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03-24-1943

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itMMitiiiiPi-- LVI-12 Hope Will Enter In Five Events at Tiffin Tournament The final annual trip for the advanced members of the debate squad will be the trip to the Pro- vincial Tournament of Pi Kappa Delta, scheduled this year for Heidelberg College, Tiffin, Ohio April 2 and 3. Hope will be represented in five events: In men's debate, by Cal DeVries and Harland Steele (who were teamed at the '.Manchester tourna- ment, and won 5 out of 6 debates). In women's debate, by Corinne Pool and Vivian Tardiff (who at Manchester won all five of the debates in which they took part). In men's oratory, by Harland Steele. In women's oratory, by Vivian Tardiff. In women's extemporaneous speaking, by Corinne Pool. Students will draw two topics one hour prior to speaking, choose one and speak from six to eight minutes. The subject for discus- sion in this contest is Inflation. There are five subdivisions from which the topics will be chosen: Bonds, Taxes, Price Control, Ra- Official Publication of the Students of Hope College at Holland. Michigan Custer Calls I Musical Arts Club i Navy V-12 Tests 25 E.R.C. B0 y»l Sp0nS0rS Vespe " Those Completing Nine Weeks Will Set Full Credit March 24, 1943 Sunday afternoon, March 21, at four o'clock, the Musical Arts club sponsored a Vesper service in the Hope Memorial Chapel. After the processional by the Will Be April 2 Qualifying tests for applicants for the new Navy College Training Program, V-12, will be conducted throughout the country Friday, rhorw>i r u • a « ~ I schools and colleges apel Choir, Anna Ruth Poppen are being requested to cooperate Twenty-five members of the P |aye d ^ onjan golo, "Pastel" by by administering the test to their Army Enlisted Reserve Corps have ^ Girls' Glee club I students. received their orders to report a t * wo T 8election8 . "^sus. Our From those who take the test the Fort Custer on March 29th. Fol- J?™ b y J ^ e 1 8 'i nd " G,or y Be to Navy will eventually select students lowing preliminary classification, on H ^ h ^y Tschaikowski, di- for the new program. Those accent- each of them will be sent to the TV* by n M "- Snow and wcompa- ed will take their college trainimr Replacement Training Center for\ nied . hy Barb ara Tazelaar. An un- while on active duty, in uniform I * - • a Six Chem Students Receive Scholarships which he is best qualified. 'ed. "^"^hn'Mr^ceiving pay and under general training he will receive will be de- L 0 " of Son « wa8 ««ng by military discipline. Upon comple- termined by the academic work he ^ Chnstie, accompanied on the tion of their college trainimr thev has had in college. Each of the|l l ® r P, by F | ul,e r- Mr. Robert | will receive further training lead- Fifty per cent those elected will start their group has been assigned the rankL W - C * vanau » h Erected the choir ing to commissions. Fifty percent of P riva te. »nT. Tertms Noble's "Souls of the of those elects will Those leaving Hope are: Bob I Brouwer sang I college work in July, and the re- Barkema, Donald Battjes, Gordon , „ ad ' K,nd, y Li » ht " b y Hawliy, Uainder in November Brewer, Glenn Bruggers, Harvey J 01 , ed b y an or « an 80,0 B ™«-\ The new proirram will «kn n K Buter, Paul Dame, George Hutch- ^ 8 intercession," by Adelaide L,^ most 0 ? a ' 8 ® ab " inson, Anthony kempker, John I Warn ^ he -- The Program closed I ^ w enlirt^inttrlT . T Kleis, Howard Koop, Charles Mar- ) the 8,n 8i n 8: "Now the Day rine cor reserv ' " thn V> an ^ ' tindale, Seymour Padnos, Dick 0ver -" A collection was taken ii 8ted j th . ' ^. 0 ® n ' Pfeifer, Roger Rietburg, Dob Row- at the c,08 « the service for the ^ ' ' s Re " an, Arthur Slager, Preston Steg- beneftt of the ^ Cross. c 0 7n g .r Cn.Tr t *™ enga, Paul Van Dort, Clarence Van Chainna n of the program was an( j h ' . | '? ar . pre erence ' Liere, Hu.h Van Order, Bob Van| B f- Dee Foiensbee. and the Zanten. Bob Van Zyl. ClarenrP U8her8 were charge of Calvin v. the U - S - light- Zyl, Clarence. . Wagner, Jim Wierenga and Jack | Vnes. Yoemans. Since those E.R.C. boys who are Naval Reserve. Present V-7 students who have more than one term to complete , leaving will have completed "ntne '''^PP 4 D.I*. Choos.* ' ur will be placed on ac- ' At a meeting on Thursday eve- 8ame date a8 V " 12 students. Those ning, March 18, of the Forensic p 7 8 t uden t8 who have one term Newsdroos Council, consisting of the officers 0r ,e88 ^ com P ,e te for a degree HeWSdrOpi of Pi Kappa Delta and their spon- may ren,a,n on inac t iv e duty in the Bob Fopma, graduate of 1942,; since the Kraler dininc fuilitie. S0^, Profe8sor Schrier, the follow- k 0 ' 1 ® 816 , they 1 ;; ,v j e b e « n attending. 10 has this year been at the Uni- i including Aunt Bee have been I" 8 8 t u d e n t s w e r e elec te<i into mem- Students enrolled in the V-5 pro- rsit. of Cincinnati on a math -ed out to North' s Z CoZ ^ who versity teaching scholarship, recently re- ceived an appointment to teach the same subject at Marietta College, Marietta, Ohio, under the Array Air Corps Cadet Training Pro- gram. Frances Koeman, nurse at Van Vleck Hall, has been forced to give up her duties and return home be- cause of an attack of rheumatic fever. This has also meant the dis- continuance of the Home Nursing Course which Frances had been teaching for girls on the campus. The Girls' Glee Club will sing in the Chapel this evening at the program sponsored by the women of the local churches featuring Dr. Ida Scudder as chief speaker. On Sunday evening, March 28th, the group will sing at First Reformed Church. 'A Spring Concert is also being arranged but no definite plans have been announced as yet. At present, the school enrollment is 405, but after the exodus of E.R,C.U. fellows the number will have dropped to 380. To date, Knickerbocker estimates that its ranks have been depleted by twelve. Emersonian by twenty-one, and Fraternal and Cosmopolitan, twenty each. Three Fraternals, Ets Kleinjans, Russ DeVette and Gabby VanDis, have chosen to share rations with the Emersonians at their house raunity Hall to accommodate the fellows houHed there under the Array Pre-Flight training program. Denver, Colorado's worst traffic accident in years took the life of Miss Sue Toerens, Hope, '13. Miss Toerens taught in McKee, Ken- tucky, and in the Wisconsin Memo- rial Academy. She had been en- gaged in war work at Lowry Field, Denver, less than two weeks before her death. Miss C. Myrtyle Klooster, Hope 30, died at her home in Zeeland on March 16, after a lingering illness. After graduating from college Miss Klooster taught school until last year when she wa« forced to dis- continue because of ill health. -o- New Army Flight Group Housed at North Shore A new group of thirty trainees for the army flight-training serv- ice program have arrived for pilot instruction, and are being housed at the Park township airport. The college has leased the North Shore Community club across from the airport, and this building houses the air students. The community building gymna- sium is now in the process of be- ing converted into a barracks and a mess hall, and recreation rooms are being installed in the base- ment Because Hope college is an- ticipating an enlargement in the college war program, an expendi- ture of $2,000 is being appropri- ated to put the building into proper order. The ground school will be taught in the study hall of the community house. Dr. Raymond, co-ordinator of the Hope College war program, has appointed Prof. McLean in charge Council Discusses National Federation At the meeting of the Student Council Tuesday, March 16, dis- cussion centered upon the proposi- tion of joining the National Stu- dent Federation of America. No definite decision was made, but the thought was given serious consid- eration. The only other business taken up at this time was the date for the al honorary forensic fraternity! CUrren ^ co " e ^ e y ea r before being Harland Steele, John Ayers, Leon- caI | ed tor ac t»ve duty for flight ard Sibley, Elva Van Haitsma, Bar- t^aln,ng bara Tazelaar, Mary Elizabeth Aid- 0 rich, Josephine Fitz, and Betty p.. Cx J A LJ Warner. They will be initiated at rre " :>em Students Hear Address By Kruithof Rev. Bastian Kruithof, pastor of the First Reformed Church, spoke ^t the regular monthly meeting of Alpha Chi on Wednesday evening, March 17th. His topic was "The Place of Literature in the Chris- tian Ministry." THE SOLDIER'S MISSION Far years will fling the virtue and the 'vice With broadcast sweep, as they have always done; Think not his going forth will mar the sun. Or end the need for eager sac- rifice. Weep not if bullets carry his last kiss; His honored grave $ill not be cheaply won, His halted race will nor be li ly run. If our jarred country calls for such a price. For war is not a bargaining in reason; It casts the leisure sentiments aside. Our lads lay down where dan- ger stirs up Hell. All finer culture is left out a season; Deep hatreds build a breach for- lorn and wide. And bravest dust must vouch that all is well. —Phillip A. Engel, Hope '31. From Times Union, Albany, New York. (This is one of the finest war poems, written during the pres- ent war, fine enough to be pre- served in any anthology for coming generations Editorial note. Times Union.) War Work Will Highlight Entire Graduate Program a meeting to be held on April 7. Pi Kappa Delta and debate squad picture for Milestone is scheduled to be taken in Commons Room at 4:45 p. m. Thursday, March 25. —o— Frosh Debate Team Wins State Title Freshman debate teams, coached by Prof. William E. Schrier, be- came state freshman debate cham- pions by winning four out of four debates at the state freshman de- bate tournament, held at Kalama- zoo on Saturday, March 13th. ^ The • negative team, Eleanor Everse and Harriet Stegeman, beat affirmative teams from Albion Col- lege and Michigan State College. The affirmative team of Wilbur Brandli, Elaine Bielefeld, and Al- lan Staver was victorious