+ All Categories
Home > Documents > 04-24-1940

04-24-1940

Date post: 13-Mar-2016
Category:
Upload: van-wylen-library
View: 219 times
Download: 3 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
 
Popular Tags:
4
-PI —— 1 —— S I SEE I B y MILTON VERBURG It was in the latter part of the nineteenth century that the world began to awaken. Here and there great thinkers were beginning to wonder about the glory of war. Musicians, poets, novelists ceased exulting the battlefield in glowing song and word pictures and were starting to ask if peace were not a more lofty ideal. Even some sin- cere politicians were doubting the expediency of fighting. A peace movement was being born. SERMON ON MOUNT IMPRESSED TOLSTOI The movement found its highest expression in t h e writings of a Russian, Count Leo Tolstoi. When Tolstoi was converted to Christi- anity, he decided to take Christ's teachings at their face value. He took it that when Christ said, "Love your enemies, bless t h e m that curse you, and blessed are the peacemakers," He meant it. This author died in 1910, having made a vast world-following. Four years later the World war broke out and apparently undid all of Tolstoi's work. Hut not entirely. Literally millions of men died be- lieving they were fighting the last war of all time. But when it was over, the settlement was made in such a way that it soon became apparent that the war had been futile. A great wave of disillusion- ment toward world peace set in. To counteract this, peace societies were organized all over the world. The movement grew. In our own country there are now over a hun- dred such organizations, of which more than sixty operate on a national scale. LAWYER GHAN 1)1 ALSO INSPIRED Another manifestation of the movement appeared in an unex- pected quarter: India. A little brown lawyer named Mohandas Gandhi, who like Tolstoi had been inspired by the Sermon on the Mount, started a great patriotic- national movement, in all effect a war of rebellion, on the basis of love and non-violent action. He proved that Christianity can work in international affairs. But today there is again war and bloodshed. Is all lost? No, by no means I In every belligerent nation, as there never has been be- fore. there are vast numbers of citizens who oppose the war that their countries are waging. Even the old weapon of propaganda has failed against them. From England and France, even from Germany, Russia and Japan, this information trickles out to us. The peace move- ment goes on! PEACE STILL LIVES TIUST IN F I T I R E As I see it. the movement will continue to go on. Ultimately it will be almost completely success- ful. 1 do not expect to see the end of war in my lifetime; that may not come for centuries. Hut the time will come when people the world over will be so opposed to war that it will be almost impos- sible for one nation to battle an- other. How soon that time comes depends upon how soon the major- ity of people love peace more than war. We can do our part by trusting in the future and casting our lot in the movement for peace. Perhaps we could all profit in re-reading seriously the Sermon on the Mount and attempting to apply it to our own lives. Hope College Anchor uiku Official Publication of the Students of Hope College at Holland, Michigan A p r i l 2 4 , 1 9 4 0 Inter-Fraternity All-College Sing Set for June 15 Plans for Hope's first all-college sing, to be held on June 15, are in tune "progressing rapidly," accord- ing to Chairwoman Margaret Bil- kert. Miss Hilkert stated that the event is to be an annual tradition. Two songs are to be rendered by each society; one, a society song; the other, a semi-classical selection. Judging will be held on the basis of interpretation, choice, precise- ness, and diction. Appearance and uniformity of dress will also be considered in the final decision. Acting as judges for the occa- sion are Miss Trixie Moore, Mr. Eugene Heeter, and Mrs. H. L. Dunwoody all of Holland. Junior Margaret Bilkert. Muskegon junior, has the following committee cooperating with her: Jean Wish- meier, Robert Powers, Theodora M e u l e n d y k e , William Tappan, Anthony Pennings, Henry Voogd, Eloise Boynton, and Blase Levai. KAY MARCLEY EUGENE FLIPSE . . . "You certainly do stick to it, Emily. I guess you must like school." . . . "Well, I always feel it's something you have to go through." Yankee Saqa Set for Lit Club Show Our Town Turns Out for "Our Town," By DON SAGER The Lit club may be cold and dark but it's home to the weary members of the senior play cast. Every night now for I don't know how long the players have been courting that elusive theatrical muse. 01' Dean Dyk as the Stage Manager ambles out right stage and drawls in a crispy New England twang, the natural resources and physical assets of Grover's Corners, New Hampshire. \ If you've never been afforded and Kay charms the heart of many more than a strictly private show- a village swain as Emily. ing of Flipse's "lighter side" don't a v Domestic Scenes Lively miss his amatory pursuit of Kay 1 And then there's Rose Teninga Marcley, that captivating country j and Al Shiphorst, as pretty a mar- catch. Flip, you know, plays the 1 ried couple as you've ever seen. Collegiate Press Rates The Anchor First Class Editorials, Sports Page Rated High As Paper Put in National Competition First Class Honor rating was awarded The Hope College Anchor by the Associated Collegiate Press, it was revealed this week by Anchor Editor Robert Bonthius. Entered in t h e 22nd Ail-American Newspaper Critical Service lists. The Anchor was scored as "Excellent" in its class. To make competition as fair as possible in the nation-wide rat- ing, papers are classified in two Mabel May Dame "Satisfied" with May Day Progress Promises Fair Weather As Officials Develop Banquet, Sports Plans Mabel the May Dame, mysterious Hope college student, revealed to May day officials yesterday that i - ---- —- she was "thoroughly satisfied" with ! t ' u ' P a ! )er ' s news coverage, and the the way in which plans were being ' ,)a ' ance 0 f interest throughout the in ways: (1) According to type of school, and (2) According to fre- quency of publication. In the four- year college bi-weekly division, The Anchor competed with papers of 42 other schools. Name Plate Helps Judged especially high in the first semester issues of The Anchor from the standpoint of content were the editorials and the sports page. Rated "Excellent" also were DEAN DYKSTRA . . . "Almost everybody in the world Rets married — you know what I mean?" role of homespun gigolo George. Mains Awarded Second in Peace Contest at Albion Ball of State First; Three Best in State Errter National Fray John Hains, Coopersville sopho- more, added to the laurels of Hope college last Wednesday night, April 17, by taking second place in the Michigan Intercollegiate Peace con- test at Albion college. Speaking as one of eleven con- testants on the subject, "The New hay Dawns," Hains received $:;() for the second award. The first place winner in the contest was Rose plays Mrs. Gibbs, the loving (naturally), understanding wife of the country doctor. Al pokes around his pill boxes as Dr. Gibbs and pre- scribes loads of homey philosophy and common sense. On the other side of the street the Webbs hold forth in all their domestic glory. Althea Raffenaud and Don Poppen take the leads in See PLAY REVUE, p. 2 o Eighteen Hopemen Make Good at Ohio Since 1913 Chem Department's Shows Ohio Placed Them in High Positions Since 1918, eighteen graduates Hope Profs Lead Educators' Meet completed for the activities to be | held on the campus on Friday, I May K). "The weather man has promised | me exceedingly fair weather." | Mabel announced. At t h e same meeting Hanquet 1 Co-chairmen Klynor S p a a n and i Dean Dykstra. announced the menu , for the banquet and told of the 1 decorations planned. The program will include the traditional toasts | to the queen. According to the committee, arrangements are being made to try and get the past queens I to be present at the banquet. Ran- . quet tickets will sell for sixty cents. 'I he m o r n i n g and afternoon , sports events, of which detailed Six of Holland to Go To Ann Arbor Friday i.-^mis t*veins, oi wmcn detailed . . lw Two Hope college professors will i accounts appear on the sports page, publication staff of the paper irticipate as chairmen in the an-1 will feature in the morning two a ^ ru ' ( ^ e <,r a ' ( ^ to further im- four pages. From the standpoint of composition. The Anchor was seen to have benefited from the change of type face and name-plate in the I*all of the year as the headlining received the highest possible rat- ing. "Superior." Front page make- up rated "Excellent," as did the printing. Guides Development The purpose of the ratings, which are published in the form of score- books, put out by the National Scholastic Press association, is "to analyze and evaluate the work of the school publications of Amer- ica." Every paper enrolled is care- fully graded with the aid of this scorebook which is then sent to Lawrence Hall of Michigan State of Hope college have received grad- college who had for his oration title. "Hlind Followers." Hex Tul- ford of Highland Park junior col- lege took third place with the ora- tion, "The Challenge of Peace." Coaches from the eleven partici- pating schools judged the event. The three top orations have been entered in the national $100 essay contest sponsored by Misses Helen and Mary Seabury of Massachus etts. $700 Plus # EARL PURCHASE . . . New England, here he comes! Earl Purchase, Muskegon Heights senior, received a scholarship to the University of Vermont last week. He will do research in organic chemistry. As little teaching is re- quired, Purchase can devote most of his time to studies. He plans to get his master's degree in one year. The scholarship is for $700 in twelve monthly payments, plus all tuition and lab fees. uate assistantships in chemistry at Ohio State university. Of these eighteen five are now teachers of chemistry, eleven are engaged in industry, and two, Calvin Van der W e r f . '."JT. and William Arend- s h o r s t . '.'{8, are pursuing their re- searches in the graduate school lab- oratories. Out of the sixteen stu- dents who have finished their graduate work in chemistry at Ohio State, thirteen have earned the Ph.D. degree. Those graduates who are now engaged in teaching are as follows: Gebhard Stegeman, 'l.'i, Ph.D., is a professor at the University of Pittsburgh. Andrew Karsten, '19. Ph.D.. and Gerard Oosterhof, '20, Ph.D., are teaching at the South Dakota School of Mines. Theodore Van der Ploeg. '19, M.S., is teach- ing chemistry at Ottawa Hills high school in Grand Rapids. Adrian Kuiper, Ph.D., is a professor of Biochemistry at the University of Iowa. Many in Industries Those engaged in industry in- clude: Paul Stegman, '17, M.S., who is employed by the Midland Water Works in Midland, Michigan. George Vander Borgh, '20, Ph.D., is with the Vander Borgh Oyster Co. in West Sayville, N. Y. Harry B. Dykstra, '24, Ph.D., is a chemist with the Du Pont Chemical Co. Bernard Shoemaker, '26, Ph.D., and Justin Bussies, '25, Ph.D., are with the Standard Oil Co. of Indiana at Whiting, Ind. I man Schurman, '27, Ph.D., has a government position in the United States Testing laboratories. Clarence Bremer, '29, Ph.D., is em- ployed by the Atlas Powder Co. in Pennsylvania. Merle Rigterink, '33, Ph.D., is with the Bell Telephone Co. of New York City. Henry Wol- thorn, '30, Ph.D., is a chemist with the Carnegie Steel Co. of Youngs- town, Ohio, and James Wiegerin^c, '33, Ph.D., is in the Bureau of Standards at Washington, D. C. participate nual meeting of the Schoolmasters' Club of Michigan. The meeting will be held on the University of Mich- igan campus, Ann Arbor, April 25, 2(5 a n d 27. Several Holland high school teachers will also take part. Albert E. Lam pen, professor of mathematics, will preside jointly with Prof. Judson W. Foust of Central State Teachers' college over the mathematics conference on Friday, April 2(5. Prof. Lampen is chairman of the Michigan section of the Mathematical Association of America, while Prof. Foust is chair- man of this section of the School- masters' club. Dean Elizabeth Lichty, professor of French, will preside as chairman over the conference of deans and advisers of women, which will also meet on Friday. Among other Holland teachers who will take an active part in the meeting are: Miss Iva Davidson, secretary of the business education conference; Miss Linnea Nelson, who will speak on shorthand and typewriting: Miss J o a n Vander Werf, who will speak on the trends in the teaching of Latin, and Miss Lida Rogers, who is a member of the resolutions committee of the club. All are instructors in Holland high school. ing baseball games, one between the freshmen and sophomore girls and another between the junior and senior girls. Pi Kappans Hold Banquet on May 6 provement. Ratings are of five levels: Ail- American, First Class, Second Class. Third Class, and Fourth Class. This is the first time The Anchor has attained First Class honors. Six Are "Tops" Each year several college papers are judged the "pick" of the All- Jean Wishmeier. junior, has been American class. These papers are appointed chairwoman of the an-1 the year's Pacemakers. Six were nual spring Pi Kappa Delta ban- so named this year. They include: | quet to be held at Anchor Inn on The Cauldron of Fenn college. | May 6. it was announced by Vir- Cleveland, Ohio; The Daily Cardi- jgmia Ellison, outgoing president. | nal of the University of Wisconsin; j The Daily Texan of the University of Texas; The Echo Weekly of Mil- waukee State Teachers college; The i Michigan Daily of the University j of Michigan; and The Minnesota ; Daily of the University of Minn- Iesota. Certificates of award are given to all papers receiving an honor rating. The lesults of the Critical Other officers were elected as Service are also published in news- Van Dyke Elected Dorm President Marthene Van Dyke. Grand Rapids junior, was elected house president at a general Voorhees house meeting Thursday. April 18. follow s : senior representative., Mildred Potter and Kay Marcley; junior representatives, R o b e r t a Rawson and Mary Ruth Jacobs; sophomore representatives, Ann De Young. Betsy Race, and Ruth Van- der May; freshmen representatives, Florence Dyke ma and Barbara Folensbee. The Secret's Out! Anchor Discovers Where Hope Profs Spend Spare Time Have you ever wondered what Hope college profs do with their spare time? Well, The Anchor approached Latin Prof Timmer with this interrogation the other day and shed a great light upon the subject. Timmei himself is carrying the weighty responsibility of worry- man for the educational survey of Hope college. You remember, of course, that Hope is one of 22 colleges and universities which is engaged in the National Cooperative Study on education. Well, Prof. Timmer spends his time as liaison officer for the Study on Hope's campus, and a time-consuming one it is, what with meetings to attend and reports to gather and loose ends to tie. Contact Alumni Working on a special Study com- mittee, interested in what the alumni have to say about Hope, are Prof's Winter, Wolters, Vander Borgh, Timmer and Mr. Brouwer. Idea is to find out what former Hopeites got out of Hope (you can take that any way you want to) and how they think our college can be improved. Prof. Raymond spends a lot of spare time on the Study these days, too. Along Mr. Hinga, and Profs Hinkamp, and McLean, Raymond is interested in clarifying the place of social studies in the college cur- riculum. Social Studies Revision "Why", quoth Raymond, "Page 32. Section D, of the Hope college bul- letin is all wet! The way things stand now a student can meet the social studies requirements by tak- ing the regular Bible couises and one psych course. We need to de- partmentalize on this business." In case anyone is looking for Miss Boyd of an afternoon, he can be pretty certain that she will be do- ing a little extra "home-work" in the library. She and Miss Lichty are in on this Study business, also, and their tianscendant aim is to ^dll two birds with a single stone. Only difference is they call it. See SPARE TIME, p. 2 papers throughout the country. o Play. Dinner For French Club Meets The next meeting of the French club will be on May 8. A play will be presented by the conversation class. Also in the offing i§ a din- ner to be held on June 9 with Mary Ruth Jacobs, Fremont junior, act- ing as chairwoman. French club members met Wed- nesday, April 17, for a business meeting and social. Officers were elected as follows: Edward Carlin, Long Island junior, president; Marthene Van Dyke, Grand Rapids junior, vice president, and Mae Clonan, P o m p t o n Lakes, N. J. sophomore, secretary-treasurer. o Profs Interview Mr. Paul Brouwer and Mr. Mil- ton Hinga were in Kalamazoo Fri- day, April 19, interviewing pros- pective students. o Raymond Travels Dr. Bruce Raymond spent last Thursday and Friday on a business trip in Canada at Owen sound on Georgian bay. o . • n Dean Lichty's Tea v Dean Lichty entertained b o t h the old and new WAL bo^ds at an informal tea in thel reception room of Voorhees hall Wednesday afternoon, April 17.
Transcript
Page 1: 04-24-1940

