05-12-1967

8
Hope Receives $2 Million Gov't Loan Approval of a $2,026,000 loan toward the construction of a new science building on the campus of Hope College was reported yesterday by U.S. Sen. Phillip A. Hart in a telegram to Pres- ident Calvin A. VanderWerf. The loan was made possible to the college through the High- er Education Facilities Act of 1963. APPROVAL OF the loan coup- led with the awarding of a $1- million grant by the U.S. Depart- ment of Health, Education and Welfare is bringing the start of construction on the $4-million sci- ence hall closer to reality. Construction will begin when final blueprints are approved by the Board of Trustees and necessary permits are received. The science building will house the departments of Chemistry, Bi- ology and the new Geology De- partment. It will replace the pre- sent science building which was constructed in 1941. THE PRESENT BUILDING, outmoded by Hope's excellent un- dergraduate scientific instruction programs, will be used as a class- room facility for other depart- ments. The new science hall is tenta- tively slated to be located at Twelfth and College Ave. The building will permit a logical ex- tension of the campus into the sector now occupied by the Phys- ics-Mathematics Building and the Van Zoeren Library, bringing all of the sciences and the library into close proximity. A landscaped plaza will front the building along Graves Place, tying in with the plazas of the Physics - Mathematics Building and the Van Zoeren Library. The ground floor will contain mechanical and storage rooms, three geology laboratories and a wood shop. On the main level will be two more geology labs, two classrooms, science library with study carrels, large lecture hall, seminar rooms and exhi- bition space. THE SECOND FLOOR will house biology in six laboratories, a museum, two special project laboratories and a herbarium. Chemistry and biology will share the third floor which will contain four biology laboratories, four chemistry labs, two classrooms and a seminar room. The fourth floor will contain eight chemistry laboratories and a classroom with a greenhouse located on the roof. All floors will be served by an elevator. Throughout the build- ing will be department and facul- ty offices which will each have private research laboratories. anc COLLEGE or OLLAND, MICHIGAN 79th ANNIVERSARY — 26 Hope College, Holland, Michigan May 12. 1967 Second Year in a Row Dutch Nine Take MI A A Crown The Hope College baseball team clinched the MIAA flag this week as second place Olivet dropped four games in three days. The Comets dropped a doubleheader to the Dutchmen Saturday and were mathematically eliminated by losing a pair to Kalamazoo College on Monday. The championship marks the second straight triumph for the Dutchmen batsmen in MIAAcom- petition. It puts Hope in fine posi- tion to win the All-Sports trophy again this year. After winning Saturday's open- er 8-2 behind hard-throwing Don Kroodsma's four-hit pitching, the Dutch rallied in the night-cap to whip the Comets, 5-4. CHARLIE LANGELAND col lected three hits in five official trips to raise his league-leading batting average to a phenome- nal .558. In game one, the Dutchmen banged out eleven hits, all sing- les. Their first run came in the second inning, when Nels Berg- mark walked, took third on Har- Opus Policy Approved; Ethics Code Adopted The Communications Board in two separate meetings approved a policy statement regarding Opus, the campus literary magazine, and a code of ethics for the anchor. At its meeting on Thursday, May 4, the Board met to discuss a policy statement for Opus which was prepared by Board member Dirk Jellema. Present at the meet- ing were Ted Johnson and Gordy Korstange from Opus Board of Editors and Opus faculty advisors Dr. A. James Prins and Stuart Wilson. THE BOARD'S consideration of a policy statement grew out of the case of the Administration's censoring of student Jane Bou- man's story, "Scrambled Eggs Can Happen to Anyone." The policy statement provides for an editorial structure for the literary magazine, a method of selection of editors and faculty advisors, yearly appointment of a judge of the magazine's mater- ial, and a statement of the respon- sibility of the student editors, the faculty advisors, and the Com- munications Board. (A complete text of the approved policy state- ment appears on page 7.) MR, JELLEMA'S original text provided for one editor and two assistant editors, a change from the present structure which pro- vides for a board of editors com- prising seven students. Mr. Jelle- ma said he felt that "a fewer number of people will make the operation more efficient." Opus faculty advisor Mr. Wil- son differed and suggested that (Continued on Page 2) ry Rumohr's single, and scored on a wild pitch. Three Hope runners crossed the plate in the third. Langeland led off with a hit and Tom Pelon was nicked by a pitched ball. Both runners moved up on a pass- ed ball, and Langeland scored on Don Troost's squeeze bunt. After a walk to Bergmark, Ru- mohr lined a two-out single to left to drive Pelon home, and Bergmark scored when left-fielder D'Alessando of Olivet bobbledthe ball THE DUTCH scored twice more in the fourth on singles by Langeland and Troost. Olivet finally solved Kroods- ma's flame-throwing for two runs in the sixth, despite getting only one hit. A hit batsman, a sacri- fice, a hit and an error account- ed for the twin tally. Scoring twice in the top of the .seventh, the Orange and Blueclos- ed out the game's run produc- tion. Hits by Bergmark, Kroods- ma, and Dave Abel plated the Dutchmen's seventh and eighth markers. KROODSMA ALSO started the nightcap but was shelled from the mound in the fourth inning, as Olivet sent eight men to the plate and scored three runs. I'HE WINNING run was driv- en in by pitcher Frens in the last of the sixth. Rumohr reached second on a throwing error by the pitcher after two out, and scored the go-ahead run on Frens' single to left. GREEK BURLESQUE—Frank Hine, as Sokrates, descends in a basket during a rehearsal of "The Clouds", which will be performed in Castle Park Amphitheater tonight and tomorrow night. 'The Clouds' Ends Run At Castle Park Tomorrow Aristophanes' satire on educa- tion, "The Clouds," began a three- night run at the Castle Park Am- phitheater yesterday and will close tomorrow night. Performances be- gin at 9 p.m. The Greek comedy is being pre- sented by students of Hope Col- lege under the direction of senior speech major Michael Vogas. Pro- ceeds from the performances will go to the building fund of the proposed theater in Hope's new student center. The classical Greek comedy was written in 423 B.C. by Aris- tophanes and was based on a social theme through which it at- tacked the contemporary educa- tion and morals of Aristophanes' day. In this Greek caricature, Sokra- tes and his chorus of lovely "Clouds" use their double talk- ing philosophy to confuse the poor, stupid debtdodger who has come to study at the "Think Shop." Sokrates is played by Frank Hine, a junior from Saugerties, N.Y. Other major roles are play- ed by Dave Crothers, a fresh- man from Dearborn; Bonnie Tompkins, a sophomore from New Baltimore, N.Y.; Diane Park- er, a freshman from Freehold, N.J.; Jeff Lambkin, a freshman from Pierpont, N.Y., and Tom Woo, a freshman from Hong Kong. New Senators Named After Spring Election Eight new Senators-at-large were elected and the new preamble to the Student Senate Constitution was approved in the all-campus elections last Tuesday. Those elected Senators-at-large for next year are Carol Chapman, Norm Gibson, Micki Luckey, Jim Piers, Zaide Pixley, Glenn Pontier, Pete Smith and Barb Timmer. The new preamble, which in- corporates an emphasis on free exchange and recognition of the weight of the student body's voice, was approved by a vote of 495 to 41, according to Susie Sonne- veldt, this year's Student Senate vice-president. The Collapse of Center* Demands Change In Loco Parentis Theory By Bruce Ronda anchor Editorial Assistant "After a student has been admitted to residence, his withdrawal may be asked at any time and the College reserves the right of withholding its reasons for the request. These conditions are part of the contract between the College and the matri- culant." —Hope College Bulletin, 1926-27. "Apathy is not simply an attitude; it is a product of social institutions and of the structure and organization of higher education itself. The extracurricular life is ordered according to in loco parentis theory, which ratifies the administration as the moral guardian of the young." —SDS Port Huron Statement, p. 11. "Dp we operate under in loco paren- tis theory?. Yes. Should we? That's another question." —Dean oi Academic Affairs William S. Mathis. * Things fall apart—the center cannot hold . . . The blood-dimmed tide is loosed and everywhere Ceremony of innocence is drowned . . . ^ —W. B. Yeats, "The Second Coming 99 THE DEMANDS OF COLLEGE and university students in this decade for a larger role in ordering their own curri- cular and extracurricular lives demands paralleled on this campus in such issues as women's rules, chapel, Opus, and the anchor have brought into sharp focus the relationship between administration and student. For a number of institutions this re- lationship has been, prior to the Sixties, characterized as in loco parentis: the ad- ministration taking a parental role in guarding the intellectual, social and moral lives of the students under its control. In response to this traditionally paternal ao- proach, both students and professional edu- cators have begun a re-evaluation of the university system, exemplified in this ob- servation madeby a publication of Students for a Democratic Society: "The university is located in a perma- nent position of social influence. Its educa- tional function makes it indispensible and automatically makes it a crucial institution in the formation of social attitudes.. .Social relevance, the accessibility to knowledge, and internal openness these together make the university a potential base and agency in the movement of social change." —Port Huron Statement, 1962 This study will take up the problem of in loco parentis from the legal, profes- sional and student perspectives, and at- tempt to trace its development on the Hope College campus. It must be noted at the outset that only major positions will be explored, that the amount of material call- ing for either an abolition or a re-evalua- tion of in loco parentis far outweighs the apologias of its defenders, and that this article by no means serves as a definitive statement on the problem. IT SHOULD ALSO be noted that in loco parentis in a church-related school differs radically from the educational phi- losophy of a state college or university, a distinction explored further in the section dealing with some of the legal questions involved. "College Law," a publication of the (Continued on Page 5)

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Hope Receives $2 Million Gov't Loan A p p r o v a l of a $ 2 , 0 2 6 , 0 0 0 loan

toward the construct ion of a new science bu i ld ing on the c a m p u s of Hope College was reported yes terday b y U.S. Sen. Phillip A. H a r t in a te legram to Pres-ident Calvin A. VanderWerf .

The loan was m a d e possible to the college t h rough the High-er Educat ion Facilities Act of 1963.

APPROVAL OF the l o a n coup-led with the a w a r d i n g of a $1-million g r a n t by the U.S. Depart-ment of Health, Educa t ion and

Welfare is b r ing ing the start of construct ion on the $4-million sci-ence hall closer to reality.

Const ruct ion will begin when final b luepr in ts a re a p p r o v e d by the Board of Trustees and necessary permits a re received.

The science bui ld ing will house the depar tments of Chemistry, Bi-ology and the new Geology De-par tment . It will replace the pre-sent science bui ld ing which was constructed in 1941.

T H E P R E S E N T BUILDING, ou tmoded by Hope ' s excellent un-

d e r g r a d u a t e scientific instruction p r o g r a m s , will be used as a class-room facility for other depar t -ments.

The new science hall is tenta-tively slated to be located at Twelfth and College Ave. The bui lding will permit a logical ex-tension of the campus into the sector now occupied by the Phys-ics-Mathematics Building and the Van Zoeren Libra ry , b r ing ing all of the sciences and the l ib ra ry into close proximity .

A l andscaped plaza will front the bui lding a long Graves Place,

ty ing in with the p lazas of the Physics - Mathemat ics Building and the Van Zoeren L ib ra ry .

The g r o u n d f loor will contain mechanical and s t o r a g e rooms , three geology l abo ra to r i e s and a wood shop. On the main level will be two more geology labs , two c lass rooms, science l i b ra ry with s tudy carrels , l a rge lecture hall, seminar r o o m s and exhi-bition space.

T H E SECOND FLOOR will house biology in six l abora tor ies , a museum, two special project

l abora to r ies and a he rba r ium. Chemistry and b io logy will share the third floor which will contain four b io logy l abora to r ies , four chemistry labs, two c lassrooms and a semina r room.

The four th f loor will contain eight chemistry l abora to r i e s and a c l a s s room with a greenhouse located on the roof.

All f loors will be served by an elevator. T h r o u g h o u t the build-ing will be depar tment a n d facul-ty offices which will each have pr iva te research labora tor ies .

anc COLLEGE

or OLLAND, MICHIGAN

79th ANNIVERSARY — 26 Hope College, Holland, Michigan May 12. 1967

Second Year in a Row

Dutch Nine Take MI A A Crown The Hope College basebal l team

clinched the MIAA flag this week as second place Olivet d ropped four g a m e s in three days . The Comets d ropped a doubleheader to the Dutchmen S a t u r d a y and were mathemat ica l ly eliminated by los ing a pa i r to K a l a m a z o o College on M o n d a y .