over de- bate teams from Michigan State College and Western Michigan Col- lege of Education. This latter team has been undefeated all season and has taken part in the state tourna- Progressive Dinner Featres Annual Blue Key Party Milestone picture. After discussion, | ment at Albion and the national Tuesday, March 23, was set and tournament at Manchester the meeting adjourned. | The debates were held on the The annual Blue Key dinner was held last Saturday night, March 20, at 7:00. The guests met for the progressive dinner at the Fraternal House where the first course was /rl'lV 0 8 1 D ! V 7? presided served. They then adjourned to the at the meeting, and John Ettema ^ led the song sen-ice. The devotions Co8mo P ohtan HoU8e for the main were conducted by Art Johnson. cour8e ' and then returned to the Rev. Kruithofs talk suggested E t e r n a l House for entertainment good reading for ministers and and games which were under the budding ministers, and spoke of supervision of Harvey Mulder, gen- their responsibility to become ac- L ^ i * . • „ . quainted with the classics and to , an the affalr - keep up with current events, reli- Facu, ty guests included Prof, and gious thought, and scientific ad- Mr8 - Hin g a ' Dr - and Mrs. Klein- vances. heksel, Prof. Lampen, Prof, and Following the address, refresh- Mrs. McLean and Dr. and Mrs ments were served and an informal D J discussion with Rev. Kruithof was i ° er gUe8tS lncluded enjoyed by the members. I Harve y Mulder, Esther Van Dyke; Harvey Koop, Mary Lou Hemmes; Seymour Padnos, Norma Lemmer; Don De Fouw, Lois Jentsch; Cal Dr. Van Zyl, head of Hope's Chem department, has announced that every senior majoring in Chemistry has received a graduate assistantship. These men, six in all, will report to the various schools at which they have been accepted in June or next September. Each one will be connected directly or indirectly with some war work? Workman to Carnegie Tech Immediately after delivering his valedictory next June, Ed Work- man will head for Carnegie Teah, where he will do graduate work and part-time teaching of students sent there by the army and navy. He will receive $1,000 for a full, three- semester year's work.' Similar fellowships have been received by Earl De Witt, Wally Van Liere and Harvey Mulder. Earl will go to Ohio State University, Wally to Purdue and Harvey to* ndiana. All will do part-time teaching and graduate work and all plan to do research in the not too distant future. Immediate Research Two men wiii do research imme- diately. Gord Schrotenboer will go to Indiana this summer where he will do research with compounds connected with the malaria prob- lem. Jud Van Wyk will research in Bio-Chemistry at the St. Louis University School of Medicine. The demand for chemists is great throughout the country and Hope undoubtedly could have placed sev- eral more men if they had been available. ii W.A.L. Carnival Smaih Hit. . . And How! subject of a post-war union of the United Nations, and Hope was the, r. „ . only college, among entries from Vne8 . Ja net Clark; Dan Fyl- all over Michigan, to emerge from 8 * ra ' Wendy Rameau; Harvey the tournament with all teams un-jStahl, Hilda Van Leeuwen; Ever- ett Kleinjans, Edith Klaaren; Al fred Borgman, Roberta Roozen. defeated. Hear ye, hear ye! good gnomes and gnomies of Hope's campus and so we heard. And having heard, we got a good grip on our uppers, adjusted our ear phones, and point- ed our noses in the direction oi Carnegie gym. Once there we tripped figuratively speaking to the clink, clink, clink of the penny serenade . . . and what pleas- ant music it made! Money talks, but pennies sing to the tune of sixty- five dollars worth, in fact. A carnival of all carnivals, there was sauce for every goose and the gander that meandered. If you are artistically inclined and who isn't in this instance? — you were sure to take at least one good look at the zoological booth (Petty Show to you!) Prof Bast came early about four o'clock — to avoid the rush, which gave the booth a good name from the start. Stars of the show were "Porky- Pine" Van Duzer and "Wood-Pussy" J o l d e r s m a , and of the commissary and has named i Hope adds "wild-life sanctuary" to Robert Cavanaugh instructor of its list of accomplishments. civil air regulations. The other in- structors named are Profs. Tim- mer, Kleis, and Lampen, in charge of general service of aircraft, and Coach Hinga teaching athletics and physical training. Yeoraans Has Fun Next we come to the kissing booth V.S. to hold. A raspberry shade is very becoming to the prof. Did you enjoy it, too, Mr. Yeoraans? Between booths there was plenty of time to get your jaws in im- moveable state with candied ap- ples. Dogs being allowed in this park, plenty of the variety that go best when fed with mustard and tucked into a roll were in evidence . . . and what a slap-happy crowd! No one said a thing when man bit dog! With a little nourishment we continue to another scenter of at- traction, the fishpond. Here we find that seasoned (with salt?) fisher, Prof Kleis, and his good frau both looking fetching in dear little vel- vet bonnets atop their curls . . . oh, well, atop Mrs. Kleis' curls! Janey Waldbillig supplied the bait and the suckers did the rest. Bulls-eye for Joaie In the middle of the floor Josie Fitz takes her stand. With sleeves rolled up and determination on her brow she lets fly that wet sponge. Blub, blub — a bull's-eye! You can pitch on our side, Josie, just any time! . . . Dottie Wendt has the situation well in hand. Hope Orators Speak to at the left over there for the | Several Organizations Rogue's Gallery. We find it's true that they must have been beautiful babies, tra-la. Miss Boyd was a. In keeping with the policy of providing practical speech experi- ences before audiences and various Col lege orators have this year pre- sented their orations to different squeezable cherub, damp ringlets L™. , - j n . K,cw, types of organizations, Hope and all, O Hinga of vocal solo fame (in the eighth grade, mind you!) a regular Joe College, and so on. down the reception line. (Just as 870111)8 and in tend to present them consolation . . . or it is? . . . they at different events in the future. look much the same as you and The subject of Vivian TardifTs you . . . For those of you who oration is "Americans with Japa- believe in pixies and the like, we nese Faces," while Harland Steele elbow our way to the fortune tell- presents M The House That Sam ing booth and Madame La Naas'I Built" Both have presented their raw •iL! T ny d,d ^ A,nqnf (pun) out chunks of the notables we see Prof Van Saun, I liver in the fun home. What a per- UonVVZ^u 0 " <0r deiperi -1 son «• doesn't hurt Wm han,led W* t * * to Mrs. I to har motto ... The line form. prophecies of things to come? GarKage Is Queen With our minds at ease and sit- ting comfortably on ye olde gym floor — are you kidding? — we make way for Stamp King Koeppe and none other than "Queenie," Garbage Gabbage Gabby Van Dis! After the crowning we do a little crowing and who has a better right? led by Johnnie Kleis with "The Ivory Mischief Barbara Dee at the piano. Aa for the highlight of the eve- ning, the skita by the faculty, may we say we like you with your hair up, Prof, bat with it down, we're with you to the finish! (We are speaking generally.) orations at chapel services at Hol- land High school, at the adult group of "The School for Christian Living" at Hope Reformed Church, and at^the Rotary club. Steele spoke at the Fennville Woman's club, Fennville, on Mareh second. Monday evening, March 22, Miss Tardiff spoke at the American Le- gion Auxiliary. Both orators will speak at the Zeeland Rotary club on April 6. A debate group composed of Cal- vin De Vries and karland Steele vs. Vivian Tardiff and Corinne Pool, is scheduled to present a de- bate before the Ladies' Aid of Hope Church on Wednesday eve- ning, April 21. Dorn Birthday Dinner features "March Kids The monthly birthday dinner was held in Voorhees Wednesday night, March 10. The special table was decorated in green representing spring. The "March Kids" enter- tained with a pageant for which tfary Liz Aldrich was the reader. June Pyle represented cold, solemn Winter, followed by Education, por- trayed by Dorothea Dixon and iuth Van Bronkhorst. Old Age came hobbling in personified by ane Reus and Josie Fitz. Carefree 7 aII was played by Roses Atkins and Seith. M. L. Hemmes and Libby Romaine came in looking very de- cidedly moon-struck. Naturally, they represented Love. Finally, Spring sprang Vonnie Yntema. March 15, Dorothy Frontjes was absent from the scene. (Maybe it was because she's related to In- come Taxes.) "y" News YW HAS QUIZ PROGRAM An unusual program marked the Freshman meeting at "YW" last Tuesday evening. Elaine Mensing- er, quiz master, conducted an in- formal inquiry about names, char- acters and quotations in the Bible. Miss Gibbs, Miss Connor and Mrs, "K" displayed amazing knowledge. The booby prize was captured by Elaine Scholten with four out of four misses. The worship program was led by Dorothea Dixon, Norma Jean Wal- voord and Florence Guis. FYLSTRA SPEAKS TO YM Dan Fylstra, a graduate of Feb- niary, '43, and former vice presi- dent of Y, spoke to the YMCA on Tuesday, March 16th, about the responsibilities of today's college students. The unusual song service was led By Gregg Ke»er, with Al Van Bronkhorst at the piano. Devotions were conducted by Russ De Vette. In his talk, Dan spoke of the dou- ble responsibilities of present col- lege students to work harder at their studies and to carjy dri some kind of active Christian work. The annual YM election will be held as part of next week's meet- ing.
Transcript
Page 1: 03-24-1943

i t M M i t i i i i P i - -

LVI-12

Hope Will Enter In Five Events at Tiffin Tournament

The final annual tr ip for the

advanced members of the debate

squad will be the t r ip to the Pro-

vincial Tournament of Pi Kappa

Delta, scheduled this year fo r

Heidelberg College, Tiffin, Ohio

April 2 and 3.