-PI —— 1 11 — —

S I SEE I B y

MILTON

VERBURG

It was in the l a t t e r pa r t of the nineteenth century tha t the world began to awaken. Here and there g r ea t th inkers were beginning to wonder about t h e glory of war . Musicians, poets, novelists ceased exult ing the battlefield in glowing song and word pictures and were s t a r t i ng to ask if peace were not a more lofty ideal. Even some sin-cere politicians were doubt ing the expediency of fighting. A peace

movement was being born.

SERMON ON MOUNT IMPRESSED TOLSTOI

The movement found its highest expression in t h e wr i t ings of a Russian, Count Leo Tolstoi. When Tolstoi was converted to Christi-anity, he decided to take Chris t ' s teachings a t their face value. He took it t h a t when Christ said, "Love your enemies, bless t h e m tha t curse you, and blessed are the peacemakers ," He meant it. This au thor died in 1910, having made a vas t world-following.

Four years later the World war broke out and apparent ly undid all of Tolstoi's work. Hut not entirely. Literally millions of men died be-lieving they were f ighting the last

war of all time. But when it was over, the set t lement was made in such a way that it soon became apparent that the wa r had been futi le. A grea t wave of disillusion-ment toward world peace set in. To counteract this, peace societies were organized all over the world. The movement grew. In our own country there a re now over a hun-dred such organizat ions, of which more than s i x t y opera te on a national scale.

LAWYER GHAN 1)1 ALSO I N S P I R E D

Another manifes ta t ion of the movement appeared in an unex-pected quar te r : I n d i a . A little brown lawyer named Mohandas Gandhi, who like Tolstoi had been inspired by the Sermon on the Mount, s ta r ted a g r e a t patriotic-national movement, in all effect a war of rebellion, on the basis of love and non-violent action. He proved that Christ iani ty can work in international affairs .

But today there is again w a r and bloodshed. Is all lost? No, by no means I In every belligerent nation, as there never has been be-fore. there are vast numbers of citizens who oppose the war that their countries are waging. Even the old weapon of propaganda has failed against them. From England and France, even f rom Germany, Russia and Japan , this information trickles out to us. The peace move-ment goes on!

PEACE STILL LIVES T I U S T IN F I T I R E

As I see it. the movement will continue to go on. Ult imately it will be almost completely success-ful . 1 do not expect to see the end of war in my l ifet ime; that may not come for centuries. Hut the time will come when people the world over will be so opposed to war that it will be almost impos-sible for one nation to batt le an-other. How soon that t ime comes depends upon how soon the major-ity of people love peace more than war.

We can do our par t by t rus t ing

in the fu tu re and cas t ing our lot in the movement for peace. Perhaps we could all profit in re-reading seriously the Sermon on the Mount and a t t empt ing to apply it to our own lives.

Hope College Anchor uiku Official Publication of the Students of Hope College at Holland, Michigan A p r i l 2 4 , 1 9 4 0

Inter-Fraternity All-College Sing Set for June 15

Plans for Hope's first all-college sing, to be held on J u n e 15, are in tune "progress ing rapid ly ," accord-ing to Chairwoman Marga re t Bil-kert. Miss Hilkert s ta ted tha t the event is to be an annual tradit ion.

Two songs are to be rendered by each society; one, a society song; the other, a semi-classical selection. Judg ing will be held on the basis of in terpre ta t ion , choice, precise-ness, and diction. Appearance and uni formi ty of dress will also be considered in the final decision.

Acting as judges f o r the occa-sion a re Miss Trixie Moore, Mr. Eugene Heeter , a n d Mrs. H. L. Dunwoody all of Holland. Jun io r

Margare t Bilkert. Muskegon junior, h a s t h e following committee cooperat ing with h e r : J ean Wish-meier, Robert Powers , Theodora M e u l e n d y k e , Wil l iam Tappan , Anthony Pennings, H e n r y Voogd,

Eloise Boynton, and Blase Levai.

KAY MARCLEY E U G E N E F L I P S E

. . . "You certainly do stick to it, Emily. I guess you must like school." . . . "Well, I a lways feel it 's something you have to go through."

Yankee Saqa Set for Lit Club Show Our Town Turns Out for "Our Town,"

By DON SAGER

The Lit club m a y be cold and dark but i t 's home to the weary m e m b e r s of the senior play cast . Every n igh t now for I don ' t know how long t h e p layers have been cour t ing t h a t elusive thea t r i ca l muse. 01' Dean Dyk as the S t age Manage r ambles out r igh t s t age and d rawls in a crispy New England twang, the na tu ra l resources and physical a s se t s of Grover ' s Corners, New Hampshire. \

If you've never been afforded and Kay charms the heart of many more than a str ict ly pr ivate show- a village swain as Emily. ing of Flipse's " l ighter side" don't

a v Domestic Scenes Lively

miss his amatory pursuit of Kay 1 And then there 's Rose Teninga Marcley, that capt ivat ing country j and Al Shiphorst , as pret ty a mar-catch. Flip, you know, plays the 1 ried couple as you've ever seen.

Collegiate Press Rates The Anchor First Class

Editorials, Sports Page Rated High

As Paper Put in National Competi t ion F i r s t Class Honor r a t i n g was awarded The Hope College

Anchor by the Associated Collegiate P re s s , it was revealed

th i s week by Anchor Edi to r Robe r t Bonth ius . E n t e r e d in t h e

22nd Ail-American Newspape r Crit ical Service lists. T h e

Anchor was scored as "Exce l l en t " in its class.

To make compet i t ion as f a i r as possible in the nation-wide ra t -ing, papers a re classified in two Mabel May Dame

"Satisfied" with

May Day Progress

Promises Fair Weather

As Officials Develop

Banquet, Sports Plans

Mabel the May Dame, mysterious Hope college student, revealed to

May day officials yesterday that i - ---- — -she was " thoroughly satisfied" with ! t ' u ' P a ! ) e r ' s news coverage, and the the way in which plans were being ' , ) a ' a n c e 0 f interest throughout the

in ways : (1) According to type of school, and (2) According to f r e -quency of publication. In the four-year college bi-weekly division, The Anchor competed with papers of 42 other schools.

Name Plate Helps

Judged especially high in the first semester issues of The Anchor f rom the s tandpoint of content were the editorials and the spor t s page. Rated "Exce l len t" also were

DEAN DYKSTRA . . . "Almost everybody in

the world Rets married — you know what I m e a n ? "

role of homespun gigolo George.

Mains Awarded

Second in Peace

Contest at Albion

Ball of State First;

Three Best in State

Errter National Fray

John Hains, Coopersville sopho-more, added to the laurels of Hope college last Wednesday night, April 17, by t ak ing second place in the Michigan Intercollegiate Peace con-test at Albion college.

Speaking as one of eleven con-tes tan ts on the subject , "The New h a y Dawns," Hains received $:;()

for the second award . The first place winner in the contest was

Rose plays Mrs. Gibbs, the loving (na tu ra l ly ) , unders tanding wife of the country doctor. Al pokes around his pill boxes as Dr. Gibbs and pre-scribes loads of homey philosophy and common sense.

On the other side of the street the Webbs hold for th in all their domestic glory. Althea Raffenaud and Don Poppen take the leads in

See PLAY REVUE, p. 2 o

Eighteen Hopemen Make Good at Ohio Since 1913

Chem Department's

Shows Ohio Placed

Them in High Positions

Since 1918, eighteen g radua tes

Hope Profs Lead Educators' Meet

completed for the activities to be | held on the c a m p u s on Friday, I May K).