The c h a m p i o n s h i p m a r k s the second s t ra ight t r i umph for the Dutchmen ba t smen in MIAAcom-petition. It puts Hope in fine posi-tion to win the All-Sports t rophy a g a i n this year .

After winning S a t u r d a y ' s open-er 8-2 behind hard- th rowing Don

K r o o d s m a ' s four-hit pitching, the Dutch rallied in the night-cap to whip the Comets, 5-4.

CHARLIE L A N G E L A N D col lected three hits in five official trips to raise his league- leading ba t t ing a v e r a g e to a phenome-nal .558.

In g a m e one, the Dutchmen banged out eleven hits, all sing-les. Their first run came in the second inning, when Nels Berg-m a r k walked, took third on Har -

Opus Policy Approved; Ethics Code Adopted

The Communica t ions Board in two s epa ra t e meetings approved a policy statement r e g a r d i n g Opus, the c a m p u s l i terary magazine , and a code of ethics for the anchor .

At its meeting on T h u r s d a y , May 4, the Boa rd met to discuss a policy statement for Opus which was p repa red by B o a r d member Dirk Jellema. Present at the meet-ing were Ted J o h n s o n and Gordy K o r s t a n g e f rom Opus Board of Editors and Opus faculty adv isors Dr. A. J a m e s Prins and Stuart Wilson.

T H E BOARD'S cons idera t ion of a policy statement grew out of the case of the Adminis t ra t ion ' s censor ing of student J a n e Bou-m a n ' s s tory , " S c r a m b l e d Eggs Can H a p p e n to A n y o n e . "

The policy statement provides

for an editorial s t ructure for the l i terary magaz ine , a method of selection of editors and faculty advisors , year ly appoin tment of a judge of the magaz ine ' s mater-ial, and a statement of the respon-sibility of the student editors, the faculty advisors , and the Com-munica t ions Board . (A complete text of the a p p r o v e d policy state-ment a p p e a r s on p a g e 7.)

MR, JELLEMA'S or iginal text p rovided for one editor and two assis tant editors, a change f rom the present s t ructure which pro-vides for a b o a r d of editors com-pr is ing seven students. Mr. Jelle-m a said he felt that " a fewer number of people will m a k e the opera t ion more efficient."

Opus faculty adv i so r Mr. Wil-son differed and suggested that

(Cont inued on Page 2)

ry R u m o h r ' s single, and scored on a wild pitch.

Three Hope runners crossed the plate in the third. Lange land led off with a hit and Tom Pelon was nicked by a pitched ball. Both r u n n e r s moved up on a pass-ed ball , and Lange land scored on Don Troos t ' s squeeze bunt. After a walk to Be rgmark , Ru-mohr lined a two-out single to left to dr ive Pelon home, and B e r g m a r k scored when left-fielder D 'Alessando of Olivet bobb led the b a l l

T H E D U T C H scored twice more in the fourth on singles by L a n g e l a n d and Troost .

Olivet f inally solved Kroods-ma ' s f lame- throwing for two runs in the sixth, despite getting only one hit. A hit b a t s m a n , a sacri-fice, a hit and an er ror account-ed for the twin tally.

Scoring twice in the top of the .seventh, the Orange and Blueclos-ed out the game ' s run produc-tion. Hits by Bergmark , Kroods-ma, a n d Dave Abel plated the Dutchmen's seventh and eighth marke r s .

KROODSMA ALSO s tarted the nightcap but was shelled f rom the m o u n d in the four th inning, as Olivet sent eight men to the plate and scored three runs.

I'HE WINNING run was driv-en in b y pitcher Frens in the last of the sixth. Rumohr reached second on a throwing e r ro r by the pitcher after two out, and scored the go-ahead run on Frens ' single to left.

GREEK BURLESQUE—Frank Hine, as Sokrates, descends in a basket during a rehearsal of "The Clouds", which will be performed in Castle

Park Amphitheater tonight and tomorrow night.

'The Clouds' Ends Run At Castle Park Tomorrow

Aris tophanes ' sat i re on educa-tion, " T h e Clouds , " began a three-night run at the Castle Park Am-phi theater yes terday and will close t o m o r r o w night. Per formances be-gin at 9 p.m.

The Greek comedy is being pre-sented by students of Hope Col-lege under the direction of senior speech m a j o r Michael Vogas . Pro-ceeds f rom the pe r fo rmances will go to the bu i ld ing fund of the p roposed theater in Hope 's new student center.

The classical Greek comedy was written in 4 2 3 B.C. by Aris-tophanes and was based on a social theme t h r o u g h which it at-tacked the c o n t e m p o r a r y educa-tion and mora l s of Ar is tophanes ' d a y .

In this Greek car icature , Sokra-tes and his chorus of lovely " C l o u d s " use their double talk-ing phi losophy to confuse the p o o r , stupid deb tdodger who h a s come to study at the " T h i n k S h o p . "

Sokrates is p layed by F r a n k Hine, a jun ior f rom Saugerties, N.Y. Other m a j o r roles are play-ed by Dave Crothers , a fresh-m a n f rom Dea rbo rn ; Bonnie

Tompkins , a s o p h o m o r e from New Balt imore, N.Y.; Diane Park-er, a f r e s h m a n from Freehold, N.J.; Jeff L a m b k i n , a f reshman from Pierpont, N.Y., and Tom Woo, a f r e s h m a n f rom Hong Kong.

New Senators Named After Spring Election

Eight new Senators-at- large were elected and the new preamble to the Student Senate Constitution was a p p r o v e d in the all-campus elections last Tuesday .

Those elected Senators-at- large for next year a re Carol C h a p m a n , N o r m Gibson, Micki Luckey, Jim Piers, Za ide Pixley, Glenn Pontier, Pete Smith a n d Barb Timmer.

The new preamble , which in-corpora tes an emphas i s on free exchange and recognit ion of the weight of the student b o d y ' s voice, was a p p r o v e d by a vote of 495 to 41 , accord ing to Susie Sonne-veldt, this y e a r ' s Student Senate vice-president.

The Collapse of Center*

Demands Change In Loco Parentis Theory By Bruce Ronda

anchor Editorial Assistant "After a student h a s been admit ted to

residence, his wi thdrawal m a y be asked at a n y time a n d the College reserves the r ight of wi thhold ing its r easons for the request. These condi t ions are pa r t of the contract between the College and the matri-cu lan t . "

—Hope College Bulletin, 1926-27. " A p a t h y is not s imply an attitude; it

is a p roduc t of social institutions and of the s t ructure a n d o rgan iza t ion of higher educa t ion itself. The ex t racur r icu la r life is o rde red accord ing to in loco parent is theory, which ratifies the admin i s t r a t ion as the m o r a l g u a r d i a n of the y o u n g . "

—SDS Port H u r o n Statement, p. 11. " D p we opera te under in loco paren-

tis theory?. Yes. Should we? Tha t ' s ano the r ques t i on . "

—Dean oi Academic Affairs William S. Mathis.

* Things fall apart—the center cannot hold . . . The blood-dimmed tide is loosed and everywhere Ceremony of innocence is drowned . . . ̂

—W. B. Yeats, "The Second Coming99

T H E DEMANDS OF COLLEGE and universi ty students in this decade for a l a rger role in o rde r ing their own curri-cu la r and ex t racur r icu la r lives — d e m a n d s paral le led on this c a m p u s in such issues as women ' s rules, chapel , Opus, a n d the a n c h o r — have b r o u g h t into s h a r p focus the relat ionship between admin is t ra t ion and student.

F o r a n u m b e r of institutions this re-la t ionship has been, p r io r to the Sixties, character ized as in loco parent is : the ad-minis t ra t ion t ak ing a paren ta l role in g u a r d i n g the intellectual, social a n d m o r a l lives of the students u n d e r its control . In

response to this t radi t ional ly p a t e r n a l ao-p r o a c h , both students and profess ional edu-ca tors have begun a re-evaluat ion of the universi ty system, exemplified in this ob-serva t ion m a d e b y a publicat ion of Students for a Democratic Society:

" T h e university is located in a pe rma-nent posit ion of social influence. Its educa-t ional funct ion m a k e s it indispensible and au tomat ica l ly m a k e s it a crucial institution in the fo rma t ion of social at t i tudes. . .Social relevance, the accessibility to knowledge, a n d internal openness — these together m a k e the universi ty a potential b a s e a n d

agency in the movemen t of social change ." —Port H u r o n Statement, 1962

This s tudy will t ake up the problem of in loco parent i s f r o m the legal, profes-s ional and student perspectives, and at-tempt to trace its development on the Hope College c a m p u s . It mus t be noted at the outset that on ly m a j o r posi t ions will be explored, that the a m o u n t of mater ia l call-ing for either an abol i t ion or a re-evalua-tion of in loco parent is f a r outweighs the apo log i a s of its defenders, and that this article by no means serves as a definitive statement on the problem.

IT S H O U L D ALSO be noted that in loco parent is in a church-related school differs radical ly f rom the educat ional phi-lo sophy of a state college or university, a distinction explored fur ther in the section dea l ing with some of the legal questions involved.

"Col lege L a w , " a publ icat ion of the

(Cont inued o n Page 5 )

Page 2 Hope College anchor May 12, 1967

Council Asks for Change

Senate Amends Budget Plan The Student Senate modified its

own budget p r o p o s a l accord ing to suggest ions f r o m the Admin-istration at its meeting last Wednesday night.

President Cra ig Hol leman re-ported that the Adminis t ra t ive Council had sent back the Senate resolution a imed at uni fy ing the budgets of all s tudent o rgan iza -tions under the auspices of the Senate. The Council asked the Senate to amend the p lan in re-gard to the communica t ions media

THE ORIGINAL PROPOSAL, which had a l r eady been returned to the Senate and sent back, pro-vided that the Communica t ions Board would decide the budgets of the anchor , Opus, the Mile-stone and WTAS, and that the Senate would merely fo rward the budget requests of these g r o u p s to the Adminis t ra t ion. Hol leman supported this p lan du r ing his campa ign for Senate President last month.

The amendmen t s passed at the Adminis t ra t ion 's p r o m p t i n g merely m a d e it possible for the

Senate to consult the Communi -cat ions Boa rd about the budgets of the o rgan iza t ions under its jur-isdiction if the Senate so desired. Such a step would require a c h a n g e in the Senate by-laws. In a n y case, the Senate and not the Communica t ions B o a r d will be re-sponsible to the Adminis t ra t ion for the budgets .

In other action, the Senate sug-gested that " the Adminis t ra t ion , when establ ishing a budget for the next fiscal year , m a k e a point of a l locat ing funds for the l i b ra ry so that it can be open on both S u n d a y and Sa tu rday evenings ."

WHEN SUBMITTING t he sug gestion, Dick Kooi reported that, accord ing to Dean of Men Robert De Young, the closing of the li-b r a r y S a t u r d a y nights in place of S u n d a y was only a mat ter of funds . "If p roper funds are pro-v ided , " said Kooi, " the l ib ra ry can be open until 10 p.m. both S a t u r d a y and S u n d a y . "

The Senate also suppor ted the chapel a l ternat ive p l a n passed by the Religious Life Committee two weeks ago. RLC member Jer ry Poor t inga expressed the op in ion

Com. Board Weighs Opus Policy, Ethics Code

(Cont inued f r o m Page 1) an eaitor be chosen by the Com-municat ions Boa rd . The editor in turn would choose a staff in consultat ion with the faculty ad-visors. The B o a r d ' s compromise solution was to a p p r o v e a struc-ture p rov id ing for an editor and two ass i s tan ted i to rs who would be approved by the Communica t ions Board.

THEY WOULD SELECT a staff and the faculty adv i so r s would be chosen by the staff. All would be a p p r o v e d by the Com-municat ions Boa rd .

Mr. Jel lema's statement also in-cluded the p rov i s ion that "adv i s -ors shall have power of censor-ship over all Opus ma te r i a l . " Dean William S. Mathis took issue with the word " c e n s o r s h i p " and also stated that this provided " n o recourse for the s tudent . "

James D u r a m suggested that the Communica t ions Boa rd settle dis-putes that ar ise between the faculty advisors a n d the student editors. However, Dr. Pr ins disagreed: "But in reality the faculty adv i so r is still responsible ."

D E A N M A T H I S S A I D t h a t s u c h a s i tuat ion would h a v e resulted f r o m a b r e a k d o w n in communi -cat ions. "If you ever have to use y o u r au tho r i t y , " he said , " y o u ' v e lost it."