Hope will be represented in five events:

In men's debate, by Cal DeVries and Harland Steele (who were teamed a t the '.Manchester tourna-ment, and won 5 out of 6 debates).

In women's debate, by Corinne Pool and Vivian Tardiff (who at Manchester won all five of the debates in which they took par t ) .

In men's oratory, by Harland Steele.

In women's oratory, by Vivian Tardiff.

In w o m e n ' s extemporaneous speaking, by Corinne Pool.

Students will draw two topics one hour prior to speaking, choose one and speak from six to eight minutes. The subject for discus-sion in this contest is Inflation. There are five subdivisions from which the topics will be chosen: Bonds, Taxes, Price Control, Ra-

Official Publication of the Students of Hope College at Holland. Michigan

Custer Calls I Musical Arts Club i Navy V-12 Tests

25 E.R.C. B0y»lSp0nS0rS Vespe" Those Completing Nine Weeks Will S e t Full Credit

March 24, 1943

Sunday afternoon, March 21, a t four o'clock, the Musical Ar ts club sponsored a Vesper service in the Hope Memorial Chapel.

Af t e r the processional by the

Will Be April 2 Qualifying tests f o r applicants

fo r the new Navy College Training Program, V-12, will be conducted throughout the country Friday,

rhorw>i r u • a « ~ I schools and colleges apel Choir, Anna Ruth Poppen are being requested to cooperate

Twenty-five members of the P | a y e d ^ on jan golo, "Paste l" by by administering the test to their Army Enlisted Reserve Corps have ^ Girls' Glee club I students.

received their orders to report a t * w o T

8 e l e c t i o n 8 . " ^ s u s . Our From those who take the test the Fort Custer on March 29th. Fol- J ? ™ b y J ^ e

18 ' i n d " G , o r y Be to Navy will eventually select students

lowing preliminary classification, o n H ^ h ^y Tschaikowski, di- f o r the new program. Those accent-each of them will be sent to the T V * b y

nM " - S n o w a n d wcompa- ed will take their college trainimr

Replacement Training Center for\nied .hy B a r b a r a Tazelaar. An un- while on active duty, in uniform I * - • a

Six Chem Students Receive Scholarships

which he is best qualified. 'ed. " ^ " ^ h n ' M r ^ c e i v i n g pay and under general training he will receive will be de- L 0 " o f S o n « w a 8 ««ng by mili tary discipline. Upon comple-termined by the academic work he ^ Chnst ie , accompanied on the tion of their college trainimr thev has had in college. Each of t h e | l l ® r P , b y F | u l , e r - Mr. Robert | will receive fu r the r training lead-

Fif ty per cent those elected will s tar t their

group has been assigned the r ankL W - C * v a n a u » h Erected the choir ing to commissions. F i f ty p e r c e n t o f P r i v a t e . »nT. Ter tms Noble's "Souls of the of those e l e c t s will

Those leaving Hope are : Bob I Brouwer sang I college work in July, and the re-Barkema, Donald Battjes, Gordon , „ a d ' K , n d , y L i » h t " b y Hawliy, U a i n d e r in November

Brewer, Glenn Bruggers, Harvey J01 , e d b y a n o r « a n 8 0 , 0 • B™«-\ The new proirram will «kn nK Buter, Paul Dame, George Hutch- ^ 8 i n t e rcess ion , " by Adelaide L , ^ m o s t 0 ? „ a '8® a b "

inson, Anthony kempker , John I W a r n ^ h e - - T h e Program closed I ^ w e n l i r t ^ i n t t r l T . T Kleis, Howard Koop, Charles Mar- ) t h e 8 , n 8i n 8: "Now the Day rine c o r r e s e r v ' "thn

V> a n ^ ' tindale, Seymour Padnos, Dick 0 v e r - " A collection was taken i i 8 t e d j t h . ' ^ . 0 ®n ' Pfeifer, Roger Rietburg, Dob Row- a t t h e c , 0 8 « the service for the ^ ' ' s R e " an, Arthur Slager, Preston Steg- b e n e f t t o f t h e ^ Cross. c 0 7 n g . r C n . T r t * ™ enga, Paul Van Dort, Clarence Van C h a i n n a n o f the program was a n ( j h ' . | ' ?

a r . p r e e r e n c e ' Liere, Hu .h Van Order, Bob V a n | B f - Dee Foiensbee. and the Zanten. Bob Van Zyl. ClarenrP U 8 h e r 8 w e r e charge of Calvin v . t h e U - S -

light-

Zyl, Clarence. . Wagner, Jim Wierenga and Jack | Vnes. Yoemans.

Since those E.R.C. boys who are

Naval Reserve.

Present V-7 students who have more than one term to complete

, leaving will have completed "ntne ' ' ' ^ P P 4 D.I*. Choos.* ' u r will be placed on ac-

' At a meeting on Thursday eve- 8 a m e d a t e a 8 V " 1 2 students. Those ning, March 18, of the Forensic p 7 8 t u d e n t 8 who have one term

Newsdroos Council, consisting of the officers 0 r , e 8 8 ^ c o m P , e t e for a degree • • • • • H e W S d r O p i of Pi Kappa Delta and their spon- m a y r e n , a , n o n i n a c t i v e duty in the

Bob Fopma, graduate of 1942,; since the Kraler dininc f u i l i t i e . S 0 ^ , P r o f e 8 s o r Schrier, the follow- k 0 ' 1 ® 8 1 6 , t h e y 1;; ,vje b e « n attending.

10 has this year been at the Uni- i including Aunt Bee have been I " 8 8 t u d e n t s w e r e e l ecte<i into mem- Students enrolled in the V-5 pro-

r s i t . of Cincinnati on a math - e d out to North' s Z CoZ ^

who

versity

teaching scholarship, recently re-

ceived an appointment to teach the

same subject at Marietta College, Marietta, Ohio, under the Array Air Corps Cadet Training Pro-gram.

Frances Koeman, nurse at Van Vleck Hall, has been forced to give up her duties and return home be-cause of an attack of rheumatic fever. This has also meant the dis-continuance of the Home Nursing Course which Frances had been teaching for girls on the campus.

The Girls' Glee Club will sing in the Chapel this evening at the program sponsored by the women of the local churches featuring Dr. Ida Scudder as chief speaker. On Sunday evening, March 28th, the group will sing at First Reformed Church. 'A Spring Concert is also b e i n g arranged but no definite plans have been announced as yet.

At present, the school enrollment is 405, but a f t e r the exodus of E.R,C.U. fellows the number will have dropped to 380. To date, Knickerbocker estimates that its ranks have been depleted by twelve. Emersonian by twenty-one, and Fraternal and Cosmopolitan, twenty each.

Three Fraternals, Ets Kleinjans, Russ DeVette and Gabby VanDis, have chosen to share rations with the Emersonians at their house

raunity Hall to accommodate the fellows houHed there under the Array Pre-Flight training program.

Denver, Colorado's worst traffic accident in years took the life of Miss Sue Toerens, Hope, '13. Miss Toerens taught in McKee, Ken-tucky, and in the Wisconsin Memo-rial Academy. She had been en-gaged in war work at Lowry Field, Denver, less than two weeks before her death.

Miss C. Myrtyle Klooster, Hope 30, died at her home in Zeeland on March 16, af ter a lingering illness. After graduating from college Miss Klooster taught school until last year when she wa« forced to dis-continue because of ill health.

-o-

New Army Flight Group Housed at North Shore

A new group of thir ty trainees

for the army flight-training serv-

ice program have arrived for pilot instruction, and are being housed at the Park township airport. The college has leased the North Shore Community club across from the airport, and this building houses the a i r students.

The community building gymna-sium is now in the process of be-ing converted into a barracks and a mess hall, and recreation rooms are being installed in the base-m e n t Because Hope college is an-ticipating an enlargement in the college war program, an expendi-ture of $2,000 is being appropri-ated to put the building into proper order.

The ground school will be taught in the study hall of the community house.

Dr. Raymond, co-ordinator of the Hope College war program, has appointed Prof. McLean in charge

Council Discusses National Federation

At the meeting of the Student Council Tuesday, March 16, dis-cussion centered upon the proposi-tion of joining the National Stu-dent Federation of America. No definite decision was made, but the thought was given serious consid-eration.

