is an a lumnus of Calvin and received his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin.

By Stanley Wiersma

A f a m o u s I t a l i an poet, ScppiWirzonni , c a m e to H o l l a n d , Mich igan d u r i n g the Tu l ip Fest ival last year . I h a v e t rans la ted his poem c o m m e m o r a t i n g Hol land , Mich-i g a n thus:

0 bed of Protes tant f lowers . P roud ly pro tes t ing still the s t ructure of the u niverse, Keep ing y o u r little plot c lean while the rest of the wor ld goes to Heaven .

Red, white, a n d yellow ( the plot a m ic rocosm of you r Dutch chu rches of v a r i o u s p e r s u a s i o n s on H o l l a n d ' s street co rne r s ) , a little va r i e ty , to be sure , amid the u n i f o r m ity.

0 tul ip bed, wait for the e p i p h a n y of lilies. 1 D I S L I K E T H E POEM because it is

a tourist poem. The poem did not get written b e c a u s e Mr. Wirzonni had a burn-ing need to wri te it. but because he hap-pened to be in a c h a r m i n g place at a c h a r m i n g time.

Two p o e m s in the H o p e Opus a re tour-ist poems of a s imi l a r sort . First , 1 turn to " T h e C a t h e d r a l " (20) . F o r m a l i s m at St. Peters m a y , indeed, be a p ress ing p rob lem for Seppi Wirzonni ; f o r m a l i s m at Fiftieth Reformed or Tenth Chr i s t i an Reformed is a m o r e p re s s ing prob lem fo r the Opus aud -ience and for H o p e writers. A Hope student h a s m a n u f a c t u r e d a p rob lem ( re l ig ious fo r -m a l i s m at St. P e t e r s ) s o t h a t t h e s t u d e n t , l i k e Wirzonni . could write a " p o e t i c " poem in a

" p o e t i c " place. Next, I t u rn to " Indolent Before Wall Mosa i c s " (28) . The tour i sm is belter hand led here because the writer ad-mits he is a tourist . The problem heexposes is that t ou r i sm (spor t sh i r t s , p h o t o g r a p h y , a n d g a w k i n g ) is out of place in a ho ly ca thedral ( p l a i n s o n g , m a r t y r d o m , sacra-ments) . The prob lem is a real one for a n y tourist , but the poem is so s i n g u l a r l y lack-ing in p a s s i o n concern ing that p rob lem, that a g a i n it seems to me to be a n arti-ficial p rob lem, fabr icated for the sake of wri t ing a poem in a pretty place. T h e c o u r -age of one ' s h u m a n i t y , even if it h a p p e n s to be a provinc ia l human i ty , is a necessity for a n y poetry at all. When a writer moves to the "left b a n k " to write, he never (well, a lmos t never) writes abou t the " l e f t b a n k " ; he m o v e s to the "left b a n k " to talk to other writers, to discover a d v a n c e s in craft and technique, to read the work of other writers and to be read; he cont inues to write a b o u t the reali ty he knows, however provincia l that real i ty m a y be. The y e n f o r touris t art ought to be limited to colored slides.

T O U R I S T POETRY O F T E N presents p h o n e y problems; one a lso f inds phoney p r o b l e m s in poems that are not tourist po-ems. The i m a g e r y and content in " L a m e n t for Z i o n " is impeccably Amer ican . It h a s only historical relevanee, however. The m o r a l in the last s t anza seems tacked-on and cerebral . It is a pity, because for the first t ime in a century p r o p a g a n d a poetry is in v o g u e a g a i n . Poetry is a g a i n open to a n y b u r n i n g i^sue; the poetry lies not so much in the issue as in the b u r n i n g . There is no b u r n i n g in " L a m e n t for Z i o n . " no pa s s iona t e react ion to the problem of the ha rdened es tabl ishments .

A GOOD BIT OF the poetry in Opus is still of the imagist ic sort , a n old f o r m by now, t h o u g h still useful as a discipline and

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sa t i s fy ing to read . Wirzonni ' s poem is un-sa t i s fy ing f r o m this point of view too: the lil ies in the last section ( the R o m a n Cath-olic C h u r c h ? ) a re i r relevant , and tulips d o not keep their own plot c lean, as the poem seems to assume. The s a m e kind of con-fus ion a p p e a r s i n " In Silence Before D a w n " ( 1 8 ) and in " L e s s o n " (34 ) . "S i l ence" is g o o d until line 4: " m u s e on t h e o f N p r i n g . " When a l ady ( o r a m a n . for th.t! ma t t e r ) lies naked in bed. toss ing , that 1-idy, ( o r m a n ) does not muse that m o m e n i o n the cool ob l iga t ions a n d stolid j oy ol parent-hood , l audab l e as such m u s i n g s m a y be o n other occas ions . Like "Si lence ," " Les-s o n " does not come off clean. The "he ld gen t ly" of line 1 is a n erotic image, so a s 1 read the poem I see that the girl is like

the book . Then, ha l fway t h r o u g h . 1 dis-cover that the mind is the book a n d the girl is the page to which the book opens. What . I then a sk . is be ing held gent ly? The on ly answer 1 can find is the a w k w a r d one that the " I" is ho ld ing his own mind gent I v.