The B o a r d agreed on a final vers ion which stated that "adv i s -ors shall have responsibil i ty for all Opus publicat ion. In the event of d isagreement , the Communica -tions Boa rd shall resolve the dis-pu te . "

At its meeting last Wednesday evening the Board considered the p rob lem of establ ishing a code of ethics for the anchor . Anchor editor J o h n Mulder had sent to the B o a r d a copy of the C a n o n s of Jou rna l i sm , the code of ethics which h a s been a p p r o v e d by the Amer ican Society of Newspape r Editors .

Boa rd c h a i r m a n Bob T h o m p -son suggested that the B o a r d ap-p r o v e the code and " f ind out whether the Adminis t ra t ion ob-jects to a n y pa r to f i t " Mr. Jel lema moved a p p r o v a l , Dennis F a r m e r seconded it, a n d the B o a r d voted aff i rmatively.

SHIRTS 25c Each For 4

Or More With Dry

Cleaning Order.

Folded Or On Hangers

Cash & Carry

SHIRT LAUNDBY

College at 6th IfANECS

HOLLAND, M I C H .

that such a step would demon-strate student suppor t of the p lan and p e r h a p s speed its implemen-tation. The RLC p lan provides that a student be permitted to choose either a t tending chapel twice a week or a t tending nine lectures per semester to fulfill the g r a d u a t i o n requirement .

Steve^ La rk in told the Sena-tors of Turtle In terna t ional in which he, Gretchen P a a l m a n and Big Dutch, the Hope entry in the turtle race, par t ic ipated. He ob-served that the event had raised much needed funds for the Mus-cular Dys t rophy dr ive and that their par t ic ipa t ion p rov ided ex-cellent public relat ions for the Col-lege, but was forced to add that the turtle was eliminated f rom the competi t ion in the first heat, as he failed to move when the gun went off.

SCHOLASTIC TROPHIES—Tom Hendrickson, IFC president, (far left) presents the fraternity scholastic trophy to Emersonian president Frank Barron. The Emmies copped the trophy with an average of 2.694, besting the Arkies' 2.673. Pan-Hellenic Board President Pat Helder (far right) awards the sorority trophy to Sorosite president Diane Joldersma. Sigma Sigma's 2.950 average outclassed the 2.945 mark of runner-up Delta Phi.

Beach Initiates Experiment

Self-Learning Approach Tried A new a p p r o a c h towards re-

search on the use of self-directed student g r o u p s in college learn-ing is being conducted on the c a m p u s of Hope College by Dr. Leslie Beach in his social psy-chology class.

The project al lows the student to a s s u m e a m a j o r responsibil i ty for his own l ea rn ing while in-teract ing a n d s tudying with a small g r o u p of fellow students.

T H E PROJECT was m a d e possible t h r o u g h a $ 9 , 3 3 7 g ran t f rom the U.S. Office of Educat ion.

While it has been established that s tudents can learn effectively by s tudy ing on their own with much less than the t rad i t ional guidance , little has been clarified as to how and where l ea rn ing actual ly occurs or does not occur in the smal l g r o u p discussion.

Dr. Beach h a s been us ing the self-directed student g r o u p as a l e a rn ing technique for several yea r s and h a s publ ished several articles on this a p p r o a c h to college learn ing .

T H E S T U D E N T S in Dr. Beach 's social p sycho logy course have been divided into small g r o u p s of six and , after being

provided with instructions for the course, a re encouraged to develop in their g r o u p the way they wish to study in the course t h roughou t the semester.

Students a re required only to meet in the smal l g r o u p at least once each week. Independent s tudy and pe r sona l contacts with the p ro fessor are encouraged th roughou t the course.

One a f t e rnoon each week is set a p a r t as a sort of " p i o f e s s o r ' s open h o u s e " at which time Dr. Beach is a v a i l a b l e to talk with individuals or g roups .

THE PROGRESS and l ea rn ing of the students a re eva lua ted in a variety of ways. While s tudents take a final comprehens ive exam over the subject mat ter of the re-quired readings , it accounts for only 4 0 - 4 5 per cent of the final g rade . Another 15 per cent of the g r a d e is based on an indepen-dent research project or term paper .

Self-evaluations and ra t ings of others in the smal l g r o u p m a k e up the r ema in ing par t of the final g rade .

To discover what in the small-g r o u p interact ion enhances or in-

Vigil for Vietnam Peace Scheduled for Tuesday

A g r o u p of s tudents and faculty h a s announced the ho ld ing of a Vigil for Peace next T u e s d a y after-noon behind Van Raalte f rom 12:15 to 1:15.

J o h n Rowe, student coord ina -tor of the Vigil, noted that the si-lent demons t r a t i on was a vehicle " t o express our concern abou t the war (in Vietnam), which is cost-ing countless lives and caus ing i r r epa rab l e h a r m to the social, economic, and political s t ructure

of that c o u n t r y . " Rowe hoped that the vigil "will initiate fur ther dis-cussion a n d ac t ion , " such as let-ters to congressmen or fur ther vigils if interest and par t ic ipa t ion war ran ted .

Approx ima te ly 130 other such vigils a re held on a weekly bas i s t h roughou t the nat ion, including such c a m p u s e s as Princeton, Santa B a r b a r a , Da r tmou th , Uni-versity of Chicago, Amherst , and University of Michigan.

WTAS RADIO MARATHON

FRIDAY 4 P.M. —till? one of our D.J.s will

attempt to break the 36 hr. College Radio Marathon Record

by going for 48 Mrs. Straight or BETTER

•hibits l ea rn ing , each g r o u p meets every other week in an observa-tion room which is equipped with a one-way mi r ror .

THE INFORMAL discussion, while being observed by Dr. Beach, is a lso recorded on video-tape for fur ther ana lys i s . At the s ame time, student assistants , t rained in the technique, record the interaction and types of state-ments being m a d e by va r ious g r o u p m e m b e r s on specially de-signed record ing machines .

Students know they are beii,^ observed, but quickly overcome their self-consciousness and have very an ima ted and quite genuine d i scuss ions ," said Dr. Beach.

The video-tape record ings re-present the first at tempt to obta in a complete record of the sma l l^ g r o u p sessions and the students ' ' b e h a v i o r and procedures in their small g roups .

" F r o m the ana lys i s of these d a t a we have been ab le to ga in new insights into the values of this g r o u p s tudy and l e a rn ing , " Dr. Beach said.

" E V E N MORE impor tan t , we can see what kinds of things en-hance or inhibit l e a r n i n g in this kind of setting, enab l ing us to b r ing abou t l e a rn ing in the class-r o o m s or other settings more ef-fectively."

If put into use in a p p r o p r i a t e a r eas of s tudy, the self-directed student g r o u p will put less of a d ra in on the ins t ruc tor ' s time and the physical facilities of the col-lege, since the small g r o u p can meet a n y w h e r e and anyt ime agreeab le to the g r o u p members .

Republicans Hold Meeting Monday Night

The Hope College Republi-can Club will meet on M o n d a y night at 7 :30 in the Kletz with Dr. Warren V a n d e r Hill and James D u r a m of the history depar tment .

" E x t r e m i s m of the Left and Right" will be the topic of an in fo rma l discussion "wfth Ihe two faculty members .

The Republ ican Club will elect officers for next year at the meeting, which is open to all interested students.

6 * 6 * ne

VEURINK'S

May 12, 1967 Hope College anchor Page S

English Aid Given

Hopites Tutor Cuban Children Hope College students h a v e

been assis t ing the Chris t ian Ele-men ta ry School ' s Bil ingual Pro-g r a m for C u b a n Refugee Students this spr ing.

Director of the p r o g r a m and school pr incipal Har ley Ver Beek s tated, " I am very apprec ia t ive of the Hope s tudents ' ass i s tance ." Ka thy Padgett , Susan Hoover , Webster Brower, Pamela Miller,

Ga ry Cook a n d Judy Brown h a v e been work ing with the refugee children.

N I N E C H I L D R E N a re en rolled in this p r o g r a m which in-volves tu tor ing and teaching com-munica t ion skills of the English

l anguage . None of the children have had any previous contact with the l a n g u a g e .

The families of these children were b rough t to this count ry th rough the sponso r sh ip of the Chris t ian Reformed Churches of the area , which are a lso pro-v id ing the elementary educat ion.

In conjunct ion with this pro-ject, a federal g ran t has also been obtained p rov id ing funds for re-search into the bi l ingual prob-lems of Michigan.

DR. DONALD DUGAS, Direc-tor of the Bilingual Educat ion Resource Center at the Universi ty of Michigan, has met with the

J

TUTORING PROGRAM—Freshman Kathy Padgett tutors a Cuban student in English skills. Eight Hope students are involved in a special tutoring program in conjunction with Christian Elementary School's Bilingual Program.

persons and committees involved with this project. He has been d o i n g research on this subject t h roughou t the state, t ry ing to establish educat ional facUities which will increase the effective-ness of Spanish-P^nglish teaching.

The H u m a n Relations Com-miss ion and the Inter-School Council of Hol land have been ac-tively engaged in p r o m o t i n g social and communi ty integrat ion for these people.

Mr. Ver Beek feels that real p rogress has been made , both academical ly and socially at the school level. " T h i s h a s been a t remendous experience for the other students at the schools in terms of acceptance of children of a diverse b a c k g r o u n d . "

" A n obstacle s t emming f rom the different cul tural back-g r o u n d s , " Mr. Ver Beek stated, " is t rying to get these students to sense the need and va lue of l ea rn ing . " This is especially im-por tan t concerning the mas te ry of the English l anguage .

"ONE OF the ways we feel we can overcome this p rob lem is by work ing with the paren ts as well ." " T h i s will lead to better and more rapid p rogress with the ch i ldren ," Mr. Ver Beek stated.

Mr. Ver Beek stated, " their val-ues are very different f rom those of the Mexican-Americans, who Americanize r a p i d l y . "

A F U T U R E T H O U G H T is be-ing given in the direction of es-tabl ishing a b i l ingual school in Hol land if there are enough Span-ish speak ing students. This would be developed t h r o u g h the H u m a n Relations Committee and the Hol-l and Inter-School Council. This Council is composed of represen-tatives of each of the school sys-tems in Hol land .

NATIONAL COLUMNIST—Nationally syndicated columnist Drew Pear-son answers questions after his speech at an all-college assembly last Tuesday afternoon. He spoke of his observations of the inner workings of the federal government and his treatment of them in U s columns.

Columnist Pearson Speaks On Dodd, Powell and War

Has Reservations

Chaplain Hits Chapel Proposal

Nat iona l ly syndicated column-ist Drew Pea r son related his ob-servat ions of the inner work ings of the federal government in his speech at the all-college assembly last Tuesday a f te rnoon in Dim-nent Memoria l Chapel.

THE FIRST PART of his talk dealt with the ethics involved in the r u n n i n g of our government . He did not limit his talk to gen-eralities but started to c o m p a r e the cases of C o n g r e s s m a n Adam Clayton Powell and Senator T h o m a s Dodd. He cited circum-stances s u r r o u n d i n g bo th cases as perfect examples of the "Con-gress ional d o u b l e - s t a n d a r d . "

The next pa r t of his talk had to do with President J o h n s o n and his hand l ing of the presidency. He said first that President John-son feels very sensitive a b o u t ap-pear ing on television, and that is why he frequently calls sudden news conferences giving m a n y re-por ters no time to cover it. He then went on to say that President Johnson feels a very close rela-t ionship with members of the

y o u n g e r genera t ion . AT THIS POINT Mr. Pearson

briefly summar i zed the back-g r o u n d of the present si tuation in Vietnam. He talked of how un-for tuna te it was that we did not get out of that war when we had the oppor tun i ty in October of 1964. According to Mr. Pearson, the Vietnamese were ready to ne-gotiate, but President Johnson hes-itated because he was caught in a political c a m p a i g n with Barry Goldwater and did not want to seem weak. By the time he was ready to negotiate for a settle-ment the N o r t h Vietnamese re-fused because they thought that they could effect a mili tary vic-tory.

According to Mr. Pearson, Pres-ident J o h n s o n ' s m a j o r achieve-ment has been the improv ing of relat ions between the United States and the Soviet Union . He said that the selling of wheat, the sign-ing of the C o n s u l a r Treaty and coopera t ion on an i r r igat ion plant a re indicat ions of these improved relat ions.

Chap la in William Hil legonds, at the Religious Life Committee meeting last M o n d a y expressed reservat ions abou t the recommen-da t ions concern ing compul so ry chapel passed by the Committee two weeks ago .