The only other business taken up at this time was the date for the

al honorary forensic f r a t e r n i t y ! C U r r e n ^ c o " e ^ e y e a r before being Harland Steele, John Ayers, Leon- c a I | e d t o r a c t»ve duty for flight ard Sibley, Elva Van Haitsma, Bar- t ^ a l n , n g • bara Tazelaar, Mary Elizabeth Aid- 0

rich, Josephine Fitz, and B e t t y p . . Cx J A LJ Warner. They will be initiated at r r e " : > e m S t u d e n t s H e a r

Address By Kruithof Rev. Bastian Kruithof, pastor of

the First Reformed Church, spoke ^t the regular monthly meeting of Alpha Chi on Wednesday evening, March 17th. His topic was "The Place of Literature in the Chris-tian Ministry."

THE SOLDIER'S MISSION

Far years will fling the virtue • and the 'vice With broadcast sweep, as they

have always done; Think not his going forth will

mar the sun. Or end the need for eager sac-

rifice.

Weep not if bullets carry his last kiss;

His honored grave $ill not be cheaply won,

His halted race will nor be li ly run.

If our jarred country calls for such a price.

For war is not a bargaining in reason;

It casts the leisure sentiments aside.

Our lads lay down where dan-ger stirs up Hell.

All finer culture is left out a season;

Deep hatreds build a breach for-lorn and wide.

And bravest dust must vouch that all is well. —Phillip A. Engel, Hope '31.

From Times Union, Albany, New York.

(This is one of the finest war poems, written during the pres-ent war, fine enough to be pre-served in any anthology for coming generations — Editorial note. Times Union.)

War Work Will Highlight Entire Graduate Program

a meeting to be held on April 7. Pi Kappa Delta and debate squad

picture for Milestone is scheduled to be taken in Commons Room at 4:45 p. m. Thursday, March 25.

— o —

Frosh Debate Team Wins State Title

Freshman debate teams, coached by Prof. William E. Schrier, be-came state freshman debate cham-pions by winning four out of four debates at the state freshman de-bate tournament, held at Kalama-zoo on Saturday, March 13th. ^ The • negative team, Eleanor

Everse and Harriet Stegeman, beat affirmative teams from Albion Col-lege and Michigan State College. The affirmative team of Wilbur Brandli, Elaine Bielefeld, and Al-lan Staver was victorious over de-bate teams from Michigan State College and Western Michigan Col-lege of Education. This lat ter team has been undefeated all season and has taken par t in the state tourna-

Progressive Dinner Featres Annual Blue Key Party

Milestone picture. After discussion, | ment at Albion and the national Tuesday, March 23, was set and tournament a t Manchester the meeting adjourned. | The debates were held on the

The annual Blue Key dinner was

held last Saturday night, March

20, at 7:00. The guests met for the

progressive dinner at the Fraternal

House where the first course was

/ r l ' l V 0 8 1 D ! V 7 ? presided served. They then adjourned to the at the meeting, and John Ettema ^ led the song sen-ice. The devotions C o 8 m o P o h t a n H o U 8 e f o r the main were conducted by Art Johnson. c o u r 8 e ' a n d then returned to the

Rev. Kru i tho f s talk suggested E t e r n a l House for entertainment

good reading fo r ministers and and games which were under the

budding ministers, and spoke of supervision of Harvey Mulder, gen-their responsibility to become ac- L ^ i * . • „ . quainted with the classics and to ™ , a n t h e a f f a l r -keep up with current events, reli- F a c u , t y guests included Prof, and

gious thought, and scientific ad- M r 8 - H i n g a ' D r - and Mrs. Klein-

vances. heksel, Prof. Lampen, Prof, and

Following the address, refresh- Mrs. McLean and Dr. and Mrs ments were served and an informal D J discussion with Rev. Kruithof was i °

e r g U e 8 t S l n c l u d e d

enjoyed by the members. I H a r v e y Mulder, Esther Van Dyke; Harvey Koop, Mary Lou Hemmes;

Seymour Padnos, Norma Lemmer;

Don De Fouw, Lois Jentsch; Cal

Dr. Van Zyl, head of Hope's

Chem department, has announced

that every senior majoring in

Chemistry has received a graduate

assistantship. These men, six in all,

will report to the various schools

a t which they have been accepted

in June or next September. Each

one w i l l be connected directly

or indirectly with some war work?

Workman to Carnegie Tech

Immediately a f t e r delivering his

valedictory next June, Ed Work-

man will head for Carnegie Teah,

where he will do graduate work and

part-time teaching of students sent

there by the army and navy. He

will receive $1,000 for a full, three-

semester year 's work.'

Similar fellowships have been received by Earl De Witt, Wally Van Liere and Harvey Mulder. Earl will go to Ohio State University, Wally to Purdue and Harvey to* ndiana. All will do part- t ime

teaching and graduate work and all plan to do research in the not too distant future .

Immediate Research

Two men wiii do research imme-diately. Gord Schrotenboer will go to Indiana this summer where he will do research with compounds connected with the malaria prob-lem. Jud Van Wyk will research in Bio-Chemistry at the St. Louis University School of Medicine.

The demand for chemists is great throughout the country and Hope undoubtedly could have placed sev-eral more men if they had been available.

ii

W.A.L. Carnival Smaih H i t . . . And How!

subject of a post-war union of the United Nations, and Hope was the , r. „ . only college, among entries from V n e 8 . J a n e t Clark; Dan Fyl-all over Michigan, to emerge from 8 * r a ' Wendy Rameau; Harvey

the tournament with all teams un- jS tah l , Hilda Van Leeuwen; Ever-

e t t Kleinjans, Edith Klaaren; Al

f red Borgman, Roberta Roozen.

defeated.

Hear ye, hear ye! good gnomes and gnomies of Hope's campus — and so we heard. And having heard, we got a good grip on our uppers, adjusted our ear phones, and point-ed our noses in the direction oi Carnegie gym. Once there we tripped — figuratively speaking — to the clink, clink, clink of the penny serenade . . . and what pleas-ant music it made! Money talks, but pennies sing to the tune of sixty-five dollars worth, in fact .

A carnival of all carnivals, there was sauce for every goose and the gander that meandered. If you are artistically inclined — and who isn't in this instance? — you were sure to take at least one good look a t the zoological booth (Pet ty Show to you!) Prof Bast came early — about four o'clock — to avoid the rush, which gave the booth a good name from the s tar t . Stars of the s h o w w e r e "Porky- Pine" Van Duzer and "Wood-Pussy" J o l d e r s m a , and

of the commissary and has named i Hope adds "wild-life sanctuary" to Robert Cavanaugh instructor of its list of accomplishments. civil a i r regulations. The other in-structors named a r e Profs. Tim-mer, Kleis, and Lampen, in charge of general service of a i rcraf t , and Coach Hinga teaching athletics and physical training.

Yeoraans Has Fun Next we come to the kissing booth

V.S. to hold. A raspberry shade is very becoming to the prof. Did you enjoy it, too, Mr. Yeoraans?

Between booths there was plenty of t ime to get your jaws in im-moveable s ta te with candied ap-ples. Dogs being allowed in this park, plenty of the variety that go best when fed with mustard and tucked into a roll were in evidence . . . and what a slap-happy crowd! No one said a thing when man bit dog! With a little nourishment we continue to another scenter of at-traction, the fishpond. Here we find that seasoned (with sa l t ? ) fisher, Prof Kleis, and his good f r a u both looking fetching in dear little vel-vet bonnets atop their curls . . . oh, well, atop Mrs. Kleis' curls! Janey Waldbillig supplied the bait and the suckers did the rest.

Bulls-eye for Joaie In the middle of the floor Josie

Fitz takes her stand. With sleeves rolled up and determination on her brow she lets fly t ha t wet sponge. Blub, blub — a bull's-eye! You can pitch on our side, Josie, just any time! . . . Dottie Wendt has the situation well in hand.

Hope Orators Speak to a t the left over there for the | Several Organizations Rogue's Gallery. We find it 's true

tha t they must have been beautiful

babies, tra-la. Miss Boyd was a .

In keeping with the policy of

providing practical speech experi-

ences before audiences and various

Col lege orators have this year pre-

sented their orations to different

squeezable cherub, damp ringlets L ™ . , • „ - j n . K , c w , types of organizations, Hope and all, O Hinga of vocal solo fame

(in the eighth grade, mind you!) a regular Joe College, and so on. down the reception line. (Just as 8 7 0 1 1 1 ) 8 a n d i n t end to present them consolation . . . or it i s? . . . they a t different events in the future.

look much the same as you and The subject of Vivian TardifTs you . . . For those of you who oration is "Americans with Japa-believe in pixies and the like, we nese Faces," while Harland Steele elbow our way to the fortune tell- presents MThe House That Sam ing booth and Madame La Naas'I Bu i l t " Both have presented their

raw •iL! T n y d , d ^ A , n q n f (pun) out chunks of the notables we see Prof Van Saun, I liver in the fun home. What a per-

U o n V V Z ^ u 0 " < 0 r d e i p e r i - 1 s o n « • doesn't hurt Wm h a n , l e d W* t * * to Mrs. I to h a r motto . . . The line f o r m .

prophecies of things to come? GarKage Is Queen

With our minds a t ease and sit-ting comfortably on ye olde gym floor — are you kidding? — we make way f o r Stamp King Koeppe and none other than "Queenie," Garbage — Gabbage — Gabby Van Dis! Af t e r the crowning we do a little crowing and who has a better r i g h t ? — led by Johnnie Kleis with "The Ivory Misch ie f Barbara Dee a t the piano.