IT IS A SAD f act that if s o m e o n e t o d a y c o m p o s e d the " G e r m a n Requ iem" , the work might get t h e c o m p o s e r t h e c h a i r m a n -sh ip of a c o n s e r v a t o r y with an h is tor ica l b ias , but it would not m a k e the c o m p o s e r B r a h m s . The time f o r d o i n g B r a h m s , just like the time for do ing W h i t m a n a n d Keats , is gone. 1 regret it. and 1 feel inclined to give the prize to " T h e W a t e r " ( 5 ) for its luscious. Whi tmancsque i m a g e r y or to " T h e Amber Dea th" ( 2 5 ) for its K e a t s e a n a w a r e n e s s of the loveliness of dea th . 1 a m almost r e a d y to believe that the dea th of the d a y ( " T h e W a t e r " ) and the na tu ra l dea th of m a n ( " T h e A m b e r " ) are real ly a s quiet a s they seem, full of the p romise of the e ternal r e tu rn of "Act I ." and beauti-ful ly a m b e r . S o m e h o w the vis ion will not d o for o u r time. The Vic tor ian r ichness h a s been cheapened by the fune ra l estab-lishment; the possibili ty of quiet, a u t u m n a l dea th h a s been m a d e unlikelier by the car-nage of the h ighways , of war , and of racial strife; t h e c o n s o l a t i o n s of na tu re h a v e been m a d e impossible by o u r u r b a n condi-t ioning. The vis ion of these poems will not sus ta in us t o d a y , just a s little as the v i s ion of the tulip bed in Wirzonni ' s poem.

T H E AIL.ME NTS OF Wirzonni ' s poem afflict m a n y of the poems in Opus; a tour-istic vis ion, a phoney p rob lem, a n unex-ploited image , a Vic tor ian aesthetic. There in ano the r qua l i ty which all of the p o e m s h a v e in c o m m o n with the Wirzonni poem: .m invincible su reness of the sufficiency of one 's method. The c o n t e m p o r a r y m o d e of poetry is very tentative. Its p h i l o s o p h y m a y be activistic and aggress ive , but its m o d e of express ion is not. The new tone of Robert Greeley, and even to some extent Robert Lowell a n d . lames Dickey, is shy; t h o u g h careful ly worked , it is whimsical in effect; it reflects how impossible it is to know a n y t h i n g for sure.

T H E REST OF the poetry in Opus is poetry of this latter type. 1 shall not dis-cuss it here for four r easons : 1. Out of the r e m a i n i n g batch of poetry , 1 h a v e not yet decided what 1 shou ld choose for the Eerd-m a n s a w a r d . 2. I shall be d iscuss ing this poetry, present ing the a w a r d , answer ing a n y ques t ions , and d o d g i n g a n y t o m a t o e s on the evening of May 14 between the h o u r s of 8 a n d 10 in Phelps Conference Room. T o review the s a m e w o r k s o ra l ly a n d in print is r edundan t . 3. Getting all the nega-tive out of the w a y in writ ing before I a r r ive in person a l lows me to be positive in person. 4. This a r r a n g e m e n t a l lows me the luxury of writ ing, fo r once in m y life, a t h o r o u g h l y negative review.

IN STORIES, " T h e J e r b o a " ( 1 5 ) h a s the novelty of h a v i n g no h u m a n cha rac -ters. but h a v i n g a plot as s o u n d as " O e d i p u s Rex." The c a t a s t r o p h e — t h e m u r -der of the j e r b o a by a snake—is exper t ly p r epa red for by the m u r d e r of a g rass -hopper by the j e r b o a . Details are s imple and expressive. The a p p r o a c h of the snake : " H e sensed a sl iding s o u n d , ry thmica l (sic) aga ins t the coarse , g r a i n y s a n d , s teady. He t u r n e d . " I sha l l not spoil the dea th scene by quo t i ng it. In spite of its excellence, however , the s tory is as touris-tic as the first three poems ( inc lud ing Wir-

z o n n i ' s ) d iscussed in this review. Art g ives people a new way of look ing at rea l i ty ; true, 1 have never seen such a h u m a n jer-boa ; in fact, 1 canno t r emember ever hav-ing seen a n y j e r b o a at all. Pe rhaps s o m e present Hope student will become a mis-s i o n a r y to Africa and find his percept ion of j e r b o a s b r o a d e n e d by the s to ry ; next time I go to the G r a n d Rapids Z o o I p l a n to check for a j e rboa . But a n y reality that 1 must t ravel a b r o a d or go to a zoo in

order to experience is not a real i ty c ry ing out for in terpre ta t ion. What, a p a r t f r o m remoteness, is more artistic a b o u t the en-counter of s n a k e a n d j e rboa t h a n a b o u t the encounter between chick a n d weasel ( a n encounter I remember v iv idly f r o m my own b o y h o o d , which for me b a d l y needs h u m a n i z i n g ) ?

T H E P L O T IN " H e Always Got U p at Nine" ( 3 1 ) is not quite sa t i s fy ing . I suspect that my difficulty m a y be some lines that were not printed on p. .34. In the top line Lo is l eav ing the TV r o o m where H a r r y is wa tch ing . In the last p a r a g r a p h

on p. 34 Paul, the son . d r o p s a fo rk , so that obv ious ly the f ami ly is now eat ing. The move f r o m the TV room to the d in ing room is never m a d e clear. 1 a l so suspect that the mo t iva t i on for the s u d d e n c h a n g e in H a r r y — h e is all at o ix 'econcerned a b o u t the a n n i v e r s a r y — h a s been left out. As it s t ands , the c h a n g e is as u n s a t i s f y i n g and unmot iva ted a s the 1 ill ies in Wirzonni ' s po-em.

1 have never been pe r suaded of the l ight-ness of any negat ive criticism of a n y writ-ing 1 h a v e done, until 1 have seen a paral le l fault in the writ ing of s o m e o n e else. That is the r e a s o n I h a v e included WirzonVii's poem.