He agreed that top-rank speak-ers should be brought but em-phasized that more impor tan t was a "beefed u p " attempt to involve students, faculty and adminis t ra -tors in activities which would lead to an "eyeba l l to eyeball con-f r o n t a t i o n " with Jesus Christ.

REV. HILLEGONDS showed a basic confidence in the students and felt that " c o m p u l s o r y expos-u r e " to Chris t iani ty was not ne-cessary. He said he was "no t convinced that vo lun ta ry chapel would fall f la t ." The Chap la in cited the church b a c k g r o u n d s of the students and the large atten-dance a t -S tuden t Church as in-dicat ions that completely volun-ta ry daily chapel services would not be unat tended.

But he expressed doubts as to whether compul so ry lectures were a really effective means of con-f ron t ing students. Not ing the re-sults of the recently-circulated quest ionaire , which showed wide diversif icat ion of religious feel-ings, Rev. Hil legonds suggested that whether or not a pa r t i cu la r student was confronted would de-pend a great deal upon who the lecturers were. He also wondered where the 24 top-rank lecturers needed for one academic year could be found and asked how they would be paid.

The C h a p l a i n said that he would like to see a vo lun ta ry chapel system and lectures by top- rank theologians , followed up by d o r m discussions led by faculty mem-bers. This would be one step

towards a "beefed u p " p r o g r a m of involvement.

IN STRESSING faculty partic-ipa t ion , Rev. Hi l legonds said that at a Chris t ian college both "stu-dents and faculty must be differ-ent ." He said that their mutua l interaction shou ld not end with the last class of the day .

The committee, while agreeing with much that Rev. Hil legonds said , decided to cont inue suppor t of the earlier p roposa l . Members felt that compu l so ry exposure to ( hrist ianity was still necessary. J e r ry Poor t inga pointed out that people seldom do more than they really have to, and might not receive exposure without compul-sion.

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CONCERTO FOR TWO HARPSICHORDS

Tickets available at Hope College Business Office Limited number

Admission is free with ID for all College Students

Page 4 Hope College anchor May 12, 1967

anchor editorial

On Purse Strings

TH E S T U D E N T S E N A T E b u d g e t p r o p o s a l , as a p p r o v e d by t h e Ad-m i n i s t r a t i v e C o u n c i l a n d t h e Stu-

d e n t Sena te , r e p r e s e n t s a n u n f o r t u n a t e d e p a r t u r e f r o m e s t a b l i s h e d c o l l e g e p ro-c e d u r e . T h e a u t h o r i t y of t h e C o m m u n -ica t ions B o a r d a n d f r e e d o m of t h e stu-d e n t p ress is e n d a n g e r e d by t h e p l a n .

T h e p r o p o s a l b e g a n w i t h a d m i r -ab le a ims . I t seeks t o c o o r d i n a t e t h e b u d g e t s of v a r i o u s s t u d e n t a c t i v i t i e s un-de r a n A p p r o p r i a t i o n s C o m m i t t e e of the S t u d e n t S e n a t e . G e n e P e a r s o n , Stu-d e n t S e n a t e P r e s i d e n t , i n i t i a t e d the

p r o p o s a l a n d e n g i n e e r e d its p a s s a g e by S t u d e n t S e n a t e a n d t h e S t u d e n t L i f e C o m m i t t e e .

A t the t i m e of its passage , b o t h the S e n a t e a n d S L C a f f i r m e d t h e au-tho r i t y of t h e C o m m u n i c a t i o n s B o a r d

over t h e b u d g e t s of t h e anchor, Mile-s tone , O p u s a n d W T A S . T h i s was d o n e to p r o t e c t t h o s e p u b l i c a t i o n s a g a i n s t po l i t i ca l r ep r i s a l s of t h e S e n a t e , s ince the C o m m u n i c a t i o n s B o a r d is a n a r m of the S t u d e n t L i f e C o m m i t t e e a n d no t the S t u d e n t S e n a t e .

SI N C E T H E N t h e p r i n c i p l e of C o m m u n i c a t i o n s B o a r d a u t h o r i t y has b e c o m e a p o l i t i c a l f o o t b a l l

k icked b e t w e e n t h e S e n a t e a n d A d m i n -is t ra t ive C o u n c i l .

T h e A d m i n i s t r a t i v e p o s i t i o n is t h a t

the p u r p o s e of t h e p r o p o s a l is t o co-o r d i n a t e the b u d g e t s of a l l s t u d e n t or-gan iza t ions , i n c l u d i n g t h e p u b l i c a t i o n s a n d r a d i o s t a t i o n .

T h e A d m i n i s t r a t i o n f a v o r s t h e stu-d e n t e v a l u a t i o n of s t u d e n t b u d g e t s by

the Sena te o n l y a n d wi l l n o t a c c e p t any p l a n wh ich i n v o l v e s C o m m u n i c a t i o n s Board a u t o n o m y .

T h e c o m p l e x i t y of th i s p r o b l e m is e v i d e n t . I n f ac t , t h e S t u d e n t S e n a t e ,

w h e n i t pa s sed t h e p r o p o s a l o n W e d -nesday , was e v i d e n t l y n o t a w a r e t h a t its p o s i t i o n h a d b e e n s ign i f i can t l y al-t e r ed b y a n A d m i n i s t r a t i v e r e -wr i t e .

T h e p r e s e n t p r o p o s a l g r a n t s f u l l " r e s p o n s i b i l i t y " t o t h e S t u d e n t S e n a t e .

T h u s i t o n c e a g a i n o p e n s u p t h e s tu-d e n t p u b l i c a t i o n s t o t h e w h i m s a n d f l u c t u a t i o n s of a l eg i s l a t ive b o d y - t h e

S t u d e n t S e n a t e . C l e a r l y t h a t b o d y is c a p a b l e of r e t a l i a t i o n w h e n c r i t i c i zed ; th i s has b e e n r e c o g n i z e d by C r a i g H o l -l e m a n , B o b T h o m p s o n a n d G e n e Pea r -son in e a r l i e r d i s c u s s i o n on t h e p r o p o s -al .

w O R S T O F A L L t h e p r o p o s a l says t h a t t h e C o m m u n i c a t i o n s B o a r d d o e s n o t have t h e au-

t h o r i t y to c o n t r o l t h o s e g r o u p s f o r w h i c h it has r e s p o n s i b i l i t y . B u d g e t a r y c o n t r o l passes f r o m t h e C o m m u n i c a -t i o n s B o a r d to t h e S e n a t e . T h u s , w h i l e t h e C o m m u n i c a t i o n s B o a r d m u s t de-

l i b e r a t e l o n g h o u r s a b o u t f u n d a m e n t a l po l icy , it is d e n i e d t h e mos t i m p o r t a n t

m e a n s of p u t t i n g t h a t po l icy i n t o ef fec t - f i n a n c i a l c o n t r o l . T h i s is c l ea r ly u n -

f a i r to t h e B o a r d a n d a c u r i o u s divis-ion of l a b o r .

T h e i n i t i a l S e n a t e p o s i t i o n seems

to us t h e m o s t v i a b l e . T h e A d m i n i s t r a -t i o n is p e r s i s t i n g in its r a t h e r i n t r a n -s igen t p o s i t i o n t h a t n o p l a n at all is b e t t e r t h a n o n e i n v o l v i n g an a u t o n -

o m o u s C o m m u n i c a t i o n s B o a r d . If t h i s c o n t i n u e s , t h e S t u d e n t L i f e C o m m i t t e e , t h e S t u d e n t S e n a t e a n d t h e C o m m u n i -

c a t i o n s B o a r d m u s t j o i n t l y a r r i v e a t a s o l u t i o n t h a t c o n s i d e r s s t u d e n t i n t e r e s t s a n d sti l l p r e se rves f r e e d o m of t h e press .

A Code of Ethics Editor's note: The statement below is

the Canons of Journalism or code of ethics of the American Society of Newspaper Edi-tors. It was approved Wednesday evening as the code of ethics for the Hope College anchor by the Student Communications Board. We urge the adoption of this code by the Administrative Council and the Board of Trustees as a recognition of the ideals of this paper, both in the past and in the future. We see it not as a hard and fast code which will answer all pro-blems which arise, but as a concise state-ment of ideals which can serve as a valu-able guideline.

The p r i m a r y funct ion of newspapers is to communicate to the h u m a n race what its members do, feel and think. Journa l -ism, therefore, d e m a n d s of its pract i t ioners the widest range of intelligence, or know-ledge, and of experience, as well as na tu ra l and trained powers of obse rva t ion and reasoning. To its oppor tuni t ies as a chron-icle a re indissolubly linked its ob l iga t ions as teacher and interpreter.

To the end of f inding some m e a n s of codifying sound practice a n d just aspir-ations of American j o u r n a l i s m , these cpnons are set forth:

I.

RESPONSIBILITY - The r ight of a newspaper to attract and hold readers is restricted by no th ing but cons idera t ions of public welfare. The use a newspaper makes of the share of public attention it ga in s serves to determine its sense of responsi-

jlity, which it shares with every member 0f its staff. A journa l i s t who uses his power for any selfish or otherwise un-worthy purpose is faithless to a high trust.

II.

Freedom of the Press - F reedom of the Press is to be g u a r d e d as a vital r ight of niankind. It is the unques t ionab le r ight to discuss whatever is not explicitly fo rb idden b y law, including the wisdom of a n y re-strictive statute.

III.

Independence - Freedom from all obli-gations except that of fidelity to the public interest is vital.

1. Promotion of any private interest contrary to the general welfare, for what-ever reason is not compatible with honest Journalism. So-called news communi-cations from private sources should not oe published without public notice of their source or else substantiation of their claims *0 value as news, both in form and sub-stance.

2. Pa r t i sansh ip , in editorial comment which knowing ly depar t s f rom the truth, does violence to the best spirit of Ameri-can jou rna l i sm; in the news co lumns it is subvers ive of a f u n d a m e n t a l principle of the profession.

IV.

SINCERITY, Truthfulness , Accuracy-Good faith with the reader is the founda -tion of all j o u r n a l i s m worthy of the name .

1. By every cons idera t ion of good faith a newspaper is a cons t ra ined to be truth-ful. It is not to be excused for lack of thoroughness or accuracy within its con-trol, or fai lure to obta in c o m m a n d of these essential qualit ies.

2. Headlines shou ld be fully wa r r an t ed by the contents of the articles which they su rmoun t .

V.

Impar t ia l i ty - Sound practice m a k e s clear distinction between news repor ts a n d expressions of opinion. News repor ts should be free f r o m opinion or bias of a n y kind.

1. This rule does not app ly to so-called special articles unmis t akab ly de-voted to advocacy or characterized by a s igna tu re au thor iz ing the writer 's own con-clusions and interpretat ion.

VI.

F a i r Play - A newspaper should not publ ish unofficial charges affecting repu-tat ion or m o r a l charac te r without oppor -tunity given to the accused to be hea rd ; right practice d e m a n d s the giving of such oppor tun i ty in all cases of ser ious accu-sat ion outside judicial proceedings.

1. A newspaper should not i n v a d e pr iva te rights o r feeling without sure war -rant of public right as dist inguished f r o m public curiosity.

2. It is the privilege, as it is the duty , of a newspaper to m a k e p r o m p t and com-plete correct ion of its own serious mis takes of fact or opinion, whatever their or igin.

DECENCY - A newspaper cannot es-cape conviction of insincerity if while pro-fessing high moral purpose it supplies in-centives to base conduct, such as are to be found in details of crime and vice, publi-cation of which is not demonstrably for the general good. Lacking authority to enforce its canons, the journalism here represented can but express the hope that deliberate pandering to vicious instincts will encounter effective public disapproval or yield to the influence of a preponderant professional condemnation.

iJ

A s AUlf

T£8Mirt 1*1.

Art Buchwald

Grafitis Is In

m

The graffiti craze ( inscr ip t ions or d raw-ings scratched on pi l lars , bu i ld ings and walls) is now in full swing in this count ry . Many have been m a d e into but tons, a pract ice which has not only furthered the ar t of graffiti, but has everyone t ry ing to think of new ones.

Time m a g a z i n e held a graff i t i contest as a p romot ion a m o n g adver t i s ing agency personnel t h roughou t the United States, and these were some of the entries that were submitted.

"1 d reamed 1 could wear a Maiden-form b r a " — T w i g g y .