"The weather man has promised | me exceedingly f a i r weather ." | Mabel announced.

At t h e same meeting Hanquet 1 Co-chairmen Klynor S p a a n and i Dean Dykst ra . announced the menu , for the banquet and told of the 1

decorations planned. The program

will include the tradit ional toasts | to the queen. According to the committee, a r rangements are being made to t ry and get the past queens I to be present at the banquet. Ran- . quet t ickets will sell for sixty cents.

'I he m o r n i n g and af ternoon , sports events, of which detailed

Six of Holland to Go To Ann Arbor Friday

i . -^mis t*veins, oi wmcn detailed . . l w

Two Hope college professors will i accounts appear on the spor ts page, publication staff of the pape r

irticipate as chairmen in the an-1 will f e a t u r e in the morning two a ^ ru ' (^e < , r a '(^ t o f u r the r im-

four pages. From the standpoint of composition. The Anchor was seen to have benefited f rom the change of type face and name-pla te in the I*all of the year as the headlining received the highest possible ra t -ing. "Super ior . " Fron t page make-up rated "Excel lent , " as did the printing.

Guides Development

The purpose of the rat ings, which a re published in the fo rm of score-books, put out by the National Scholastic Press association, is " t o analyze and evaluate the work of the school publications of Amer-ica." Every paper enrolled is care-ful ly graded with the aid of th is scorebook which is then sent to

Lawrence Hall of Michigan Sta te of Hope college have received grad-college who had for his oration title. "Hlind Followers." Hex Tul-ford of Highland P a r k junior col-lege took third place with the ora-tion, "The Challenge of Peace."

Coaches from the eleven partici-pat ing schools judged the event. The three top orat ions have been entered in the national $100 essay contest sponsored by Misses Helen and Mary Seabury of Massachus etts.

$700 Plus

#

E A R L P U R C H A S E . . . New England, here he

comes!

Ear l Purchase, Muskegon Heights senior, received a scholarship to the Universi ty of Vermont last week. He will do research in organic chemistry. As little teaching is re-quired, Purchase can devote most of his t ime to studies. He plans to get his mas te r ' s degree in one year. The scholarship is f o r $700 in twelve monthly payments , plus all

tui t ion and lab fees .

ua te ass is tantships in chemistry at Ohio S ta te university. Of these eighteen five are now teachers of chemistry, eleven are engaged in industry, and two, Calvin Van der Werf . '."JT. and W i l l i a m Arend-shors t . '.'{8, are pursuing their re-searches in the g radua te school lab-oratories. Out of the sixteen stu-dents who have finished their g radua te work in chemistry at Ohio Sta te , thirteen have earned the Ph.D. degree.

Those gradua tes who are now engaged in teaching are as follows: Gebhard Stegeman, 'l.'i, Ph.D., is a professor at the Universi ty of P i t t sburgh. Andrew Karsten, '19. Ph.D.. and Gerard Oosterhof, '20, Ph.D., are teaching at the South Dakota School of Mines. Theodore Van der Ploeg. '19, M.S., is teach-ing chemistry at Ot tawa Hills high school in Grand Rapids. Adrian Kuiper, Ph.D., is a professor of Biochemistry at the University of Iowa.

Many in Industries

Those engaged in industry in-clude: Paul Stegman, '17, M.S., who is employed by the Midland Wate r Works in M i d l a n d , Michigan. George Vander Borgh, '20, Ph.D., is with the Vander Borgh Oyster Co. in West Sayville, N. Y. H a r r y B. Dykstra , '24, Ph.D., is a chemist with the Du Pont Chemical Co. Bernard Shoemaker, '26, Ph.D., and Jus t in Bussies, '25, Ph.D., a r e with the Standard Oil Co. of Indiana a t Whiting, Ind.

I man Schurman, '27, Ph.D., has a government position in the United Sta tes Tes t ing laboratories . Clarence Bremer, '29, Ph.D., is em-ployed by the At las Powder Co. in Pennsylvania. Merle Rigter ink, '33,

Ph.D., is with t he Bell Telephone Co. of New York City. Henry Wol-thorn, '30, Ph.D., is a chemist with the Carnegie Steel Co. of Youngs-town, Ohio, and J a m e s Wiegerin^c, '33, Ph.D., is in the Bureau of S tandards a t Washington , D. C.

part icipate

nual meet ing of the Schoolmasters ' Club of Michigan. The meeting will be held on the Universi ty of Mich-igan campus, Ann Arbor, April 25, 2(5 and 27. Several Holland high school teachers will also take par t .

Albert E. Lam pen, professor of mathematics , will preside joint ly with Prof . Judson W. Foust of

Central S t a t e Teachers ' college over the mathemat ics conference on Fr iday, April 2(5. Prof. Lampen

is chairman of the Michigan section of the Mathematical Association of America, while Prof. Foust is chair-

man of this section of the School-masters ' club.

Dean Elizabeth Lichty, professor of French, will preside as chai rman over the conference of deans and advisers of women, which will also meet on Friday.

Among other Holland teachers who will take an active par t in the meeting are : Miss Iva Davidson, secre tary of the business education conference; Miss Linnea Nelson, who will speak on shorthand and typewri t ing: Miss J o a n Vander Werf, who will speak on the t rends in the teaching of Latin, and Miss Lida Rogers, who is a member of the resolutions committee of the club. All are ins t ruc tors in Holland high school.

ing baseball games, one between the f reshmen and sophomore girls and another between the junior and senior gir ls .

Pi Kappans Hold Banquet on May 6

provement.

Ratings a r e of five levels: Ail-American, F i r s t Class, Second Class. Third Class, and Fou r th Class. This is the first time The Anchor has a t ta ined First Class honors.

Six Are "Tops"

Each yea r several college papers a re judged the "p ick" of the All-

Jean Wishmeier. junior, has been American class. These papers are appointed chairwoman of the an-1 the year 's Pacemakers . Six were nual sp r ing Pi Kappa Delta ban- so named this year . They include:

| quet to be held at Anchor Inn on The Cauldron of Fenn college. | May 6. it was announced by Vir- Cleveland, Ohio; The Daily Cardi-j gmia Ellison, outgoing president. | nal of the Universi ty of Wisconsin;

j The Daily Texan of the Universi ty of Texas; The Echo Weekly of Mil-waukee S t a t e Teachers college; The

i Michigan Daily of the University j of Michigan; and The Minnesota ; Daily of the Univers i ty of Minn-Iesota.

Certificates of award are given to all papers receiving an honor

rat ing. The lesul ts of the Critical Other officers were elected as Service a re also published in news-

Van Dyke Elected Dorm President

Marthene Van Dyke. G r a n d Rapids junior, was elected house president at a general Voorhees house meeting Thursday . April 18.

f o l l o w s : senior representa t ive . , Mildred Potter and Kay Marcley; junior representat ives, R o b e r t a

Rawson and Mary Ruth Jacobs; sophomore representat ives, Ann De Young. Betsy Race, and Ruth Van-der May; f reshmen representat ives, Florence D y k e m a and Barba ra

Folensbee.

The Secret's Out! Anchor Discovers Where Hope Profs Spend Spare Time

Have you ever wondered what Hope college profs do with their spare t ime? Well, The Anchor approached Latin Prof Timmer with this interrogat ion the other day and shed a grea t light upon the subject .

Timmei himself is car ry ing the weighty responsibility of worry-man fo r the educational survey of Hope college. You remember , of course, that Hope is one of 22 colleges and universities which is engaged in the National Cooperative Study on education. Well, Prof. Timmer spends his time as liaison officer for the Study on Hope's campus, and a t ime-consuming one it is, what with meet ings to at tend and reports to ga the r and loose ends to tie. Contact Alumni

Working on a special Study com-mittee, interested in what the alumni have to say about Hope, a re P ro f ' s Winter , Wolters, Vander Borgh, Timmer and Mr. Brouwer. Idea is to find out what f o r m e r Hopeites go t out of Hope (you can take t ha t any way you w a n t to) and how they th ink our college can be improved.

P r o f . Raymond spends a lot of spa re t ime on the Study these days, too. Along Mr. Hinga , and P r o f s Hinkamp, and McLean, Raymond

is interested in c lar i fy ing the place of social studies in the college cur-riculum.

Social Studies Revision

"Why" , quoth Raymond, "Page 32. Section D, of the Hope college bul-letin is all wet! The way things s tand now a s tudent can meet the social studies requirements by tak-ing t he regular Bible couises and one psych course. We need to de-par tmenta l ize on this business."

In case anyone is looking fo r Miss Boyd of an af ternoon, he can be p re t ty certain t ha t she will be do-ing a l i t t le ex t ra "home-work" in the l ibrary . She and Miss Lichty are in on this Study business, also, and the i r t i anscendan t aim is to ^dll t w o birds wi th a single stone. Only difference is t hey call i t .

See S P A R E TIME, p. 2

papers throughout the country.

o

Play. Dinner For French Club Meets

The next meeting of the French club will be on May 8. A play will be presented by the conversation class. Also in the offing i§ a din-ner to be held on J u n e 9 with Mary Ruth Jacobs, F remont junior, act-ing as chairwoman.

French club members met Wed-nesday, April 17, fo r a business meeting and social. Officers were elected as follows: Edward Carl in, Long I s l a n d junior , pres ident ; Marthene Van Dyke, Grand Rapids junior, vice president , a n d Mae Clonan, P o m p t o n Lakes, N. J . sophomore, secre ta ry- t reasurer .

o

Profs Interview Mr. Paul Brouwer and Mr. Mil-

ton Hinga were in Kalamazoo F r i -day, Apri l 19, in terviewing pros-pective s tudents .

o

Raymond Travels

Dr. Bruce Raymond spent las t Thursday and F r i d a y on a business t r ip in Canada a t Owen sound on Georgian bay.

o . • n

Dean Lichty's Tea v Dean Lichty enter ta ined b o t h

the old and new W A L b o ^ d s a t an in fo rmal tea in t h e l reception room of Voorhees ha l l Wednesday a f te rnoon, Apri l 17.

Page 2: 04-24-1940

Pap Two Hope College Inebor

Hope College finchor Campus Capers • • .1 i t — I AU— VI rtt\A rV\1lpcrA

Published evtry two w « k « during the school year, by t W ^ u d e n t j j r f Hop« College Entered an second c law matter at the post of f ice of Holland, Michigan, B t ^

siMcial a t e of postage provided for In Section 1103 of Act of Congress, October 3, 191 <, authorlxed October 19, 1918.

m r a e e e n r i n row MATIONAL ADV**TISIH« BY

lbtioMlMvartWigSentic«,lne. C*IUH hAUtktn RfrttnUliv*

4 2 0 MADMON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CNICME •OOTOS • LOS AHSIIIS • ! « • FSABCIOCO

1939 ^ Member 1940

P t s s o c i d e d G o O e f t c i t e P r e s s

Mail subscriptions, one dollar per yea r Address — T h e Anchor, Hope College, Holland, Michigan.

Telephone 9436.