There is, of course , no Wirzonni.

i

P U S

Spring, 1968

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Reprinted hy permission of the Chicago Tribune

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Page 6: 05-10-1968

Page 6 Hope College anchor May 10, 1968

$2,000 Added

Senate Passes Student Budgets By Jan Dzurina anchor Reporter

The p roposed 1968-69 budge ts for s tudent o r g a n i z a t i o n s were passed by the Student Senate last M o n d a y evening. T h e p roposed budge ts h a v e been sent to Clar -ence H a n d l o g t e n , Director of Bus-iness Affairs , for f ina l review.

The impor t an t c h a n g e s in the 1968-69 Student Senate budge t include the add i t ion of $2 ,000 to the o r ig ina l ly p roposed budget . The 1967-68 Senate budget re-served $ 3 0 0 for c a m p u s soc ia l events. Next year , $ 3 , 5 0 0 will be allotted to the Senate for this purpose .

TIM LIGGETT, Senate t reas urer-elect, noted that $ 1 , 0 0 0 of this m o n e y will be used lo spon-s o r W T A S record dances in the t e m p o r a r y student u n i o n on 2 5 weekends d u r i n g the next school year .

The r e m a i n i n g $ 2 , 5 0 0 will cover the expense of special out-side activities, such as b a n d s a n d s inging g roups . These special

events will cost approximately $ 100 per weekend.

Liggett a l so noted that with a definite budget , the Senate c a n p l a n better enter ta inment in ad-vance a n d a l so use this m o n e y m o r e effectively a n d wisely.

Instead of being d r a w n f r o m the Student Senate account , "Felici-t a t i o n s " will a g a i n be f inanced by the J u n i o r Class.

B L U E KEY honor f r a t e rn i ty will receive a p p r o x i m a t e l y $ 1,500 f r o m the 1968-69 budget . This $ 3 0 0 a d d i t i o n to the 1 9 6 7 - 6 8 b u d -get will ra ise the sa l a r i e s of the Blue Key m e m b e r s f r o m $ . 7 8 to $ 1.25 per hour .

The College Church h a s asked to be self-sufficient next year . In-s tead of receiving a budget of ap-p r o x i m a t e l y $6 ,000 , the College Church will receive no f u n d s f r o m the College but be allowed to keep of fer ings and special gifts.

By the end of this year , a p p r o x -imately $ 5 , 0 0 0 will be received by the Col lege Church in the f o r m of of fer ings a n d gifts. A budget of $ 4 , 8 3 0 is projected for 1968-69,

'Opera Portraits' Given Friday Night in Chapel

Originated by Miss Joyce Mor-r i son of the music depar tment , this p r o g r a m will fea ture some of the m o r e f ami l i a r sections of opera t ic l i terature, m a n y of which h a v e been popu la r i zed by M a n -tevann i a n d Peter Nero .

" P o r t r a i t s in O p e r a " will be presented at 8 :15 p .m. in Dim-nent Memor ia l Chape l next Fri-d a y .

Co-produced by D o n a l d F i n n of the d r a m a depa r tmen t , this is the first t ime that s tudents h a v e a p p e a r e d exclusively i n g r a n d o p -era at Hope. Vocal students were

chosen to pe r fo rm after Novem-ber t ry-outs .

This premiere will be compr i s -ed of eight selections, two by Wolf-g a n g A m a d e u s Mozart . Cu-ch inn i ' s M a d a m Butterfly a n d Rossini ' s Barber of Seville will be a m o n g other w o r k s by Verdi and Rigoletto. The p e r f o r m a n c e will close with " L u c i a di Lam-m e r m o o r " b y Donizetti f r o m the o p e r a plot of " T h e Bride of the Raven W o o d , " by Sir Walter Scott.

" I ' m very excited abou t this p roduc t ion , a n d I hope it will be cont inued in the c o m i n g y e a r s , " said Miss Mor r i son .

m a k i n g it possible fo r the Collpge C h u r c h to be self-sufficient next year .

T H E anchor a n d WTAS will bo th be par t i a l ly self-sufficient next year . The anchor is allotted $ 1 6 , 5 0 0 in the 1968-69 budge t . Addi t iona l f u n d s will be e a r n e d t h r o u g h subsc r ip t ions a n d adve r -tisements.

WTAS will be g iven $ 2 , 2 8 5 by the College. Addi t iona l f u n d s will be ea rned b y WTAS itself t h r o u g h adver t i sements .

The Milestone budge t is set at $ 12,985, a n increase of $ 8 0 0 f r o m this year.

The Opus will receive $ 1 , 6 7 5 next year , while IRC is al lotted $340 .

T h e AWS budget r e m a i n s the s a m e as last year , $ 5 7 0 . Mor t a r B o a r d will receive $ 1 6 4 .

Oral Interpreter Festival Meets At Hope Today

H o p e College is host this week-end of the a n n u a l Oral Interpre-ta t ion Fest ival of the Mich igan Intercollegiate Speech League .

Fif ty ora l interpreters of liter-a tu re will part icipate , represent-ing 14 colleges and univers i t ies in Michigan.

Hope College r e a d e r s will in-c lude Emilie Azeka r e a d i n g f r o m J a m e s M i c h e n e r s " H a w a i i , " Deb-bie Foshe im r ead ing f r o m Mar -gare t Mitchell 's " G o n e With the Wind , " Diane Parker r e a d i n g K a -therine Mansf ie ld 's "Miss Br i l l , " and Dennis Jones r e a d i n g De Mau-pas san t ' s " L a Mere S a u v a g e . "

This a f t e r n o o n ' s r e a d i n g s will be presented in the Physics-Math bu i ld ing at 3 :15 . T o n i g h t ' s r e a d i n g s will begin at 8 :30 in the Car ley Room of V a n Zoeren Li-b r a r y . T o m o r r o w ' s p resen ta t ions will a lso be in the Car ley R o o m , at 8 :30 and at 10:30 p.m.

