12-15-1967

6
Viet War Discussed in NSA Ibrum The question of U.S. involve- ment in Vietnam was debated at a National Student Association Vietnam Forum last Wednesday evening in Snow Auditorium. Participating in the discussion were Dr. Robert Brown, Dr. John Barlow, Dr. Richard Brockmeiei and Dr. Cotter Tharin. M. Harold Mikle moderated. DR. BARLOW, described as a 'dove" by Mr. Mikle, termed President Kennedy's intervention in the Dominican Republic a vio- lation of the United Nations Char- ter. He stated that the major vio- lence in Vietnam is the violence of greedy landlords and money lenders. He called this the "quiet Arguments tor and against the U.S.'s participation were pre- sented by (1. to r.) Dr. Robert Brown, John Barlow, Dr. Rich- ard Brockmeier and Dr. Cotter Tharin. Harold Mikle (center) moderated. violence that is prevalent in Asia today." DR. BARLOW asked the aud- ience, "Can we believe the Viet- namese youth if he says that the United States wants to make a colony of Vietnam?" "IF WE THREWdarts at a map of the world," Dr. Barlow noted, "we couldn't possibly hit a place where the U.S. is not having trouble," We can't even consider our action popular with other na- tions when our own puppets chant "Go home" to U.S. troops. Dr. Tharin views increased pressure on the part of the Amer- ican government as the only way to bring North Vietnam to the ne- gotiating table. He also predicted that the North Vietnamese Will be more willing to negotiate after the 1968 presidential elections. Dr. Tharin emphasized the uni- versal desire to terminate the war in Vietnam, but not merely because of the severe economic stresses the Asian war has placed on the American people me Suiuiion to tne war musi come from negotiation," Dr. Tharin noted "However, we have lot been given the idea that North Vietnam wants to negotiate" DR. BROCKMEIER termed the professional standards, military accuracy and efficiency found in the Vietnam war the highest the world has ever seen. "However," he stated, "the scoreboard has Deen misleading ma inly as a result ot comments trom our nation's leaders." He went on to say that it is time for us to study the situation and find out what is going on. He concluded his opening statements with, "Something is terribly wrong and the American people have a big responsibility to find out about it." Dr. Brown noted that "during combat there are no doves." He argued that from our safe, secure and distant position we can view the war in Vietnam "philosophi- cally, morally and psychological- ly" but once involved in actual combat, every engagement is an "all-out act of escalation." DR. BROWN spoke of the neec to understand the oriental mind when questioning the North Vi- etnamese refusal to negotiate "Unless you forcably drive the oriental to the negotiating table he won't come," he said. "Withdrawal," hecontinued, "is absolutely aainine" 'If we have to up the kill ratio to 100:1, then it has to be that way. We are in no position to debate our involvement in Vietnam, our com- mitment has already been made" A question was raised from the 1 audience concerning the Euro- pean opinion of U.S. involvement in Vietnam. Dr. Brockmeier re- plied, "the silence of their interest is deafening." Dr. Tharin pointed out that both England and West Germany have not taken nega- tive viewpoints on our involve- ment in the Vietnam conflict but the nations who have given fi- nancial support havebeen mainly Asian. DR. BARLOW noted, however, that even the Asian peoples do not have a high opinion of Amer- ican policy. He stated,"They hate our guts." "Thailand, our biggest puppet in Asia, term the Ameri- can people as 'too loud, too rich and too many.' " "ARE WE, the American people running ourselves into a serious economic problem as a result of the Vietnam War?" was another question put to the debaters. Dr. Tharin noted that the Uni- ted States does have serious eco- nomic problems. However, he said that they are not totally the result of Vietnam. " If not spent in Vietnam," he concluded, "the American tax dollar would be spent elsewhere" OPE COLLEGE anc or OLLAND, MICHIGAN Dr. Gerrit Van Zyl Died Of Heart Attack Sunday 80th ANNIVERSARY - 13 Hope College, Holland, Michigan 49423 December 15, 1967 Dialogue With Trustees SLC Endorses Board Request The Student Life Committee"en- dorsed a request of theCommuni cations Board to seek a dialogue with the Board of Trustees to re solve the four questions raised in a memorandum to the SLC" at its meeting last Monday night. The four questions dealt with the revisions made by the Trus- tees in the policy statement con- cerning the anchor adopted by the Communications B o a r d lasv spring. THE MAJOR change involved taking supervision of the campus newspaper from the faculty and giving it to the Dean for Academic Affairs. This raised a question in the minds of the Board, reported Board representative Dirk Jelle ma, because such supervisory au- thority may give the Dean unwar- ranted censorship power over the anchor. The Board felt that the clause relating to this should read: "The Communications Board is re- sponsible to the faculty through the Student Life Committee" Gretchen VanderWerf said that the rationale of the Trustees for this change might be that they did not want to deal with the faculty as a whole, and wanted one person with whom they could communicate on this subject. Mrs. Linda Palmer noted that this might have been their Inten- tion, but that thestatement as writ- ten does not make the Dean a liaison only, and gives him super- visory power In addition to power to go between the anchor and the Trustees. OTHER TRUSTEE additions Include the statements that "the anchor must constantly bear In mind the fact that It has a Joint responsibility both to the students and to Hope College as a whole," and that "the anchor should con- stantly take the lead In setting an example for rising above provln- 1 icialUm and parochialism and in [relating the activities of the cam- pus to state, national and inter- national trends." The Board asked that these additions be clarified, because they seem to contradict the open- ing statement of the policy, which asserts that the anchor "is written by the students, edited by stu- dents and aimed at a student audience" The final question dealt with additions that the Board felt were redundant in the light of the Jour- nalistic Code of Ethics. STUDENT SENATE President Craig Holleman brought from the Senate the motion requesting that "a binding policy statement be issued. . .prohibiting discrimi- nation of any sort on the basis of race, creed, color or national origin." SLC chairman Alvin Vander- bush said that he hesitated to endorse the motion entirely because the wording ofthemotion implied that discriminatory prac- tices exist on campus when the Senate could cite none other than the letter to roommates of women from other cultures. Mrs. Palmer asked whether a policy statement was needed at the level of the College or the level of the parents. Holleman had noted thatthereasonfor send- ing the letter was to prevent stu- dents or their parents from ob- jecting to their children rooming with, a student from a different background after the students had arrived on campus. HOLLEMAN then moved thai a non-dlscrlmlnatlon statement be printed i>i the bulletin as a sub- ititute move This was seconded and passed. In other action It was moved and seconded that the hours dur- ing which Carnegie Gymnasium Is open be extended to 8 a.m. to midnight on Monday through Sat- urday and from noon to midnight on Sunday. Glenn Van Wleren noted that at present students can only use the g y m if they participate in physi- cal education classes, inter-colle giate or intramural sports, or" some other organized activity. He also suggested that some provi- sion be made so that men and women could use the gym at se pirate Hmes, but said mat mis could be planned later. The mo- tion was passed unanimously. Dr. Gerrit Van Zyl, retired chair- man of the Hope College chemis- try department, died Sunday in Gresham, Ore. of a heart attack. He was 73. Services were held yesterday in Trinity Reformed Church, Hol- land. Burial was in Pilgrim Home Cemetery. A memorial service washeldfor Dr. Van Zyl in morning chapel yesterdav. President Calvjn A. VanderWeri delivered the euiogy, excerpts from which are printed on page 4. Dr. Van Zyl was graduated from Hope College in 1918. He earned his Masters degree from the University of Michigan in 1921 and his Ph. D. from the same university in 1924. While engaged in pre-doctoral study, he became chairman of Hope's chemistry department in 1923. He retired from that po- sition in 1964. In 1957, Dr. Van Zyl was named a Fellow of tkeJ^ew Yoik Academy of Sciences. In 1962 he was "named one of the six out- standing college chemistry teach- ers in the Unites States and Can- ada by the Manufacturers Chem- ists' Association. He has also re- ceived the Scientific Apparatus Makers' Award. He is survived by his wife. Bertha, four children, twelve grandchildren, three sisters and a brother. DR. GERRIT VAN ZYL Spurk Indignation Calvin Trustees Bar Gregory The Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees of Calvin Col- lege has overruled an administra- tive decision to allow Dick Grewory to speak on the Calvin camoufi; The precedent-set ting decision touched off a campus controversy questioning the decision by thf Board. The Calvin Student Coun- cil discussed the matter in a closed session and the "Calvin College Chimes" ran two highly critical editorials. DICK GREGORY Is a leader of the civil rights movement in America. A professional enter- tainer, he Is generally regarded as a member of the more militant black power faction of the move ment. He has been arrested several times for his activities and is cur- rently fasting to protest the war in Vietnam. Un Marcn 7-9, Mr. Gregory will speak at a Hope College symposium on urban problems under the auspices of the Cul- tural Affairs Committee According to the front page story In the "Chimes," the Ex- ecutive Committee's vote at Cal- vin was unanimous. Rev. Charles Greenfield, chairman, did not give a rationale for the action but said that "we did not consider it to be in the best interests of the col- lege" Mr. Gregory was to havespoken to a closed campus meeting not open to the public. REV. GREENFIELD said that me action of the committee was t«kpn for varying individual rea- sons. He pointed to Gregory^ bad reputation m the CEfcago area as a maior influencing fac- (Continued on page 2) s Calvin College Chimes cartoon by Gerald Hoekstra. Reprinted by permission.

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Transcript of 12-15-1967

Page 1: 12-15-1967

Viet War Discussed in NSA Ibrum The ques t ion of U.S. involve-

ment in Vietnam was debated at a Na t iona l Student Association Vietnam F o r u m last Wednesday evening in Snow Auditor ium.

Part ic ipat ing in the discussion were Dr. Robert Brown, Dr. J o h n Barlow, Dr. Richard Brockmeiei and Dr. Cotter Thar in . M. H a r o l d Mikle modera ted .