Senior Play, Campus Cookies, Ice, Thnooped by Inquisitive Thnooper

e e e

By T H E T H N O O P E R • * *

The senior play seems to be coming along quite nicely these

THE STUDENT PRINTS —By BETTY VAN P U T T E N and DON S A G E R —

• « «

Right about th is t ime our sp r ing feve r t e m p e r a t u r e is r unn ing aw

high as the old communi ty ches t the rmomete r . — S P —

Have you heard the latent anatomical mysterii? — S P —

S P offers i ts hea r t i e s t congra te to ye olde Anchor f o r making the

days . . . wonder if there will be a stool pigeon around this ACP "Public Enemy Number

Kay Esther can put on more colors than anyone we _ . new permanents showing up around the campus

Editor-in-chief Kobert H. Bonthius already — aren't they, Teddy? . . . did you know that Dr.

year know

Associate Editor. F r i t z Bertsch W a r n e r had spent three and a half yea r s going a round the g lobe? A w a r held him u p pa r t of the t ime . . . wonder how f a r we could get

t o d a y ? . . . . . . Campus cookie makes good

— well Mar thene is House presi-den t and she had her share of cam-puses . . . Winslow's window is the

W A R N I N ' ! ! ! ' T o be sure of a s f a t , a t tend

"Our T o w n " either Tuesday or Wednesday n i g h t / ' J ay Kap-enga, p lay ' s business manager , advised yes terday.

Ste lma h a s beaut i ful tee th i t

S P

Looks as if it takes all spring for spring to get to Holland — S P —

Have you heard the latest anatomical mys t e ry? ^ — S P —

Announcing the winnah of our secretly conducted short story contest:

I Love a Misery! or

T h r e e S t r ikes Isn ' t A lways Out or

Light I t On Yo* Shoo Then there was the ball player who made a Lucky St r ike which

EDITORIAL S T A F F

News Edi tors Fri tz Bertsch, Doug MacDonald, Don Sager

Sports Editor , K , ,d d i e D " , b ' e

Feature Edi tor Na fe Headlines Blase Leva!, For res t Pnnd le , Alma Weeldreyer

Facul ty Adviser P a u l B r o u w e r

Ten 1 n S ? 0 T e d d y Meulendyke. Lois J a n e Kronemeyer . R u t h Van P ° p e r i n ^ ' U ® " ^ V a n P u t t e n , Don Sager . Edi th Rameau . Ken Pon»»«n ' Van Dyke, Carl Van Har t sve ld t . John Wenthof. Grovene D«ck. Dorothy Curt is , Nancy Hoynton, Ru th S t ryke r , Evelyn MacCallum, Wil f r id Hasbrouck .

Freshman Reporters Mary J a n e Raffenaud. Alvin Schutmaat . Les Lnmpen, Wini f red Rameau, J e a n n e Horton.

Edith Klunrea. Florence Dykema.

MANAGERIAL S T A F F # „ T ' T " ' " *T ' -n u hov t rudeed „ . « Al Van Dvke h e ? . . . J immie Bar r looks awful ly junior gir ls — Alcor Will have i ts ^ iruuKeu . 4 o^lmlarakln Business Manager Marcley cu te in those baseball clothes - meet ing soon . . . J ean Wishmeier Spud, who had Winged over to see about a R ^ ^ h o , a ^ I P ; i Circulation Manager Kay Marcley ^ ^ ^ j n ^ ^ _ h a d > b . r t h ( i a y w h i c h g a v e n i n e t e e n Which only p rove , tha t all a t h l e t e a j , r e n t so dumb, or some thm* .

Wilbur Boot might take honors as f r i ends an excuse to play bridge — . • , t * . a. ii. u Hare uou heard the latest anatomical mysteryf t he CampUS peddler—bicycle, wo «-qo Q moo nnr fv •hnno-h n u n uuu

center of much conceit, we'd say would seem tha t Morry Tardiff is ways Wlin . . „ . . . , l . »• I I i^rraiUar m/itli . . . we'd like to say t ha t when we ge t t i ng only a litt le

mentioned Rube Berry last t ime we Florence Dykema — we were reflecting on NO ONE ELSE choice of mater ia l though

likp hi* ing with a bunch of Debs on t he side lines, had to get toge the r with

elec- R ' l e i g h and finish this Twenty Grand hit which was the Marvel of the

. . . Bob Hudson would make a nice t ions a re being rushed through in aK e- 8 0 called for q mw t hc^ba t cherubim for t h e campus, wouldn't o r d e r to total up points for t he I f e an English Oval and he needed a ^

T: I ^ C O^FNIIV A I . . . ^ I I W * UC boy t rudged all the way to Avalon to pick up Marlboro to pinch hit for

Helnr ichs . Helen Leslie. Louise Becker, Jeari Rui ter . Mildred Ste lma. I rma

wo was a nice pa r ty though. mean . . . we saw John Den Herder Tickets Galore running a race with himself in . . . Seniors have play t ickets and

at Voorhees are in

Lois Stoppels.

j^.u o .nr.rv-^-.n.

Editorials and feature articles express the views of the writer. They

make no claim of representing official Hope College opinion.

Take a Look at the Masthead N a t u r a l l y , we a r e ve ry h a p p y t h i s week a b o u t T h e Anchor ' s ,

T h i s i s w h a t w e ghouij ^ave — if she is as good at tennis as at ^ • u u j 1 F i r s t C l a s s H o n o r r a t i n g b y t h e A s s o c i a t e d C o l l e g i a t e P r e s s . i n t r o d u c e d t 0 y o u t o d a y b u t it b lushing she's a champion . . . Then there was the college s tudent who, by the t ime he had completed A l t h o u g h in p a s t y e a r s t h e s t a f f s h a v e w o r k e d e q u a l l y h a r d , s p r e a d o v c r t h e c a m p u s s o t h e r e o u g h t t o b e s o m e w a y t h e all the vocational guidance tes t s offered, applied for old age re t i rement

c i r c u m s t a n t i a l d i f f i c u l t i e s , s u c h a s h e a v i e r a d v e r t i s i n g s c h e d - y 0 U Edi th Rameau's diamond pi r l s would HAVE to play off f o r insurance. ules and i n a d e q u a t e off ice faci l i t ies , h a v e combined to p r e v e n t . . . . . a h i g h e r s t a t u s w i th t h e A C P .

I t should go w i t h o u t s ay ing t h a t t h i s r a t i n g could no t have 1 been a t t a i n e d w i thou t t h e su-

And There are Forty pe r io r coopera t ion of e v e r y s ta f f m e m b e r . Bu t it doesn t.

— SP — We owe Dr. Van Saun a vote of thanks for teaching us the f a c t s of

f r o n t of Van Raal te the o ther day society pres idents have golf t ickets We never knew until today that babies were born in their in fancy .

— wonder whether he or his — will those who promised to buy shadow won. them, buy then, ; we wonder? . . . "onatian, for "The Man Who Comes Around New Sparkler J ean Rui ter is coming up in tennis "rder. If* either sheer exlmmlhnor a sore throat, tit fear.

. . . This is what we should have — if she is as good a t tennis as a t

introduced to you today but it b lushing she's a champion

we might say it 's the first one

around here in months . . . Mildred

Play Revue

the tennis championship of the school . . . Margare t Nagy has

been all puffed up in the dorm. — f rom sore th roa t . . . voices we like: Stretch Pennings, Merle Fi -lers, Gertie Ja lving . . . May day

has a lot of people in a di ther , in-do you

our editor will announce it soon . . . watch what goes on on the campus in a few days . . . good-bye,

but we'll be watching you.

Members on Our Estate T h e r e f o r e , w e a r e t a k i n g t h i s th is domestic f racas . By the way ^ ^ o p p o r t u n i t y t o cal l t o t h e a t - have you ever seen Althea, as Mrs, M . g s L i c h t y

t en t i on of t h e college t h e u n h e r a l d e d r e p o r t e r s of ou r f o u r t h Webb, mix an invis.ble cake? Or, k n o w w h o t h e q u e e n i s ?

e s t a t e . h a \ eL J '0" e " e r ' l , k e B u " ; , a s M r - . . . We knew you didn't but jus t

So s t o p a m o m e n t , r i g h t now, and t a k e a good look a t t he Webb, edited an unseen village ga- t h o u g h t w e . d ^ w e do . . . m a s t h e a d , t o p of t h i s column. T h e s e people, in l igh t f a c e six zette? point , p r e s e n t t h e news, in bold f a c e t h i r t y point , t o t h e Their numbers are legion, but

college eve ry o t h e r week. v™'11 l i v e w i t h s t i n , 9 o n ' c h o i r

maste r , Howie Newsome, the paper 0 boy, Prof. W i 1 I a r d , the pedant,

% A / \ A / ' I I k l J. A i . ' i . l / # J I ^ r s - Soames, and, well — j u s t We Will "Not Accept I t l\indly everybody you'd expect to meet in

TTT . . , . . . r 1 a well-ordered New England town E v e n t h e c o n s e r v a t i v e Middle W e s t is b e g i n n i n g to teel o f 2 ( .42 s o u l s

t h e p r e s s u r e of a n t i - G e r m a n i s m , des igned to instil l w i th in R e a i i y VDouble Feature A m e r i c a n h e a r t s t h e f e a r t h a t a G e r m a n v ic to ry will mean A s f o r t h e m o r e p r o s a i c d e t a i l s

invas ion of t h e W e s t e r n h e m i s p h e r e . S p r i n g m e a n s a r m i e s o f b u s i n e s s a r r a n g e m e n t S t t i c k et on t h e move in E u r o p e and we can expec t m u c h more of t h i s s a l e s a n d a d v e r t i s i n g ) w e e a V e S . p r e s s u r e , t r y i n g to d r a g us in because t h e y need m o r e cannon { l r o p

,o n t h a t b i R b u 8 i n e 8 8 m a n i j a y

f o d d e r . Kapenga , who says : "Well, i t 's like

M u s i c « 1 J .

B o x

— SP — Have yon heard the latest anatomical mystery?

— S P — Incidentally, who is that campus man called " P a d f o o t ? "

— S P — It seems the Muse touched a responsive chord in our literary makeup

the other day while we were gazing at the coal docks. Here is the result:

AN ODE TO SPRING You is wonderful

Because You comes around

In time

So I can trade in My heater

In the old bus for

A radio! — SP —

We almost forgot the solution to the mystery of the weak. To quote and unquote: The anatomical mystery is, dear fr iends, W H E R E DOES

YO' LAP GO W H E N YO' STAND U P ? . . . . . / . — SP —

Parting Shot: It may be a love set at tennis but it will be an offset

al golf if you don't buy your ticket!!

By ALVIN SCHUTMAAT

ALMA W E E L D R E Y E R will D . l a . • • ^ k. i J . W e d o u b t t h a t m a n y in t h e U . S. wi l l a c c e p t t h i s p r e s s u r e th i s : First , you want to go to the present her senior recital Tuesday K O V I f l C J i V I l S S U n V e i l S V Z 7 r 0 V e I V l y S T e r y i

Victor Hardly Possible

i n t ry C O U i a c a r r y on an invas ion p , a y Everyone knows of Thornton evening, May 7 . She has selected +/% I E s s r s * A n P i » s \ r > e of t h e W e s t e r n h e m i s p h e r e Wilder and everyone on the campus a difficult and interesting program, ^ W 6 e t K C p O S G t O L O f l C ) 1 O r C J O t t © ! ! i P O p S a f t e r b l e e d i n g i t s e l f t o fight t h e knows of the senior class — so it's which will include Bach's "C Minor p r e s e n t w a r . M o r e o v e r , A m e r - a d ( )yble fea tu re , almost. Then, as F a n t a s i a " and Beethoven's "Ap-ica sees only dep r iva t ion , civil ^j10 p | a y js r a t e d one of last sea-a n d e c o n o m i c , in r e t u i n f o i a n - K o n ' s best, and Coach Albers says

o t h e r fore ign-f ie ld v e n t u r e . P a r t i c u l a r l y , t h e you th of A m e r - t h c s o n j ( ) r s a r e d o i n K a fine j()b of ica s enses t h e selfish des igns of such a l a r m i s t s . T h e r e is still no r eason f o r i n t e r v e n t i o n ; t h e r e is eve ry reason , bo th selfish and a l t ru i s t i c , f o r s t a y i n g ou t .