^ *

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MAY Q U E E N — Retiring May Queen Sue Tell man places the regal crown on 1 9 6 8 May Queen Mary Rynbrandt.

James Tall is To Direct Motet Choir in Concert

Ihe Motet Cho i r , directed bv J a m e s Tall is , will present a sa-cred concert this S u n d a y at 8 : 3 0 p.m. in Dimnent Memor ia l Chap -el.

The m a j o r work in the concert will be the p e r f o r m a n c e of Schu-ber t ' s " M a s s in G . " The c o m p o -sit ion is a sett ing of the O r d i n a r y of the Cathol ic Mass . Like the O r d i n a r y , the c o m p o s i t i o n is in five sections: Kyrie , Glor ia , Cre-do, Sanc tus and A g n u s Del

I h e choir will be a c c o m p a n i e d by a small s t r ing orches t ra . So-

p r a n o , tenor and b a r i t o n e solos will be s u n g by M a r y Beth H o r n -bache r , J o h n D y k e m a a n d F l o y d F a r m e r , respectively.

In add i t i on to the Mass, a sec-t ion of f o u r ea r ly Engl ish mo-tets and selections by M a r e n z i o a n d Sweelinck will be sung . The S u n d a y concert will a l so fea ture the first p e r f o r m a n c e of a n an-them composed by Mr. Tallis . T w o other c o n t e m p o r a r y selec-t ions a r e by Ludwig Lenel a n d choi r m e m b e r F a r m e r .

The concert is be ing s p o n s o r e d b y the College Church .

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Page 7: 05-10-1968

May 10, 1968 Hope College anchor Page 7

Three Democrats Fight for Nomination By Candy Man-

Few wou ld h a v e guessed one y e a r a g o tha t the b ig race pf the 1968 Presidential c a m p a i g n would he in the Democra t i c r a the r t h a n the Repub l i can c a m p . N o r would mos t h a v e seen tha t race a s much m o r e t h a n a futile chal-lenge to LBJ. The J o h n s o n b o m b -shell of March 3 1 h a s c h a n g e d that picture dras t ica l ly .

And w h a t of the three men now f ight ing in p r i m a r i e s ac ros s the na t ion? T h e p h a r m a c i s t , the poet-p ro fes so r a n d the br i l l iant y o u n g counsel of the Joseph M c C a r t h y inves t iga t ions of the e a r l y 1950 ' s — wha t a re their b a c k g r o u n d s , their views, their chances of suc-cess?

VICE P R E S n ) E N T H u b e r t H o r a t i o H u m p h r e y , J r . , 57, is the oldest of the three and President J o h n s o n ' s first choice. He b e g a n his political career in 1945 as M a y o r of Minneapol is .

Elected to the United States Sen-ate in 1948, he b e c a m e m a j o r i t y whip in 1961, h o l d i n g that po-sition until just after his election as Vice-President in 1964. Hum-phrey s t r o n g l y s u p p o r t s the pro-g r a m s of President J o h n s o n , in-c lud ing his Vietnam War policy. Domest ica l ly , he f a v o r s a d o p t i o n of the tax s u r c h a r g e , s u p p o r t s the Riot C o m m i s s i o n Report a n d has sugges ted a M a r s h a l l P lan for the cities. He h a s been a con-sistent suppor t e r of civil r ights legis lat ion t h r o u g h o u t his career .

Minneso ta ' s senior S e n a t o r Eu-gene Joseph McCar thy , 52, is L B J ' s second choice a m o n g the Democra t s ( r u n n i n g a h e a d of N ixon a n d behind Rockefeller when the Repub l i cans are in-cluded) . He was elected to Con-gress in 1948 where he fo rmed a l iberal d iscuss ion g r o u p which eventua l ly became the Democrat ic Study G r o u p . He h a s served in the Senate since 1959.

MCCARTHY WAS one of the first to chal lenge the President on Vie tnam. He believes the war is m o r a l l y indefensible and not in the n a t i o n a l interest. At home , he f a v o r s greater s p e n d i n g o n d o -mestic p r o g r a m s a n d o p p o s e s a n y tax increase at this time. He, too, h a s a s t r o n g civil r igh ts record.

New Y o r k ' s j u n i o r Sena to r Ro-bert F r a n c i s K e n n e d y , 4 3 , is the younges t of the three c a n d i d a t e s a n d the on ly l awyer .

Kennedy h a s l o n g o p p o s e d the War in Vietnam a n d the Admin -i s t ra t ion ' s h a n d l i n g of it. Like his opponen t s he is a n active s u p p o r t e r of civil r ights . He a l so opposes the tax s u r c h a r g e and f a v o r s b r o a d u r b a n a id pro-g r a m s .

T H E E N T R A N C E of " B o b -b y " Kennedy in to the race aga ins t President J o h n s o n surpr i sed no one , for the lack of cordia l i ty in their r e la t ionsh ip w a s c o m m o n knowledge . A grea t dea l less is k n o w n abou t the mu tua l dislike which Senators K e n n e d y a n d Mc C a r t h y h a v e for each other --a n an imos i ty which goes back before 1960 when J F K a n d Mc-C a r t h y were co l leagues in the Sen-ate. It was c o m p o u n d e d by Mc-C a r t h y ' s s u p p o r t first of Steven-s o n and then of J o h n s o n for the n o m i n a t i o n in 1960 a n d by RP'K's subsequen t s u p p o r t for H u m p h r e y over McCar thy for the 1964 Vice-Presidential n o m i n a -tio n.