DR. BARLOW, described as a ' d o v e " b y Mr. Mikle, termed President Kennedy ' s intervention in the Dominican Republic a vio-lat ion of the United Na t ions Char-ter.

He stated that the major vio-lence in Vietnam is the violence of greedy landlords and money lenders. He called this the "quiet

Arguments tor and against the U.S.'s participation were pre-sented by (1. to r.) Dr. Robert Brown, John Barlow, Dr. Rich-ard Brockmeier and Dr. Cotter Tharin. Harold Mikle (center) moderated.

violence that is prevalent in Asia t o d a y . "

DR. BARLOW asked the aud-ience, " C a n we believe the Viet-namese youth if he s ays that the United States wants to m a k e a colony of Vie tnam?"

" I F WE T H R E W d a r t s at a m a p of the wor ld ," Dr. Bar low noted, "we couldn't poss ib ly hit a place where the U.S. is not h a v i n g t rouble ," We can ' t even consider our action p o p u l a r with other na-t ions when our own puppets chant " G o h o m e " to U.S. t roops .

Dr. T h a r i n views increased pressure on the pa r t of the Amer-ican government a s the only way to br ing Nor th Vietnam to the ne-gotiat ing table. He also predicted that the Nor th Vietnamese Will b e more willing to negotiate after the 1968 presidential elections.

Dr. Tha r in emphasized the uni-versal desire to te rmina te the w a r in Vietnam, but not merely because of the severe economic stresses the Asian war h a s placed on the American p e o p l e

m e Suiuiion to tne war musi come f rom negot ia t ion," Dr. T h a r i n noted " H o w e v e r , we have lot been given the idea that Nor th Vietnam wants to n e g o t i a t e "

DR. B R O C K M E I E R termed the profess ional s t anda rds , mil i tary

accuracy and efficiency found in the Vietnam war the highest the world has ever seen. " H o w e v e r , " he stated, " the sco reboa rd has Deen mis lead ing m a inly as a result ot comments t rom our na t ion ' s leaders ."

He went on to say that it is time for us to s tudy the si tuation and find out wha t is go ing on. He concluded his open ing statements with, " S o m e t h i n g is terribly wrong a n d the American people have a b ig responsibil i ty to find out about it."

Dr. Brown noted that " d u r i n g combat there are no doves . " He argued that f r o m o u r safe, secure and distant posi t ion we can view the war in Vietnam "phi losophi -cally, m o r a l l y and psychological-ly" but once involved in actual combat , every engagement is an "al l-out act of esca la t ion ."

DR. BROWN spoke of the neec to u n d e r s t a n d the oriental mind when ques t ioning the Nor th Vi-etnamese refusal to negot ia te "Unless you forcably drive the oriental to the negot ia t ing table he won't c o m e , " he said.

" W i t h d r a w a l , " hecont inued, "is absolutely a a i n i n e " 'If we have to up the kill ra t io to 100:1, then it h a s to be that way. We are in no posi t ion to debate our

involvement in Vietnam, our com-mitment h a s a l r eady been m a d e "

A ques t ion was raised f r o m the1

audience concerning the Euro-p e a n op in ion of U.S. involvement in Vietnam. Dr. Brockmeier re-plied, " the silence of their interest is dea fen ing . " Dr. T h a r i n pointed out that both England and West G e r m a n y have not taken nega-tive viewpoints on our involve-ment in the Vietnam conflict but the na t ions who have given fi-nancial suppor t h a v e b e e n main ly Asian.

DR. BARLOW noted, however, that even the Asian peoples do not h a v e a high opinion of Amer-ican policy. He s t a t e d , " T h e y hate our gu t s . " " T h a i l a n d , our biggest puppet in Asia, term the Ameri-can people as ' t oo loud, too rich and too m a n y . ' "

" A R E WE, the American p e o p l e runn ing ourselves into a serious economic problem as a result of the Vietnam War?" was ano ther quest ion put to the debaters .

Dr. T h a r i n noted that the Uni-ted States does have serious eco-nomic problems. However, he said that they are not total ly the result of Vietnam. " If not spent in Vie tnam," he concluded, " t h e American tax dol lar would be spent e l sewhere"

OPE COLLEGE

anc or OLLAND, MICHIGAN

Dr. Gerrit Van Zyl Died Of Heart Attack Sunday

80th ANNIVERSARY - 13 Hope College, Holland, Michigan 49423 December 15, 1967

Dialogue With Trustees

SLC Endorses Board Request The Student Life Commit tee"en-

dorsed a request of t h e C o m m u n i cations Boa rd to seek a d ia logue with the Boa rd of Trustees to r e solve the four questions raised in a m e m o r a n d u m to the SLC" at its meeting last Monday night.

The four quest ions dealt with the revis ions m a d e by the Trus-tees in the policy statement con-cerning the anchor adopted by the Communica t ions B o a r d lasv spring.

T H E MAJOR change involved taking supervis ion of the c a m p u s newspaper f rom the faculty and giving it to the Dean for Academic Affairs. This raised a ques t ion in the minds of the Board, reported Board representat ive Dirk Je l le ma, because such superv i sory au-thority m a y give the Dean unwar-ranted censorship power over the anchor .

The Boa rd felt that the clause relating to this should read: " T h e Communica t ions Board is re-sponsible to the faculty t h r o u g h the Student Life C o m m i t t e e " • Gretchen VanderWerf sa id that

the ra t iona le of the Trustees for this c h a n g e might be that they did not want to deal with the faculty as a whole, and wanted one pe r son with whom they could communicate on this subject.

Mrs. Linda Palmer noted that this might h a v e been their Inten-tion, but that thestatement a s writ-ten does not m a k e the Dean a l iaison only, and gives him super-visory power In addit ion to power to go between the anchor and the Trustees.

OTHER T R U S T E E additions Include the statements that "the anchor must constantly bear In mind the fact that It has a Joint responsibility both to the students and to Hope College as a whole," and that "the anchor should con-stantly take the lead In setting an example for rising above provln-1

icialUm and parochialism and in [relating the activities of the cam-

pus to state, na t ional and inter-na t ional t rends . "

The Board asked that these addi t ions be clarified, because they seem to contradict the open-ing statement of the policy, which asserts that the a n c h o r "is written by the students, edited by stu-dents and aimed at a student a u d i e n c e "

The final quest ion dealt with addi t ions that the Board felt were r edundan t in the light of the Jour-nalistic Code of Ethics.

S T U D E N T S E N A T E President Craig Hol leman b rough t f rom the Senate the mot ion request ing that " a b inding policy statement be issued. . .prohibi t ing discrimi-nat ion of a n y sort on the bas is of race, creed, color or na t ional o r ig in . "

SLC c h a i r m a n Alvin Vander-bush said that he hesitated to endorse the mot ion entirely because the word ing o f t h e m o t i o n implied that d i sc r imina to ry prac-tices exist on c a m p u s when the Senate could cite none other than the letter to r o o m m a t e s of women f rom other cultures.

Mrs. Palmer asked whether a policy statement was needed at the level of the College or the level of the parents . Hol leman had noted t h a t t h e r e a s o n f o r send-ing the letter was to prevent stu-dents or their paren ts f rom ob-jecting to their children r o o m i n g with, a student f r o m a different b a c k g r o u n d after the students had arr ived on campus .

HOLLEMAN then moved thai a non-dlscrlmlnatlon statement be printed i>i the bulletin as a sub-ititute m o v e This was seconded and passed.

In other action It was moved and seconded that the hours dur-ing which Carnegie Gymnasium Is open be extended to 8 a.m. to midnight on Monday through Sat-urday and from noon to midnight on Sunday.

Glenn Van Wleren noted that at

present students can only use the gym if they par t ic ipa te in physi-cal education classes, inter-colle giate or i n t r a m u r a l sports, or" some other o rgan ized activity. He also suggested that some provi-sion be m a d e so that men and women could use the g y m at s e

p i r a t e Hmes, but sa id mat mis could be p lanned later. The mo-tion was passed unan imous ly .

Dr. Gerrit V a n Zyl, retired chair-m a n of the Hope College chemis-try depar tment , died Sunday in Gresham, Ore. of a heart attack. He was 73.

Services were held yesterday in Trinity Reformed Church, Hol-land. Buria l was in Pilgrim Home Cemetery.

A memor i a l service w a s h e l d f o r Dr. Van Zyl in m o r n i n g chapel yesterdav. President Calvjn A. VanderWeri delivered the euiogy, excerpts f r o m which a re printed on page 4.

Dr. V a n Zyl was g r a d u a t e d f rom Hope College in 1918. He earned his Masters degree f r o m the Universi ty of Michigan in 1921 and his Ph. D. f rom the s ame univers i ty in 1924.

While engaged in pre-doctoral study, he became cha i rman of Hope 's chemistry depar tment in 1923. He retired f r o m that po-sition in 1964.

In 1957, Dr. Van Zyl was named a Fellow of tkeJ^ew Yoik Academy of Sciences. In 1962 he was "named one of the six out-s tanding college chemistry teach-ers in the Unites States and Can-ada by the Manufac tu re r s Chem-

ists' Association. He has a l so re-ceived the Scientific A p p a r a t u s Makers ' Award.

He is survived by his wife. Bertha, four children, twelve g randch i ld ren , three sisters and a brother .

DR. GERRIT V A N ZYL

Spurk Indignation

Calvin Trustees Bar Gregory The Executive Committee of the

Board of Trustees of Calvin Col-lege has overruled an admin i s t ra -tive decision to allow Dick Grewory to speak on the Calvin camoufi;

The precedent-set ting decision touched off a c a m p u s con t rove r sy quest ioning the decision by thf Board . The Calvin Student Coun-cil discussed the matter in a closed session and the " C a l v i n College Chimes" r a n two highly critical editorials.

DICK GREGORY Is a leader of the civil r ights movement in America. A profess iona l enter-tainer, he Is genera l ly r ega rded as a member of the more mili tant black power fact ion of the m o v e ment. He has been arrested several times for his activities and is cur-rently fas t ing to protest the w a r in Vietnam.