"Goodn igh t , D a v i d . " "Goodn igh t , Gol ia th ." " H i r e the hand icapped"—the Hatha-

way man . " T h e Jolly Green Giant is a vegetable ." " M a r s h a l l M c L u h a n reads b o o k s . " "Xerox never comes up with any th ing

o r i g i n a l . " "Dr ink C a n a d a dry . Visit F x p o 6 7 . " " D o the Chinese look in the white

p a g e s ? " " D i s c o u r a g e ugly office b u i l d i n g s -

p lay handba l l aga ins t the Pan Am Build-ing . "

" T h e Ajax white knight cheats at p o l o . " "Aunt J emima is an Uncle T o m . " "Pal l Mall can ' t spa l l . " " S m o k e y the bear is a ha i ry boy scou t . " While Time magaz ine h a s been con-

cent ra t ing on the adver t i s ing world, Wash-inton has been work ing h a r d on its own graffi t i . Liz Carpente r , Mrs. J o h n s o n ' s press secretary, contr ibuted several d u r i n g a speech she gave at the Women 's Press Club dinner including:

" B o b b y Kennedy is a r a b b i t . " "Secre ta ry M c N a m a r a can ' t do New

M a t h . " "Gov . Romney—would you buy a new

ca r f rom this m a n ? " " K e e p smil ing with Joe A l sop . " "Wal te r L i p p m a n n — G o d is not dead.

He's alive and a p p e a r s twice a week in the Wash ing ton Pos t . "

A multiple sclerosis char i ty ball in Wash ing ton last week used graffi t i as its theme, a n d s o m e of the signs said:

" A d a m Clayton Powell uses Man T a n . " " C o u r t n e y Valenti ( Jack Valenti 's

d a u g h t e r ) is a midge t . " " J . E d g a r H o o v e r sleeps with a night

l ight ." " R i c h a r d Nixon is dead and l iving in

New Y o r k . " One scratched out at the last momen t

was: " T h e g o v e r n o r of A l a b a m a is a m o t h e r . "

Other graffi t i now m a k i n g the r o u n d s of Wash ing ton are:

"Sen. Dodd h a s never eaten a bad d i n n e r . "

" I m p e a c h George H a m i l t o n . " "Gen. Westmore land come back—you

forgot to sa lu te Sen. F u l b r i g h t . " " G e o r g e Wallace uses ha i r s t ra ight-

ene r . " " N o , t hank you . Dr. Coppo l ino , I 've

a l r eady h a d my s h o t s . " " F o r Bro the rhood Week—take y o u r

bro ther to lunch . " " D e a n Husk is a recorded announce-

ment . "

"Mrs . J o h n s o n never waters the trees she p l a n t s . "

'L .B.J , reads Walter L i p p m a n under the bedcove r s . "

" T h e U.S. has the a n s w e r . " "Wha t was the ques t i on?"

Copyr igh t (c) 1967, The Wash ing ton Post Corp . Distributed by Los Angeles Times Syndicate.

CM COLLIOI

anchor pnesa OLLAND, MICHIGAN

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

and lor the students oj Hope College, Holland, Michigan, under the authority of the Student Communications Board.

Entered as second class matter at the post office of Holland, Michigan, 494^3, at the special rate

of postage provided for in Section 1103 of Act of Congress, Oct. 3. 1917, and authorized Oct. 19. 1917.

Subscription: $3 per year. Printed: Zeeland Record, /eeland. Michigan.

Editor . . . .

Editor-Elect

Assistant Editor

News Editor

Layout Editor

Advertising Manager

Business Manager

John M. Mulder

Tom Hildebrandt

George Arwady

Glenn Loomnn

Dick Angstadt

Bob Schroeder

Jim Marcus

Board of Editors

Editorial Assistants . Bob Donia, Bruce Ronda

Features Pat Canfield

Critiques John Cox

sports Bob Vanderberg

National News DUk Kooi

Rewrite Harold Kamtn

Copy . Janice Bakker, Carol Koterski,

Lew Vander Naald

Headlines Jim Pohl

Proof Bette Lou Smith

Photography . . Donald Page, Don Gunther,

Suzette Luckhafdt

Columnist . . . . . Gordy Korstange

Cartoonists . Muck Menning, Greg Phillips

Reporters . . Ruby Beatson, Jane Becksfort,

Janice Blakely, Rob Branch, Bonnie

Everts, Sherman Farber, Mike Fitney,

Marion Greiner, Tom Hendrickson,

Glenn Loonutn, Don Luidens, Ken

Nienhuis, Madeline Slovenz, Neal

Sobania, Sharon Stoats, Al Wildschut

May 12, 1967 Hope College anchor Page I

College's Power Based on Parentis Theory (Cont inued f r o m Page 1)

American Council of Educat ion , defines in loco parent i s in the fol lowing m a n n e r : " T h e power which the officers of a college may lawfully exert to restrict and control the act ions of its s tudents is based u p o n the fact that , in law, the college s t a n d s in the s ame posi t ion to its s tudents as that of a parent — in loco parent is — a n d it can therefore direct and control their con-duct to the s a m e extent that a paren t c a n . " (p. 104) Because of the youth of s tudents at tending universities in colonial America, and because of the rel igious bases of those institutions, in loco paren t i s became a feasi-ble and workab le educa t iona l ph i losophy . The homogenei ty of s tudents and the simi-larity of their upper-c lass b a c k g r o u n d lent to the ease with which control was passed f rom parents to a watchful admin i s t r a t ion .

WHILE S T U D E N T S IN T H E per iod p r io r to the Civil War d e m a n d e d , and were g ran ted , fewer restrictions on their social activities, the college admin i s t r a t i on still funct ioned to protect them f rom the out-side world of increas ingly aggress ive com-mercial ism. However , after the w a r the middle-class advoca t e s of that s a m e com-mercial spirit b e g a n d e m a n d i n g higher educat ion , and the univers i ty s t ructure be-g a n a process of " d e m o c r a t i z a t i o n . " Hope College admit ted its first f reshmen class d u r i n g this period.

Roland Liebert, in an essay " A Little His tory of In Loco Parent i s , " points out that such democra t i za t ion chal lenged not at all the pa te rna l s t ructure of the univer-sity; it meant merely " . . . b r ing ing middle-class youths into the college, put t ing them unde r its restraints , and ' teaching ' them in an a tmosphe re of a s s u m e d immatur i ty and exclusion f r o m responsibil i ty ' ." (p . 29)

The first " C a t a l o g u e and Ci rcu la r of Hope Col lege" ( 1 8 6 6 - 1 8 6 7 ) noted the fol-lowing concerning rules and d i^ ip l i ne : " R u l e s are as few a n d s imple as practi-cable. The s tudents a re expected to deport themselves with that p ropr ie ty which a due r e g a r d for the wishes of their teachers would dictate, and their own self-respect enforce. They are t augh t to g o v e r n themselves ." ( P . 9 1 )

While Hope College appea red to begin its career with an uncompl ica ted s ta tement of rules based on self-respect a n d self-gove rnmen t , the influx of women to its c a m p u s and the ensu ing double s t a n d a r d were noted in this statement by the Coun-cil of Hope College: " H i g h e r educa t ion for females seems to furn ish the p rope r medium between that spirit of Oriental b a r b a r i s m which r e g a r d s w o m a n as fit-ted only to be a mere parent and house-keeper, and the infidelity ot " w o m e n ' s r igh ts . " falsely so ca l l ed . " ( p . 9 1 )

COUPLED WITH A DESIRE to pro-tect the Victorian coed, a lack of adequa t e hous ing and ope ra t i ng funds forced the universi ty system to b r ing its s tudents on c a m p u s after 1890. Hope faced no such ser ious hous ing sho r t age , and noted in its 1891-92 " C a t a l o g u e , " " B o a r d i n g Houses a n d Clubbing A r r a n g e m e n t s in the city a re to be a p p r o v e d by the faculty, and to be subject to such regula t ions as a r e usual in s imilar institutions. By a rule of the College, lady s tudents a re not to r o o m in the same bui ld ing with the gen t lemen." This dictum was modif ied in the 1 8 9 8 - 9 9 " C a t a -l o g : " " L a d i e s and gentlemen are not expect-ed to occupy r o o m s opening into the s ame hall or are otherwise connected." Evidently after the comple t ion of Voorhees Hall, women were s t rong ly encou raged to live there, as noted in the 1927-1928 'Bulle-t in ." (p .74 )

Increasing interest in w o m e n s hous-ing was reflected in this statement in 1932: "All girls who do not live with their par -ents are required to consult the Dean of Women concern ing their r o o m i n g places, ( p . 2 5 ) Final ly , in 1940, all women were required to live on c a m p u s except those

c o m p u l s o r y , " (p .72) , but it was not until 1963 that chapel a t tendance was substan-tively changed. The " H o p e College Bulle-t in" of that yea r notes that: " E a c h student is required to attend a min imum of 70 per cent of these devot ional pe r iods" (p.8) . The present system, an alteration of which h a s recently passed Religious Life Com-mittee, was established in 1964. ("Bulle-t in ," p .12 )

Social regula t ions are admittedly al-defined because of the numerous changes a p p r o v e d this academic year . Nonethe-less, a perusal of the AWS Handbook , l ib ra ry , eating, and class-dress regulations, s m o k i n g facilities, and supervision and regulat ion of p r ivacy provides s t rong sup-port for Tom H a y d e n ' s comment that "it is p a r a d o x i c a l l y d iscr imina tory that our vaunted ' educa t iona l elite,' the people that society places its best hopes upon, are subjected to greater social restrictions than most a n y person of c o m p a r a b l e age, save imprisoned convic ts ." ( " I n Loco Parentis and College Educa t ion , " p .39)

WOMEN SMOKING—Pictured above is a Hope woman exercising a privilege—smoking— that was not extended to coeds until 1946. The 1940 coUege bulletin allowed smoking for

men for the first time.

l iving at home or with relatives. The pre-sent ru l ing b r i n g i n g all men on c a m p u s fur ther solidifies Adminis t ra t ive control over the social lives of Hope students.

WHILE T U R N - O F - T H E - C E N T U R Y college students were experiment ing with the vices practiced but also condemned by their elders, the rules of Hope concerning danc ing , d r ink ing , s m o k i n g and card-p l ay ing were inflexible. The 1895-96 ruling that " D a n c i n g and ca rd -p lay ing is pro-hibited, and a lso the use of tobacco on the college c a m p u s " (p .39 ) apparen t ly did not c h a n g e until s m o k i n g by men was given tacit a p p r o v a l in the 1940-41 "Bul-letin:" " T h e use of narcotics and l iquor is fo rb idden , as is the use of tobacco by women. The t radi t ion of the College re-g a r d i n g the use of tobacco a r o u n d the g r o u n d s and bui ld ings will be mainta in-ed ." (p. 18)

The quest ion of women s m o k i n g on this c a m p u s became one of semantic inter-pre ta t ion between the 1945-46 "Bul le t in" which f o r b a d e the use of tobacco by wo-men, and the 1946-47 "Bul le t in" which merely d i scouraged it. But the quest ion of d a n c i n g became one of vagueness and evas ion . The 1952 " A n n u a l Ca ta logue ' notes that:

"Soc ia l d a n c i n g at Hope College is regulated in accordance with a rul ing of the Boa rd of Trustees which is as follows: The college canno t effectively enforce stan-d a r d s of social conduct and practice dif-ferent f rom those taught and encouraged in the homes of its constituents. Neverthe-less, danc ing on the college c a m p u s shall not be permitted, and , while the Board d i scourages of f -campus dancing, any such of f -campus student dances shall be under college supe rv i s ion . " (p. 10)

HOWEVER, T H E JAN. 1 1 , 1 9 6 3 issue of the anchor r a n a story concerning the Student Life Commit tee 's r ecommenda t ion for danc ing in the proposed t e m p o r a r y student center (Durfee) , and the September 27, 1963 anchor r a n an announcement for a Ju l i ana room dance scheduled to follow a Wheaton football game. Evident-ly, f rom this record and f rom the n u m e r o u s c a m p u s dances to date, the 1952 Board ru l ing has been superseded.

The his tory of chapel at Hope repre-sents ano the r example of the college's in-volvement in mat ters other than the stu-dent ' s intellectual development. P'rom the

The Best of Peanuts (jJHAT'S 50 HARD ABOUT IT? THI5 MORNING I TOLD HER 'P MAKE MV OUN LUNCH

Tf~.