A l though K e n n e d y h a r b o r s no grea t an imos i ty t o w a r d Hum-phrey , the latter h a s long been associa ted with the a n t i - R F K

Democrat ic fact ion. H u m p h r e y does not hate Kennedy but seems to resent his youth and his r ap id rise to p rominence ostensibly on the name of his late bro ther .

T H E S E PERSONAL q u a r r e l s a l o n g with cer ta in other f ac to r s compl ica te the problem of g r o u p -ing a n v of these three on a possi-ble N o v e m b e r ticket. A ticket in-vo lv ing Kennedy and McCar thy would be highly unlikely even if their r e l a t ionsh ip were not so s t ra ined , for they are both Cath-olics and t rad i t ion f rowns u p o n such pa i r ings . Similar ly, Hum-phrey a n d McCar thy would be a n unlikely c o m b i n a t i o n because they a re both f r o m Minnesota . The t r ad i t ion of g e o g r a p h i c a l bal-ance combines with a qu i rk in the Const i tu t ion to m a k e this p a i r i n g i m p r o b a b l e -- the Minnesota dele-g a t i o n would be fo rb idden to cast their electoral votes for both men. Under these c i rcumstances the H u m p h r e y - K e n n e d y c o m b i n a -tion seems most plausible, espe-cially shou ld Kennedy see his c a m p a i g n fa l te r ing and wish to s a f egua rd his future.

RIGHT NOW. however , Ken-nedy 's fu tu re seems secure. Even though " T i m e " calls his lead " f a r f r o m decis ive ," all the polls show him a h e a d . Democra t s f a v o r him

over the other two cand ida te s : 3 5 to 31 per cent for H H H a n d 23 per cent fo r McCar thy . He a l so r u n s ahead of the o thers aga ins t bo th Nixon a n d Rockefeller. One g rea t source of s u p p o r t for R F K seems to c o m e f r o m the black c o m m u n i t y , especial ly the youth .

Despite the polls which f a v o r Kennedy a n d the fact that no Vice-President has succeeded to the Presidency by the elective pro-cess since 1836. H u m p h r e y seems to h a v e the s u p p o r t of the m a j o r -ity of the p a r t y leaders . He is a l so backed b \ the AFL-CK) . Even Dr. B e n j a m i n Spock calls him the best of the three candi-da tes except o n Vie tnam, s a y i n g he mist rusts R F K ' s " a m b i t i o n . " H u m p h r e y , the exper ts s ay , is the m a n to beat in the South .

T h e forgot ten m a n in all this specu la t ing seems to be " C l e a n Gene" McCar thy . He h a s the sup-port of the intellectuals, the stu-dents , the Dissent ing Democra t s , but very few of the p a r t y r egu la r s . His victories in New H a m p s h i r e , Wisconsin, Massachuse t s a n d Pennsy lvan ia showed him to be

m o r e than just a " g a l l a n t irrele-v a n c y , " a Don Quixote , a s the polit ical ca r toon i s t s like to pic-ture him. But those victories seem large ly hollow in the face of the lack of a n y real compet i t ion.

NOW T H E R E S U L T S of Tues-d a y ' s I n d i a n a p r i m a r y a r e in and there are no real surpr ises . K e n n e d y ' s w inn ing 42 per cent w a s abou t wha t had been project-ed, bu t less t h a n he h a d predicted or at least hoped for . M c C a r t h y ' s 27 per cent was a bit more t h a n projected, a n d he cons iders it a s ignif icant v ic tory . As for Gov. B r a n ' g a n ' s 3 1 per cent, it is h a r d to s a y where it wou ld h a v e gone had H u m p h r e y been in the race --p e r h a p s to h im, p e r h a p s to Mc C a r t h y . Pe rhaps m o r e s ignif icant t h a n the I n d i a n a win was Ken-nedy ' s vic tory in Wash ing ton , D.C., for it showed his s t rength a m o n g black voters .

Next T u e s d a y ' s N e b r a s k a pri-m a r y will be ano the r i m p o r t a n t one to watch, a s will Oregon on May 2 8 and Ca l i fo rn ia J u n e 4. And come August , C h i c a g o will be "whe re the ac t ion is."

McCarthy Wins in Choice 68;

Students Oppose U.S. Bombing

Blue Baby Doctor Dies Of Heart Ailment at 73

(Cont inued f r o m p a g e 1)

pens ion of all b o m b i n g ; nine per cent agreed with the cu r r en t limit-ed b o m b i n g a p p r o a c h ; 17 percent said we should intensify t h e b o m b -ing and 3 per cent f a v o r e d the use of nuclear weapons .

ON OVER 1,200 c a m p u s e s , 2 9 per cent chose pe rmanen t ces-sa t ion ; 2 9 per cent f a v o r e d tem-p o r a r y suspens ion ; 12 per cent agreed with the cur ren t limited b o m b i n g a p p r o a c h ; 2 6 per cent sa id we should intensify the bomb-ing and four per cent f a v o r e d the use of nuclear w e a p o n s .

On the ques t ion of m e a n s to solve the u r b a n crisis, the Choice 6 8 vote at Hope indicated that 4 1

per cent of the students v o t i n g on this c a m p u s though t that j ob t r a in ing shou ld have the highest pr ior i ty . F o r t y per cent though t educa t i on was the most impor-tant a r ea of concent ra t ion; eight p e r c e n t indicated riot con t ro l was most impor t an t ; eight per cent in-dicated hous ing ; a n d income sub-sidy was r a n k e d as most impor-tant by fou r per cent.