Un Marcn 7-9, Mr. Gregory will speak at a Hope College symposium on urban problems under the auspices of the Cul-tural Affairs Committee

According to the front page story In the "Chimes," the Ex-ecutive Committee's vote at Cal-vin was unanimous. Rev. Charles Greenfield, chairman, did not give

a ra t iona le for the action but sa id that "we did not consider it to be in the best interests of the col-l e g e "

Mr. Gregory was to h a v e s p o k e n to a closed c a m p u s meeting not open to the public.

REV. G R E E N F I E L D said that me action of the committee was t«kpn for v a r y i n g individual rea-sons. He pointed to G r e g o r y ^ bad reputat ion m the CEfcago a r ea as a ma io r influencing fac-

(Cont inued on p a g e 2 )

s

Calvin College Chimes cartoon by Gerald Hoekstra. Reprinted by permission.

Page 2: 12-15-1967

P a g e 2 Hope College anchor December 15, 1967

Administration Overruled

Dick Gregory Visit Canceled (Continued from page 1)

tor. "We just felt tha t we h a d in-fo rma t ion which the adminis t ra-t ion did not have and acted ac-cord ing ly , " he was quoted in the Calvin newspaper . "Cons ide r ing the na ture of the m a n , " he said, " the re seemed to be no g u a r a n t e e that four-letter words would not be used in Mr. Gregory ' s presenta-t ion . "

The " C h i m e s " article described how Philip Lucasse, Dean of the College, was invited to the Ex-ecutive Committee 's meeting to explain why Mr. Gregory had been selected. He said later that " a l t h o u g h very p rovoca t ive and

.abrasive, Mr. Gregory could b r ing a va luab le point of view and provide a worthwhile topic fo r discussion within the total Christ ian educat ional f rame-w o r k . "

Administration Is Considering Pre-Exam Break

The possibility of a week's b reak before examo and a longer b reak between semesters will not ma-terialize this semester, accord ing to Dean of Academic Affairs Wil-liam Vander Lugt.

The reason for this, he sa id , was the ca lendar for each semes-ter is p lanned in the beg inn ing of the semester, and it is impos-sible to alter.

At present the p r o p o s a l is in the hands of the Adminis t ra t ive Council and , according to Dr. Vander Lugt, will be considered for next semester. Hesa id it would p r o b a b l y not have to go to the Educat ional Policies Committee because it is clearly an adminis-trative decision.

The Student Senate sent ques-l ionaires to the students this week asking what their feelings were on the matter.

IN THE'-CLOSED meeting of the Calvin Student Council, the Trustees ' decision was judged un-acceptable. " A p p a r e n t l y the Trus-tees did not realize the full scope of ,the quest ion n o r the full im-pact of their decision upon the opera t iona l bas is of the college— specifically what it implies con-cerning the speaker policy and the wisdom of the admin i s t r a t i on and facul ty ," Council president Ger-ben DeJong commented in the article.

Three committee members ap-peared at a special conference on student social action and offered their own pe r sona l objections to Mr. Gregory.

They contended that m a n y people believe Mr. Gregory is a communis t and that his presence at Calvin would distress or al-ienate a l a rge por t ion of the con-stituency. They also said that Gregory is known to be blasphc^ mous and v u l g a r a n d is thus un-acceptable at a Chris t ian College, and that m a n y of his own people disown him. They added that for these reasons he is not a qualified spokesman on civil rights.

DE JONG COMMENTED that Gregory ' s charac ter and posit ion are " te r r ib ly misunders tood . Some peoplecontend that wecould have gotten a morequa l i f i ed spok-esman, and it is t rue that others could art iculate better the racial p rob lem ' s legal and m o r a l as-pects, but Gregory has the ca-pacity to convey the emotion and feeling actual ly embodied in the ma ins t r eam of the negro commu-ni ty ."

According to Peter Dahm, a representat ive on the social action committee, the Trustees ' decision is based on mis in fo rmat ion rather than fact. " T h e y s a y the constitu-ency is un in formed and would object to Mr. Gregory ' s appear -ance, but instead of educat ing the public, they restrict the college.

In this case, especially consider-ing the current fund- ra i s ing drive, they seem less concerned with educat ional objectives than with g a r n e r i n g consti tuents ' d o l l a r s , " he said in the " C h i m e s " article.

Dean Lucasse said that " t h e college as a funct ion of the church h a s a obl iga t ion to it. There is a wide and ill-defined a rea where it is very difficult to p r o v e educa-t ional necessity as opposed to wise public relat ions. The B o a r d ' s decision is in this area . The school must be sensit ive to its constitu-ency and avo id offending sup-por te r s whenever possible ."

IN T H E LAST Student Council meeting, a mot ion was passed to place all its resources behind an attempt to b r i n g about a recon-siderat ion of the Dick Gregory cancel la t ion.

MESSIAH- Hope College's Messiah chorus and orchestra, pre-sented Handd's "Messiah" last evening in Dimnent Memorial Chapel. Also participating in, the program were four guest soloists from across the country. The whole program was under the direction of Dr. Robert C a v a n a u g h , a member of the Hope Cof-lege music department

Meet Prospective Staff

Acquainting New Profs Urged The -Student Senate passed a

mot ion M o n d a y night which commends to the va r ious depart-ment heads that two or three ma-jors in each depar tment meet with prospect ive Hope College educa-tors and acquain t (hem with Hope College and its student body.

Senator Shirley Lawrence pre-sented t h e p r o p o s a l and asked that the Senate endorse a letter of en-couragement to those people whom the College had app roved . Barb Timmer a rgued that this should be left to the depar tment heads and students in that depar t -ment and amended the motion to exclude any action by the Senate.

G L E N N PONTIER said that it was not the j ob of the student body to welcome people to Hope Col-

R E P O R T T • Y O U T H -

YOUR NEXT CHALLENGE.:

Growth. Change. These arc bywords at

C o n s u m e r s P o w e r . W e offer the cha l -

lenge of h a r n e s s i n g the c o m p u t e r and

t h e a t o m . Of d e v e l o p i n g be t te r w a y s to

d o o u r job . A b o v e all, of p r o v i d i n g the

bes t service at t he lowest poss ib le cost .

C o n s u m e r s P o w e r C o m p a n y is o n e of

the largest e lect r ic and n a t u r a l g a s utili-

ties in the na t ion . W e serve 1.4 mil l ion

c u s t o m e r s in 6 7 of the 6 8 c o u n t i e s of

M i c h i g a n ' s L o w e r Pen insu la . W e spend

m o r e t h a n $ 1 0 0 mil l ion a y e a r on ex-

p a n s i o n , to k e e p p a c e wi th r is ing needs

f o r ene rgy in a d y n a m i c a rea .

I n t e r e s t ed in cha l l enge? T h e n w e ' r e in-

t e res ted in you .

Where "CP" stands for continuing progress consumers Power Genera l Off ices: Jackson, M ich

lege aoout whom it knows nothing. Bob Claver pointed out that this would be an endless job when the number of people the v a r i o u s depar tments want to b r ing to Hope College is consider-ed. The motion as amended passed.

The Senate also discussed a mo-tion presented by J im O'Neill which asked for a re ferendum on the Na t iona l Student Associa-tion in March. O'Neill pointed out that students should h a v e a s a y as to whether or not they want to continue pa r t i c ipa t ing in this o rgan iza t ion or not.

Pontier pointed out that the Sen-ate is a representative b o d y and that it is not necessary to throw everything that comes a long back to the student body. Mickey Luck-ey sa id that NSA affects the Sen-ate m o r e t h a n it does the student body as a whole. Bruce White commented that s tudents don ' t know enough about NSA to vote intelligently on its future.

MISS TIMMER sa id that stu-dents should be informed about the services of NSA to the Student Senate. The motion, however , for a referendum was defeated.

Steve Lundquis t ' s p r o p o s a l to extend the hour s d u r i n g which Carneg ie Gym is open to include 8 a .m. to midnight M o n d a y t h r o u g h Sa tu rday , and S u n d a y

' j i y ' v y W o / t c l a y X

w «UU m/M if o n

VEURINK'S

f rom n o o n to midnight , was pass-ed by the Senate and was fo rward -ed to the Student Life Committee.

Mark Vander L a a n reported that it would be imposs ib le to book folk s inger Pete Seeger for a concert because he will be in Austral ia . The Cul tural Affairs Commit tee is l ook ing into other possibilities for the second semes-ter.

PRESIDENT CRAIG HoIIt-m a n reported that he is l ook ing into possible other uses for the Hope-Hol land-Hamle t f u n d s if they can be shifted and if it be-comes necessary to do so.

Women's Rules Pennit Slacks In Lounges

Presently, for thefirs t time, Hope women a re en joy ing the privi lege of wear ing s lacks in the l ib ra ry . Also they have the oppo r tun i t y to have small par t ies in their d o r m s .

According to Caro l S c h a k d , president of AWS, these rules were secured t h r o u g h the act ions of the AWS Council with the pe rmiss ion of Student Life Committee.

The first rule, which went into effect on Dec. 4, c learly states that relaxed dress is permitted in the do rm lounges and the l i b r a ry . However, a second par t of the rule said that, " Relaxed dress, de-fined as neat and clean, is a pri-vilege that , once abused , will be discontinued at the discret ion of the AWS Counci l . "

The second rule informs indivi-dual d o r m s that they m a y h a v e open houses or par t ies a r r a n g e d th rough their house councils. Any expense must be pa id by the resi-dents of that d o r m . Also, a r r ange -ments for chape rones must be m a d e t h r o u g h the house council.

It's Christmas Time at Fris

You'll Enjoy Browsing

Through Our Store

Downtown (next to Penneys)

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Page 3: 12-15-1967

December 15,. 1967

• 4

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Saga Features Steak And Unlimited Seconds

- i ts* • - ^ y & Saga F o o d Service h a s an-

nounced several add i t iona l new p r o g r a m s to be put into effect when the new o rgan iza t ion is in-troduced on c a m p u s J a n u a r y 5, 1968.