Aa for the highlight of the eve-ning, the skita by the faculty, may we say we like you with your hair up, Prof, bat with it down, we're with you to the finish! (We are speaking generally.)

orations a t chapel services a t Hol-land High school, a t the adult group of "The School fo r Christian Living" a t Hope Reformed Church, and a t ^ t h e Rotary club. Steele spoke a t the Fennville Woman's club, Fennville, on Mareh second. Monday evening, March 22, Miss Tardiff spoke a t the American Le-gion Auxiliary. Both orators will speak a t the Zeeland Rotary club on April 6.

A debate group composed of Cal-vin De Vries and kar land Steele vs. Vivian Tardiff and Corinne Pool, is scheduled to present a de-bate before the Ladies' Aid of Hope Church on Wednesday eve-ning, April 21.

Dorn Birthday Dinner features "March Kids

The monthly birthday dinner was held in Voorhees Wednesday night, March 10. The special table was decorated in green representing spring. The "March Kids" enter-tained with a pageant for which tfary Liz Aldrich was the reader.

June Pyle represented cold, solemn Winter, followed by Education, por-trayed by Dorothea Dixon and iuth Van Bronkhorst. Old Age

came hobbling in personified by ane Reus and Josie Fitz. Carefree

7 aII was played by Roses Atkins and Seith. M. L. Hemmes and Libby Romaine came in looking very de-cidedly moon-struck. Naturally, they represented Love. Finally, Spring sprang — Vonnie Yntema. March 15, Dorothy Front jes was absent from the scene. (Maybe it was because she's related to In-come Taxes.)

" y " News YW HAS QUIZ PROGRAM

An unusual program marked the Freshman meeting at "YW" last Tuesday evening. Elaine Mensing-er, quiz master , conducted an in-formal inquiry about names, char-acters and quotations in the Bible. Miss Gibbs, Miss Connor and Mrs, "K" displayed amazing knowledge. The booby prize was captured by Elaine Scholten with four out of four misses.

The worship program was led by Dorothea Dixon, Norma Jean Wal-voord and Florence Guis.

FYLSTRA SPEAKS TO YM

Dan Fylstra , a graduate of Feb-niary, '43, and former vice presi-dent of Y, spoke to the YMCA on Tuesday, March 16th, about the responsibilities of today's college students.

The unusual song service was led By G r e g g Ke»er , with Al Van Bronkhorst a t the piano. Devotions were conducted by Russ De Vette. In his talk, Dan spoke of the dou-ble responsibilities of present col-lege students to work harder a t their studies and to c a r j y dri some kind of active Christian work.

The annual YM election will be held as par t of next week's meet-ing.

Page 2: 03-24-1943

Pag* Two Hop* College Anchor

H o r c C o l l e g e A i c h o r

Mary Blair Roger Koeppe

Member

Associated Goleftiote Press

CO-EDITORS

EDITORIAL S T A F F

News Editor - 1 - . — V * Fy l i t r a

Society Editor . Feature Editor ^u th Van Bronkhorst

Feature Writers Constance Crawford, Rose Seith, Helen Wilhelm Howard Koo

Sports.

Some Get Spots/ Some Get

'Em Solid; How Measeley

Vacationing Lumsdcn Announces That

Winttr Just Can't Catch Flying Fish

Loop Robert Lucking Clarence Van Li iere

Girls' Sport* Editor.^ E d i t h K l a * r e n

MANAGERIAL S T A F F Business Manager Moerdyk Asstant Business Manager Melba Dings

Circulation Manager - I " | i m Stoppels A u i e U n t s — Joen DeYoung. Marion Sandee. C o n . U n c * ScbolUn, Eleanor Bveree.

Muriel Meekeprang, Ion* Strick. Victoria Van Wertenberg. Melba Dlng i . Donna Ebjr.

Florence GuU, Elaine Scholten. REPORTERS

Georse Lumsden . Anna Ruth Poppen Dal* P ™

W ^ ^ W U t " S f f S & T " BarbanTVan B a a h e c, ( r i c r Otteman ConaUnce Scholten Leonard Sibley R o b l i u I t o S J n v Ruth J o l d e n m a Lai ry Beltman

Published every two wee lu during the Mhool year by the rtudente of Hope

Entered a* second CU M matter at the pott office of Holland. ^ of p o l u g e provided for In eecUon 1108 of A c t o f C o n g r e n . October 8. 1117 and author lied October 19. 1918.

Mail subscriptions, one dollar per year Address — The Anchor, Hope College, Holland, Michigan

Telephone 9436 * v •

I t doesn't seem possible, <but i t 'a

t rue! The thought is enough to de-

moralize even the most hopeful

co-ed, but the grim fact remains:

there has not been a single en-gagement in two whole weeks! Oh, woe. One small ray of hope is left us, one patch of silver lining shines through. The E.R.C. boys leave the first of next week, and if they have half the initiative anJ dar ing of the Army Air Corps, we ought to see some action.

PRINTED AT OLD N E W S PRINTERY

Hope!! Where's Your Pep? Needless to say, war has taken its toll from Hope college.

No campus organization can honestly say that it hasn't suf-

fered some loss because of the war. In many cases the

"cream of the crop" has been taken. Finances have hurt

others. However, do these facts just i fy the listlessness that

has crept onto our campus during the last semester? Don't

get us wrong, we aren't trying to tear down Hope; we re

proud of her; and because we're proud of her we hate to see

her slip, war or no war. We don't work or play as hard as

we used to. We're doing things half-heartedly. The old "wim,

wigor and witality" is gone. Why? We blame it on the war

but in reality we are the only ones who should be blamed.

We just haven't got the intestinal fortitude to do what we

do enthusiastically, in spite of the prevailing conditions.

Let's climb on the ball, shall we? Let's work harder and

when our work is done, let's play harder. Let's get back some

of our "Hope" spirit such as was so much in evidence at the

Carnival a couple weeks back. Let's have some more carni-

vals; at the end of the week . . . af ter our week's work is done.

-o-

Calling O W I ! To the best of our knowledge, the Office of War Informa-

tion was established to protect and watch over the moral of

the nation; that is as fa r as news is concerned. How good

a job they have done as f a r as war or Washington news is

concerned we are not capable of judging. However, in our

opinion, a much better job could have been done with the

news that pertained directly to college fellows who enlisted

in the various reserves. Ever since the start of the semester

rumors have been invading the various campuses throughout

the nation telling when the various reserves are going to

be called. Now the thing that we have against these rumors

is that in most cases they have proved to be false and have

resulted in a lack of study on the part of those fellows in-o

volved by the rumors. We realize that the OWI probably

doesn't have jurisdiction over these reports, but they should.

If they do have authority to curb rumors in the future, this

authority should be exercised so tha t the program of the

colleges can go forward at a war time pace.

THE IDEAL DRY CLEANERS Phone 2465 • W e Call For and Dellvar

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But there's no way of printing next week's news in this week's newspaper; let us therefore pro-ceed with propriety to the doings and beings round about and, of course, you all knew that the Zee-land Zephyr, Rosie Winstrom, spent the whole week in luxurious idle-ness in the infirmary. She claims some sort of distinction, on account of most people get spots when they get measles, but she just got bright red all over solid! Lumsden blames his German measles on fifth column activity, and now we hear that Ruth Ann Poppen and Marjorie Hoobler are also spotty, and it be-gins to sound like a blitz, no?

Miss Lichty cherished a case of laryngitis last week, and had to talk softly 'cause she couldn't talk hardly. She f e e l s worst about having missed the dorm party, which was, as they say in small newspapers, enjoyed by all, espe-cially Peggy Bilger, who discov-ered an affinity for the Blarney Stone. Audrey Scott's Irish accent is amazing, and Wee Willie Wil-helm and Cut-a-rug Clark are noth-ing short of phenomenal. But can they prove i t was an Irish j ig?

Reports from Pearl Scholten in-diate that Three Rivers is all it isn't cracked up to be, but that Firemen's Balls aren' t either. Pearl went to visit fiance Tom, and that par t of it was a success . . . Chuck Dykema's terrif hair-cut earns for him the title of "Little Abner of 1943" . . . Fran Koeman, tempo-rarily retired from the bustle of this collitch life on account of her not feeling so well, wishes all and sundry to know that she has a tel-ephone now. The inference should be obvious, and who wouldn't give her a word of cheer and a wish i she'll be back soon?

A very realistic character por-trayal at the W.A.L. carnival, a wild dorm party, and a couple of ungraceful tumbles on icy side-walks have left Mr. Cavanaugh ruefully rubbing his dignity and wondering how to regain and main-tain it . . . his dignity, that is . . .

! Any Wednesday or Friday f rom sue

to eight come around and Mil Van-

derLinden will extol the delights

of being free, white and nineteen,

foot-loose and fancy-free, and

what-have-you . . . Margaret Mary

Friesema's exercise these days con-

sists of get t ing in and out of bed

. . . V'ronica Davis hears regular

from the army air corps . . . Floss

Dykema remarks sadly t h a t a stiff

neck is not as funny as i t looks.