T h e n , too, we h a v e seen too m u c h of t he moral r o t t e n n e s s of t he Allies a s well a s t he d i c t a t o r s h i p s to hold t h e m in high

it, I'm sure you want yourself , John.

"So — you approach a senior with a come-hither look in your o rb and demand a ticket to the

By RUTH STRYKER • • •

Finally and surely the meaning behind the name "Graves ha l l" is going to be disclosed. Hold every th ing — the guil t all lies on the lower regions of t ha t i l lustrious building, and what it hides. Graves hall —

promptu and a Moment Musicale" the final r e s t ing place of th ings too numerous to ment ion completely

pass ionata Sonata in F Minor." In-cluded a r e the scherzino and inter-mezzo f r o m "Fasch ingsschwank

to see for aus Wicn" by Schumann. A " Im-

by Schuber t , "Willo' the Wisp" by P h i l i p , and Rachmaninoff 's "G Minor Pre lude" c o m p l e t e Miss

a re r ight in t ha t cer ta in section. Undernea th t he calm and grave pur-

suance of our educational life lies

r e spec t . We saw E n g l a n d s t a n d still unt i l a coun t ry s h e was ,,1^. f o r forty cents. Then, on any Weeldreyer's program. i n t e r e s t e d in w a s i n v a d e d . W e h a v e s e e n t o o m u c h in t h e one or all of the nights f rom April Fo r the past three years Alma p a s t of power poli t ics plaved more sk i l fu l ly t h a n Eng land ;{(> to May you go down to the has been a pupil of Mrs. Harold o n l y b y G e r m a n y . C e r t a i n l y w e a r e n o t s e c u r e in o u r i n t e r - u t club, find a comfortable seat Kars ten . Dur ing h e r f r e s h m a n

n a t i o n a l h o u s e w h i l e t h e r e i s a ( they all a r e ) and watch the cur- year she studied with Miss Nella fire r a g i n g . B u t t h e w a y t o s t o p tain go up^on the best senior play Meyer. Warning to Japan is

Dangerous at this Time a fire is no t to igni te t h e res t y0 t produced." of t h e h o u s e . Costuming Is Old Style

A s l o n g a s w e k e e p o u r h e a d s Although Kapenga ' s t i rade left cle^ir, a f e a r p sychos i s which leads n a t i o n s into w a r canno t us almost breathless, we scurried be f o s t e r e d he re . One t h i n g r e m a i n s c lear , we a r e not in around backstage in search of more d a n g e r invas ion . If t h a t t i m e should come, and an enemy dope (details, I mean). Barging m t k e s t h r e a t e n i n g g e s t u r e s a t ou r shores , t h a t will be d i f - past the left tormentor (that's f e r e n t . technical) who should we see but

Meanwhi le , it would seem to us t h a t P r e s i d e n t Roosevel t Marty Morgan, as pretty as the well is p lac ing an u n n e c e s s a r y c h i p on o u r na t iona l shou lde r by known picture, loaded down with i s su ing w a r n i n g s to J a p a n a b o u t t h e Du tch is lands which a re a flock of female haberdashery a b o u t f o u r t i m e s a s f a r a w a y f r o m o u r Pacif ic coas t a s t h e y a r e f r o m t h e m . No mid-ocean i s lands a r e w o r t h blood money and now is t h e m o s t d a n g e r o u s t i m e to i ncu r t h e e n m i t y of a n y na t ion .

CoDgratulations

reminiscent of the old-folks-at-home-A lice-sit-by-the-fire era .

"What ' s n e w ? " we cried, in our best falset to.

"Every th ing ' s n e w i n ' O u r T o w n , ' " she replied. " ' O u r Town' has the cri t ics in aisles all over

She should cer ta inly be com-mended for her fine work in the Hope college music depar t -ment. During her junior year she gave a complete recital , and has made many appear-ances both as soloist and ac-companist in c h a p e l a n d various other programs. She is a member of the choir and accompanist for the Girls ' Glee Hub. In addition she is a mem-ber of the Hope College S t r ing Ensemble, a n d h a s accom-panied a grea t number of s tu -dents on the Hope c o l l e g e radio program.

a vir tual "cemetery of the dead"

—'neath the throbbing cur ren t of our life lie these l ifeless relics of a life t ha t used to be — Ah, me!!

" Incongru i ty" must have been

the password of en t rance to t ha t cemetery. Holding t he place of honor s tands a huge wooden r e f r i g -e ra tor of "00" v in tage — Big and

once brilliant b rass h inges give it a regal a i r — Tall and narrow, it must have once been the victim of numerous "ice-box r a ids" at Voor-

hees hall. Who knows? Organ Rests Sublime

Covered wi th dust bu t still hold-ing i t s own, an o rgan , f r o m ?

magaz ines complete th i s p ic ture of dejected "someth ing-or -o ther . " Here ' s Incongrui ty

In and about th is "Graves" yard a re the workroom essent ia ls of those men you see bus t l ing around the campus, who keep the dea r old place runn ing smoothly as f a r as hea t , ca rpen t ry , and such a r e con-cerned. But who would suspect them of being tender admi re r s of luxuries like cold c ream — yet the f a c t remains t h a t sundry cream j a r s , giving the room an element of femini ty , a r e the holders of such delicate th ings as na i l s and tacks.

And next to these s t ands a pickle

• • •

To The Anchor

on its First Class Honor

Rating by the

Collegiate Press

Old News Printery Your Anchor Printers

. . . . . x . j a r and ano the r bot t le of very ques-epoch, humbly res ts . Of course, the t i o n 8 b l e c h a r a c t e r _ T a l k a b o u t i n .

keyboard and o ther minor bits of it c o n g r u i t y "

a re missing bu t wha t can one ex- T h e n > t 0 p p i „ g off the whole pect when loads of t a n m u l m are s c e n e > i 9 o n e 3 e c t i o n s e p a r a t e d i b y

very incoiuuderately heaped on it, | a r g e . . N o T r e spas s ing" and "Pr i -h idmg its anxious beauty . v a t e . . a n d ( . K e e p o f f ^ G r a g 8 „

nas m e c r . u c .n uu over A B R I E F SONATA recital will J h ea

S t d r a w < ? S i g n 8 - a l l p ro tec t ing and g u . r d -

the country. And what ' s more, it 's ^ presented Wednesday evening, ^ V G r a v e l h l l M s a

secre t no more. Bu t please don't

how, the idea is that outside Ger- continued in he r best Boston accent. Mrs. W. R. Buss on the Pa rk road. » J p o t giory. a aoor, crowd when your own tour of "See

man or French reading can be done " I ' m too modest to say t h a t the The p r o g r a m has been a r r anged by Wl_n. , 0 W "^ .^ n ( a c a n s ' a n _ ^ 0 P e ^ r s t begins. costuming is ju s t oodles of fun . P ro f . Kenneth Osborne and will

consist of th ree sonatas. A sona ta of Correll is will be played by the S t r i ng e n s e m b l e , consisting of Harold Van Heuvelen, C a r o l y n

Spare Time "Correla t ing the language reading '"L ' rt"u W T ; " " ' " r e ' 1 1 3 " • . 7 " - " a m T e T u e o T i h e c o v e r e d w i t h s u c h Pract ical i t ies as

. . . . the best scrip these old lamps have A P r " ^ 4 ' a t i a m e e t i n g oi m e , o . o , u . , with the college curriculum. Any- g | i m m c ( i i n m a n y a y e a r „ M a r t y A A U W > to be held a t the home of p i p C * ' b 0 * r d f ' . . a ' " i p a p ? r ' 11 ' 8 , o n i > ' how. thp id pa is that outside Gor- - t. Mr« W R Buss on thp Pa rk road. ^ P g 'o ry . A door,

in history or science, etc., and thus

over-woiked Hopeites will have

both ass ignments done in half the time, or something! Real Progress Made

However t h a t works out, i t 's evi-dent t h a t the Study is making s teady progress towards present ing an even more thorough couise of t ra in ing . And that ' s the point, a f t e r all.

but I 'm sure you get the general idea." S tage Really a Town

Don Cordes, chief of the prop-

Hamilton Westfleld

Elgin

B . H . W I L L I A M S JEWELERS

Watch Inspectors for P. M. Railroad Bulova

e r t y depar tment , came along jus t K r e m e r s , Theodora Meulendyke, in t ime to g a s p : "Man alive, we're A lma Weeldreyer. Harold Van

Heuvelen and Mr. Osborne will p l ay a Handel sonata f o r violin and piano. L a s t js the "Appass ion-a t a S o n a t a " f o r piano by Beetho-ven, which Alma Weeldreyer will

plan."

I. H. MARSIUE ACCIDENT INSURANCE FOR

HOPE COLLEGE STUDENTS Holland State Bank Bldg.

all hepped u p about 'Our Town.' Never saw such effective sets . No-body wants to miss i t ."

And so we l e f t the Lit club which, when we entered , was cold and d a r k . But now, what a change! "Oun Town" h a s come to town! T h e warm and cheery glow of sim-ple home l i fe a t Grover 's Corners, N e w Hampshi re , has t r ans formed t h e Lit club into a vibrant , throb-bing, p iquant p a r t of "Our Town."

See you t h e r e !

Character is boll upon the feuidaltoiof iitegril;

STEKETEE-VAM Hun PRINTING HOUSE, he.

HOLLAND'S LEADING PRINTERS

9 East 10th St. Phones: 4337 and 9231

Holland, Michigan

T U L I P C A F E 59 East Eighth St.

Conveniently located—3-minute walk from campus. GOOD F O O D — L o w PRICES—QUICK SERVICE

Open 7:00 A. M. to 8;00 P. M. Daily except Sundays

J. -• 1—I . • - . :

Page 3: 04-24-1940

Fraternal Takes Cage Trophy in 8 Straight Wins

Hi-Scorer for Season Is Bob Dykstra with 99 Points in 8 Games

In the final game of the in-ter-frat season p l a y e d last week in Carnegie gymnasium, the Fraternal court five de-feated the representation for the Independents, 46-27, to c i n c h the fraternity league championship for the 1939-40 season.

In eight league games, the Fraters were undefeated, and took t h e c r o w n w i t h o u t b e i n ^

pushed in a n y h e a t . Of the 313

po in t s t h e y ro l led u p a g a i n s t t h e i r

o p p o n e n t s 124, 99 w e r e pushed in

by t h e i r ace f o r w a r d , Bob D y k s t r a .

Th i s is t h e t h i r d consecut ive y e a r

t h e c h a m p i o n s h i p h a s f a l l e n to F r a -

t e r n a l . T h e b o y s w h o r e p r e s e n t e d

t h e house on t h e c o r n e r of College

and T e n t h w e r e Bob Power s , Bob D y k s t r a , Buzz P o p p e n , Edd ie De-

P r e e , Y u t z Heneve ld , M a r t Bekken,

Phi l W a l k e s , J a c k J a l v i n g and Bob

( B u c k o ) A r n d t . Coach Lee Bran-

nock to ld h is m e n how to do it, and

M a n a g e r H o w a r d H o e k j e smoothed

t h e w a y in.