They include cha rcoa l broi led steaks every S a t u r d a y night, menu offerings based u p o n stu-dent preference, unlimited seconds on all food items except the Sat-u r d a y night entree, and h a n d dipped ice c ream served at all cafeteria style lunches and din-ners.

T H E NEW PROGRAM will h a v e cafeteria style service for all meals except S u n d a y noon, which will continue to be family style. This is designed to eliminate wait-ing time for dinner. The c h a n g e wljl also enable the food service to* offer individual ly p repa red sa l ads in addi t ion to mult iple choices of sa lads , entrees and des-serts at the evening meaL

Resident s tudents who a r e not b o a r d contract pa r t i c ipan t s will be able to b u y meals whenever they care to on a cash basis with-out advance notice or special ar-r angem ents.

Students who are eating in Phelps or Durfee Hails will be able to m a k e s p e c i a l p r o v i s i o n f o r meais when job responsibili t ies, official college functions, pract ice teaching and the l ikepreven t them f rom tak ing their meals d u r i n g the no rma l hours .

EXPERIMENTAL EVENING hours will be initiated in the Kletz as soon as possible with the new service. Adjus tments to service hours will be m a d e more pe rma-nent by the beginning of the sec-ond semester, tak ing into account

Hope CoUege anchor

Inventory Taken

International Resources Cited su rveys of student b o d y pre-ference.

Incoming F o o d Service Direc-tor William Boyers said that the Saga , c o m p a n y desires to serve the Entire college communi ty in every way possible. He noted that managemen t will constant ly be on h a n d to answer ques t ions of students, facul ty or adminis-t r a to r s and deal with special p rob-lems.

Dean of Students Robert De Y o u n g said tha t thenewserv ice had contacted the present em-ployees of the Slater Food Service and said that almost all will be retained.

S a g a prov ides food service at more than 2 0 0 colleges a n d uni-versities in the United States and C a n a d a .

By Lynn Jones anchor Reporter

An inven to ry of resources in in ternat ional education at Hope College h a s been p repa red by Dr. Paul G. Fried, director of in ternat ional education. It in-cludes a listing of facilities on campus fo r in ternat ional study.

These include special l ib rary collections, the l a n g u a g e labora-tory and the c a m p u s r a d i o sta-tion. WTAS.

In the l a n g u a g e l a b o r a t o r y , stu-dy can b e d o n e i n eight l anguages . These a re Dutch, French, German , Italian, Japanese , Latin, Russian and Spanish .

T H E C U R R I C U L U M offers several courses geared toward in-ternat ional study. These are in

Vienna Summer School Tour of U.S.S.R. Planned

Plans for the 1968 Hope College Vienna Summer School p r o g r a m were announced by Dr. Paul Fried, Director of In ternat ional Educat ion.

F o r the first in the 13-year his-tory of the p r o g r a m , there will be three distinct s tudy tours including a two-week tour of the Soviet Union.

The study tours will be count ry oriented with the objective of cov-ering one specific a rea intensively, ra ther than g iv ing the student a general tour.

The two-week tour of the Soviet Union will include visits to Lenin-

Sloan Grant Being Utilized

To Boost Scienee Edueation By Peg Yntema

anchor Reporter The $ 3 7 5 , 0 0 0 Sloan g r a n t re-

ceived last yea r by Hope College is being utilized in a series of new p r o g r a m s within the College.

Hope was a m o n g 20 top small colleges which received funds f rom the Alfred P. S loan F o u n d a t i o n in order to enhance and upda te its science p r o g r a m . As soon as Hope was nomina ted , a committee

consis t ing of representat ives f r o m the mathemat ics and science de-par tments met to put together a 'hree-pronged p r o g r a m to use the 'unds.

THE COMMITTEE investi-gated the possibil i ty of a better science educat ion for non-sciertce ma jo r s , m o r e adequa t e p r e p a r a -tion for prospect ive high school science teachers, and more cur-rent t ra in ing for the serious scien-tist.

In order to achieve this, de-par tmenta l coopera t ion is now being increased so that s tudents can be provided with a b r o a d e r base in the sciences and a funda -mental g r a s p of fields outside of their own sperial ization.

• Inder tne Sioan p r o g r a m sci-ence and m a m courses will be related without the waste that h a s existed in the past accord ing to Dr. Cotter Thar in^ c h a i r m a n of the committee. Therefore, the cur-riculum will have to be redesigned with more sophisticated courses

introduced earlier in the student 's career at Hope.

The committee in charge has five yea r s in which to implement the p r o g r a m and will start with next year ' s f r e s h m e n It is ne-cessary that the par t ic ipants h a v e a sufficient ma th b a c k g r o u n d , so a summer session will b e held for incoming f reshmen who need im-provement in this area, accord-ing to Dr. Tha r in .

T H E SLOAN f unds wi l lbeused for addi t ional l i b ra ry research materials , demons t ra t ion equip-ment, outside consultants, seed money for research, s o m e over-head expenses, the cost of r u n n i n g the summer p r o g r a m , some new scientific equipment, and the hi r ing of new facul ty members . Dr. Tha r in said that at least three new staff members would be added.

The general p l an p roposed b y the committee has been ap-p roved by the Educat ional Pol-icies Committee, but specific ap-p r o v a l for the necessary course changes must still be obta ined, accord ing to Dr. Richard Brock-meier of the physics depar tment .

g r ad , Moscow and other Russian cities. Michael Petrovich. who

teaches Russ ian his tory , will n a v e cha rge of the Russ ian tour g roup .

ALSO I N C L U D E D I N t h e I B 6 8 p lans is a study tour which will concentra te exclusively on Ger-many , cover ing both the Western Federal Republic and Communis t East G e r m a n y . The p r o g r a m , which will be par t ly suppor ted b y the West G e r m a n government , will include meet ings with members of the State gove rnmen t s of Schless-wig-Holstein, and s imi lar inter-views in the South G e r m a n state capital of Bava r i a .

Also scheduled is a visit to the K r u p p factor ies in Essen, Radio and Television s tudios in Co-logne, a n d a stop in Alpine O b e r a m m e r g a u .

The th i rd tour will concentra te almost completely on Italy, start-ing in Rome and slowly w o r k i n g its way up to Siena, Florence and other centers of the I tal ian Renaissance. As in the past , the m a j o r emphas is in this p r o g r a m ivill be on the cul tural and ar-tistic her i tage of Western Europe.

Injured Coeds Make Progress After Accident

Seniors Valerie Quist and Carol Bul tman, who were ser iously in-jured in a one-car accident near Gary, Ind., a re p r o g r e s s i n g satis-factorily, accord ing to Chap la in William Hillegonds.

Miss Quist, who received a f rac-tured pelvis, is now back on cam-pus and a t tending classes.

Miss Bul tman, who was to h a v e surgery , is now at home and accord ing to her pa ren t s is do ing well. C h a p l a i n Hillegonds said that s u r g e r y was not necessary for Miss Bul tman due to na tu ra l heal ing processes. He does not know, however , when she will be back on campus .

All Sundaes

25c

with this coupon

Good till Dec. 20

Mills

House of

Flavors

Sunday, December 17

IN THE COLLEGE CHURCH

Morning Worship at 11 ;00 A.M.

In Dimnent Chapel

Preacher: Chaplain Hillegonds

Sermon: " I f them were

only one sermon to preach."

Organist: Mr. Roger Davis

The Women's Choir under the direction

of Dr. Anthony Kooiker will sing.

AND the Student Church wi l l worship

in the Kletz at the same hour (11:00).

a reas of world civilization, the non-west area , in ternat ional pol-itics, c o n t e m p o r a r y world issues and foreign l anguages .

Hope does not offer a field of concentra t ion in a r ea studies, al-though p r o g r a m s in Amer ican Studies and Russ ian and East Eu ropean Studies a re under con-sideration.

Co-curricular activities a re also a pa r t of the in ternat ional pro-g r a m . In addi t ion to l a n g u a g e clubs, l a n g u a g e houses and week-ly l a n g u a g e tables for French, German and Spanish o r o a d e n l a n g u a g e study, there are hono r societies for each l anguage , J h e -Internat ional Relations Club is also active and presents speakers and films to the student body.

PART OF T H E in ternat ional study p r o g r a m a r e t h e o f f - c a m p u s p r o g r a m s . For E u r o p e a n s tudy, the Vienna Summer School offers travel and courses in art history, music, European l i terature, his-tory, German, d r a m a and poli-tics. This p r o g r a m begins with t nine d a y cruise on a student ship then a joint s tudy tour. There are East a n d West s tudy tours,

Most Colleges To Raise Fees

Eighty per cent of the na t ion ' s state colleges and universities rais-ed tuition, fees, r o o m a n d / o r b o a r d rates for the current aca demic year.

This fact was included in a re-port p repa red joint ly by the Na-tional Association of State Uni-versitififi. andLan^ i -Gran t Colleges and the Association of State Col-leges and Universities.

The report said that, on the average, t o d a y ' s senior at a state universi ty is p a y i n g about 15 per cent m o r e f o r his educat ion this year than he did as a f r e s h m a n in 1964.

followed b y one month of classes at which time a m a x i m u m of six credits can be taken. Fol lowing the coursework , independent t rav-el for over two weeks is given and then students re turn to the States.

Other off-campus p r o g r a m s are GLCA sponsored studies in Bogo-a, Beirut, T o k y o and Yugosla-via, Washington Seminar and Salzburg Universi ty. With the ex-ception of the Yugos lav Seminar , these p r o g r a m s a re conducted du r ing the academic year.

