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f.A I* ^ O '&/i I 76th Year—15 Hope College, Holland, Michigan December 19, 1963 Recent Grants To Help Finance Physics Building Hope College has recently re- ceived additional grants to aid the payment of ^the construction of the new Physics-Mathematics Building. The latest grant is $10,000 f r o m the Upjohn Company. The grant was announced through Dr. E. Gif- ford Upjohn, M.D., chairman of the Board of Trustees of the company. The college has also announced that it has received an $1800 g r a n t of stock from the Sears, Roebuck Company. The Physics-Mathematics Build- ing. now being built next to Van Zoeren Library, is scheduled to be completed by next August, and will be used by classes and labs in the coming fall semester. No Extra Day Off Friday Classes Scheduled WHITE CHRISTMAS—Hope's campus is blanketed in white as winter takes hold. Winter Carnival To Exploit Snow Hope students will acknowledge the hold of 01' Man Winter on Hol- land by holding a Winter Carnival during the weekend of Feb. 7-8. Plans for this weekend of winter sports and other activities are now certain. General chairmen, Pete Van Lierop and Marcia Vande Vrede, have asked that students be re- minded to bring their skates, skis, and suitable clothing back with them after Christmas vacation. The schedule of events for the Carnival begins with a sled race between fraternities at 4-5 p.m. Friday. The race will consist of a 150 lb. man on a sled pulled by a 6-8 man team. They will race on a •track marked out around ihe campus. There will be several re- lay stations along it for fresh "dogs." The dinner meal Friday will be a Slater special: a jazz combo will play, dining halls will have decora- tions and the attire will be ski pants and sweaters. Friday night will feature winter sports at Goshorn Hills. Students may ski, ice skate, or go on sleigh rides. Refreshments will be served there, and the Union will be open serving hot chocolate as well. The skating ring will be open also. Saturday between 8:30 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. snow sculptors will be out. creating their works of art around the theme of American legends. Judging will take place between fraternities, sororities, dorms, and cottages. Between 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. the girls will play ice soccer, a game involving tennis shoes, a broom, and a soccer ball. Competition will be between classes. The championship of the frat- ernity ice hockey teams will ibe decided between 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. Eliminations will run throughout the week. Saturday night Hope will play Alma at the Civic Center. The half- time entertainment will include band numbers, decorations and a student skit. After the game the Union will be open and there will be ice skating, a bonfire and refreshments. Hope College students this year will not receive an unscheduled extra day of Christmas vacation as they have in the past, according to college President Dr. Calvin VanderWerf. In an interview Monday Vander- Werf said that having a rather un- organized day off decided upon at the last minute would put a premi- um on unconscientiousness, since the conscientious students who plan on going to classes on Friday and schedule transportation for Friday afternoon would lose out if the day were called off on Friday morn- ing. while the less conscientious students who leave early benefit by not missing classes on the pre- viously unannounced day off. In order to aid his decision. Van- derWerf asked the faculty mem- bers to give their opinions on whether an extra day of vacation should be given. According to the president, "The faculty was very decided in favor of having classes. Of the approximately 50 who re- MAY ALL OUR READERS HAVE A VERY MEANINGFUL CHRISTMAS and A HAPPY NEW YEAR plied, about 49 were against hav- ing Friday off. " The president, nonetheless, is keeping an open mind to .the idea that having Friday, or even up to the Wednesday, before Christmas vacation off might be valuable to the students for traveling time. However, he feels that, if such extra days were allowed, they should be written into the college school year scheduling. Local Stations To Run Hopeite's Radio Program "By That Same Star", a Christ- mas program originally produced for television by the Public Rela- tions Office at Hope College has been adapted for radio and will be heard locally on both radio stations. The program will also be seen this year on a Detroit itelevision station in its original form. "By That Same Star" tells the story of Christmas from the time of the prophecy until after Christ's birth. The narrative is interspers- ed with appropriate carols and background music. The program was written by Milton Nieuwsma. who graduated from Hope last June, produced by Gerald Kruyf, Director of Public Relj of the Jpe Speech Department. anchor staff v . . MESSIAH—Hope's symphonic orchestra, four pntfesslonal soloists, and 200 student singers presented Handel's "Messiah" Tuesday.
Transcript
Page 1: 12-19-1963

f.A I* ^ O

'&/i

I

76th Year—15 Hope College, Holland, Michigan December 19, 1963

Recent Grants To Help Finance Physics Building

Hope College has recently re-ceived additional grants to aid the payment of ^the construction of the new Physics-Mathematics Building.