Barbara Jive-dive Folensbee gets

the palm as the m o s t misused

character of the week. To begin with, she has a campus . . . and she, a senior and example to all the younger girls, too! But that ain't all! In the course of her practice teaching the other af ter-noon she was in the study hall, helping a little high school gal with something or other, very circum-spectly and efficiently, all of a sud-den up walks the study hall teach-er, with a frown on his face. Says he, sternly, "Are you out of one of your classes? . . . Now, hon-estly, do you think Barbara Dee looks that young?

If Hoppy Van Alst can whistle while she reads devotions a t dinner in the dorm, you can hum a merry tune as you dig into your pockets to buy war stamps. But you don't have to. You don't even have to buy war s tamps; it is, as the preachers say when they pass the collection plates, your privilege to give. So remember, as Viv Tardiff has phrased it in immortal poetry, "A s tamp a week gives the Axis creeps!" Buy war s tamps!

For That Satisiied Feeling Try a Sandwich or a Complete Dinner a i the .

New Mary Jane Restaurant

The Campus

Victory Book

Drive

Netted $19.30

and Fjfty-two

Volumes

The Roving Reporter Puts His Ear to the Ground . . . Flash . . .

Several of the boys a t Hope college recently received this won-derful offer:

Free . . . One-room cottage, plenty of fresh air, accommoda-tions fo r fifty guests. A popular resort.

Enjoy with us the democratic spirit, not a snob in a carload . . . Have a regulated diet with us, and let our staff take care of your wor-ries. Jus t relax and have fun .

Get some good, wholesome exer-cise. We guarantee muscles. Our rifle range is convenient . . . try your luck.

Visit our kitchen and see how the food is prepared. Don't miss it. Sit down with the cook and survey our potato barrel.

Join our Hiking Club . . . Con ducted tours . . . be healthy.

We'd like to have you. . . . U. S. ARMY

And concerning mid-semester ex ams, we picked up this one: One of life's abominations Lies in the realm of examinations, Formula, Fact, and Definition Put us all in fine condition.

Although we try, we find tha t we can't

Learn of the cosine or the secant; What care we of grammatical func-

tion . . . When we can't distinguish verb

from conjunction? Here's one that every red-blood-

ed Education student will appreci-ate:

Professor Winter went fishing

with his brother one season and while his brother had exceptionally good luck. Prof couldn't seem to hit them at all. Although they fished side by side for several days the story was unchanged. Finally, Pro-fessor Winter slipped off without his brother; went to the spot in the t rout stream where the greatest success had been noticed, and fished all day. Still no luck . . . As he packed up. to leave the spot, a big t rout jumped out of the water and shouted . . . "Where 's your broth-

e r ? "

Again . . . Some Blank's Verse: (Dedicated to all those who have-

suffered with such affliction.) I can make a picture Without paints or easels of the guy who suffered With German measles. He looks into the mir ror To find the peppered spots. Can't see 'em where they really

are.

But finds 'em where they're not; He itches . . . and scratches . . . He hates the things . . . and then. In forty-eight hours, he's back in

school . . . And wishes he had 'em again!

Mulder and Ayers Give

Chemistry Club Papers Two papers featured the regular

meeting of the Chemistry Club on Wednesday, March 17th. John Ay-ers spoke on "Titanium and Titan-ium Oxide," while Harvey Mulder's topic was "The Industrial Refin-ing of Beet Sugar."

(famfi fa (Zantfuu -

COHPAMY mi PAU OUT fin Mmmt

1

A W A X C does a double {ob. h doing her own fob, she releases a man for combat service, in a way ice-cold Coke is like that, too. Not only quenches thirst but brings energy-giving refreshment, too. And on top of that it offers the taste you don't find this side of Coco-Cola, itself. How about a 'Coke date*, nowf*

COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF GRAND RAPIDS

ANCHOR editor emeritus. Milt Verburg, writes that marching is the specialty down a t the Miami Beach Air Corps Reception Center. ' T h e mess hall is a good half-mile away so that 's three miles a day alone," moans Verburg. MI didn't even go down for chow because my feet were so sore tonight."

"There are a few good looking women around here, but me for what I left in Holland," says ers-while Junior, Dutchi Hofmeyer, also down in Miami.

The thing that Ray Beal, "deep in the heart of Texas," misses most next to Twin Mabel, is Jack 's gym classes.

Fylstra Has Biggest Feet

Hank Fylstra, basking in the sunlight of Miami Beach, claims the distinction of having the big-gest feet in his squadron. As to women in his neck o* the woods, Hank classifies them as "scarce and homely."

Maybe Ray Otteman is living on the r ight side of the tracks in At-lantic City. According to Kerle, also stationed a t the Air Corps In-duction Center there, "Ray 's eats are super — ours are fa i r . " This observation was made a f t e r the two former roommates spent an af ter -noon together a t the U.S.O. in At-lantic City. " I t ' s jus t how you hit it, I guess," sighs Kerle, dreaming of happy college days and his "bet-ter h a l f here in Holland.

Roy Van Zyl in Texas says, "The army isn't so bad a s some seem to think, except for the weather down here. In the morning it 's so cold you freeze to death and By af ter -noon the sun bakes you like a sweet potato in a hot oven."

Joe Northoek, down in Arkansas,

claims he likes a rmy life, is just "lazin' around" and finds the girls quite to his satisfaction.

Snow Turns Composer

Murray Snow, another one of the

Miami boys, seems to have found his niche already. "Curt ," as the Sergeant has dubbed him, has been requested by Squadron Commander Horgan to write the words for a squadron song to the tune of "Pret ty Co-ed." Recently when res-idents near the training center complained of being wakened by the singing of the squadron as they did their early morning drills, this same commander firmly replied that if the singing annoyed the neighbors they could just get up as early as the boys had to. Sure evidence that Snow's lusty bass wouldn't be gett ing rusty during his time in the service.

Editor's Note: This column is planned now as a regular fea ture of the ANCHOR, and contributions of items of interest received in letters f rom Hope men now in the service would be great ly appreci-ated.

I

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Page 3: 03-24-1943

Ration

Con Feefin*, But

Not Amooiin* Gale It seems that the modern genera-

tion has turned from the accepted

measurement by curves (room for

a whistle) to the point system.

There are merits to both and since

we are the modem generation, let's

discuss the problem of the accumu-

lation of "Dots" — and the lack

of Male Exclamation Points, G.I. orders!

Well, sugar was rationed, first of all. That was okay; we still had our own brand. Then came coffee rationing, but bridge is a good substitute for the cafTein(d). Next, rubber. That hit a bit harder, along with gas, but parking lots are still comparatively untainted — in one sense of the word! And now we get rationing of canned foods — but we're cheerful about that 'cause we're getting our vitamin content. But, there's one thing we can't console ourselves concerning, and that 's the rationing of our males! But as we aren't cut out to be sabo-teurs, let's be patriotic. Let's turn in our Date Books for Ration books. Say, 15 points for a coke date with a handsome Marine, home on furlough — and for a full evening with a "Semper Paratis" man, 25 points. If you specialize in the Air Corps brand, well, let's say a pair of Wings rented for 3 hours—30 points. But, girls, watch your points carefully because once you've used up this month's quota — no more till April 15th!

You, males, how does the idea appeal to you? Of course, we'll keep it strictly under our feather cuts who rates first in this month's book. You, fellows minus f ra t pins, know that you have a full ration allotment for your next furlough. An added incentive ? Not that we're trying to rush you into anything. Not that.

The one thing that puzzles the ration board is the governmental sense of values. According to their theory, a fresh sailor doesn't rate points, which we are glad of, in a way, but just think if he did, there would be fewer of them. Yet, the government turns around and makes the board give a 10 point rating to a canned or stewed sol-dier. Wait'll the W.C.T.U. hears about it! But, enough for this un-pleasant side of the point system. Say, if these ideas go into effect, won't our Math Profs, get a rush in business, so that we co-eds can understand our new math, books.

Girl's wouldn't it be wonderful to have that secure feeling of know-ing you have at least one date a month on reserve — that is, if you can cash in on your points! Throw the pessimist out!

CotmoS/ Seminary

Play Championship

Gama Tonight At nine o'clock tonight in Car-

negie gym the league-leading Cos-

no five will play the second-place

?em team.' By winning their tenth

straight game the Cosmos can

•linch the title. However, if the

Seminarians upset the would-be

-hamps a play-off game will he necessary.

Monday night the Frater team

gave the Sem a real battle and

almost elmininated them from the

ace. However, Sem boys led by

Cy Voogd braved a third period

. rater uprising and won 33-26.

Later the same night the Emmy

A team '.rimmed the Emmy B and

the Cosmos took over the Knick^.

If the Cosmos win tonight they

will play an "all-star" team next

Monday night. This team will be

composed of Jack Krum, Chuck

Molinaar, James Heersma, Bud

Koranda and Dale Van Lente. How-

iver, if a playoff game is necessary

this wiil be held instead of the 'allstar" game.

Present standings:

Emmy A

Emmy B

W L

0

. 1

4

6

8

10

COLLECTIONS taken at the

December and Mareh Vesper

Services Sponsored by

The Musical Arts Club totaled

$50.00 all of which has

been turned over to the

Red Cross

The Same Quantity

Quality /#ICE CREAM

IN Cones — Malteds

Sundaes — Package

MILLS ICE CREAM 206 College Ave.

Open until 10 P. M.