A h a n d s o m e t r o p h y , w a s a w a r d e d

t h e c h a m p s , a n d is now t h e cyno-

s u r e of all e y e s a s it r e s t s in t h e

F r a t e r t r o p h y case . Scores f o r

g a m e s p l ayed a r e :

Morrison on Mound

11

F r a t e r n a l 33, Emer son i ans F r a t e r n a l - 23, EmerHonian F r a t e r n a l 33. . F r a t e r n a l 54, Knickerbockers , F r a t e r n a l 3M, IndependentH K-F r a t e r n a l 46. Inde|>emlentH 27 F r a t e r n a l 52, Cosmos 1* F r a t e r n a l 34. Cosmos 23

Totals — 313 P r a t e r s ' T h i r d S t r a i g h t

124

Poppen, Joldersma and Vegter Are Only Vets On 7-Man Tennis Team

L a s t week d u r i n g t h e more or

less decep t ive s p r i n g w e a t h e r en-

joyed h e r e . Coach H a r v e y Klein-

hekse l had his t e n n i s squad outs ide

f o r t h e first w a r m u p of t h e season.

P r e s e n t when t h e roll w a s called

w e r e the ve t s of las t y e a r , Al Jol-

d e r s m a , Don P o p p e n and Bob Veg-

t e r p lus t h e s t r o n g s o p h o m o r e

g r o u p of H o w a r d Hoek je , Bill Tap-

p a n , E d d i e De P r e e a n d F r a n k

Zwer ing .

T e a m ' s S t r e n g t h U n k n o w n

T h e t e a m a s a whole should be

a s t r o n g one in sp i t e of t h e losses

su f fe red t h r o u g h g r a d u a t i o n . Three

of Hope ' s bes t t e n n i s m e n , Gord

Pleune , Bill DeGroot and Pau l Boy-

ink, l e f t t hen , and the e x t e n t to

which t h e i r absence will be noted

can only be e s t i m a t e d now.

P robab le c o m b i n a t i o n s f o r the

doubles a r e V e g t e r and J o l d e r s m a ,

ve t t e a m of las t y e a r , first doubles,

and T a p p a n and DePree , doubles

Headquarters for . . . .

R O B L E E , A I R - S T E P

A N D B U S T E R B R O W N

S H O E S

SPAULDING'S S H O E S T O R E

T h e above s h o t c e u p h t by Anchor

P h o t o g r a p h e r . Carl Van H a r t e s -

veldt shows D a v e Morr i son , one of

the two H o p e p i t chers who wen t

a g a i n s t Hi l l sda le l a s t S a t u r d a y ,

h id ing behind his l e f t boot while he

sizes up t h c b a t t e r .

Hope Baseball Nine Loses to Hillsdale 9-3

At inv i ta t ion f r o m t h e Dales ,

Coach J a c k Schouten and his ba t -

men t rave l led to mee t t h e Hil ls-

dale nine, and were d e f e a t e d 9-3.

The g a m e w a s played Apr i l 22.

The Dutch made two of t h e i r

runs in the seventh , and one in the

e igh th . To open the seven th , Ken

V a n d e n b e r g flied out to cen t e r field.

Chuck Zoet f a n n e d . Then Ray Lo-

ke r s and Dick Van S t r i en both hit ,

E r n e s t E n s i n g poked a t w o - b a g g e r

out to the cen t e r fielder who jug-

gled it long enough to al low both

Lokers and Van St r ien to score.

In t h e e i g h t h . Ken V a n d e n b e r g

b r o u g h t Dave Morr ison in fo r t h e

final Dutch run . The Dales crossed

t h e b a g once in the first inn ing ,

once in the second, twice in the

fifth, aga in in the s ix th , and f o u r

t imes in the seven th . J a l v i n g P i t ches Fi rs t Six

B a t t e r y f o r t h e Dales w a s N o i d -

ling and F r y on the mound and

Touhy at ca t ch . F o r Hope, J a c k

J a l v i n g pi tched the first s ix, Dave

Morr i son t h e final th ree . Bob Mont-

g o m e r y w a s behind the p la te f o r

the whole g a m e . Hay Loke r s p lay -

ed first, Chuck Zoet 3rd, Ken Van-

d e n b e r g 2nd, Bob V a n d e r L a a n

s h o r t s t o p . A r t T i m m e r and E r n e s t

Ens ing , l e f t field, Howard Becks-

for t c en t e r , and Dick Van S t r i en

r i g h t field.

Hi l l sda le w a s a tough opener f o r

the local nine. The Dales include

big schools such as Michigan S t a t e

and W e s t e r n Rese rve in t he i r sche-

dule, and r ea l l y fos t e r t h e i r base-

ball. T h e Hopemen su f fe red most -

ly f r o m l a :k of pract ice, and m a d e

most of t he i r boners in the pinches,

t h u s m a k i n g each e r ro r an expens -

ive one.

Hoye College Bnchor

COLUMN TALK - - - By Eddie Dibble - - -

Bigges t t h i n g to b r e a k on t h i s c a m p u s d u r i n g t h e nex t t h r e e

w e e k s will be the May d a y . W h a t w i t h a g i r l s ' t r a c k mee t , a

m e n ' s t r a c k meet , the c r o w n i n g of a b e a u t i f u l coll i tch queen ,

a n d a b a n q u e t finale, t h e day is n o t h i n g s h o r t of s tu f fed .

B u t c h P o w e r s te l l s t h i s sc r ibe t h a t t h e t r o p h y f o r t h e w i n n i n g t e a m

in t h e a f t e r n o o n t r a c k m e e t h a s been o rde red , a n d will be a t h i n g t o

g r a c e a n y m a n t e l . T h e F r a t e r s have t h e t r o p h i e s f o r t h e p a s t t w o y e a r s ,

and a r e no t g o i n g t o be t a l k e d out of t h i s one.

Coach Schouten is q u i t e h a p p y wi th h is baseba l l t e a m , a l -

t h o u g h they would be t h e last o n e s to th ink so, a n d fee l s confi-

d e n t t h a t b e f o r e the season closes, he will have H o w i e B e c k s f o r t

b a t t i n g w i t h h is eyes open .

Bob M o n t g o m e r y w a s h i t wi th a b a t in t h e Hi l l sda le g a m e , whi le

c a t c h i n g T w i r l e r J a c k J a l v i n g ' s s tuf f , b u t go t l i t t l e s y m p a t h y . T h e u m p

sa id t h a t a l t h o u g h he a d m i r e d his s p i r i t , i t w a s m o r e s p o r t i n g t o let

the b a t t e r h a v e a cu t a t t h e ball b e f o r e g r a b b i n g i t .

In t ha t g a m e , t h e s p e c t a t o r s g a v e t h e Dales one ea rned run

and Hope one e a r n e d r u n . T h e final score w a s 9-3. Nice t i g h t

basebal l , w h a t ? However , J ack s a y s t h a t t h e t e a m has a good

season b e f o r e it as soon as the n e w n e s s w e a r s off . The va r i -

colored u n i f o r m s t h e t e a m w e a r s h e r e m a k e it look like a flock

of r e f u g e e s f r o m half t h e l eagues in t h e c o u n t r y . J ack a lso

sa id tha t t h e spi r i t of t h e Dales, and the i r a t t i t u d e t o w a r d the i r gues t s , w a s the f ines t .

All Class Meet On May Day Bill, Girls Participate

Advance not ice on May d a y re-

vea ls t h a t f r e s h m a n , sophomore ,

j un io r , and sen io r g i r l s will com-

pete in the m o r n i n g f o r an a th le t ic

t r o p h y prof fe red by the W A L . The

c lass ga in ing t h e h ighes t n u m b e r

of p o i n t s collected in all t h e even t s

will g a i n the d is t inc t ion . Individual

r ibbons will be given to t h e g i r l s

who place in t h e events .

Off ic ia l s s t a t e t h a t the h igh l igh t

will be the basebal l g a m e s be tween

the f r e s h m e n and sophomores and

the j u n i o r s and seniors . O the r

even t s a r e the r u n n i n g b road j u m p ,

high j u m p , fifty-yard dash , and the re lay .

C a p t a i n s of t h e t e a m s will be:

J e a n Rui te r , f r e s h m e n ; Lor ra ine

T i m m e r , s o p h o m o r e s , R u t h

K l a a s e n , jun io r s ; and Bernice F re -

ligh, sen iors .

All g i r l s e x p e c t i n g to p a r t i c i p a t e

in t h e t o u r n a m e n t a r e to p rac t i ce

T u e s d a y n igh t s in t h e g y m f r o m

e igh t to ten.

KRONEMEYEkS Clothes of Character

P ' C L S I O M TAILORED

t e a m of the '39 f rosh squad , second

doubles . A t t h i s t ime the i r first

scheduled m a t c h is with A l m a t h e r e

May 7.

NGTON

Co-eds Arrange For M I A A Net Tourney in May

Kremers, VanPopering Represent Hope at Battle Creek Meeting

D r a w i n g s f o r t h e g i r l ' s MIAA

tenn i s ma t ch w e r e held in t h e Pos t

t a v e r n . Ba t t l e Creek , las t Wednes -

d a y e v e n i n g . Caro lyn K r e m e r s ,

Cleveland sophomore , a n d Ruth

Van Poper ing , L o n g Is land senior ,

r e p r e s e n t e d Hope .

T h e g i r l s a r e looking f o r w a r d to

a success fu l s eason . Wi th severa l

of t h e old t e a m m e m b e r s back , and

a n u m b e r of p r o m i s i n g f r o s h , t hey

expec t to r e p e a t t he i r good deeds

of the pa s t two y e a r s . T h e MIAA

t o u r n a m e n t will be held a t Kala-

mazoo, May 24 a n d 25. Miss Van

Poper ing , p r e s i d e n t of \ h e W A A ,

announced T u e s d a y tha t t h e college

women ' s t enn i s t o u r n a m e n t will be

s t a r t e d here soon. All g i r l s who

wish to e n t e r m u s t sign up wi th

he r wi th in the n e x t week.

Chosen on May Day

T h e finals of t h i s t o u r n a m e n t

will be o n e of t h e o u t s t a n d i n g

a t t r a c t i o n s of May day, and is t h e

m e a n s of s e l ec t i ng g i r l s t o r ep re -

s e n t Hope a t t h e MIAA tenn i s t o u r n a m e n t .

In addi t ion , g o l f , bowl ing and

v a r i o u s t r ack e v e n t s a r e s la ted f o r

t h e g i r l s t h i s s p r i n g . A th le t i c

d i r e c t o r J ack Schouten h a s s t a r t e d

i n s t r u c t i o n s in t h e f u n d a m e n t a l s of

golf a t the g y m in an t i c ipa t ion of

ac t iv i ty on t h e local courses . More

t h a n fifteen g i r l s a t t e s t e d t h e pop-

u l a r i t y of bowl ing las t week .

INSUKANCK

J. ARENDSHORST RIAL EtTATI

"E . I IONTNtT . , NOUAND, MICH. PNONI 21M

Sldft'i- I C E C R E A M

Try a Delicious Soda or Sundae

made with Your Favorite ICE CREAM

Attention... Hope Students! Have You Ever Tried Our Economy Fluffed Dry

Service at 9c per Pound? SAMPLE BUNDLE: 3 shirts, 2 drawers, 2 under-shirts, 1 pajama, 3 pair socks, 6 handkerchiefs, 3 soft collars, 3 towels, 3 wash cloths. Average weight, four pounds — 36 cents. NOTE I. This is probably less than the parcel post

charge for sending home and return.

NOTE I I . You may have any or all of the shirts in this bundle finished at 10 cents each.

MODEL L A U N D R Y , Inc . 97 EAST EIGHTH STREET, HOLLAND PHONE 3625 Xnj-U-Unj\j-U-U-Lnj-U-| -u-|~ ---.mmmmmm *

THE IDEAL DRY CLEANERS

|t - "The House of Service"

j CLEANING AND STEAM PRESSING

Phone 2465 • We Call For and Deliver

CORNER COLLEGE AVENUE AND SIXTH STREET HOLLAND

Planning a Party?