The latest grant is $10,000 f rom the Upjohn Company. The grant was announced through Dr. E. Gif-ford Upjohn, M.D., chai rman of the Board of Trustees of the company.

The college has also announced that it has received an $1800 grant of stock from the Sears, Roebuck Company.

The Physics-Mathematics Build-ing. now being built next to Van Zoeren Library, is scheduled to be completed by next August, and will be used by classes and labs in the coming fall semes te r .

No Extra Day Off

Friday Classes Scheduled

WHITE CHRISTMAS—Hope's campus is blanketed in white as winter

takes hold.

Winter Carnival To Exploit Snow Hope students will acknowledge

the hold of 01' Man Winter on Hol-land by holding a Winter Carnival during the weekend of Feb. 7-8. Plans for this weekend of winter sports and other activities are now certain.

General chairmen, Pete Van Lierop and Marcia Vande Vrede, have asked that s tudents be re-minded to bring their skates, skis, and suitable clothing back with them a f t e r Chris tmas vacation.

The schedule of events for the Carnival begins with a sled r ace between fra terni t ies at 4-5 p.m. Friday. The race will consist of a 150 lb. man on a sled pulled by a 6-8 man team. They will race on a •track marked out around ihe

campus . There will be several re-lay stations along it for f resh "dogs ."

The dinner meal Fr iday will be a Slater special : a jazz combo will play, dining halls will have decora-tions and the att ire will be ski pants and sweaters .

F r iday night will f ea tu re winter sports at Goshorn Hills. Students may ski, ice skate, or go on sleigh rides. Ref reshments will be served there, and the Union will be open serving hot chocolate as well. The skating ring will be open also.

Saturday between 8:30 a .m. and 2:00 p.m. snow sculptors will be out. creat ing their works of art around the theme of American legends. Judging will t ake place

between fra terni t ies , sororities, dorms, and cottages.

Between 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. the girls will play ice soccer , a g a m e involving tennis shoes, a broom, and a soccer ball. Competition will be between classes.

The championship of the f ra t -erni ty ice hockey t eams will ibe decided between 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. Eliminations will run throughout the week.

Saturday night Hope will play Alma at the Civic Center. The half-t ime enter ta inment will include band numbers, decorat ions and a s tudent skit.

After the game the Union will be open and there will be ice skating, a bonfire and re f reshments .

Hope College s tudents this year will not receive an unscheduled ex t ra day of Chr is tmas vacation as they have in the past , according to college Pres ident Dr. Calvin VanderWerf.

In an interview Monday Vander-Werf said that having a ra ther un-organized day off decided upon at the last minute would put a premi-um on unconscientiousness, since the conscientious s tudents who plan on going to classes on Friday and schedule t ransportat ion for Fr iday afternoon would lose out if the day were called off on Fr iday morn-ing. while the less conscientious s tudents who leave early benefit by not missing classes on the pre-viously unannounced day off.

In order to aid his decision. Van-derWerf asked the faculty mem-bers to give their opinions on whether an ext ra day of vacation should be given. According to the president , "The faculty was very decided in favor of having classes. Of the approximate ly 50 who re-

MAY ALL OUR READERS

HAVE A VERY

MEANINGFUL CHRISTMAS

and

A HAPPY NEW YEAR

plied, about 49 were against hav-ing Fr iday off. "

The president, nonetheless, is keeping an open mind to .the idea that having Fr iday, or even up to the Wednesday, before Chris tmas vacation off might be valuable to the s tudents for t ravel ing time. However, he feels that , if such extra days were allowed, they should be written into the college school year scheduling.

Local Stations

To Run Hopeite's

Radio Program "By That Same S ta r " , a Christ-

m a s program originally produced for television by the Public Rela-tions Office at Hope College has been adapted for radio and will be heard locally on both radio stations.

The program will also be seen this year on a Detroit itelevision station in its original form.

"By That Same S t a r " tells the story of Chris tmas f rom the time of the prophecy until a f te r Christ 's birth. The nar ra t ive is interspers-ed with appropr ia te carols and background music.