The Summer Session for Inter-nat ional Students h a s b^pn hpld ori the Hope c a m p u s l o r t h e p a s t t h r e e summers . Most of the part icipat-ing students a re f r o m J a p a n , but some h a v e come f rom Germany , the Nether lands , Sweden and Yu gos lav ia . Dur ing the session, the students take courses in Ameri-can studies and are given lan-guage assistance. Field trips to Detroit, Chicago, Lans ing and several factories in the Hol land area have been m a d e d u r i n g t h e s e three sessions.

FOR T H E F U T U R E , the In-ternat ional Educat ional Commit-tee is consider ing such p r o g r a m s as a summer p r o g r a m in J a p a n , a French p r o g r a m in Pai ls , a Yugoslav p r o g r a m at Nov i Sad, East E u r o p e a n Center in Vienna and a Coopera t ive Academic pro-g r a m at Chung Chi College, Hong Kong.

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Page 4: 12-15-1967

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Page 4 Hope College anchor December 15, 1967

anchor editorials

To Dr. Van Zyl Editor's Note: The following are excerpts from the eulogy given by President Calvin A. VanderWerf in the Thursday memorial service for Dr. Gerrit Van Zyl who diea Sunday in Gresham, Ore An obituary appears on fiage 1.

DR. GERRIT VAN ZYL, a modest, unassuming, unpretentious, kind and gende man—yet the best known

the mos t respected, the best beloved teacher of chemistry in the nat ion.

There are times when words are gross-ly inadequate—when, for example, you speak of a teacher who exerted the greatest influence for good in your own life—as he did in the lives of coundess students over 4 1 years of teaching as head of Hope ' s department ol chemistry.

UN F O R T U N A T E L Y , Y O U S T U D E N T S

will never know tirst-nand tne ficli experience of s tudying under Doc,

but hundreds of Hope alumni a round the world will tell you that It was a never-to-

be forgotten experience which enriched your life forever

What was his secret? He wasn ' t really a brilliant c lassroom

lecturer. In one sense, he wasn ' t an im-pos ing pre-possessing personali ty. He didn ' t win a Nobel pr izefor his research. . . ^ " ^ U I T E SIMPLY—his secret was that S V he cared so desperately for and

about each of us, his students. . . N o request taxed his patience. No demand was too great . Never was another hour of help too long. Chem m a j o r , pre-med, or a student laKing cnemTstry to till a require-ment—he cared. . .

No, Doc didn' t win the Nobel prize. But don' t be surprised if o n e of his former students does some day . Noth ing could make Doc happier .

Yes, D o c cared .

And that he had in common with the one greatest Teacher ol all time—our Lord.

He cared too. And that, I suppose, is the basic secret of all great teaching.

Sound and Fury MUCH C R I T I C I S M both written

nnd verbal , ha s been directed against the editorial which

appeared in last week's anchor. A good deal of this would be cleared up if a few charges were explained and a few facts m a d e known.

Regarding an editorial assert ion that ' ' n o report on the s tatus of the p roposa l to gain a break before or after final ex-a m s has been g iven," the anchor was mistaken. This report was m a d e by Peter Smith at the Dec. 4 Senate meeting, when he said that the p roposa l is before the Ad-ministrative Council.

Regarding the "s ta tesman like conduct of the Student Senate in the matter of changing food services," Dean of Students Robert De Young and Director of Busi-ness Affairs Clarence J. Handlogten have emphasized that this applies to last year 's Senate. Indeed, said Mr. Handlogten , the relationship with the Senate " is the one place where we haven ' t been squa re with Slater this y e a r . "

Regard ing the Kletz, the editorial last week asserted that " t h e AdministraUon has promised that consultat ion on the subject will take place, but present Presi-dent Craig Hol leman has yet to indicate that these talks are even p l anned . "

IT IS T R U E T H A T the Senate passed a motion asking that the Kletz be opened and that this motion was

passed by the Student Life Committee at the first opportunity. In addition to this,

members ol the Senate discussed the ques-tion with the Dean of Students.

But this was not enough. The Kletz is still not open at night and a service to the students has remained Inoperat ive tor three months. It is our contention that the Senate did not serve as an ef-fective representative of the students in this matter.

Mr. Handlogten observes that " t h e role of the Senate in hav ing S a g a open the Kletz at night has been confined to inquiries th rough Dean De Young and SLC cha i rman A1 Vanderbush . I was will-ing to at least discuss opening the Kletz at night if I had been dlrecdy requested to do so. T h a t request was never m a d e . "

TH E POSITION OF the editorial was that the Senate had been do ing little for the students of Hope Col-

lege this year. This lack of pressure for opening the Kletz is but one illustration. TKp l^rlc of communicat ion with Slater is another . The fact that %6,000 f rom t h e H H H - dr ive has been sitting in a Saigon bank untouched and forgotten for two months is another . Discussing

motions about non-existent discrimination is no excuse for not solving these concrete problems.

Last week's editorial was voiced with the hope that the Senate would aga in be-come the effective voice of the Hope stu-dent body that it can be and has been in the past . This remains our concern.

Readers Speak Out Hi nil J i I '

Dear Editor T o the Students and Facu i ty of H o p e College:

T h a n k you for m a k i n g possible for Al lan , three wonderful years on your cam-p u s . We are grateful to you.

And t h a n k you fo r your m a n y kind w o r d s and g rac ious acts at a t ime in which f r iendsh ip meant so m u c h to us.

To each of you a " M e r r y Chr is tmas a n d Joyous 1968 . "

Mr. and Mrs. N o r m a n Kinney

I read Mr. Nivala 's column regularly, largely out of curiosity to discover who or what the next unfortunate target of his s ingularly nauseating brand of bitter and scurrilous cynicism will be. The column is appropriately named "The Sandbox" -appropriate because it is apparent that the author's childish and immature mind has not progressed beyond the puerile stage. This immaturity is most evident in the fact that Mr. Nivala obvious ly sees himself as a crusader with a great mission on this campus: to viciously attack, usually unjustly, whatever his current whim dic-tates. The attacks are invariably abusive, unsubstantiated, and wholly unfair. He's l ike a little b o y trying to attract attenUon b y calling others the worst names bethinks he can get a w a y with.

Last week he went too far in hurling his caustic invectives at a respected fellow

student. He b a g a n that co lumn by s ta t ing that he doesn ' t consider himself to be par -t icularly warped, a view shared by, a las , only a small por t ion of the c a m p u s popu-lation. He continued by call ing this part i-cular s tudent 's letter "ass in ine . . . incoher-ent. . . g a r b a g e . "

In m y opinion when someone answer-ing a legitimate at tack h a s to resort to this type of s lander and name-cal l ing, it is a clear indicat ion of an extremely weak and untenable defense. The one conso la t ion I feel after r ead ing this co lumn is that the discerning people on this c a m p u s won' t , as usual , take Mr. N iva l a too ser iously. I regret that 1 too h a v e had to s toop to this typical ly N iva l i an type of rebuttal (Le. de famat ion , den igra t ion , etc.), but that seems to be the on ly l a n g u a g e he unders tands .

T o m Bast

Dear Editor: I wish to address myself specifically

to the editorial appearing in last week's anchor. I must say it certainly lacks the quality to which I have become accus-tomed to in articles of this sort in our paper. It is uninformed and generally misleading.

((Jontinued on page b)

Art Buchwald

Alabama Here We Go

The entire government of the state of A l a b a m a is now w o r k i n g for former Gov. George Wallace 's president ial nomina t ion outside the state, and n o b o d y is quite sure who is mind ing the store.

While A labamianb can proDauiy gov-ern themselves, there is a lways the chance that an emergency could ar ise in which s o m e b o d y in au thor i ty might be needed.

SUPPOSE, FOR example, there L» H riot in Bull Whip County , and the sheriff down there calls the state capital for help.

" T h i s is Sheriff Ax handle of Bull Whip County. Let me speak to the g o v e r n o r . "

"She ain' t here. She's in San u i ego helping her h u s b a n d , George."

"V\ell, where's he at?"

" H e ' s in Sac ramen to t ry ing to get a petition s igned."

"Well let me speak to the lieutenant gove rno r then."

" H e ain' t here. He's up in Alaska at a White Eskimo Rally for Wallace."

' Daimu, 1 m n a v i n g trouDle down here, and I need s o m e state t roopers . "

"Ain ' t no state t roopers left in thestate. They ' r e all out g u a r d i n g George."

"Well, then, I'll h ave to take the Na-t ional G u a r d . "

" C a n ' t help you. The Nat ional Guard is out in Ca l i fo rn ia g u a r d i n g the s tate t roope r s . "

" I ' v e got to speak to somebody. What about the commiss ioner for pub l i csa fe ty?"

" H e ' s down in New Mexico as Wal-lace's a d v a n c e man . I doubt if you could get t h r o u g h to h i m . "

"Le t me speak to the speaker of the H o u s e "

"YOU MUST REALLY be out of it down there. The speaker of the house h a s moved to O k l a h o m a until after the elec-t ions."

"Lis ten , m a n , this is an emergency. I need s o m e police d o g s fas t . "

"All the police dogs are in Wisconsin. George expects a h a r d fight there ."

" C a n you get me some cattle p r o d s p r o n t o ? "

" T h e state sena tors took all the cattle p r o d s with them when they went off to c a m p a i g n for Wallace in New H a m p s h i r e . "

" T h i s is ridiculous. What about fire hoses?"

" T h e fire depar tment is in Ohio t ry ing to put out some fires that George started a few weeks a g o . "

" T h e r e ' s got to be s o m e b o d y in au-thor i ty . "

"Let melook a r o u n d and see," (Pause , ) " S o r r y , Sheriff. There 's n o b o d y h e r e " W h a t about you? Don't you have any

au thor i ty?" " I hadn ' t given it much though t . " "Well, who the hell a re you, a n y w a y ? " " A h ' s the jan i tor , Boss. What kind of

riot d id ja say you was h a v i n g down there?"

Copyr ight (c) 1967, The Wash ing ton Post Co. Distributed by Los Angeles Times Syndicate.