Double-K Nuts 1 lb. G I A N T MIX

No P e a n u t s 79c

1 lb. G I A N T C A S H E W S 69c

1 lb. MOGUL P E A N U T S Blanched 29c

Ice Cream

F A N C Y F L A V O R S

M A D E F R E S H D A I L Y

P L A C E Y O U R O R D E R

E A R L Y

WARM FRIENDS of Hope College

PafeThree

May 10 Contests Take Hope Sport Spotlight

Frats Put Pressure on Trackmen, Prepare for May Day Field Meet

Bob Powers, May day track chairman, has been working these past few weeks toward the production of an inter-frat-ernity track meet that will rival the combined efforts of W. T. Barnum and Billy Rose. The meet will be held, as usual, on the college field, and every frat has entered its best cinder-pounders.

Prospective ribbon winners can be seen on the running t r a c k eve ry a f t e r n o o n , and would

Dutch Golf Team Sees Big Season Ahead; Aims High

By BOB D Y K S T R A

Y O N K E R ' S S We Are Proud of

H O P E C O L L E G E and wish for it only continued success. As in thc past, may its

influence for good become great with

the passing years.

H O L L A N D S T A T E B A N K

Holland^ Michigan

H O L L A N D F U R N A C E

"Make* Warm Friends" .

World's Largest Installers of Home Heating and

Air Conditioning Systems

T h e solid click of ma tched i r o n s

is a g a i n to be h e a r d a t t h e Hol land

C o u n t r y club, w h e r e m e m b e r s of

the golf t e a m a r e p r a c t i c i n g f o r

i m p o r t a n t w a r f a r e on t h e l inks .

Since t h e sun h a s finally decided

to come out and dry u p thc g r o u n d ,

the t r e n d is a g a i n t o w a r d golf . T h i s

y e a r t h i s m i n o r s p r i n g spo r t is of

rafi j o r i m p o r t a n c e . If the H o p e

Col lege S w i n g s t e r s can m u s t e r a

champ ionsh ip ou t of t h e coming

sc ramble , chances a r e good t h a t t h e

all M I A A s p o r t s t r o p h y will a g a i n

be a t r e s t in the ga l l e ry of memen-

toes in G r a v e s hall .

P r o s p e c t s B r i g h t

T h e out look is p r e t t y convincing

t h a t the college will be r e p r e s e n t e d

by a t e a m of championsh ip ca l iber .

T h e r e a r e t h r e e l e t t e r - w i n n i n g ve t -

e r a n s back a s a f ounda t i on of the

t eam. These men a r e Ade S l ikke r s ,

senior , whose g a m e has a l w a y s

been good; Ken Honhol t , senior ,

and Bob D y k s t r a , t h e j un io r mem-

ber of t h e t e a m . W i t h t h e exper i -

ence ga ined l a s t yea r and an addeo

impe tus and goal , t he se t h r e e o u g h t

to be r i g h t in t h e r e shoo t ing cham-

pionship golf a n d g iv ing p a r a

sca re .

In addi t ion to the v e t e r a n s , t h e

t e a m has acqui red in s o p h o m o r e

Ted Cimock, a g o l f e r of no l i t t le

ab i l i ty . Ted , in his p r ep school

J a y s , p layed on the S t a t e C h a m p i o n

J a c k s o n high school t e a m and in

his sen io r y e a r t h e r e won the indi-

vidual S t a t e championsh ip . Wi th a

g o l f e r of t h i s abi l i ty to round out

the t e a m , it is wi th no l i t t le op t i

m i s m t h a t t h e golf t e a m e m b a r k s

on a schedule which p romises to be ve ry i n t e r e s t i n g .

• d n '41 u a

0 ; A\oq A\ou>j n . X a q }

a u o q j • ! § g g

fljddns aoifiO '"11,.

*|<W»S M!IJ0 M"#S T I V 3

j o } n o

SI i o o ^ UAVOQ a p i s CIQ

u iooy JO 0DUJO JNOA

SI

M E N ' S Q U A R T E R S L E E V E

be m u c h encouraged if s o m e of t h e

beau teous H o p e co-eds would s top

a round to w a t c h t h e i r musc les r i p -

ple. Coaches f o r t h e va r ious f r a t -

e in i t i e s r e p o r t t h a t m a n y of t h e i r

men have begun t r a i n i n g in all s e r -

iousness ( t h e new reso lve is m a d e

a p p a r e n t by a n u m b e r of loud re -

fusa l s be fore t a k i n g a c i g a r e t t e )

and a r e g e t t i n g a n a s t y g l i n t in

.heir eyes a s t h e y r o u n d t h e l a s t corner .

Coaches Mus t Be T o u g h

Gus Van E e r d e n is coach ing f o r

the Cosmos, and r e p o r t s t h e usua l

J i f f i cu l ty in convinc ing h i s m e n

tha t t h e y will win , a l i t t l e t r a i n i n g

would g ive t h e mee t a m o r e bus i -

ness- l ike a i r . S a y s Coach V a n

Eerden , " I f t h i n g s don ' t pick u p ,

I'll h a v e to run m y s e l f . "

Chuck S t e r e n b e r g is p i lo t ing t h e

Emerson ian t r a c k m e n . As t h e i r

house is ac ros s t h e s t r e e t f r o m t h e

- rack . Chuck j u s t chases t h e m o u t

.he f r o n t door , and b e f o r e they s low

lown, t h e y a r e in the back s t r e t c h . Look t o T r o p h y

F o r t h e Knicks , Chuck Ridenour

Is t h e Simon Legree .* He w a s

observed g e t t i n g in a l i t t le p rac t i ce

with Bob P o w e r s l a s t week w h e n

' B u t c h " was t o s s ing t h e 16-lb. sho t

ind, a f t e r some e f fo r t , observed

i h a t it w a s p u r e foo l i shness f o r a n

j r d i n a r y m a n to a t t e m p t t h e w o r k

)f a cannon .

F r a t e r n a l pr ied Lee Brannock

out of t h e s o f a cush ions and p u t

his h a n d a t t h e wheel of t h e F r a t e r

J u g g e r n a u t . His t e a m holds t h e

championsh ip a t p r e s e n t and he h a s

a l r eady dus ted a spot in t h e t r o p h y

•ase f o r th i s y e a r ' s a w a r d . W h e t h e r

he is be ing p rophe t i c o r over-con-

fident, t i m e will tell .

*A c h a r a c t e r w i t h a wh ip in

"Unc le T o m ' s Cab in . "

Visscher-Brooks A G E N C Y

No. 6 East 8th St. Holland, Mich.

m

m

JT.1. n njUUXai-LTlJ-Ln

S H I R T S

W I T H H O P E E M B L E M

75c W O M E N ' S S P O R T S W E A T E R

W I T H H O P E S E A L

95c

SUPERIOR CIGAR CO.

256 River Ave.

i H

A MESSAGE TO SENIORS — who intend to enter a graduate school or pro-fessional school, attention is called to the facilities at Marquette University.

Graduate courses leading to master degrees and the degree of Doctor of Phi-losophy. Professional curricula In medicine, law, dentistry, dental hygiene, nursing,, engineering, journalism,. business administration, platform art, dramatic art.

Marquette University is on the approved list of the Association of Ameri-can Universities and Is an accredited member of the North Central Associa-tion of Colleges. Eadv college and school is ap-proved by the national bodies organized to set up educational standards.

Address Thc Student Adviser, Marquette University,

fo r complete infonnation.

MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY Milwaukee

PEOPLES STATE BANK tvisbes for Hope College and The Anchor

the Success it Merits

KUITE'S MARKET & GROCERY

Phone 2847

BIRD'S -EYE FROSTED FOODS We Supply Your Table Complete

Free Delivery

Page 4: 04-24-1940

Page four Hope College Bnchor

Beardslees Speak To Y's Tuesday

Seminary President, Wife Stop on Tour

D r . J o h n W. Beards lee , H o p e

college a l u m n u s , and p r e s i d e n t ol

N e w B r u n s w i c k Theological semi-

n a r y , add re s sed t h e r e g u l a r meet-

i n g of YM l a s t n i g h t , w h i l e Mrs .

Bea rds l ee add re s sed t h e Y W meet-

ing.

D r . Bea rds l ee is also vice presi-

den t of the R e f o r m e d c h u r c h synod

and b o a r d of f o r e i g n miss ions .

Mrs . Bea rds l ee is on the b o a r d of

t r u s t e e s of H o p e college. T h e y a r c

v i s i t i n g chu rches in Mich igan and

the Middle W e s t in the i n t e r e s t of

the N e w B r u n s w i c k s e m i n a r y .

Music a t las t n i g h t ' s m e e t i n g con-

s is ted of a v o c a l d u e t by Mac

C lonan and He len Leslie.

/rs for Graduation

The NEW ROYAL FIIST A N D ONLY PORTABLE

Old, New Y Cabinets Dine and Plan Monday

T h e new Y M C A c a b i n e t w a s

g u e s t of the r e t i r i n g c a b i n e t m e m -

b e r s a t a 7 o 'clock d i n n e r a t t h e

E m e r s o n i a n H o u s e M o n d a y n igh t .

T h e d inne r , i n s t i t u t e d s eve ra l y e a r s

ago , w a s fo l lowed by t h e weekly

m e e t i n g of t h e new cab ine t . New

m e m b e r s were i n s t r u c t e d in t h c fu l l

du t ies of office and enthusiast ic-

p l ans w e r e m a d e f o r t h e yea r .

P r e s i d e n t Gordon Van W y k w a s in

c h a r g e .

W A N T E D : To g e t in touch a t once

wi th y o u n g m a n to spend few-

h o u r s a d a y t o d i s t r i b u t e Tul ip

Time p a p e i s to news and novel ty

s t ands on commiss ion bas is .

OLD NEWS PRINTERY

32 West 8th St. Phone 2020

" ^ T F T E R ^ l ' H E G A M b : A S A N D W I C H A T

KEEPER'S RESTAURANT T H E B E S T I N M E A L S A N D

S A N D W I C H E S

RECORDS

Orrin Tucker Dick Jurgens

Kay Kyser ALLEN'S RADIO SHOP

• ••nrany other exckish Royal MAGIC footuros.

I N * mmk am. u. a. em. or.

Fris Book Store

PETER A. SELLES Expert Jeweler and

Watchmaker 6 East 8fh St. Phone 3055

H A V E Y O U R E Y E S E X A M I N E D

by

W. R. Stevenson Optometrist

24 Eas t 8th S t ree t

WESTRATE'S 15 West E igh th S t ree t

"Rocking C h a i r " Sport Dress-

es now on display. See them

and t r y them.

$ 3 . 9 5 t o $ 7 . 9 5

Shiphorst Speaks About Minorities To Religious Group

S e n i o r A l b e r t S h i p h o r s t , P o m p -

ton L a k e s , N . J . , a d d r e s s e d C W L

m e m b e r s on t h e s u b j e c t , " V i c t o r -

ious M i n o r i t i e s " F r i d a y , Apr i l 10.

W a y n e L e m m e n , Hol land f r e s h -

m a n , w a s in c h a r g e of devot ions

and K a y Marc ley , Nor thv i l l e , N. Y. sen ior , r ende red a s o p r a n o solo,

" I Shal l Re Sa t i s f i ed , " w i t h J e a n n e

S w a r t , DeMot te , Ind. , sophomore ,

a t t h e p iano .