The program was writ ten by Milton Nieuwsma. who graduated f rom Hope last June, produced by Gerald Kruyf, Director of Public Relj

of the Jpe Speech Depar tment .

anchor staff

v . .

MESSIAH—Hope's symphonic orchestra, four pntfesslonal soloists, and 200 student singers presented Handel's "Messiah" Tuesday.

Page 2: 12-19-1963

THIS WAY OUT—Marsha Zamoida, Bryce Butler, Carole Timkovitch

and Rob Werge helped to present sophomore Jennifer McGilvray's play in pantomime Saturday.

Sophomore McGilvray's Drama Presented Saturday at Theatre

by Thomas Wombwell

Jenn i fe r McGilvray, a Hope Col-lege sophomore, presented her lait-est play, "This Way Out ," in the Little Thea t r e last Sa turday af te r -noon to an invitational audience.

Themat ic and technical con-siderat ions. it seems, would be in-appropr ia te in a public review at this t ime. They might be valuable for the playwright 's ar t is t ic devel-opment . They would not, however, be relevant to the potential viewer

DU SAAR PHOTO and GIFT

SHOP Holland, Mich. EX 2 - 2 2 3 0 Everything Photographic

of the play, the newspaper reader , since at least as far as this wr i ter is aware , there a re no immedia te plans to res tage the production for the general public.

The point to be m a d e here is that in the writing of this play a creat ive work has come f rom a corner of the ar ts at Hope College in which writing has hitherto not been largely realized. Acting, di-recting, and production a r e import-ant aspects of the thea t re exper-ience to which writing m a y now be added. Miss McGilvray 's play is a m a j o r contribution. Continued fac-ulty and student support may bring about even more significant works.

PLACE

Merry Christmas

and

Happy New Year

from

Campus Miss

Be A College Town Doll

Make Your Selection at . . .

FRENCH CLOAK 3 0 E. 8th St. EX 3 - 9 0 0 6

HERFST STUDIO AND PHOTO SUPPLY

PORTRAITS — PICTURE FRAMES — CAMERAS

PROJECTORS — FILMS — PHOTO FINISHING

We Give S&H Green Stamps

7 West 8th Street Phone EX 2 - 2 6 6 4

Let these lines from the Minister's Notebook be Hope

Church's Christmas greeting to the students and faculty

of Hope College.

"Christmas for the Christian must be a festival of hope

—the kind of hope which can face the menacing facts

and still carry on. And Christmas hope is not a matter

of whistling in the dark; rather, it is a matter of keep-

ing a light burning in the dark.Christian hope never

suggests that there wil l be no great difficulties ahead,

but it does declare that, in the long run, there wil l be

no defeat of God's purposes. Christmas for the Christian must be remembrance of what God d id for man when he came into man's history

in the person of Jesus Christ. But it must also be a re-

minder that when we turn to him in faith he comes

again and again and again. 'Have courage, never

fear; here comes your God . . . he comes to save y o u / "

HOPE CHURCH

7 7 W . l l t h Street

Christmas in Washington

by Robert Donia

Many average citizens wonder what life is like in Washington— with all those important person-alities wandering around. Now, due to some excellent outside sources, we are able to give you this penetrat ing analysis of Wash-ington at Chris tmast ime.

The Supreme Court building is conspicuous by its lack of decora-tions. By unanimous consent, the Jus t ices agreed that Chr is tmas as a national holiday is Unconstitu-tional, because of its religious im-plications. However, since Just ice Goldberg wanted some recognition of Hannukkah, the Just ices have agreed .to a new and revolutionary form of celebration—on opening each court session, they smile.

The Capitol building, however, is much more gay. In the main lobby is a huge Chris tmas tree decorated with green, yellow, white, orange, and blue light?—no red, out of de-ference to Senator Goldwater. Southern Senators can be heard singing their favorite Chris tmas carols, " I ' m Dreaming of a White Campus" and " 0 L i f l e Town of B i r m i n g h a m . "

The Democrat ic leadership, which has been conducting a fili-buster agains t a motion to adjourn , has somehow found t ime to dis-tr ibute "We love you, Bobby B a k e r " buttons to the more fun-loving of the Congressional bunch. Some of the more reserved mem-bers of Congress have been seen stopping into the Quorum Club for

Novice Speakers

Win 7 Debates

In Chicago Meet Novice Hope debaters t raveled to

Chicago to take pa r t in a Frosh-Soph Debate Tourney held at the University of Illinois, Navy Pier , Dec. 13 and 14. Debating 12 t imes, Hope's iteam won 7 and lost 5.