1943

Tennis

Equipment

Is Here

• Rackets

c Balls

• Presses

• T Shirts

• Sport Jackets

Superior

Sport

Store

ii

NICK DYKEMA The Tailor

l9l/2 W « t 8th Sfreaf

WE HAVE

Tko Place The Sarvica Tha Food

Hoffman Restaurant

OWL FOR HEALTH AND RECREATION

Liefense Bowling Alleys

D U S A A R PHOTO and SIFT SHOP

10 EAST EIGHTH STREET

Kodab and Kodak Finishing.

Framing and Gifts

HOLLAND. MICHIGAN

WOMEN'S SPORTS

by edith ellen

Sorority keglera are perkin' right i Navigators and the Sharpshooters

along. One round of play has been out ahead with three wins each

completed. These toumamenta re-1 and no losses. The Sharpshooters

almost dropped their last one to

the Bombardiers. It was one of

those thrillers in which the lead

keeps shifting, but when the last

whistle blew the Sharpshooters

were ahead by two points. (That

was a hard one to lose, dernit!).

Deadeye Ruth Probst tallied 14

points for the Bombardiers. But

let's get back to the games of

Thursday, the eleventh. That eve-

ning the Navigators, with Hotshot

Hoobler scoring 16, took down the

Pilots, 18-11. The Gunners with

14 were trimmed by the Bombar-

diers with 24, and here again Dead-

eye Probst scored 18 for our team.

The Sharpshooters tangled with

the Marksmen and won by a 10-3

score. Then there were the games

of a week ago last night — the

Sharpshooter victory already men-

tioned, and the Marksmen-Pilots

tiff when Shirley Romeyn led the former team to a 23-12 victory by tallying 15 points. So here's the standings:

w Navigator i 3 SharpnhocterH Bombardiers | Gunners ] Markimen 1 Pilot* 0

T h a t Navigator-Sharpshooter

tilt should prove exciting. Don't know at this writing when it'll be, but we'll try to have a thorough writeup of it for you.

Exercise for victory, pals, and remember, these athletic privileges

H U H come to you, courtesy WAA of In the cage division we find the j Hope College.

* w " ' ' - -- -- -- -- -- -- -i~i~i~»~»-n-wir»nr»nmnn.PLnLrLrL-j-i_n_i"ij'ijiJ~iri i'i i~i n

PEOPLES STATE BANK witbet for Hop* College and The Anchor

the Success it Merits

Mulder Given Ceptaincy of

All-State All-Star Team

veal one SAD thing, however —

and that 's the terrific inconsistency

of co-ed bowlers, and even of whole

teams. But af ter a round of play

this horse is beginning to take on

a color of its own. Here are the standings:

w L Pet, Sibylline B — | 0 1.000 Dorian A 1 | ,141 Delphi A 2 1 .444 Sibylline A S 1 .66« Dorian B 1 2 .433 Delphi B 1 2 .333 Soroaia B \ 2 .333 Soroaia A 0 3 .000

And here's the summary of the

games rolled that made the stand-

ings this way. On March 12 Delphi

A took down Sib A, 1224-1111. And

those Del^hians were red-hot!!

Their score was team high for the

day. Rose Winstrom rolled a tur-

key, totaled 147 pins in a game,

and Pinx Mulder downed 157 pins.

Sib Shirley Otteman rolled a 149.

Also in the A brackets, Dorian A

rolled 991 to defeat Sorovis A with

918. Sib B took down Sorosis B,

909-884, and Dorian B bowed to

Delphi B to the tune of 906 to 869.

This past Friday Sib A rolled 1197

to defeat the Dorians by 55 pins,

and Sorosis A bowed again, this time to Delphi A, 1185 to 903. Sib B's 1049-922 victory over Dorian B kept this Sib team in first place. Sorosis B rolled Delphi B and won, 993-849. Joyce Muilenberg (Do-rian A) rolled a turkey. Individual highs went to Pinx Mulder (Delphi A) with 147, and to Joyce Timmer (Sib B) with 146.

1.000

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and Suits 69c WITH CASH AND CARRY

Garments Left on Friday can be Picked up Saturday (Please bring in your hangers for Exchange, for

they are not made any more. THANKS!)

MICHIGAN CLEANERS INSURED — Fire and Theft I. HOLLEMANS, Prop.

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MAKERS OF

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Frafen Defeat Sems

To Take Bowling Title In a play-off match for the cham-

pionship of the Inter-Fraternity

Bowling League, the Frater A five

defeated the Seminary's Holy Roll-

er, two games out of three. It was

a close match all the way through

with the final game deciding a

after each team had lost one. The

Praters won the first game by 97

pins, the Holy Rollers took the

second by 16 pins, and the Prat-

ers took the final and deciding

game by 15 pins. In this game,

Etts Kleinjans rolled six straight

strikes to come out with a score of

217, while Cy Voogd was close on

his heels with a 212 game.

Members of the championship

team are Etts Kleinjans, Vern

Kraai, Dell Boersma, John Vanden

Broek and Les Nienhuis.

I. H. MARSIUE ACCIDENT INSURANCE FOR ' HOPE COLLEGE STUDENTS I

Hollsnd State Bsnk Bldg.

Jack Howe of Alma Is Only Other M.I.A.A. Player Chosen

j Hope College had the honor of

having Don Mulder placed on the All - State Collegiate basketball

, team. In addition to this, special j honor was given to Mulder in be-i ing selected honorary captain of

he squad. Besides Mulder another M.I.A.A. player — Jack Howe of Alma, was placed on the first team.

In the selection of the 1943 All-State team, the honors were divid-ed evenly among the schools. No team placed more than one man on the first string. The team consists of Harold Gensichen (Western Michigan) and Jack Howe (Alma) at the forward positions; Lee Kno-rek (Detroit) at center; Captain Don Mulder (Hope) and Bob War-drop (Central Michigan) at guards.

This is the first time in the his-tory of the Detroit Free Press selections that the University of Michigan did not place a player on the first team. Jim Mandler, U. of M. center, who was on the 1942 team, was edged out by Knorek, U. of D. scoring ace.

Mulder averaged 12 points a game. Gensichen scored 301 points in 19 games for an average of about 16 points per game. Jack Howe led the M.I.A.A. in scoring, averaging 18 points a game.

Ets Kleinjans and Russ De Vette were given honorable mention as guards.

i • .

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leane's Shop Eighth at Central

The WAL Carnival

made a Net Profit

of $65.14

ail of which has been

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Red Cross

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6 East 8th St. Phone 3055

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W«rtfi*kl

Page 4: 03-24-1943

Pag* Four Hop* Collsg* Anchor

"Irish" Steal the Show as Dorm Gals

Entertain Faculty On St. Patrick's Day Members of the Hope college

faculty who were not present a t the annual Christmas party given by Hope college girls were en-tertained at a gala formal St. Patrick's day party in Voorhees

their version of the£ act. M r s .

Garret Vander Borgh's stunt was

to sing a duet with Shirley Otte-

man, "the wailing banshee."

Robert Cavanaugh was accom-hall Wednesday evening. G r e e n P^niat for Dr. Bruce M. Raymond shamrocks decorated the mantel in the lobby and. faculty guests

. and their wives wore fancy green and white hats made by Joyce Muilenburg.

A clever program for which the original scrip was written in Irish dialect by Ruth Van Bronkhorst was a highlight of the evening. In a fantastic commentary by Narrator Audrey Scott the story was t o l d of the mischievous pixies who "run" Ireland and all the Irish. Opening the program was a piano duet of an I r i s h selection played by Miss Van Bronkhorst and Margare t ' Fries-ema. Miss Van Bronkhurst also served as fortune teller who de-picted various members of the audience as they might have been had the pixies decided their fates otherwise.

T a k i n g part in the comedy were Milton L. "O'Hinga" as a love consultant and Betty Mc-Cann as his client. A sextet com-posed of Eleanor Mulder, Mildred Timmer, Elaine Scholten, Norma Lemmer, Betty Christie and Con-nie Crawford sang the "Irish Hills" and a s w i n g version of "Wearin* of the Green." Barbara Dee Folensbee was accompanist.

Helen Wilhelm and Janet Clark, dressed as two jolly Irish Washer-women, presented a jig and the fortune teller prescribed the same tonic for n r G e r r i t Van Zyl and Dr. Walter VaRN^aun w^m bor-rowed the aprons amt'Bonnefls for

"Arabian Nights" At Cosmo-Sib Meeting

"Arabian Nights" was the theme for the joint Sibylline-Cosmopoli-tan meeting held last Friday eve-ning at the Cosmo House. With "Aladdin" Bruggink presiding, the Magic Lamp brought forth the dra-matis personae when the proper incantations were carried out.

"Wisdom of the Orient" was given by Millie Vander Linden, reading from both the Bible and the Koran, and offering prayer. Greetings were then exchanged by the two society presidents. Sib Jan

as the latter artistically rendered "When Irish Eyes Are Smiling.'* Sandwiched between various other appropriate wisecracks, Mrs. Rob-ert Cavanaugh, Mrs. Peter Prins and Miss Margaret Gibbs applied first aid to the hapless Dr. Teunis VerGeer. Betty Fuller, harpist, presented a medley of Irish tunes.

Community singing led by Edna Blom and Rose Seith featured specialty acts by the Rev. Henry Bast and Coach Bud Hinga who made themselves conspicuous as soloists. Refreshments featured decorated cakes and ice cream.