Rev. C h a r l e s S topp le s of Bethel

R e f o r m e d church in Hol land , will

speak to t h e g r o u p F r i d a y , A p r i l

2(5. Specia l mus ic will be r ende red

by Bob V a n d e r H a r t , Hol land

j u n i o r . R u t h S t e g e m a n , N e b r a s k a

senior , will conduc t t h e devotions.

DU SAAR

PHOTO and GIFT SHOP

10 EAST EIGHTH STREET

Kodaks and Kodak Finishing,

Framing and Gifts

HOLLAND, MICHIGAN

BOWL FOR HEALTH

AND RECREATION

LIEVENSE BOWLING ALLEYS 215 Central Ave.

SOCIAL LIFE LINES

Jffor m j o t l f p r ' a B a y

May 12 N O GIFT W I L L P L E A S E H E R L I K E Y O U R I ' H O T O C . R A r i

Let us m a k e an e n l e r g e m e n l f r o m the n e g a t i v e

w e have on file.

WINSLOW STUDIO

A L E T H E A N

A l e t h e a n s v is i ted a dude r a n c h

Apri l 18. M a r i o n W a a l k e s led de-

v o t i o n s , " C o w g i r l ' s M e d i t a t i o n . "

" B u f f a l o G a l ' s S e r e n a d e " w a s a

s o n g se rv ice led by A r l e n e De

Vr ies . A n i t a V o g t and A r l e n e De

Vr ies , a s " B e l l e s of t h e M o h a w k

Val ley , " s a n g a d u e t and A r l e n e

p layed a c l a r i n e t solo. T h e p r o g r a m

ended wi th a t r e a s u r e h u n t f o r all

A le theans .

French Pastry Shop Try Our Line ol Dolicious

BAKED GOODS Phone 2542 We Deliver

"Hope's Pastry Center"

QUALITY SHOE REPAIRING

ThaCt Our Butinest

'DICK" the Shoe Doctor ELECTRIC SHOE HOSPITAL

DELPHI

L a s t F r i d a y n i g h t D e l p h i a n s

were t aken f o r a world c ru i se by

a c rew of sophomores .

T h e cou r se w a s c h a r t e d by Nola

Nies , who g a v e e x p l a n a t o r y no t e s

on each c o u n t r y vis i ted . Devo t ions

were read in one of E n g l a n d ' s

churches . Be th Marcus , r e p r e s e n t -

ing D e n m a r k , read l e t t e r s r evea l -

ing much of t h e b a c k g r o u n d and

n a t u r e of t h a t coun t ry .

F r o m Greece , E l e a n o r D a l m a n

in t roduced t h e orac le a t Delphi .

Pol ish music w a s r ende red as a

p iano solo by K a t h r y n Pe ipe r .

Betsy Race and Ruth V a n d e r May

i n t e r p r e t e d E g y p t i a n music . T h e

last s top w a s t h e Sandwich I s l a n d s

w h e r e c h a r a c t e r i s t i c r e f r e s h m e n t s

were served .

NICK DYKEMA The Tailor

S U I T S • $23.50 up

W / j West 8th Street

DORIAN

Fol lowing t h e bus iness m e e t i n g ,

Apri l 19, t h e p r o g r a m w a s t u r n e d

MARY IANE RESTAURANT T H E N I C E R T H I N G S TO E A T

AT R E A S O N A B L E P R I C E S

Phone 9162 186 River Ave.

Next to Tower Clock, Holland

DO Y O U R S E L F A FAVOR T R Y I T S F L A V O R

1

FREE Developing! Any Size Roll or Film

You Pay For Pr in t s Only at 3c each

Try O u r P h o t o Service!

A G o o d Pic ture is W o r t h Enlarging

8x10 Size at 33c-

The Model Drug Store N. E. Cor. 8th and River Ave.

W A L G R E E N AGENCY

THE DE PREE COMPANY

Makers of Fine Toilet Preparations and

Package Medicines

"Nurse Brand Products"

T. KEPPEL'S S O N S

JOHN VANDER BROEK, Mgr.

EiUblhbtJ 1167

COAL • BUILDERS' SUPPLIES

SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS AND VARNISHES

FAIRBANKS-MORSE STOKERS

MILLS QUALITY ICE CREAM Qualitif—Sercice is Our Hobby

" S T E W A R T W A R N E R " Home Radios " M O T O R O L A " Ca r Radios

E X P E R T R A D I O S E R V I C E , ALL M A K E S

Main Auto Supply CO E A S T E I G H T H S T R E E T T E L E P H O N E 353U

Lunch at Peck 's r O A S T E D H A M S A N D W I C H P I C K L E OR OLIVE C O F F E E , T E A OR HOT C H O C O L A T E ICE C R E A M 19c

PECK'S DRUG STORE CORNER RIVER A N D E I G H T H S T R E E T

SPRING'S

N E W E S T S T Y L E S

S U I T S A L L S M A R T L Y T A I L O R E D

N E W E S T S H A D E S A N D F A B R I C S

522.50 - 525.00 - 529.50

P . S . B o t e r & C o .

uke it li**s/ne

HALF PRICE on e x t r a p a n t s when o rde red wi th made - to -o rde r s u i t

F r o m S C O T C H W O O L E N line.

C A L L W H I L E O U R L I N E I S C O M P L E T E

Vanderlinde & Visser 50 E A S T E I G H T H S T R E E T

ove r to K a y D o u m a , who p r e s e n t e d

t h e " D o r i a n Bird House . "

I s l a Meppe l ink w a s in c h a r g e of

devot ions , a f t e r which V i r g i n i a

Mul le r led a s o n g sess ion. M a r j o r i e B o r g m a n r e a d a s e r ious p a p e r ,

" B i r d F a c t s . " Ar Shor t p l ay , " C h a t -

t e r B i rds , " s t a r r i n g D o r o t h y Schu t -

m a a t , M a r j o r i e B o r g m a n , and K a y

D o u m a took t h e p l ace of a h u m o r

pape r . R u t h H o e k s e m a , a c c o m p a -

nied by K a y D o u m a , r e n d e r e d a

t r u m p e t solo.

o —

S I B Y L L I N E

T h e Apr i l 19 m e e t i n g of t h e Sib-

yl l ine soc ie ty f e a t u r e d R u t h S t e g

e n g a , w h o g a v e a n i n t e r e s t i n g

account of he r E u r o p e a n t r a v e l s of

las t s u m m e r .

Fo l l owing t h e p r o g r a m , E d i t h

Rameau f o r m a l l y announced her

e n g a g e m e n t by d i s t r i b u t i n g l i t t l e

pink g a u z e b u t t e r f l y ne t s to m e m -

ber s of t h e socie ty .

o

S O R O S I S

"See A m e r i c a F i r s t " w a s the slo-

g a n of So ros i t e s a t t he i r m e e t i n g

F r iday , Apr i l 19. A t the lower s ide

of New York , B e t t y D o u g h e r t y ,

r e p r e s e n t i n g the " D e a d End K ids , "

did a j i t t e r b u g dance . The n e x t s t o p

w a s W a s h i n g t o n , D. C., w h e r e

J e a n n e Hor ton deplored t h e p re -

dominance-of women over t h e men .

In the deep Sou th land , M a r y J a n e

Raf fenaud s a n g a N e g r o sp i r i t ua l .

Soros i tes were g iven a view of

Wes te rn h u m o r t h r o u g h a p a p e r

by Nancy J e n n i n g s . T h e l a t e s t in

spo r t c lo thes w a s modeled in Hol ly-

wood, A m e r i c a ' s c e n t e r of f a sh ions .

C O S M O P O L I T A N

New song books g inger f ied the

song-service of t h e r e g u l a r Cos-

mopol i tan l i t e r a r y m e e t i n g last

F r i d a y even ing . A f t e r a ser ious

p a p e r on the w o n d r o u s w o r k s of

P las t i cs by ^ o p h o m o r e Rober t E m -

mick, musica l m o m e n t s took a

h u m o r o u s f o r m a s the "H i l l Billy

M o u n t a i n e e r s " s w u n g a r o u n d t h e

m o u n t a i n . T h e fou r -p i ece b a n d

m a d e u p of R a y m o n d M e y e r s ,

R o b e r t V a n d e r - L a a n , J a m e s

A d a m s , a n d J u l i u s Zager , w a s m e t

wi th a g r e a t o v a t i o n of p l a u d i t s .

A r e a l rod a n d reel d e m o n s t r a -

t ion w a s r e n d e r e d a s h u m o r f o r t h e

e v e n i n g by G i l b e r t Van W i e r e n ,

sophomore . A t t h e close of t h e p ro -

g r a m a bus iness m e e t i n g fo l lowed.

o

E M E R S O N I A N

Due to t h e v a r i o u s o p p o r t u n i t i e s

for m u s i c a l ed i f ica t ion , E m e r s o n i a n

held a l i t e r a r y h o l i d a y l a s t week .

A jo in t Sibyl l ine and E m e r s o n i a n

m e e t i n g will be he ld a t t h e E m e r -

son ian house n e x t F r i d a y even ing .

o

F R A T E R N A L

On t h e e v e n i n g of Apr i l 19, t h e

F r a t e r n a l society w a s f a v o r e d by a

visit of t a l en t ed Mis s Kleis, d a u g h -

te r of P r o f , a n d Mrs. C l a r e n c e

Kleis. In a p iano rec i t a l , Miss Kle i s

r ende red R a c h m a n i n o f f ' s " P r e l u d e

in C S h a r p M i n o r . "

A f t e r F r e s h m a n C h a r l e s Hol-

comb b r o u g h t on t h e t ickl ing h u m o r

fo r t h e e v e n i n g in h i s r end i t i on of

" S t r i c t Psycholog ica l S t u d i e s , "

Senior Dean D y k s t r a read a s e r -

ious p a p e r en t i t l ed , " T h e Phi loso-

phy of L i f e . " Music f o r the e v e n i n g

was in c h a r g e of S o n g s t e r R o b e r t

Powers .

K N I C K E R B O C K E R

G r o u p s i n g i n g o p e n e d t h e

Apri l 18 l i t e r a r y m e e t i n g u n d e r

t h e l e a d e r s h i p of F r e s h m a n R o b e r t

S p a u l d i n g . A f t e r R o b e r t H o l l e m a n

commented on up - to -da t e n e w s ,

Senior David De P r e e humor i zed

on t h e v i ta l s u b j e c t of " H o w To

Get On T h e Black Lis t a t Voor -

hees ." F r e s h m a n E d w a r d K l a u s

read a s e r ious p a p e r on the s u b j e c t

of av i a t i on .

S p r i n g p a r t y p l a n s w e r e dis-

cussed in the bus iness m e e t i n g

which fol lowed t h e p r o g r a m .

Make Your

Spring Party C O M P L E T E

Use t h e fine facilities

of the

Anrlinr inn A Sandwich or a fu l l Cour se Dinne r

on U. S. 31 J U S T NORTH OF H O L L A N D

Special to College Men $5.00 V A L U E S S E L L I N G AT

$1.98 A N D $2.87

Do Jus t ice to Your Pocketbook and Save at

Bargain Shoe Store 70 Eas t E igh th St. J u s t E a s t of College Ave.

S P E C I A L ALL PLAIN COATS

PLAIN DRESSES AND SUITS Cash and Carry

Michigan Cleaners (Formerly Bailey Dry Cleaners) I. HOLLEMANS, Prop

232 River Ave. Open Saturday Evenings

WE ARE PROUD TO HAVE HOPE COLLEGE

AS OUR NEIGHBORS

BAKER FURNITURE FACTORIES, INC.

MAKERS OF

Msi

CONNOISSEUR FURNITURE


Recommended