The negat ive team of Dave Noel and Bob Donia won four and lost two, winning over De Pauw Uni-versi ty, Calvin College, Wisconsin State at Oshkosh, and Indiana Uni-versi ty, and losing to the Univer-sity of Illinois and Loyola Univer-sity.

Debating aff i rmatively, Ba rba ra Vanderwest and Gene Pearson won over Dubuque University, Wiscon-sin University at Milwaukee, and Western Illinois University, and lost to Western Michigan Univer-sity women, Wilson J.C. and Mar-quette University.

There were 53 units or 106 teams f rom 12 s ta tes . The tournament is one of the oldest of Frosh-Soph de-bat ing in the country.

an occasional glass of holiday cheer. Congressman Adam Clay-ton Powell made a speech on the House floor s tat ing that he planned to spend Chr is tmas in Europe , in-specting the educational sys tem of the French Riviera with his three secretar ies . Senator Dirksen, min-ority leader, s ta ted that he is op-posed to such ex t ravagance unless equal rights a re granted to ithe Republican minority.

Pe rhaps the best .time of all is had at the White House. Here Lyn-don "Ah need yowe help" Johnson and his family have decked the halls with boughs of sagebrush . They plan a delicious Chr is tmas dinner of corn f r i t t e r s and grits, featur ing surplus mea t , wheat , butter , milk, and corn. McGeorge Bundy, who gives the Pres ident his daily briefing on foreign af-fairs , received a subscription to The Dallas Star for Chris tmas f rom the Johnsons. He had com-plained since Mr. Johnson, in the interest of economy, cancelled all White House subscriptions to The Wall Street Journal , The New York Times, U.S. News, Time, Life, Newsweek, and Fortune. Other White House Staff personnel were

given a Chris tmas present also: instructions on how to keep down office expenses, printed on the back of old tax forms.

At the State Depantment, re-searchers a re busy trying to dis-prove a claim voiced in a recent note f rom Khrushchev that "We invented Santa Glaus." Nikita claims that Santa was a red bur-eaucra t who got stoned a t a Krem-lin party, a t tempted to walk home, and ended up at ithe North Pole by accident. Khrushchev also objected to the U.S. habit of calling Santa "St. Nik." The note said, "Every-one knows that ,there is only one Nik worthy of sainthood. Any trai t-or to the Moscow cause does not deserve the name Saint. Such a •trick couldn't be played by anyone other than you sneaky A m e r i c a n s -except maybe the Red Chinese or Stalin."

At the Defense Department , s t ra tegis ts have devised a new fun-game which is being given .to all employees. Its called "Cut-back." Each player makes his move and waits 12 hours to see how many Congressmen object. The employee with the most objections is then made Secre tary of Defense.

m DR. JAMES PRINS DK. HENRY TEN HOOR

Prins, ten Hoor Obtain Doctorates; U. of M. Awards English Degrees

Two members of the Hope Col-lege English faculty, Henry ten Hoor and J a m e s Prins , will re-ceive doctoral degrees f rom the University of Michigan today at 2 p.m. in the Hill Auditorium of the Ann Arbor campus.

Each man will be awarded a Doctor of Education in English by the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies.

Ten Hoor wrote his doctoral dis-sertation entitled "A Reexamina-

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tion of Susanna Centlivre as a Comic Dramat i s t . "

Pr ins ' title is "The Fabulous Art: Myth, Metaphor, and Moral Vision in Dickens' Bleak House."

Presently associate professor of English, ten Hoor joined the Hope facul:y in 1946. Prior to -that he served in the U.S. Navy for three years . He also taught for five years at the Castle Heights Mili-tary Academy in Tennessee.

He received his A.B. degree f rom Calvin College and his M.A. f rom the University of Michigan.

Pr ins is also an associate pro-fessor of English and joined the Hope faculty in 1946.