CM COLUOI

anchor OLLAND, MUCMIOAN

Puhlishnl weekly during the college year except vacation, holiday and examination periods by

and jcr the students of Hope College. Holland, Mulligan, under the authority of the Student

Communications Board.

Enteii d as second class matter at the post office of Holland, Michigan, 49423, at the special rate

of postage provided for in Section 1103 of the Act of Congress, Oct. 3. 1917, and authorized Oct.

19. 1917 .

Subscription: 83 per year. Printed: Zeelaud Record, Iceland, Michigan.

Member, American Collegiate Press Assn.

Of/ice: C,round floor of Craves Hall. Phone: 396-2122; 39()-4t)ll I ext. 285.

HOARD OF EDITORS

Editor Torn Hildebrandt

Associate Editor George Arwady

Managing Editor . . . . Richard Angstadt

Mews Editor Glenn Looman

DEPARTMENT HEADS

Features Pat Can field

Critiques Bruce Ron da

Sports Bob Vanderberg

Xational News Harold Katnm

Columnist John Nivala

Cartoonists Mark Mennitig

Greg Phillips

Rewrite Carol Koterski

Proof Lynn Koop

Cop)' . .

Photography

. Beverly Glas

Carolyn Latham

. Don Page

Roger Plaxton

Larry Erikson

Sue AI hers

REPORTERS

fiosezina Bard, Ruby Beatson, Jim Beckering,

Bob Block, Barbara Boos, Richard Bradley,

John Clevering, Tom Donia, Jan Dzurina,

Sherman Farber, Nancy Flier, Fern Frank,

Peter Hoen, Ron Hook, Lynn Jones, Tim

Liggett, Don Luidens, Norm Mol, Penny

Moore, Laura Mumford, Ken Nienhuis, Doug

Nichols, Mike O'Riordan, Madeline Slovenz,

Carole Vander Broek, Peg Yntema.

Page 5: 12-15-1967

December 15, 1967 Hope College anchor Page S

Faculty Focus

Foreign Study and Reverse Cultural Shock Editor's N o t e Thefacultyfocus this week is written by Dr. Paul Fried, chairman of the history department and Director of In-ternationa] Education. Dr. Fried has an A.B. from Hope, an A.M. from Harvard Uni-versity and a Ph.D. from &iangen University in Ger-many.

By Dr. Paul G. Fried I h o p e you a r e f ami l i a r with

Tbm Lehrer ' s del ightful record-ing, " T h a t Was the Year Tha t W a r . " It includes a song dea l ing with Wernher von Braun , who is quoted as say ing : "Once the roc-kets a re up, who cares where they come down; that ' s not my depart -ment, says Wernher v o n B r a u n . "

It seems to me that m a n y col-leges, including o u r own, eager to help a r r a n g e f o r exciting under-g r a d u a t e s tudy a b r o a d pro-g r a m s , m a y well be guilty of sim-ilar lack of interest in what hap-pens when the student, thus launched into orbi t , re turns to his h o m e campus .

MOST OF US a r e q u i t e in agree-ment that a period of foreign s tudy can be of great value. In, the past twelve yea r s over 600 students, more t h a n half f rom Hope, have taken par t in the Vi-enna Summer School. Many others have studied in Bogota or Beirut, Paris , F r e i b u r g or Mu-nich, in Stockholm, Madr id or Kdinburgh.

In almost all cases the time spent a b r o a d was exciting and s t imulat ing. Students experienced a more or less severe cul tural shock as they faced the l a n g u a g e ba r r i e r , lived in unaccus tomed

social or economic environments, and discovered previously unfa-miliar cultural values or uses of leisure time. Then, too, they tast-ed greater personal and academic freedom, and they gained greater objectivity about themselves, their environment and even their coun-try than they had had at home.

The impact of a shor t per iod of study a b r o a d m a y not be this significant in every case, but if the experience has been at all meaningful for the student he will inevitably be faced with a real readjust when he gets home. In fact, the m o r e p r o f o u n d the en-counter with new va lues h a s been for the student while h e w a s away , the greater will be the " r eve r se" culture shock for him when he re-enters his fo rmer environment. He knows that his experience has changed him and he wants to communica te this -- only to find that he is back in a world which has not changed at all.

T H E Q U E S T I O N 1 asked of our Vienna a lumni b rough t a great m a n y detailed and interest-ing replies such as: "When I re-turned to the States I was g lad to be home. No th ing had changed -and pe rhaps that was theproo lem, because I h a d . " or " O n e of the main things I miss is being able to take t ime to apprec ia te things just because they 're there, some-thing that hur r ied American life just doesn' t allow for! And more bluntly: " I wish I had never come back to school after being in Eu-rope. I feel very c r amped and hin-dered by the a tmosphe re of col-lege. I no longer h a v e this great need to confo rm, so that I can get security by being pa r t of an

DR. PAUL G. FRIED

accepted g r o u p . " The reverse culture shock m a y

not a lways be that intense. But it is there and the college which has helped io launch the student on his venture a b r o a d should also be ready to help him re-enter in a meaningfu l fashion.

How can this be done? Perhaps the first step is to recognize that these returned students constitute a v a l u a b l e resource of the college and that they, as well as the for-eign students on our campus , can give a great deal to suppor t the internat ional projects in which we are engaged.

MORE IMPORTANTLY we need to p r o v i d e a social and in-tellectual cl imate on o u r c ampus which will encourage the student who h a s returned to discuss, eval-

Dear Editor...

More Letters to the Editor (Cont inued f r o m page 4)

In reference to the mot ion call-ing for a statement of race, the statement that Dick Kooi was un-avvai t oi the Presidential assur-

ances that the letters would not be sent out aga in is completely untrue. In the initial discussion and in all those that followed, Mr. Koo i repeatedly mentioned this

assurance . One of his stated r easons for cal l ing for the policy s tatement o r ig ina l ly was in order to ob ta in someth ing moreconcre te than a mere verbal p romise which had a l ready p roved ineffectual in prevent ing a reoccurrence of the letter incident.

I ASK YOU sir, why it is a was te of time for the Senate to consider a local appl ica t ion of one of the most press ing social issues fac ing this coun t ry t o d a y ? It h a s been stated b v one of the neg ro students involved in the present d e b a t e t h a t t h e r e h a v e b e e n other incidents of d iscr iminat ion on this campus.

1 feel it very much the du ty and responsibil i ty of the Student Sen-ate to see that things of this na tu re do not happen in the future,

I would a lso ques t ion the edi-to r ' s ability to discern the " a b -soluteness" of the Dean of Women 's motives. The Senate j udged that whatever the motives, the letters were sent and only to the white girls thus commi t ing an act of discr iminat ion.

I would note here that the Sen-ate by its action commended the aff i rmat ive steps taken by the Ad-minis t rat ion in r ega rd to race.

IN R E F E R E N C E to the " n o report o n t h e s t a t u s of t h e p r o p o s a l to gain a b reak before and after final e x a m s , " 1 would tu rn the editor 's attention to the minutes of the Senate meeting of Dec. 4. At that meeting Peter Smith re-ported that the p r o p o s a l was await ing cons idera t ion b y the Ad-ministrat ive Council which must a p p r o v e it.

In reference to the open ing of the Kletz, I would point the editor to the President 's report of the Nov. 27 meeting when Mr. Hol-leman announced that the Kletz would be open f r o m 4 p .m. until 10 p.m. as soon as it could be staffed.

In reference to the Senate Food Committee, I would point to re-marks m a d e to a b reakfas t meet-ing of the Senate on Dec. 1 by Dr. VanderWerf when he stated that the entire c h a n g e of food services had been accomplished as a result of work d o n e in close cooperat ion with the F o o d Com-mittee.

THESE T H I N G S have been cited in order to show that per-haps we are not the only ones who are "completely out of touch with the realities of this campus." I think the anchor has perhaps even more responsibility to be

informed and accurate than does the Senate. We h a v e as much right to d e m a n d that our actions be reported fully and accurately as does the ancho r to demand that we act in the best interest

of the student body. I would certainly agree that

"s tr ides in the past show that there is impor tan t work that must

be d o n e by the Senate." How-ever, 1 would point with p r ide to the things that the Senate has accomplished so far this year, and s a y that the Senate is do ing its work.

1 would hope that in the fu ture the anchor will be an impor tant agent in assist ing the Senate in its work. I would also hope that in the fu tu re the anchor can become a construct ive force c o m p a r a b l e to the Senate on this campus .

Sincerely your s Robert Claver Student Senator

All letters to the editor are wel-come. They must be typewritten and submitted at the anchor of-fice in the basement of Graves Hall by the Wednesday before publication. All letters within the bounds of good taste will be pub-lished. All letters must be signed, but names will be withheld upon request The anchor editorial board reserves the right to edit or postpone publication of any letter for reasons of space.

uate and u t i l i ze theknowledgeand experience he b r o u g h t back with him. This applies both to his academic work and his role as a member of the campus com-muni ty . Quite f r ank ly , I would like to see us "exp lo i t " these stu-dents, that is [o s a y m a k p u s e o f their experience much more t h a n we do. T h i s c a n b e d o n e i n c a m p u s organ iza t ions , in the anchor , in history or l i terature or art classes. It can a lso mean including "ex-per ienced" students on the Inter-nat ional Educat ion Committee, as tutors for newly arr ived fore ign students or as assis tants in o u r Internat ional Summer p r o g r a m on campus .

We frequent ly talk about student exchange. Actually, there is v e r y little of this at HopeCollege. Since 1956 we h a v e sent several hundred Americans to Austr ia for a summer . In that s ame time we have had three Austr ian s tudents on our campus . Yet, du r ing the s a m e per iod we have had m o r e than one hundred Chinese stu-dents at Hop a Most of them h a v e come f rom Hong Kong, but not a single student f rom Hope h a s gone there to study. I do not wish

to suggest that we r inse down o u r Vienna p r o g r a m and move it to Hong Kong, but I d o think that a greater b a l a n c e o f " e x p o r t " and " i m p o r t " could serve todeep-en the experience of both sjudent g r o u p s and would increase tht contr ibut ion each could m a k e to the campus as a whole.