AW MOTHER 15 ALUAte COMPLAIN 1N6 ABOUT HAVING T O M A K E LI/NCHE5

r

inception of the College, chapel a t tendance five d a y s a week was m a n d a t o r y . The 1929-1930 "Bul le t in" played semantic-g a m e s with the following enigmat ic sen-tence: " C h a p e l a t tendance is required —not

Editor's note: This is the first of two installments of an article by Bruce Ronda on the "In Loco Parentis" theory of col-lege authority. Next week Ronda will ana-lyze the present status of this theory, both at Hope and at various colleges across the nation.

Ronda is a sophomore from Chicago, 111., and plans to major in English. The In Loco Parentis theory of college authori-ty has come under severe scrutiny in recent years and especially at Hope this year. Next week Ronda's article will concentrate on Hope College's approach to the theory.

'Clouds' Reigns As Successful Satire in Student Production

By Gordy Korstange Someone must h a v e affronted the

clouds — I mean the real clouds up in the sky. Perhaps they were disturbed about being represented in h u m a n form, for mid-way in the Little Theater p roduc t ion o f " The C louds , " when Strepsiades (Dave Cro-thers) held out his h a n d s in order to dem-ons t ra te a point about precipitation, indeed it was ra in ing . .

T H E WATER DIDN'T d a m p e n the spirits of the cast, however^ as they romp-ed t h rough Ar i s tophanes ' sat i re in excel-lent fashion. The actors and director Mike Vogas faced two main obstacles in this unique Castle Park presentat ion: the na ture of the play itself and the fact that it was done out in the wilds of nature .

A dated bur lesque presents p rob lems main ly because the institutions and peo-ple it is l a m p o o n i n g h a v e lost the immedi-ate impact they would h a v e had to an Athen-ian audience. Sophis t ry m a y be timeless, but in some of the l o n g speeches using jumbled logic the p l a y tended to drag .

This was not the fault of the actors who used b o m b a s t and exaggera ted ac-tions to effectively create the slapstick which is a p r ime par t o f a n A r i s t o p h a n e s ' c o m e d y . F r a n k Hine as Socrates ( a l though his dic-tion was not the best), Dave Crothers as the squeaky father Strepsiades, and parti-cular ly Tom Woo p l a y i n g a homosexua l m a d e the most of their comic opportunit ies.

T H E GREATEST H I N D R A N C E to the product ion will be the weather , be-cause Vogas and his technical crew have demons t ra ted that the ou tdoor amphi-theater of Castle Park can successfully be used to s tage a p lay. The l ighting and setting combined with the na tu ra l effect of the tree s tudded hollow created an at-mosphe re na tu ra l ly suited for theater, in itself an experience to a n audience. 1 would hope that the Little Theater would con-tinue to explore this medium next year.

Given rainless and warmer weather, " T h e Clouds" will be well worth an eve-

FINE PERFORMANCE - Pheidlppidcs (Mike Vogas) eyes Sophistry (Bonnie Tompkins) in the dress rehearsal of "The Clouds." The Greek satire will end its three night run in Castle Park Amphi-theater tomorrow night.

ning spent under the clouds. If not, 1 would suggest b lankets and a thermos bottle full of w a r m i n g liquid. But even the rain won' t be able to quench the final scene when the fire of Ar i s tophanes ' wit destroys a " T h i n k e r y " built upon half-truths.

Reprinted hy permission of the Chicago Tribune

AND I DID,TOO! SEE? I MADE MV 0U)N LUNCH

E I 6 M T C A W D V B A R S I

— ( P

y - l f

p a ® 4 Hope CoUege anchor May 12. 1967

The Fifth Column $ On Campus with M a x M n a n

(By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!", "Dobie Gillis," elc.)

HOW TO GET A'S EV ALL YOUR FINAL EXAMS

In today's column, the last of the school year, I don't intend to be funny. (I have achieved this objective many times throughout the year, but this time it 's on purpose.) The hour is wrong for levity. Final exams are looming.

Have you got a chance? I say yes! I say America did not become the world's foremost producer of stove bolts and cotter pins by running away from a f ight!

You wn//pass your finals! How? By studying. How? By learning mnemonics.

Mnemonics, the science of memory aids, was, as we all know, invented by the great Greek philosopher Mnemon in 526 B.C. (This, incidentally, was only one of the inven-tions of this fer t i le Athenian. He also invented the house cat, the opposing thumb, and, most important , the s ta i r -case. Before the staircase people were forced willy-nilly to live out their lives on the ground floor, and many grew cross as bears. Especially Demosthenes who was elected Consul of Athens six times but never served because he was unable to get up to the office of the Commissioner of Oaths on the third floor to be sworn in. But a f t e r Mnemon's staircase, Demosthenes got to the third floor easy as pie —to Athens' sorrow, as it turned out. Demosthenes, his temper shortened by years of confinement to the ground floor, soon embroiled his countrymen in a series of sense-less wars with the Medes, the Pe r s i ans , and the Los Angeles Rams. This later became known as the Missouri Compromise.)

A*

But I digress. We were discussing mnemonics, which are nothing more than aids to memory— little j ingles to help you remember names, dates, and places. For example:

Columbus sailed the ocean blue In fourteen hundred ninety two. See how simple? Make up your own jingles. What , f o r

instance, came a f t e r Columbus's discovery of America? The Boston Tea Par ty , of course. Try t h i s :

Samuel Adams flang the tea Into the briny Zuyder Zee. (NOTE: The Zuyder Zee was located in Boston Harbor

until 1801 when Salmon P. Chase traded it to Holland for Alaska and two line backers.)

But I digress. Let 's get back to mnemonics. Like th i s : In nineteen hundred sixty seven Personna Blades make shaving heaven. I mention Personna because the makers of Personna

Super Stainless Steel Blades are the sponsors of this column. If I may get a little misty in this, the final column of the school year, may I say it 's been a pleasure working for Personna? May I say f u r t h e r that i t 's been an even grea te r p leasure work ing f o r you, the u n d e r g r a d s of America? You've been a most sa t isfactory audience, and I'm going to miss you this summer. In fact , I'd ask you all to come visit me except there is no access to my room. The makers of Personna, a f t e r I missed several deadlines, walled me in. I have no doors or windows—only a mail slot. I slip the columns out ; they slip in Personnas and such food as can go through a mail slot. (Fo r the past six months I've been living on a f t e r dinner mints . )

I am only having my little joke. The makers of Personna have not walled me in, for they are good and t rue and gleaming and c o n s t a n t - a s good and t rue and gleaming and constant as the blades they make—and I wish to s ta te publicly that I will always hold them in the highest esteem, no matter how my suit for back wages comes out.

And so, to close the year, I give you one last mnemonic: Study hard and pass with honors, And always shave with good Personnors!

• • * © 19 6 7 , M a x S h u l m a n

Personna and Personna's partner in luxury shaving, Burma-Shave, regular or menthol, have enjoyed bring-l ^ ? o u another year of Max's uncensored and uninhih-Med column. We thank you for supporting our products; we tcish you luck in your exams and in all your other enterprises.

The Tulip Noire By Gordv Korstange

Note: This column tells of a search for evil in allegorical terms. The Tulip Noire is a symbol for what-ever you want it to be.

One m e m o r a b l e d a y in May S a m m y Radian t woke up and knew that the time had come. He h a d put up with it too long, this l and which only grew br ight flow-ers. Within minutes he had dress-ed in the c u s t o m a r y white go-go boots , white shirt and levis, yel-low sunglasses , and white Hotel Dixie tablecloth-cape. In all his rad ia l r ad iance S a m m y Radiant set forth in search of the mys-terious Tulip Noire ( o r Black Tulip as some have called it).

HIS FIRST STOP was thetour-ist-laden pa rk , gaily decorated in br ight tulips, gold fish, and H a w a i i a n shirts. S a m m y took a f lying leap and plummeted into a tulip bed. The f r a g r a n t incense of the flowers m a d e him nox ious as he sc rambled th rough the rows. But just as the hunt seemed over he heard a shrill voice cry "Mom-my, m o m m y , look at the Dutch boy and his white cos tume!"

" S h u d d u p H a r r y ya s tup id je rk of a h u s b a n d , Can ' t ya see it's one of them crazy hippies. Now you go get the car , and we'll see if we can find a J o h n . "

Aha!" thought S a m m y , " T h e r e are traces of the Tulip Noire here. I am persever ing a long the correct hypo tenuse . "

IN A FLASH he was off to the next patch of tulips, one which

Student Recital Presented Next Thursday

The Hope College music de-par tment will present a student recital next T h u r s d a y at 7 :00 p.m. in Dimnent Memoria l Chapel .

The p r o g r a m will begin with Ceasa r F r a n c k ' s " C h o r a l e in B M i n o r " per formed by organis t William Wilson. This will be fol-lowed by " S o n a t a for Flute and P i a n o " by Eldon Burton, p layed by flutist Caro l Gaulett and pianist F r a n Webinga. Next, Giacomo Puccini 's a r i a " F r a n c i u l l a gen-tile" will be s u n g by Amy Wilson, lyric s o p r a n o , who will be ac-compan ied by Gloria Renkes.

Harpis t Virginia Y o u n g and violinist Glenys Dav idson will then pe r fo rm Marcel Tourn ie r ' s "Deux Preludes Romant iques et Ha rpe Opus 17." The p r o g r a m will conclude with Debussy 's " F e u x d' art ifice" ( F i r e w o r k s ) p layed by pianist Charles Wolvoord.

s u r r o u n d e d a n e a r b y church. He was s t r id ing a r o u n d the build-ing, his eyes on the flowers, when a powerful , s o n o r o u s voice in-terrupted him.

" W h y are you here my son?" "Grea t regrets your minis-

tership, but 1 a m sea rch ing for the Tulip Noi re . "

" I am so r ry , my boy. All our f lowers and all the church flow-ers in town a re pure white."

" H e r e is one that looks pale yel low."

" Y o u must be mis taken, for it is as white as the rest of them. Perhaps those glasses you have on "

HIS LAST words were unhea rd , for S a m m y s t reaked a w a y , still certain he was in the right orbit. He was wrong , because as he entered a section p r edominan t ly inhabited by Mexicans there were no tulips at all.

" W h y ? " S a m m y asked a man . "Well the tulips, they say , will

not grow where we live so they plant them in other places. The fumes f rom the pickle factory kill the flowers before they b l o o m . "

SAMMY HEARD much the s a m e tale all d a y long as he flew f rom one pa r t of town to ano ther . At dusk , h a v i n g looked in va in , he was w a n d e r i n g dejectedly down m a i n street, imperv ious to a pass-ing p a r a d e , when an old m a n with a white bea rd suddenly g r a b b e d him.

" Y o u are search ing for the Black Tulip, a r e you no t?"

" Yes, but how did. . . "

" N E V E R MIND," the g r ay -beard interrupted, " y o u will not find it where you are looking. The d a r k one does not g row a b o v e g r o u n d yet, but it is there, under the feet of the marche r s and the wheels of the teenagers; on the outskir ts of town , ready to burs t forth when the weather is right. It g rows everywhere and nowhere, but it exists. You have only to open y o u r eyes ."

S a m m y Radian t opened his eyes, and the rain began to fall. As he hurr ied home, white ga r -ments m u d d y and wet, he noticed thaL the wind-driven ra in was al-reaoy ba t te r ing the tulips to the g r o u n d .

Spanish Department Presents Comedy in Little Theater

Hope College's Span i sh depart-ment will present the three act comedy " J u e g o de Ninos (Chil-dren ' s G a m e ) " by the contem-p o r a r y Span i sh p l aywr igh t Vic-tor Ruiz Ir iar te next Monday and Tuesdav in Hope ' s Little Theater.

T H E PRODUCTION, t o b e p r e sented entirely in Span i sh , deals with the h u m o r o u s and pa inful p rob lems of a family in Madr id .

Dr. Huber t P. Weller, assis tant p rofessor of Spanish , is directing the p lay with Bernice Van Fngen, a senior speech m a j o r , se rv ing as

ass is tant director, and B a r b a r a

Brunson , a lso a senior speech m a j o r , se rv ing as technical director.

Evening pe r fo rmances will be presented at 8 p .m. on M o n d a y and Tuesday for the Hope Col-lege student b o d y and the Spanish speak ing people in Hol land and the s u r r o u n d i n g a rea . Also after n o o n p e r f o r m a n c e s will be given at 2 p.m. for s e c o n d a r y school and college students in Spanish.

T H E CAST FOR the p lay will include Alan Ver Schure, Karen Gilbert, J o n a t h a n Hearne , Marty Howell, Rosalie Hudnut , Robin Huybregtse , T o n y Mock and Ka thy Padgett .