Dr. Willis J Potts, the s u r g e o n w h o , a long with Dr. Sidney Smith developed ins t rumen t s and tech-niques m a k i n g possible the " b l u e b a b y " ope ra t i on , died last S u n d a y of a heart a i lment . He w a s 73.

Dr. Potts enrolled in Hope Col-lege in 1913. After s e rv ing in the a r m y chemical w a r f a r e service for a year , he t rans fe r red to the Universi ty of Ch icago . He was a w a r d e d a B.S. by that institu-t ion in 1920, and received a B.A. f r o m Hope in the s a m e year . He e a r n e d his M.D. f r o m the Univer-sity of Illinois in 1922.

He served as surgeon-in-chief at Ch i ld ren ' s Memor ia l Hospi ta l in C h i c a g o f r o m 1 9 4 6 until 1960, a n d cont inued research thereunt i l 1962.

A m o n g the h o n o r s a w a r d e d to him d u r i n g his career were the go ld medal of the A m e r i c a n Med-ical Associa t ion in 1 9 5 1 , t h e d i s -t inguished service a w a r d of the Univers i ty of C h i c a g o Medical School in 1953, the d is t inguished service m e d a l of the Amer i can Hear t Associa t ion in 1961 and the William E d w a r d L a d d medal of the Amer ican Academy of Pedi-a t r ics in 1962.

Choice 68 Voting C a n d i d a t e Na t i ona l Hope College

McCar thy 2 8 5 , 5 9 8 167 Kennedy 2 1 3 , 5 7 6 42 N ixon 196 ,870 82 Rockefeller 1 1 5 , 7 8 3 120 .Johnson 5 7 , 2 4 4 13 Wallace 33 ,044 4 R e a g a n 2 8 , 1 5 1 9 L indsay 2 3 , 2 5 4 2 8 Percy 15 ,152 15 Hatfield 7 , 5 9 5 6 Hals tead 5 ,877 0 King 3 , 5 3 4 1 Stassen 1,032 0 Other 3 1 , 7 7 5 10

1 , 0 7 2 , 8 3 9 537

Sunday, May 12

THE STUDENT CHURCH WILL WORSHIP 10:00 a.m. — Kletz

Hendrika VanderKemp/ worship leader Jon Smoker, the spoken word

11:00 a.m. — Dimnent Chapel Chaplain Hlllegonds, worship leader

Dr. Robert Nykamp, Western Seminary, preacher

Cantata, This Son So Young Robert Thompson, organist

David Naylor, tenor Mrs. John Barlow, harpist

8:30 p.m.-Dimnent Chapel Motet Choir

SUMMER JOBS FOR STUDENTS

Applications now being accepted for summer jobs with major corporation. Students 18 yrs. of age & over wanted to learn marketing, sales promotion, & brand identif ication techniques during summer period. High level execu t i ve m a n a g e m e n t training courses given to qual i f ied a p p l i c a n t s . Sa la ry $115 per wk. for first 3 wks. $145 per wk. plus bonuses starting 4th week.

Win all expense paid holiday

in Acapulco for an entire

week.

Win one of 15 $1,000

scholarships.

Work anywhere in U. S. or in

Canada. Qualified students

may work overseas.

Earn at least $1,500 for the

summer student - make

$3 ,000 and more.

Best Posit ions Going Fast! Call Today For Appointment

9:00 A.M. - 1:00 P.M.

GRAND RAPIDS, MICH

MUSKEGON, MICH

LANSING, MICH

KAIAMAZ00, MICH...

CHICAGO, ILL

Mr. Schmitt A.C. 616 459-5079

Mr. Gould A.C. 616 722-4144

Mr. Emert A.C. 616 485-1881

Mr. Davis A.C. 616 381-0833

Mr. Deter A.C. 312 782-4362

We have offices located in most cities, however, please contact

our district offices listed above for an appointment.

Page 8: 05-10-1968

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Page 8 Hope College anchor May 10, 1968

Stomp Scots, 85-63

Trackmen Raise MIAA Mark Hope 's t racksters upped their

MIAA record to 3-1 Wednesday af te rnoon as they whipped the Alma Scots, 85-63, in a dual meet at Alma.

THE D U T C H M E N took eight firsts and tied for another as they c a m e f r o m behind to winthemeet . After the complet ion of the field events, the home team was ahead , 25-11.

However, the Dutch o u t r a n Al-m a in the spr ints and distance events to come back s t rong. Ray Cooper and Walter Reed were bo th timed at 9 . 8 5 seconds in the 100-yard da sh to easily win that event. Cooper a lso won the

2 2 0 with a time of 21.9, while Reed placed second.

RALPH SCHROEDER and Bruce Geelhoed took second and third in the 440 , won by Wiggin of Alma. Rich F r a n k r a n the 8 8 0 in 2 :09 .6 to g r a b another Hope first, while t eammate Chris Haile took a third. Rick Bruggers w o n both the mile r u n and the two-mi le run, a n d t eammate Dan Colen-b r a n d e r took a runner -up in the mile and Rich Bisson placed third in the two-mile.

Hope ' s mile re lay team took first place h o n o r s in the mile re-lay with a time of 3 :29 , a l though Paul Steketee, D a v e T h o m a s ,

National Sports Baseball

.Jim " C a t f i s h " Hunter , 22-year old r igh thander for the Oak land Athletics, pitched himself into the Hall of F a m e Wednesday night as he hurled a perfect ganu-agains t the powerful Minnesota T wins.