In the last analys is , however, the most impor tan t solut ions to the problem will have to come f r o m the faculty and in the class-room. We must discover ways in which the student can utilize his experience a b r o a d within the f r a m e w o r k of his total academic and educational p r o g r a m so that he will re-enter not where he left but with full awareness of the dis-tance he has covered while h e w a s away . We need to build a solid b r idge between p rope r p repa ra -t ion for foreign study a n d its m a x i m u m exploitation within the student 's curr iculum. When we learn how to do this, we will have come a long way t o w a r d s mas-tering the re-entry problem and we will come closer to giving this dimension of our educat ional p r o g r a m the significance it ought to have.

The Sandbox

Holiday Spirit By John Nivala

In just five more days we will be depa r t ing on what is the most en joyab le two weeks of the school year. The length of the Chr i s tmas recess eliminates the frantic pace of our ab rup t T h a n k s g i v i n g b reak . It offers ample time to enjoy the c o m p a n y of family , fr iends or girl. There is enough time to visit with relatives or dr ink a leisurely, legal beer. While two weeks is not an indefinite or abso-lute p a r o l e f r o m scholastic wor-ries, it does p rov ide a r ea sonab l e a l lowance to enjoy the ho l iday

without t hebu rden ol school work. EVEN MORE important t h a n

this, Chr i s tmas can be one of the most meaningfu l and fulfilling of hol idays . Whether you regard it as a great religious, phi losophic, his-torical or materialistic period does not really matter. While Chr i s tmas is first, a n d p e r h a p s only, a cele-b ra t ion of the birth of Christ, one can be outside the scope of Christi-anity and still be caught up in the ho l iday spirit. Chr i s tmas is just a good time t o b e a r o u n d p e o -ple. The hol iday spirit is as infec-tious as a c o m m o n cold.

1 can h-fttr the question fo rming on m a n ^ j ip s . "What is he go ing to do now? He wouldn' t da r e tear down Chr i s tmas ! " That is abso-lutely right. I enjoy the Chr i s tmas season too much to ever p r o f a n e it. I feel that it is the one season of the year when people a p p r o a c h the eternal ideal of love and mutual concern. That is enough for rejoicing even though it is a highly t r ans i to ry state las t ing up to the h a n g o v e r on J a n u a r y 2.

THIS COLUMN is being writ-ten without a n y p u r p o s e of retrac-tion or fort if ication of p rev ious efforts. It is directed toward a general c a m p u s situation. We a re now caught up in a cross-fire of

criticism and counter-criticism both of which contain elements of concrete pu rpose and mal ic ious m e a n d e r i n g s . U nfortu nately, there has been a min imum of ac-tion and a plentitude of anger and misunders tanding. It is a sad fact that the latter two cata gor ies reproduce at an a l a r m i n g rate.

It would greatly aid thecauseof considerate, constructive action if we could just forget about the existence of Hop.eCol legeforfour-teen days . My desire is that we could return f rom vaca t ion with a desire to work together for the correction of deficiencies and the dissolution of critical e r rors on the par t of both sides. Working to-gether just might p rov ide the need-ed impetus to effect some rat ional , purposeful action.

OF COURSE, 1 do not hold any idealistic conceptions of a communi ty of concerned, co-op-erat ive individuals void of any dissident elements. I cannot even g u a r a n t e e that for myself. Some-b o d y is a lways go ing to feel the need to air his complaints . That is an inescapable situation. How-ever, dissent should rightly be used as a corrective m e a s u r e and not for an indiscr iminate venting of ideological wrath. That only leads to an unpleasant n a m e call-ing contest which ult imately ac-complishes nothing but to br ing discredit on everyone involved.

I hope that everyone will be able to enjoy Chr is tmas to its fullest extent. Perhaps a vaca t ion is what we need to pu rge ourselves of foolish animosit ies and come to realize the need for s o m e sane action. At least, let's amel iora te the tension that results f rom non-communica t ion . Let's give each other a break.

The Best of Peanuts Reprinted by permission of the Chicago Tribune

PEANUTS YOU'RE

( K i m s BV

W U R 5 E L F :

IVE BECOME ALLER6IC TO PEOPLE I H E L P IT. . .

Page 6: 12-15-1967

<6

Page 6 Hope College anchor December 15, 1967

Hope Faces Albion

MI A A Race Begins Tomorrow With two straight victories under

their belts, Hope's F ly ing Dutch-men travel to Albion tomorrow night to do battle with thedanger-o u s Britons in Hope's MIAA opener.

Saturday night's clash will be the second l eague contest for the Britons, w h o squeaked past im-proved Adrian, 78-77 , last week-end.

IF T H E D U T C H M E N defeat A l b i o n , it will be the 2 0 0 t h vic-t o r y in Russ DeVette 's b a s k e t b a l l c o a c h i n g ca ree r at H o p e Curren t -ly, C o a c h DeVette 's record s t a n d s at 199 wins and 1 0 5 losses for a p e r c e n t a g e of .655 .

T h e Dutch h a v e downed Aquin-as, 1 0 9 - 9 3 , . a n d C o n c o r d i a , 83-76, s ince l o s i n g t h e s e a s o n inau-g u r a l to V a l p a r a i s o . F l o y d Brad-y 's 4 0 - p o i n t p e r f o r m a n c e Satur-d a y night g ives h im a total of 107 m a r k e r s fo r the 3 - g a m e sea-s o n a n d a 3 5 . 7 a v e r a g e . B r a d y a lso s p o r t s a 54 per cent shoot -ing p e r c e n t a g e a n d is a v e r a g i n g 16.3 r e b o u n d s per contest.

H o p e ' s s e c o n d - l e a d i n g scorer , g u a r d G a r y R y p m a , is s c o r i n g 15.7 p o i n t s a g a m e , and is hit-t ing his field g o a l tries at a 4 7 per cent clip. T h e hottest shoo te r on the t e am at th is point is for-w a r d B a r r y Schreiber . T h e 6-3 f r e s h m a n h a s c a n n e d eleven of 19 shots f r o m the f loor for a . 5 7 8 pe rcen tage . Schreiber a l so l eads in f r ee t h r o w p e r c e n t a g e with his . 8 1 8 m a r k , as a result of m a k i n g g o o d on nine of ele / en cha r i t y tosses.

A L B I O N , AS C o a c h DeVetU h a s po in t ed out, h a s a g o o d s q u a a a n d is a l w a y s t o u g h at home . T h e Br i t ons h a v e fou r of their

•starters b a c k f r o m las t y e a r ' s t e am which f in ished 5 -7 f o r a f if th p l ace ber th in the M I A A F o r w a r d Mikf Wilson a v e r a g e d 14.4 p o i n t s p e g a m e a yea r a g o , which p l aced h im n in th in l e a g u e scor ing .

Wi lson ' s t e a m m a t e , 5 -7 g u a r d Ed Stephens , m a d e the M I A A se-c o n d t eam las t s e a s o n a s a s o p h -o m o r e a n d is a f ine o u t s i d e s h o o t -er. S tephens d e m o n s t r a t e d his s c o r i n g ta len ts in the 1 9 6 6 - 6 7 f i n a l e when he tallied 2 0 po in t s at the Civic Center in Albion'f 8 7 - 6 4 loss to the Dutch.

Ano the r Br i t on s t a lwar t , soph-o m o r e f o r w a r d Bill Breckenfield , w a s the M I A A ' s seven th- lead ing r e b o u n d e r in ' 6 6 - ' 6 7 with 107. G u a r d J i m H o r n e r tied K a l a m a z o o ' s Gene N u s s b a u m f o r e ichth p l ace in f ree t h row p e r c e n t a g e

with a m a r k of . 712 . Neil War -r iner , a 6-9 g i a n t , is hope fu l l y i m p r o v e d over l a s t yea r , when h e g r a b b e d on ly 7 8 r e b o u n d s in twelve games .

T H F D U T C H w o o b o t h g a m e s f r o m Albion las t s e a s o n , 87 -64 in H o l l a n d , bu t jus t 81 -74 at t he B r i t o n s ' " s p o r t s p a l a c e . "

t h e Dutchmen will face M a n Chester 's quin te t M o n d a y nighi at t he Civic Center in w h a t will be H o p e ' s las t h o m e g a m e b e f o r e the C a l v i n c lash o n J a n . 13. H igh-l i g h t i n g the h o l i d a y pe r iod will be the U n i o n Col lege t o u r n e y in Sche-nec t ady , New York . I n t h e t o u r n a -ment , H o p e will f ace M a s s a c h u -setts Insti tute of T e c h n o l o g y ( 1 9 - 4 a y e a r a g o ) , L e h i g h a n d the host schpyol, Union College.

Hope Wrestlers Pinned By Valparaiso, 21-16

T h e H o p e College wres t l ing t e am lost two ma tches l a s t week, s u f f e r i n g dr fea t at the h a n d s of V a l p a r a i s o Unive r s i ty a n d G r a n d R a p i d s J u n i o r College.

Las t S a t u r d a y the g r a p p l e r s , u n d e r H o p e ' s first ful l - t ime wres-t l ing c o a c h , G e o r g e K r a f t , lost all of iheir m a t c h e s a n d forfe i ted one to G. R.J .C. ' a s the F l y i n g Dutch-m e n lost 39-0 . - .

T H E C L O S E S T m a t c h at the meet f ea tu r ed Keith V a n Tube r -gen , a heavyweiKht . V a n Tu-be rgen a n d J o h n G a l l o w a y of J .C. were tied, 3-3, until the clos-ing m o m e n t s of the th i rd pe r iod .