Pr ins received his A.B. from Hope in 1938 and M.A. f rom the University of Michigan in 1939.

Pr ins and ten Hoor drove to Ann Arbor together today to receive -the degree in person.

WE NEED YOUR HEAD IN OUR BUSINESS

POST'S BARBER SHOP ThrM Borbtn

Two blocks south of chapel.

A&W ROOT BEER Olive King Burger Two Patties of Choice Beef

Melted Cheese, Lettuce-Tomato and Our Own Olive Dressing

Served on a Rusk Bun

45c

Tit" Ha ,

Page 3: 12-19-1963

December 19, 1963 Hope Collere anchor Pare 3

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ANCHOR

MAIL Greet ings to the boy I walked

home with from the l ibrary a month ago. who informed me that he was an "intellectual, a person who really appreciates cultural

th ings ."

And to the girl who. while comb-ing her grey-blond hair in Graves lounge last week, said that she was "bored with this p lace" and wished to t ransfer to a more cos-mopolitan environment.

This is also a letter to .the tablQ of bridge players I overheard talk-ing in the smoker about the ab-sence of activity and cultural in-t e re s t at Hope. (Repeat last sent-ence ten times, rotat ing tables.)

This is a letter to the kids I 've stood in front of and in back of in lunch lines, movie lines, registra-tion lines, chapel card lines and, maybe only due to the absence of other common bonds, heard con-clude that there 's " some kind of a void" here in Holland.

Pe rhaps most pointedly, this let-ter is addressed to (since one would believe that if Hope students mus t 'be guided somewhat as to bedding hours, clothing regulations, etc. , that Hope students mus t be

(Continued on column 4)

Peace on Earth Chris tmast ime!

That great White Wonderland time, filled with sparkling Chris tmas trees and bells and gay presents and Santa Claus. Christmastime means wreaths and snow and shopping and cards and little shepherds in old bathrobes carrying ply-wood shepherds ' s taf fs beside cute little blond Marys and dolls in mangers filled with Real Hay. Chris tmast ime means visits and relat ives and lights and carols and fireplaces and stock-ings and reindeer and that happy warm deep down feeling that you gel when you give a dime or a quar te r to the Salvation Army girl ringing her bell all day on the corner.

Chris tmast ime! That sparkling busy t ime

filled with tinsel.

And i t ' s all great—except that Chris tmas means Christ and all the wonder of God's great love and power, an idea so deep and quiet and inner and non-commercial that somehow it just doesn't seem to fit anymore, if we dare to be really honest with ourselves. Maybe we ought to call it Santat ime, or Clausmas.

"But Chris tmas is for the Children." And at Chris tmast ime we're all children finding it so easy to slip into the fantastic dream of modern Christmas. Chris tmas has become the great es-cape, our seasonal opiate. Eat , drink, and get presents for tomorrow we must enter the prac-tical world of reality again. How much more we would get out of Chris tmas if we honestly re-

flected on the t rue reality of God's great gift of a Savior accepting human form in order to save men—men as lowly as humble shepherds and as great as Wise Men.

But we accept Christmas as children—recit-ing the words we know too well but rarely under-stand and instinclively knowing that the reason for being good is that we must placate the Santa Claus or parents or whomever else it is that will give what we want.

Like too much in our society today so many of the vital essences of Christianity are being inverted, turned inside out, and ultimately de-graded. Adults see nothing more in Christmas than their children do. The time of commemorat-ing the birth of the Son of God into the world as the Son of Man—a time which could, and should, be a rebirth, renewal and renaissance of Christianity—is too rapidly being dominated by a multi-billion dollar socio-commercial s tructure which burying real Christianity in its waste basket of tinsel, plastic and wrapping paper.

What can we do? We can start by taking Xmas from Santa Claus and giving Christmas to Christ. We can make Christmas a time of peace on earth and religious wonder and adora-tion in our hear ts instead of a time in which we let ourselves be swept along in a chaos of hard selling commercials and saccharine sentimental-ity. We can realize that the real meaning and essence of Christmas lies quietly deep in the heart of an honest and mature Christianity.

'Continued from column l>

encouraged in activity selection also. . . . ' those of the administra-tion and faculty who are playing the roles of Whole Men. As long as they don't have to go out of their departments , that is. . . .