Instrumentalists,Women's Choir Perform Tonight

The Hope College music depart-ment will present a concert of B r a h m s next F r i d a y at 8 :15 p.m. in Dimnent Memoria l Chapel as a tribute to Esther M a c F a r l a n e Snow.

The first selection on the pro-g r a m will be "Waltzes for Piano Duet, Opus 3 9 , " with Mrs. Edna Ter Molen and Dr. An thony Kooi-ker as the featured pianists . Next Char les Aschbrenner , will per-form " F i v e Songs for Sop rano : Wir wandelten, Der Schmied, Im-

mer leiser wird mein Schlummer , Therese, and Botschaf t . "

The p r o g r a m will close with " F o u r Songs for Women's Chor-us, Two H o r n s a n d H a r p , Opus 17: Est tont ein voller Harfenk-l ang . Come Away Death, Der Gartner , and G e s a n g aus F i n g a l . " These selections will feature the Hope College Women's Chorus , Robert Cecil and T h o m Working p l a y i n g French horn , and Mrs. Dulcie Bar low on the ha rp , under the direction of Dr. Kooiker .

AMBASSADOR Shop Styles In Accordance With The Tastes of

Discriminating Young Men

Tickets for the per formances a re ava i l ab le at the Downtown Dis-count Store, 4 3 E. 8th St. and the " S a n Diego" Record Shop, 76 E. 8th St.

Opera Offered At Holland High Next Week

The speech and music d e p a n -ments will co l l abora te to present a musical p r o g r a m fea tur ing .1. S. Bach 's Concerto No. 2 in C m a j o r for two ha rps i cho rds and orches t ra and Curt Weill's ope ra , " D o w n in the Val ley ." This pro-g r a m will be presented at the Hol-land High aud i to r ium next Wednesday, T h u r s d a y and Fri-d a y at 8 :15 p.m.

"Down in the Val ley" is being staged by George Ralph of the speech depar tment with the mu-sic for the opera being provided by the orches t ra under the di-rection of Dr. Morette Rider. The o p e r a ' s cho rus will be directed by J ames Tallis.

Sets for the opera were design-ed by Richard Casler, who is a profess iona l set designer work-ing with the speech depar tment in the p roduc t ion of its p lays .

Those p l ay ing m a j o r roles in the opera are Tom Griffin play-ing the hero Brack, Andrea Mar-tin p l a y i n g the heroine Jinnie, Dirk Walvoord p o r t r a y i n g the vil-l ian Tom Bouche, and Harvey Lucas na r r a t i ng .

Student Church Elects New T rustees

Members of the Student Church Boa rd of Trustees for next year were elected at a congrega t iona l meeting held last S u n d a y af-ternoon.

Those chosen f rom next yea r ' s senior c lass were F loyd Brady , Dennis F a r m e r , Paul H a r t m a n , Jer ry Poor t inga , Peter Smith, Jim Suther land , Bob T h o m p s o n and Renee Ziegler.

The j u n i o r s elected were N o r m Gibson, L a u r a H a m m o n , Ron Hook , Cal Mur ray , N o r m Mol, J a n Sebens, Rick Veenstra, Ba rb T immer and Sally Ticknor .

Next y e a r ' s s o p h o m o r e Trust-ees will be Br ian C l a p h a m , Dave Dethmers, Debbie De Young , Bob Kieft, Ca ro l Koterski , Andy Mul-der, Dave Gouwens and K a t h y DeWitt.

May 12. 1967 Hope CoUege anchor Page 1

Student Church Activities:

More Than Sunday Worship

MODERN ART—Art instructor Delbert Michel explains a work to David Utzinger. Mr. Michel finds the theme for most of his painting in landscapes.

Michel Discovers Themes Within His Environment

By Nancy Newman In- a search for mater ia l for

paint ings m a n y artists tu rn tot-ally to their imag ina t ions . Del-bert Michel, instructor of art at Hope College, turns to his en-viornment .

LANDSCAPE AND dune themes constitute the m a j o r por-tion of his work. In the dunes and the l andscape Mr. Michel finds the greatest var ie ty of " p u r e fo rm"—visua l re la t ionships of color, line, lights and d a r k s , tex-ture, shapes and space.

T h r o u g h an ordered a r range-ment of these re la t ionships Mr. Michel feels he is able to commun-icate someth ing of himself. His interest is not directly in his en-vironment .

He says ra ther , "My p r i m a r y interest is in express ing my re-action to my env i ronment and not my env i ronment itself. This reaction is best expressed by me th rough ' p u r e fo rm. ' " Thus, ' " E v e n though I work f r o m land-scape themes, I consider myself to be an abs t rac t pa in te r , " he concludes.

AS AN ABSTRACT painter treating fo rms instead of objects, Mr. Michel must be concerned with the accuracy of the v isua l state-, ment m a d e by these fo rms iu a paint ing. Certain media are more accurate for one type of state-ment than another . For instance, oil paint sugges ts to Mr. Michel " a n interest in thick textural b rush strokes and in the pliabili ty of the paint itself."

Because acryl ic paints dry fast-er however, they s t imulate spon-taneity in paint appl icat ion. They also allow for thin t r anspa ren t glazes which are more difficult to achieve with oils. Thus the type of paint Mr. Michel uses de-termines to some extent the effect achieved in his pa in t ing .

On combin ing his roles as teach-er and artist , Mr. Michel says that the one contr ibutes to the other. " I sometimes think I get more f rom the s tudents than I give them. By getting involved in the s tudents ' work it is easier to get involved in my own work and vice versa .

Student Church Seeks Clothes For Needy

The Missions Commit tee of the Hope College Student Church un-der the leadersh ip of Edith Byers, is conduct ing a b o o k a n d clothes dr ive for the Apache Reformed Church in Apache, Ok lahoma .

Boxes placed in the d o r m s yes-terday will r emain there for the next two weeks, and students who wish to d o n a t e b o o k s o r clothes can place their gifts in the boxes.

The clothes will be sold at a small clothing store in Apache, and the books will be used to build a library.

According to Miss Byers, the Committee hopes that students will support this last drive as enthus-iastically as they have all the other activities of this year.

"WE'RE ALL ENGAGED in this search for visual fo rm and we feed upon the exchange of ideas. Teaching and work ing in art a re the s ame thing. They are both involved in the search for ideas in visual f o r m . "

Editor's note: The following is the statement of policy regarding Opus, the Hope College campus literary magazine. The statement was approved at a meeting of the Communications Board Thurs-day, May 4.

1. The C o m m u n i c a t i o n s Board shall choose the editor of Opus, and he shal l appo in t two to four more editors.

2. The editor will be selected by the C o m m u n i c a t i o n s Board in May f rom nomina t ions and appl ica t ions presented to it.

3. TWO ADVISORS shall be appointed in May ( o n e e a c h y e a r ) for two V2 year terms. These ad-visors shal l be appoin ted by the editors. The names of the edi-tors and adv i so r s shall be re-ported to the Communica t ions Boa rd by mid-May.

4. One a d v i s o r shal l be a mem-ber of the English depar tment , and one f rom a n y other depart-ment.

5. Advisors shal l have the re-sponsibil i ty for all Opus publi-cations. In the event of disagree-ment between the edi tors and the adv i sors , the Communica t ions Board shal l resolve the dispute.

6. S E C R E T A R I A L H E L P s h a l l be p rov ided for in budget re-quests. The secretary will be em-ployed to type manusc r ip t s onto stencils for the bi-monthly issues.

" T h e problem is that most stu-dents think that the Student Church is just a worship service on S u n d a y , " commented Wes Mi-chaelson , c h a i r m a n of the Stu-dent Church B o a r d of Trustees, as he described the v a r i o u s ac-tivities carr ied on by the Student Church in its first year of ope-rat ion.

HE F E L T that since students do not know m a n y people in town, they usua l ly don ' t "feel as t hough they are a part of the c o n g r e g a t i o n " when they at-tend churches in Hol land. Mi-chaelson commented , "We, (the Student Church) are filling a real void on c a m p u s . " He said that if the Student Church did not ex-ist, m a n y of its members would not go to church at all on Sun-days .

In addi t ion to the Sunday morn-ing worship services, the Student Church sponso r s var ied activities, r a n g i n g f rom the Open F o r u m on compu l so ry chapel to estab-lishing a coffeehouse in downtown Hol l and and tu tor ing underpr iv i -leged children in Grand Rapids.

Several committees coord ina te the Student Church . The worship committee, cha i red by Cra ig Hol-leman, is in c h a r g e of the Sunday m o r n i n g worsh ip services, and a lso conducts Wednesday night

7. A competent qualif ied writer or teacher not closely associated with the school shall be chosen by the editors and adv isors to judge prose a n d poetry m a n u -scripts, and to give a lecture in the spr ing of the school year . The lecture shal l emphasize a re-view/criticism of the works judged . The j u d g e shal l receive an h o n o r a r i u m for his work and his travel.

8. The E e r d m a n ' s Li terary Award money shall be used ex-clusively for Opus prizes, and these prizes shal l be determined by the outside judge.

9. T H E EDITORIAL PROCE-D U R E shall be that the editors shal l announce deadlines, adver-tise and collect manuscr ip t s for Opus, and shal l distribute month-ly ( o r b i -month ly) m i m e o g r a p h e d editions which shall conta in all mater ia l submitted except that which is deemed mora l l y objec-t ionable by the editors and ad-visors . The printed Opus will con-tain the mate r ia l selected as prize-wor thy by the judge, plus that ma-terial deemed excellent by the ed-itors and adv isors .

10. Advisors shall bear the re-sponsibil i ty fo r contract ing the printer , init iat ing requisit ions, au thor iz ing the pr in t ing of Opus, and shall in form the printer of this policy.

Vespers Services in the Chapei . It has initiated v a r i o u s "exper i -men ta l " services, such as the Ser-vice of Movement , emp loy ing m o d e r n dance as a m e a n s of worship , and a session of d ra -mat ic readings .

The s tudy committee h a s start-ed several discussion g r o u p s to explore such topics as C.S. Lewis' b o o k " F o u r Loves ," the film " L a S t r a d a " a n d the ideas of Deitrich Bonhoeffer , Paul Tourn ie r and other c o n t e m p o r a r y Chr is t ian

writers. Also, they have b rough t in several speakers , such as Don De Young and Fa the r Beame.

Hope s tudents can take a d v a n -tage of the oppor tun i ty offered by the work council to encounter s o m e of the basic social p rob lems of today by tutor ing and " jus t bas ical ly be f r i end ing" chi ldren at-tending the F rank l in School in G r a n d Rapids. The work council a l so a r r a n g e s part ies and enter-ta inment for mental ly re tarded children at the Ford Custer State Home.

N E X T YEAR the Council p lans to establish a coffeehouse in Hol-l and where high school students can " g o and talk with older people honestly a b o u t th ings . "

Tr ips to impover ished a reas such as Anneville, Ky. and a reas of New York City have been o rga -nized by the Student Church miss ions committee to give Hope students exposure to these a reas .

The trustees of the Student Church drew up an or ig inal creed instead of adop t ing an exist ing Chris t ian creed because "we want-ed a creed of our own and wanted to go t h rough the experience of wri t ing it. It was much h a r d e r than

adop t ing one of the existing creeds, such as the Apostle's Creed , " accord ing to one Trustee

T H E NEW BOARD of Trustees, elected last Sunday , will have to decide whether the Student Church will continue to have guest speak-ers for the major i ty of Sunday services or hire a full-time min-ister to preach three Sundays a month . College Chapla in William Hil legonds currently acts as part-time minister to the Student Church.

Many students who are protest-ing compu l so ry Chapel arguethat the high a t tendance at Student Church indicates that students worsh ip voluntar i ly and need not be forced to attend religious ser-vices by the College. The atten-dance isconsistently 450-600 wor-shippers . Caro l Koterski, a mem-ber of the g r o u p that protested compu l so ry ichapel by retaining chapel slips, commented "TheStu-dent Church channels the religious commitment which the student makes voluntar i ly . Everything positive that could come out of that whole compul so ry chapel protest can be expressed volun-tar i ly th rough activities of the Student C h u r c h . "

Michaelson observed that the quest ion " Is there interest in Christ on this c a m p u s ? " could be answer-ed b y the Student Church rather than by c o m p u l s o r y chapel.

Reverend Hil legonds mirrored the preva i l ing opinion of the Stu-dent Church on c a m p u s when he said , "If success is measured in terms of a number of people getting a fresh insight into what the Church really is then yes, the Student Church has succeeded."