Co-chairmen for the affair were Edith Klaaren and Helen Wil-helm.

Faculty guests attending the party included the Rev. and Mrs. Henry Bast, Dr. and Mrs. J . Har-vey Kleinheksel, Miss Elizabeth Oggel, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Prins, Prof, and Mrs. Albert Timmer, Prof, and Mrs. Gerrit Van Zyl, Prof, and Mrs. Edward Wolters, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cavanaugh, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Hinga, Dr. and Mrs. Bruce M. Raymond,.Dr. and Mrs. Teunis VerGeer, Dr. and Mrs. Wynand Wichers, Miss Faye Connor and Miss Margaret Gibbs. Mrs. Marvin Brower of Grand Rapids was also a guest. Miss C a r o l i n e Hawes, Miss M e t t a Ross, Prof, and Mrs. Oscar Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Karsten, Prof, and Mrs. Egbert Winter and Mrs. W. Curtis Snow were unable to attend.

Seroiitet "Ration" Items For Joint Frater Moot

Last Friday evening the mem-bers of the Fraternal society sat meekly in their meeting room while the Sorosis society meted out many wonderful "points" in their ration-ing system. The "Sorosis Ration Board" (Local No. 1) was headed by Sorosite Kooiker, who was ex-tremely generous in the rationing allotments.

After opening remarks by Pres-idents "Ets" Kleinjans and Millie Timmer, Sorosite Van Volkenburgh read the Frater roll and Frater Lultaden, the Sorosite roll call. From there, the "rolls" were ra-tioned. -

S O C I A L L I F E L I N E S

Davis, and Paul Dame were the

three nit-wits featured in this part

of the program. Putting a more

serious touch to the program, Betty

Christie gave the group "Black

Magic of Hattah Mari." The Sibyl-

line songbird sang "Night and Day" and "Moonlight Becomes You."

"Hapi Medyum" then conducted a group game of baseball. With two captains and two cheer leaders for the two teams representing the American and National leagues, each member was given a chance to "play" during the nine innings. Final score was American leaguers 60, the Nationals 50. Evidently, r - ^ w ^ - a a v w i lUkKJ UC4II ^ — —

Clark and Cosmo George Dykstra. ' ^ a P ' " Dykema was an American Amid a flourish of drums "Ach-

med Ali, the Scribe" came from the land of enchantment and read the historical account of the writ-ing of the famous tale, "Arabian Night." Achmed is known to her friends about the campus as Fritzi Colenbrander. "Coli, the S n a k e Charmer," followed the Scribe and entertained the group with a bit of singing, accompanied by a man-dolin. John Ettema was definitely out of character in performing this act of artistic humor.

With "Aladdin" continuing to >ub his magic lamp, three Cosmos were brought forth to put on a brief skit. "Short-cut" "Fuzz" and "Buzz" then proceeded to tickle

, everyone's funnybone with a three-f part dialogue. Harland Steele, Roy

league fan. He umpired the game.

After the game was concluded, assistant. Rose Seith, admitted that during a bit of horseplay in the properties room preceding the ac-tual game she had struck the "Hapi Medyum."

After the program refreshments were served by the committee. Jane Reus and Roy Davis were co-chairmen for the meeting.

Stamp No. 1 was good for "one pint of cream." This came in the form of devotions, led by Lois Hinkamp. Stamp No. 2 was goo< for "one pound of meat" and was issued by Vivian Tardiff, who reac her serious paper on "France and the War." The paper focused at-tention on the little known French Underground system and its work in the overthrowing of one Adolf Schnikelgmber. Many revealing facts of France's suffering were set forth in this paper which was truly the "meat" for the evening.

Stamp No. 3, issued by Dorothy Wichers and Barbara Tazelaar, was good for "one pound of sugar." Miss Wichers sang "Stars In My Eyes" and "Manhattan Serenade" while Miss Tazelaar gave a pound, here and there, to the keyboard.

Stamp No. 4 was good for "one can of com" -and was issued by Fritzi Jonkman. On this ctamp, we saw "Women and the War" and as could be expected from any product . . . . a la Jonkman . . . it was excellent humor. A passing parade of models illustrated each type of woman in the war, and a running monologue-dialogue pro-vided the laugh-continuity.

Stamp No. 5 was good for "One quart of 'I sc ream'" and was is-sued by Norma Lemmer, who led community singing. Stamp No. 6 was good for one can of raspber-ries, and for the first time in the evening a man had something to say about the proceedings. Frater Russ DeVette gave the master critic's report. Stamp No. 7 was good for two (down) beets and was issued by both societies as they sang their respective soci-ety songs.

Stamp No. 8 was good for "one gallon of gas and two tires" (soda pop and doughnuts) which was used to extensively decorate the "inner man." This stamp was is-sued by >laxine Den Herder.

Interrupting the program. Presi-dent Kleinjans, retiring mentor ol OKE, administered the oath of of-fice to the newly elected Frater prexy, Seymour Padnos. O t h e r officers for the new term were announced . . . Frater Bob Chard, vice president; and Frater John VanderBroek, secretary.

KNICKS WRITE LETTERS

The meeting of the Knickerbock-ers was opened by a song service led by Clarence Buurma, accompa-nied by Tom Van Dahm. The devo-tions were given by Bob Van Zyl. Next a s e r i o u s paper entitled T n e Metal — Aluminum" was presented by Gerrit Levey, who was criticized by Ted Zwemer. The Good Humor Man, Thomas Van Dahm, then delivered the funny stuff for the evening called "The Female Is the More Deadly of the Species" or "Try and Stop Me If You Heard This One Before," and was criticized by Don Bochs. The master critic for the evening was Bill Onk.

During the business meeting the members of Knickerbocker now in the armed services were assigned to different members still at school and a series of letters were start-ed. These letters were passed around to the other members of fraternity so that each could add his little line. The meeting was closed with the Knick song, and a little farewell party was given for the boys in the Army Reserve.

DORIANS ELECT DE KLEINE

The Dorian society held a regu-lar business meeting last Friday night to elect a new staff of offi-cers. Corrine Poole was succeeded by Fannie De Kleine as president. Melba Dings took over the activi-ties of the vice president from Marion Sandee. Marie Jenkins turned the secretary's book over to Evelyn Schiffner, and Marian Vande Bunte was succeeded by Loretta Van Wieren. Miriam Sie-berts is the new keeper of the air-chives.

Following the election, future plans of the society were dis-cussed. The girls kept their fingers busy with war knitting during the whole meeting. Officers' treat was the climax of the evening.

THETAS AT RED CROSS

Thesaurians met in their room

at 7:00 Friday night, for a short business meeting. The group then made their way to the Red Cross Room to work on surgical dress-ings until 9:00. The society is ' happy to welcome Helen Van Alst into their ranks. She was received into the society as a pledge at the joint meeting with the Sibyllines, March 12.

It was decided that this week the girls should bring their Red Cross knitting. Recently the girls have painted the floor of their room and have now completed the remodel-ing they planned earlier.

DELPHIANS TO ELECT

Prexie Syd MacGregor brought down the gavel for the last time at the Delphia meeting Friday night, as election of new officers is coming up this Friday. Resign-ing officers, Syd, Jean Ruiter, Lou-ise Becker and Red Van Dyke whetted and quenched the appe-tites of Delphi with the traditional oicers' treat. Following this, Del-phians settled back to ripping out stitches while Barbara Van Raalte read a ripping paper (survival of Informal Initiation on "Keeping Two Fellows on the String," or "What a Line!"

COSMOS CHOOSE MULDER

At a recent meeting Cosmpoli-tan chose officers for the spring term. Elected to the presidency was Harvey Mulder with John Et-tema chosen as his assistant. Adam McClay will keep the books and Chuck Dykema the archives. Ser-geant-at-arms elected were Glen Stokdyk and Arys Huizenga.

CHISMAN EMMY PREXY

The Emersonian Fraternity held

i ts weekly meeting on Friday,

March 19. Chapiain Alfred Borg-

man opened with prayer and af ter the sinking of the Emersonian song, routine business was dis-cussed. The election of officers for the third term was the highlight of the meeting. Those elected are: Louis Chisman, president; James Burger, vice president; Laurence Beltman, secretary; John Rypstra, sergeant-at-arms; J o h n Geary, keep-of-the-archives; and Howard Hakkon, Robert Wildman and Bill Schank, janitors. The constitutional revision committee with Andrew Veldhuis, chairman, presented a streamlined constitution to the f r a -ternity as the closing business of the evening.

On Saturday evening, March 20, the junior class of the fraterni ty held its annual formal dinner in the Emersonian house. The decora-tions were carried out in a St . Patrick's day theme. Juniors and their guests were: Larry Beltman, Francis Van Duzer; Bob Heneveld, Connie Crawford; John Kleis, Jo Ann Vander Velde; Bob Lucking, Evelyn Reus; Charles Moolenaar, Anna Jane Toppen; Bill Midavaine, Betty Christie; Bill Moerdyke, Le-ti t ia Husband; Lee Roggen, Edna Blom; Keith Soderburg, Barbara Van Raalte; Arnold Vermeer, Fran-cis Colenbrander; Clarence Wagner and Donna Eby. Honored guests were Prof, and Mrs. Albert Tim-mer.

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