J.V. Basketball Season Opens With Two Victories

After two impres s ive ea r ly sea-son victor ies , the JV b a s k e t b a l l t e am, led b y C o a c h Glenn V a n Wieren, a p p e a r s to be off to an-other w i n n i n g season . Open ing the s e a s o n with victories over A q u i n a s a n d M u s k e g o n J u n i o r College, this y e a r ' s t eam l o o k s oo ten t i a l ly as t o u g h as las t y e a r ' s s q u a d which nos ted an exrpilent 12-5 r eco rd .

On Dec. 6 the j a y v e e s t rave led

to G r a n d R a p i d s to meet the A q u i n a s f ro sh a n d c a m e a w a y with an 82 -71 v ic to ry . T h e Dutch led all the w a y e n j o y i n g a 4 1 - 2 7 ha l f - t ime a d v a n t a g e and increas-ed their l ead in the second half , e n a b l i n g every m e m b e r of the t eam to see ac t ion.

It took a t e am effort to s u b d u e o u t s t a n d i n g i n d i v i d u a l pe r fo rm-ances b y two A q u i n a s p l aye r s . D a r r y l H i l b r a n d s , who at 6 , 4 " is the tallest m e m b e r of t h e s q u a d , led the H o p e s c o r i n g with 17 points a n d p r o v e d to be a t ough offens ive r e b o u n d e r . T h e twc s t a r t ing g u a r d s . Bob B lan ton a n d R a n d y A d o l p h s , a lso scored in d o u b l e f igu res with 13 a n d twelve po in t s respect ively . S ta r t ing for-

w a r d Mike B r o w n did a g o o d j o b in he lp ing H i l b r a n d s clear the b o a r d s .

P reced ing the va r s i t y g a m e last S a t u r d a y , the f ro sh d i s p l a y e d sco r ing po ten t i a l as they defeated M u s k e g o n J .C. , 90-80. A g a i n it was a t e am effort that offset a 2 9 po in t p e r f o r m a n c e b y M u s k e g o n ' s Denny De Vries.

L e a d i n g 4 8 - 4 1 at the hal f , t he Dutch con t inued to score well a n d w o n in i m p r e s s i v e style. The bal-anced s c o r i n g saw f o u r p l a y e r s in d o u b l e f igures . Led b y D a r r y l H U b r a n d s ' 2 3 points , he h a d plen-ty of help f r o m Bob B l a n t o n with 14, R a n d y A d o l p h s w h o scored 13, a n d Mike Brown with twelve po in ts , i n c l u d i n g ten f r ee th rows . T h e f ro sh a l s o d o m i n a t e d in the r e b o u n d i n g d e p a r t m e n t as Hil-b r a n d s , L o n Eriks, a n d J im For t -ney swept the b o a r d s .

M o n d a y the f r o s h t a k e o n Glenn L a k e J u n i o r College. Th i s a n d their encoun te r with the a l w a y s t o u g h Western Mich igan F r o s h s h o u l d g ive them a g o o d indica-t ion of their s t r eng tns a n d weak-nesses b e f o r e they beg in l e a g u e compe t i t i on aga in s t C a l v i n J a n . 13.

Review of the News Moscow

In a strong formal statement ^sued through Tass, theofficial Russian news agency, Moscow warned the United States against extending its military action for Vietnam to neighbor-ing C a m b o d i a or Laos. Express ing a larm at s igns that the United States might m o v e to b lockade or invade Cambod-ia and establish a "corridor" across L a o s l inking Thai land and South Vietnam, Moscow cautioned that the United States would "bear" the complete re-gponslbility for the conse-quences."

Washington A w a v e of protest arose from

Congressmen, Judges and un-iversity presidents u p o n thean-nouncement by Selective Ser-vice Director Lewis Hershey that the nation's draft boards

shou ld s t r ip de fe rmen t s f ron s tudents a n d o thers w h o inter-fere with the dra f t .

T h e N a t i o n a l Student Asso-c ia t ion las t week filed suit ir W a s h i n g t o n a s k i n g for a n in-j unc t i on a g a i n s t en fo rcement of the He r shey pol icy s ta tement .

Washington Still puzzled about the reasons

for Robert M c N a m a r a ' s sur-prise m o v e from Secretary of Defense to the presidency of the world Bank, Washington

learned that A m b a s s a d o r Gold-berg w a s p lann ing to l e a v e his post at the United Nat ions .

His departure would remove from the President's Inner circle the last supporter of a Vietnam pol icy in which accent o n peace negot iat ions would take prece-dence over military escalat ion and b o m b i n g of the North

G a l l o w a y h a s now won H7 con-secut ive matches .

F r e shmen T im DeVoogd , Bob G a r m i r i a n a n d G e o r g e Ave ry were all p inned as w a s j u n i o r Bill C o o k . F r e s h m a n Car l N a d o l s k y lost his ma tch , 19-6, a n d his c l a s s m a t e T o m V i c k r e y l o s t , 10-4.

H o p e will h a v e a c h a n c e to re-deem themselves when they meet G.R.J .C . a g a i n o n J a n . 6. Las t yea r H o p e w a s beaten twice b y that s q u a d b y s co re s of 3 5 - 1 0 a n d 36-2.

A G A I N S T V A U ' A K A l S O , H o p e came within six p o i n t s of a n upse t , but w a s defeated, 21-16.

Because b o t h t h e D u t c H a n d the C r u s a d e r s forfe i ted two m a t c h e s each , the sco re s tood at 10-10 b e f o r e the meet a c t u a l l y got under , w a y . Hope forfe i ted at 130 a n d 137 p o u n d s , while V a l p a r a i s o t o r -feited the 123 a n d 160 p o u n d c lasses .

T h e visi tors took a 15-10 lead when Cook, wres t l ing at 145, w a s p inned . Then N a d o l s k y t o o k d o w n his m a n in the c los ing sec-o n d s to c o m e b a c k f r o m a 4 -3 deficit and win, 5 4 . T h e V a l p o lead thop s tood at 15-13.

J U N I O R RICK V a n d e n b e r g at 167 a n d V i c k e r y both lost b y de-c i s ions to g i v e V a l p o an insur m o u n t a b l e 21-13 a d v a n t a g e g o i n g into the final ma tch . V a n d e n -b e r g lost by a 5-2 score, a n d V i r k e r v was bea t en . 4-0.

V a n T u b e r g e n , who p l a y s de-fensive tackle on H o p e ' s f o o t b a l l t e a m , came up with a s te l lar per-f o r m a n c e to defeat his m o r e ex-per ienced foe. T h e 210-pounder wa tched his 7-4 lead melt a w a y , then pulled a n e s c a p e at the buz-zer to b reak a 7-7 tie.

T H E D U T C H g r a p p l e r s t a k e on T a y l o r U n i v e r s i t y of U p l a n d , Ind. t o m o r r o w at C a r n e g i e g y m .

S C O R E - F l o y d B r a d y ( 3 2 ) goes in for a lay-up In the Concordia

g a m e last Saturday. Hope defeated Concordia , 83-76 , for its '

second win In three starts. Hope meets Albion this Saturday at Alb ion .

Floyd Brady Has 40 Points

As Hope Defeats Concordia By Bob V a n d t r b e r g

F l o y d B r a d y es tab l i shed a new p e r s o n a l ea rne r h i g h - s c o r i n g r e u o i u as the 6-2 C h i c a g o a n p o u r e d t h r o u g h 4 0 po in t s while l e a d i n g H o p e to a 8 3 - 7 6 win ove r t o u g h C o n c o r d i a last S a t u r d a y night .

B r a d y ' s p r e v i o u s h i g h g a m e w a s 34, a total he h a s a m a s s e d t h r e e t imes in his H o p e ca ree r , i nc lud ing o n c e a l r e a d y this s e a s o n a g a i n s t A q u i n a s . B r a d y a lso led the w a y a g a i n s t C o n c o r d i a in, r e b o u n d s , p u l l i n g d o w n 18 missed sho t s .

Paced b y B r a d y , the Dutch m o v e d out to a s i zab l e 17-9 l ead , bu t the C o u g a r s , w h o entered the contes t with a 3-0 r eco rd , c a m e b a c k a n d t ra i led 17-15 after Nea l K a s p a r ' s b a s k e t with 13:20 to go. At the t en-minute m a r k , H o p e h a d a s ix-poin t edge, 23-17 , but a g a i n C o n c o r d i a r e b o u n d e d a n d t o o k a 3 9 - 2 9 lead o n 20- foo te r s b y K a s p a r a n d g u a r d B o b K a s t e n with 4 : 2 5 r e m a i n i n g in the half .

B a r r y Schre iber then p r o c e e d e d to pu t in t h r e e s t r a i g h t f r e e t h r o w s , fo l lowed b y two-po in te r s b y G a r y R y p m a a n d B r a d y , a n d theDutch -m e n a g a i n h a d their 6-point ad-v a n t a g e , 36-30 . The s c o r e at the half r e ad Hope , 42, C o n c o r d i a , 38 . B r a d y led all score r s at this po in t with 20 , with R y p m a a d d i n g 11. L e a d i n g the C o u g a r s w a s 6-6 center D a v e Wild with 12 tallies.

Baske t s b y K a s t e n , Wild, a n d Roger B u r g d o r f at the o p e n i n g of the second half g a v e the vis-i tors a 4 3 - 4 2 lead , bu t center B r u c e V a n Hui s tied the g a m e with a f ree th row. F r o m here on, the two c lubs t r a d e d b a s k e t s until two l a y - u p s b y B r a d y at t h e 9 - m i n u t e m a r k p u t the Dutch-m e n a h e a d , 64-59 .

T h e s t u b b o r n C o u g a r s s t ayed within 4 p o i n t s kof the Dutch until consecu t ive buckets b y R y p m a a n d V a n H u i s m a d e it 7 1 - 6 5 with 5 :20 left. C o n c o r d i a never cha l l enged a g a i n .

Horses for Trees Trees for Candles Candles for Smell

Come and see if this doesn't make sense.

OTI

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