Review of the News

Final Exam Schedule Friday, May 26

1:15 2 TT 3:15 . . 1 TT

Saturday, May 27

10:15.. .. 3 TT 1:15 . . . . 4 MWF

Monday, May 29

7:45.. . 1 MWF 10:15 . . 6 TT 2:00 . . German,

French, Spanish

Tuesday, May 31

1:15 6 MWF 3:15 4 TT

Wednesday, May 31

7:45 3 MWF 10:15 . . . 7 TT 2:00 5 MWF

Thursday, June 1

7:45 7 MWF 10:15 5 TT 2:00 . .. 2 MWF

V i g i l f o r P e a c e in Vietnam

Pine Grove - Tuesday - 12:15-1:15

Vietnam In near ly two weeks of bat-

tle, the United States Marines have dr iven three Nor th Vi-e tnamese regiments off three hills ove r look ing the key U.S. base at Khe Sanh. The Ma-rines killed more than 1,000 Vietpong while losing 157 of their number .

Washington The United States h a s begun

to wi thdraw g r o u n d and air forces f rom Europe. N e a r l y 3 5 , 0 0 0 men, or fourteen per cent of American t roops now s ta t ioned in Ge rmany , a re be-ing wi thd rawn because of the s t ra in of the war in Vietnam on h o m e forces.

Bri tain has a lso announced its intention to pull back 5 ,0001 men.

Korea President C h u n g Hee Park

has been elected by a m a j o r i t y S: of one million votes. The vic-•S tory, which is seen by s o m e

observers as a m a j o r victory :$ for the United States, might $ e n c o u r a g e President P a r k ' s •S r u m o r e d intentions to send

5 0 , 0 0 0 more K o r e a n t roops $; to Vietnam. This would m o r e

than double the present K o r e a n S cont ingent in the war .

f.; New Jersey S President J o h n s o n ' s p o p u l a r -

ity is on the rise aga in . The

v. Jv

Gallup poll, a sk ing "Do you a p p r o v e or d i s a p p r o v e of the way Mr. J o h n s o n is handl ing his j o b , " found in March that 45 per cent a p p r o v e d while 42 per cent d i sapproved . Today, 4 8 per cent a p p r o v e d "and 37 per cent d i s app roved .

Kentucky Racial unrest forced cancel-

la t ion of a p a r a d e and other festivities held annua l ly before the runn ing of the Kentucky Derby. More Na t iona l Guards-men were ordered into Louis-ville to ma in t a in order on Derby Day. The Negro popu-lace was d e m a n d i n g an "open h o u s i n g " ordinance .

New York Somewhat less than eight

mon ths after it was created, The New York World Journa l Tr ibune collapsed on May 5. Its owners sa id that it was forced to shut down because of l a b o r un ion ha rassment .

In Syracuse, there were stag-ed walkouts and one group s a n g "We Shall Overcome" th roughou t the speech by form-er Ala. Gove rno r George Wal-lace. In Pi t tsburgh, 1,000 pick-ets marched outside of his ho-tel, and derided him as a racist. At Dar tmouth College students mobbed the G o v e r n o r ' s car and were finally dispersed by club-swinging police.

a; :v • • ly

tt

THE STUDENT CHURCH Corporate Worship at 10:45 a.m.

Sunday, May 14

Dimnent Chapel

Participating as leaders in worship: Preacher: Chaplain Hillegonds

Sermon: "The Theology of a Myth anc1 One-HalfM

Organist: Mr. Roger Davis Ushers: Kappa Delta Chi

7:00 P.M. In the Pine Grove: Informal discussion on "Sex and the College Student"

led by Dr. Milton Cudney of Western Michigan University.

Communications Board Sets

New Policy Concerning Opus

Page « Hope CoUege anchor May 12. 1967

Loses at Valpo

Hope Crushes Olivet Trackmen By Andy Mulder

Last S a i u r a a y o u r cindermen certainly earned the reputat ion of being " the F ly ing Dutchmen." With fourteen first, eleven seconds, and seven thirds, they trounced Olivet, 110-26. They fared less well at a meet at V a l p a r a i s o Un-iversity, f inishing third.

In themi le run , the Doug Forms-ma-Rick Bruggers d u o once aga in took first and second. P^ormsma turned in a 4:21.7, which is only 1.7 seconds off his MIAA record.

THE 4 4 0 RELAY team, con-sisting of Walt Reed, Jeff Kling, Paul Sloan and Dave T h o m a s , could not be caught b y Olivet. The winning time was 44.4 in this event. An equal ly successful event was the 100 yd. da sh . T h o m a s , who is p r imar i ly a hurdler , took first with a 10.4.

A first, second, and third were captured by Hope ' s 880 squad . Led by Steve Reyman with a 1:59.8, there came Dick F r a n k with 2:01 and Dan Colenbrander with 2:03. In the 4 4 0 yd. dash, Hope was led by Mike Pal ia tsos 's

Tennis Team Gains Victories With Ease

The tennis team easily downed Olivet Sa tu rday and defeated Central Michigan Tuesday to stretch its record to 6-1 since the spring trip.

The squad defeated Olivet 9-0, losing only nine individual games. Posting wins without the loss of a g a m e were Ron Visscher, John Schadler , and Tibor Safar in singles; and the doubles teams of Visscher and Jeff Green, and Schadler and Craig Holleman.

Central Michigan was defeated 7-2, with five matches extended to three sets. Winning three set vic-tories were Cra ig W o r k m a n and Holleman in singles, and Doug Barrow and W o r k m a n in doubles.

Comic relief was provided in the Central Michigan match when Craig Hol leman was hit on the back of the head by a high-hit ball he was chas ing.

51.7, which took first, and Bill C o o k ' s third place time of 52.4.

The 120 yd. high hurdles was the only t rack event in which Hope did not take a first. Olivet's Loft r a n a 15.6. Jeff Hol lenbach captured second place hono r s with a 15.8. Denny Anderson was third with a time of 17.3.

FORMSMA A N D 'Richard Bis-sen were Hope ' s winners in the two mile competit ion. F o r m s m a , r u n n i n g nine seconds a b o v e his best time, turned in a respectable 9:51.1 . Bissen's 10:28.4 was fast enough to win second place hon-ors. Sprinters Reed and Kling were first and third place win-ners in the 2 2 0 dash. Reed's time of 22 .7 was followed by Kling 's 23 .2 . In the 330 yd. hurdles, T h o m a s was the first place win-ner with a 39 .1 time. F r a n k , Rey-m a n , Co lenbrande r and Pal iatsos swept the mile relay with a 3:29.8.

In the field competition, Hope failed to finish first in only one event—high jump. Shot putters Les Cole a n d Terry Childs swept first and second place? with heaves of 41 feet 11 inches and 41 feet 5 inches. In the pole vaul t , Hope car r ied all three places. Bill Bek-ker ing ' s 12 foot vaul t took first. Fo l lowing him were two vaul ts of 11 feet by Ken Feit and Dave Dui tsman.

COLE A N D Tabi Kah le r were the first and second in the discus

with th rows of 119 feet 11% inches and 115 feet 71/2 inches. Doug Nichols, Dui tsman, a n d M i n g c a r -ried a w a y the three places in the javel in event. Nichols ' heave of 182 feet 5 inches overwhelmed Olivet.

In the b r o a d jump , Mike Oonk took an easy first with a leap of 20 feet 6 3 /4 inches. Paul Sloan and Olivet's entree tied for third with j u m p s of 19 feet 10 3 /4 inches. High jumper Childs earned a second place finish for Hope with a 5 feet 8 inch jump.

AT VALPARAISO, the host school totaled 73 points to cop first place laurels, while Manches-ter College took runner -up hon-ors with 56. The Orange and Blue thinclads m a n a g e d 52 points.

Hope 's N o r m Klein paced the field in the long j u m p with a leap of 20 feet, 8 inches. Dash ing to victory in the 440 -ya rde r was Mike Pal iatsos, who b roke the tape in 51.9. Another first place for Hope was recorded by Doug F o r m s m a in the two-mile run. F o r m s m a ran the dis tance in 9:42.7.

T H E H I G H L I G H T o f the meet for Hope came when the Dutch placed 1-2-3 in the javel in event. Doug Nichols won it with a toss of 180 feet, 3 inches, while Taibi Kah le r and Dave Dui t sman took second and third.

MAY DAY FESTIYITIES— May Day queen Sue Albers smiles after being crowned at the May Day ceremony last Friday afternoon. To her right are court members (1. to r.) Linda Patterson, Sandy Tomlinson and Gretchen VanderWerf. to her left are Gene Pearson and court members Jane Kallemyn and Linda Deurwaarder. In the foreground are the twelve new members of the Alcor chapter of Mortar Board.

Dutch Blast Aquinas 11-2

With Big First Inning Rally

Golf Team Splits a Pair; Eyes MIAA Field Day

Last week the Hope College golf team split a pa i r of mat-ches which m a r k e d the end of league competit ion. The golfers finished with a 1 - 6 record, giv-ing them sixth place in the MIAA.

A hot-shoot ing Albion golf team downed Hope 15 - 0 in a match p layed at Duck Lake Coun t ry Club last F r iday . F r e s h m a n golfer Sluinger led Albion with a 72 while Fred Muller and George Cook paced Hope with 78 and 80 respectively.

In a match played last Mon-

d a y at the American Legion Golf Course in Hol land, the Hopel ink-sters scored a 1 5 - 0 victory over Olivet. F r e s h m a n Fred Mul-ler a g a i n led the Hope team with a 78. George Cook, Chuck Lie-der, Willy Jackson and Denny Bobeldyk followed with scores of 85, 88 and 89 respectively.

It all s tar ted when little Dave Abel led off with a walk. Sever-al minutes later, Abel drew anoth-er walk, which forced in the s ixth run of the first inning, and the Dutch baseba l le rs were on their way to an easy 11-2 t r iumph over Aqu inas College T u e s d a y .

ALL TOLD, HOPE collected six bases on bal ls and three hits in that big first inning. Catcher Tom Pelon un loaded a bases-loaded single to dr ive ac ross a pa i r of runs, and centerfielder Don Troos t plated ano ther with his line hit.

The Dutch added two runs in the third on hits by Dan Krueger

I

GO, BIG DUTCH!—Hope students Steve Larkin (far left) and Gretchen Paalman (far right) cheer for Big Dutch, the Hope College entry in Turtle International in Washington. Michigan Senators Philip Hart and Robert Griffen augment the cheering section. The turtle race was held to raise funds for the Muscular Dystrophy Drive. Hope's turtle did not reach the finals.

BAY VIEW SUMMER COLLEGE Education Recreation

plus

1967 Sessipn June 26—August 18

For Catalog and Information Write:

Dr. Keith J. Fennimore, Dean

Albion College Albion, Michigan

and Abel and a wild pitch. Three more Hope b a s e r u n n e r s crossed the p a y stat ion in the sixth f rame. Denny F a r m e r tripled to deep right-center a n d scored on Char -lie L a n g e l a n d ' s line single to left. L a n g e l a n d stole second and scor-ed on an RBI hit by Troos t , who tallied later on a doub le steal.

L E F T Y MARK J O H N S O N got credit for the v ic tory , a n d rightly so. The jun io r f rom Hami l ton al-lowed just three hits in six shut-out innings and struck out eleven Aqu inas batters .

The win put the Dutch a b o v e the . 5 0 0 m a r k with an 11-10-1 record. It was the ninth win in the last eleven g a m e s for Hope.

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 identification techniques during summer period. High level executive management training courses given to qualified appl icants. Salary$105 per wk. for first 3 wks. $130 per wk. plus bonuses starting 4th week.

SCHOLARSHIPS

win one of 15 $1,000

scholarships

TRAVEL

Work anywhere in U.S. or Canada. Qualified students may work overseas.

SEE EUROPE Win all expense paid holi-day in Europefor an entire week.

HIGH PAY

earn at least $1,500 for the summer student — make

$3,000 and more.

Best Positions Going Fast!

Call Today For Appointment

9:00 A.M. — 1:00 P.M. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. & IND. . . . Mr. Schmitt . . . A.C. 616 459-5079 MILWAUKEE, WIS. & IOWA Mr. Bergman A.C. 414 276-4119 CHICAGO LOOP & SO. ILL Mr. Vass A.C. 312 346-6108 CHICAGO LOOP Ml NO. ILL Mr. Anderson A.C. 312 782-4362

We have offices located in most cities, however, please contact our district offices listed above for an appointment.