Hunter retired all 27 men to face him in the 4-0 victory as he became the 11th m a n in his-to ry to pitch a perfect game . The masterpiece was the first in the American League since 1922, when Char ley Rober tson of the Chicago White Sox turned thetrick in a game with the Detroit Tigers.

Hunter h a d a 3-2 count on the f inal batter. Rich Reese, who then proceeded to foul off five pitches before str iking out. " C a t f i s h , " be-sides pitching the no-hitter, got three hits himself and d r o v e in three of his t eam's four runs.

The Bal t imore Orioles, 196b World Champs , reeled of! eignt consecutive victories to take over first place in the Amer ican League. Detroit was second and Minnesota third as of Wednesday night. Meanwhile, the cellar-dwelling Chicago White Sox appea red ready to start their move as they got g rand- s l am homers f r o m pit-cher Gary Peters and first base-m a n T o m m y McCraw, both hits winning ball games .

In the Nat iona l League, the St. Louis C a r d i n a l s held a two and a half g a m e lead over Cin-

cinnati, a s the Reds were getting great hitt ing f r o m Pete Rose. Rose, leading the m a j o r s with a .398 average , put together a 2 1 -game hitting s t reak.

Hockey The Montreal Canad iens , re-

ceiving excellent g o a l tending f rom veteran G u m p Worsley, won 3-2 and 1-0 over surpris ingly tough St. Louis to take a 2-0 lead in the Stanley Cup finals. The 3-2 thriller was won in " s u d -den d e a t h " overt ime.

Basketball The Bos ton Celtics, whipping

the Los Angeles Lakers four games to two, won the National Basketbal l Assoc ia t ion cham-pionship last T h u r s d a y night. The title was the ninth in the last ten years for the Celtics. J o h n Havli-cek led the Celts with 40 points in the f inal game.

In other basketbal l news, it was announced that Alex H a n n u m , coach of the Philadelphia 76er ' s , had been named coach of the Oak land Oaks of the ABA. Also, Bill S h a r m a n , coach of the San F ranc i sco Warr iors , turned in his res ignat ion and was named coach of the Los Angeles Stars of the ABA. A third coach , Chicago ' s J o h n n y " R e d " Kerr , changed his job , accepting the coaching posi-tion with the new Phoenix Suns of the NBA. Owner Ben Kerner of St. Louis announced that he was m o v i n g his H a w k s to At-lanta fo r the 1968-69 s e a s o n

Schroeder a n d Geelhoed failed to come close to their record-b r e a k i n g pace of last Wednesday. Jeff Hol lenbach finished second in the 120-yard high hurdles , as did t e ammate T h o m a s in the 4 4 0 intermediates.

FLOYD BRADY WON the high j u m p event with a l eap of six feet and Herm Kuiper finished second. B r a d y a l so won the long j u m p despite a shor t j u m p of only 19' 8 ,/2". J o h n Tysse won the triple j u m p at 4 0 , 5 " .

The 440-re lay team was dis-qual i f ied because of a bad ex-change . Troubles were a l so pre-valent in the shot put event, which was swept by Alma. Doug Nichols won the javel in throw for Hope, and a l so tied for first in the pole vaul t with a vault of 1 r 6 " . Kent Cande lo ra took third in both the jave l in and the discus.

T o m o r r o w af te rnoon , the Dutchmen enter tain the Olivet Comets , led by Gordie Lofts, Al N a g y and Karl Wilson, at V a n Raalte Field.

• y. t I m

MAY DAY SOFTBALL -- Jane Kouw slides into base for the In-dependents as the Kappa Chi first baseman waits for the ball.

Hitting Is Weak

Hope Baseball Record Drops By Bob Vanderberg

" O u r pitching has been real g o o d , but we're just not hitting at a l l , " sighed Hope College base-ball coach Glenn Van Wieren af-ter his F ly ing Dutchmen had drop-ped another ball g a m e in MIAA ac t ion last S a t u r d a y .

T H E D U T C H , who have j u m p e d on MIAA pi tch ingfor nine hits in the last four games , watched their league record d r o p to 2-3-1 as they lost to the Adr i an Bull-dogs , 2-1, a n d played to a 0-0 tie fo r six innings in g a m e two before ra in washed out the pro-ceedings.

What made the loss tough to take was the fact that lefty Ga ry F rens walked in the winning r u n in the sixth inning. Other t h a n that, F rens pitched a good ball game , a l lowing onlv four hits. Hope also picked up four hits, e q u a l i n g the Du tchman ' s total output for the Ca lv indoub l ehead -er. The key hit was shor t s top H a r r y R u m o h r ' s double, which

d rove in first b a s e m a n Steve Piers-m a with Hope ' s lone run.

RIGHTHANDER D O N Kroods -m a , like Frens, gave up just four hits to the Bulldogs, but his team-mates were able to muster merely one hit, a single by second base-m a n Groy Kaper . Kape r a lso threw out an Adr i an runne r at the plate d u r i n g the game .

T h u r s d a y , the Dutchmen faced the Alma Scots in a doubleheader , but results were too late to be printed. T o m o r r o w a f t e rnoon , Hope takes on Olivet in a twin bill at V a n Raalte. Lefty Mark J o h n s o n will s tar t one of the games , with both Frens and K r o o d s m a slated to see action in the other.

Hope Netmen Take Two, Beat Adrian and CMU

Review of the News By H a r o l d K a m m

Washington , D.C. The United States and Nor th

Vietnam b roke the 3 4 - d a y deadlock over the selection of a site for pre l iminary discus-sions b y agree ing this week to begin" f o r m a l ta lks in Paris s o o n President J o h n s o n said he hoped that the agreement "can represent a mutua l and serious movement b y all par-ties t owards peace in South-east As i a . "

I nd i ana Ind iana Democrats went to

the polls this week a n d g a v e Sen. Robert F. Kennedy 4 2 percent of the vote, defeating Gov. Roger D. Bran ig in and Sen. Eugene J. McCar thy .

Gov. Bran ig in had 31 per cent and McCar thv rpreived 27 per cent of the vote. It will not be clear, however, what Ken-nedy's I n d i a n a victory means in terms of delegates to the Chicago convent ion until the Indiana Democratic State con-vention meets. The Ind i ana convention wi l lbecon t ro l l edby the Hoosier Democrat ic o rga -nization of Gov. Branig in .

The p r i m a r y drew a record t u r n o u f f r o m both par t ies ,even though Richard Nixon was alone on the Republ ican bal-lot. N i x o n received over 500 , 000 votes, s u r p a s s i n g his own record of slightly over 4 0 0 , 0 0 0 in the 1960 I n d i a n a p r i m a r y .

Kennedy and McCar thy will appea r in m o r e direct p r i m a r y contests in N e b r a s k a next Tues

day , Oregon May 28 , and Cali-fo rn ia and South Dakota June 4.

New York A su rvey of the 1,333 dele-

gates a l r eady picked or expect-ed to attend the Republ ican Na-t ional Conven t ion in Miami Beach in August showed tha t Richard M. Nixon h a s a com-m a n d i n g lead. Mr. Nixon had 725 delegates l ean ing or com-mitted to him, 58 more t h a n the number needed to win the nominat ion. G o v e r n o r Nelson Rockefeller of New York had 402 and Gove rno r Ronald Rea-gon of Cal i forn ia 2 0 6 . Thesur -vey showed, however , that Mr. Rockefeller could conceivably over take the fo rmer Vice Pres-ident.

Gov. Rockefeller told students at the Universi ty of Iowa that the present draf t system was " a r b i t r a r y and inequi tab le" and p roposed a d ra f t by lottery. He a l so urged the lowering of the v o t i n g age to 18.

Washington, D.C. The House Ways and Means

Committee voted 17 to 6 to en-dorse a tax increase of a b o u t $10 bill ion p r o v i d i n g it w a s coupled with a reduct ion of at least $4 billion in Government spend ing next year and other steps to hold d o w n Government ou t l ays in future years . The ac-tion el iminated the most im-por tan t ba r r i e r to enactment of a tax rise since it was first pro-posed b y President J o h n s o n nine m o n t h s ago .

Moscow The Soviet Government an-

nounced rat i f icat ion of a con-sular convent ion with the Uni-ted States that h a d been stalled for f o u r years . The United States, after considerable con-t roversy and opposi t ion, rati-fied the consu la r convent ion March 31, 1967. The conven-tion establ ishes rules, proce-dures and r ights of consulates in the two countries.

Mon tgomery , Ala. A l a b a m a swore in Albert P.

Brewer as g o v e r n o r after the death of Governor LurleenWal-lace. The 4 1 year old wife of fo rmer Gov. George Wallace died after a long fight with can-cer. Brewer, the lieutenant gov-e rnor , was given the oath of office a s Wallace stood at his side.

Observers in Mon tgomery be-lieve Brewer, a lawyer, will es-tablish a closer work ing rela-t ionship between A l a b a m a and the rest of the nation. Wallace is expected to cont inue his third-pa r ty c a m p a i g n for the Presi-dency.

Louisville, K y , The winner of the Kentucky

Derby, Dancer 's Image, was disqual if ied because of the pre-sence of a p a i n killer in his b lood s t ream. F o r w a r d Pass, which h a d finished second, will be recognized as winner and a w a r d e d the cash prize, but wage r ing on last S a t u r d a y ' s Derby isn't affected.

Hope 's powerful tennis t eam moved into second place in the MIAA last S a t u r d a y with an im-pressive 8-1 victory over Adr ian .

T H E N E T M E N ALSO d e m o n strated power as they s troked their w a y past Central Michigan Uni-versity 7-2 on Tuesday .

Hope completely domina ted the p lay agains t an o u t m a n n e d Adri-a n squad to secure their second s t ra ight league victory after an open ing loss to defending cham-pion K a l a m a z o o .

Hope sewed up the meet ea r ly by easily winning all six of the singles matches. Doug Ba r row , Ron Visscher, Don Kronemeyer , C ra ig Hol leman , Jack V a n Wier-en and Jim For tney all en joyed easy victories.

The Dutch also won the first two doubles matches as the teams of Bar row-Vissche r and Krone-meyer—Holleman a g a i n won eas-ily. Adr ian picked up their only victory of the day in third doubles as F o r t n e y and Jeff Green dropped their match.

The match aga ins t Central Michigan was a lmost a repeat of S a t u r d a y ' s dua l . All five sin-gles matches were won with the sixth match being forfeited to Cen-tral because of Kronemeye r ' s ill-ness. Barrow—Visscher and Hol-l e m a n - T i b o r S a f a r also picked up victories in doubles . As was the case on Sa tu rday , the only real defeat was suffered by For tney and Green in third doubles.

GLORIA for Orchestra, Chorus and Soprano Solo

by

FRANCIS POULENC

The Hope College Orchestra Robert Ritsema, Conductor

The Hope College Chorus Roger Davis, Cvnductvr

Anne DePree Reisig, Soprano

Tuesday, May 14, 1968 at 8:15 p.m.

Dimnent Memorial Chapel

Holland, Michigan St