Where were you during the ex-cellent band concert last Tuesday evening? Admittedly, apologetical-ly. the efforts of our band are, if at all. only a part of an Answer for those here at Hope who are in-tensely cultural, intellectual, or Whole. But for those who enjoy the delights of music, the sense of in-volvement and refreshment in the clean, healthy work of such music, you missed something. Unless you were one of the 50 who "took an

hour" to attend. —Susan Spring

Pnhiishrd urthly of the roUrne

\cm cxrvftl vnrnlinn. holiday find

rxnmitinliou fnrwds hy and jnr

l/ir studrnls of Hope College, Hal-

hind. Mich., under the authority

(,f ihr Student Sointc Puhliratinus

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i.nlnrd a* second class matter

nl the post office of Holland,

Michigan, nl Ihe special rale of

postage provided for in section

llii} nf Act of Congress. Oct.. h

/ 9 / 7 . nnd authorized Oct. 19,

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ed: /eeland Record. Zeeland.

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Page 4: 12-19-1963

Pare 4 Hope College anchor December 19, 1963

WAA Cagers Edge Out 22-20 Win

In First Skirmish with Alma Hope College women's ibasket-

ball t eam .traveled to Alma on Wednesday, Dec. 11, to gain a vic-tory for the first game of the sea-son.

Members of the WAA team in-clude Evelyn Albers, Karen Cush-man, Joyce Flipse, Sally Kooistra, Delia Kuiper, Debbie Osborn, Sandy Parke r , Mary Rich and Lee Van Haver.

The f irs t quar te r and half ended with Hope slightly ibehind with a first quar te r score of 5-4. At the half Alma was two points ahead

with a score of 9-7.

Hope's women were more suc-cessful in the second half with a 15 - 13 score over Alma in the •third quarter . The game ended with Hope two points ahead in a final score of 22-20.

Hope's high pointer was Karen Cushman who accumulated 13 points. Alma's high pointer Zdun gatherend 10 points.

Other WAA activities planned for the near fu ture include partici-pation in a P layday on Jan . 11 and in bowling and volleyball t eams .

Vienna School Plans Completed;

INTERNATIONAL S T R U G G L E - T h e DuU* F r f e d A n n O l U t C C S T w O S t l l d y T O W S

Dutch Trip Westmont at Holland High by Steve De Pree

Intermit tent spurts of scoring and Glen Van Wieren's clutch command pushed Hope College to a tr iumph over Westmont College by a margin of 77-74 in a pulsating contest held at Holland High gym Monday night.

Hope's spurts of point-making never caught up with Westmont until the last few minutes of play when Captain Glenn Van Wieren displayed some all-round play-making to net a victory for the Flying Du'chmen.

Hope spent most of the game t ry ing to contain Westmont 's Skel-ton who finally totaled 33 points. F i r s t half action saw the Blue and Orange on the losing end most of the time. Hope experimented with

a 1-3-1 defense at first , but resorted to the man-to-man when the corner-men started hitting. The initial half as a whole was quite dull for Hope fans as they saw their t eam unable to keep up with the West-mont club. The half ended with the Flying Dutchmen behind by a score of 46-36.

Hope began the second half with a f lurry of successes to pull within 2 points of the opponent with fifteen minutes remaining. But as before, Westmont rose to the occasion and lengthened their lead to as much as •4en points. Then Chris Buys and A1 P a l m e r started clicking offensively to help cut the lead to a single point with six minutes left. But West-mont tried one final run for the victory to make the lead 72-67. This

a t tempt was to no avail as Glenn Van Wieren led a t remendous as-sault with about two minutes re-maining on the clock. Van Wieren sank six crucial f ree throws, re-bounded aggressively, and stole the ball away to capture the win for the Blue and Orange.

Van Wieren's efforts m a d e him high scorer for the Blue and Or-ange with a total of 18 marke r s . Hope's two other double-figure scorers were Ron Venhuizen with 16 and Clare Van Wieren with 10.

Field goal percentages showed Westmont ahead as the shot for a cool 49 per cent while the Blue and Orange netted only 38 per cent. Hope outrebounded the opponent and swished a grea ter percentage of f ree throws to provide .the dif-ference.

Plans for the 1964 Hope College Vienna Summer School have ibeen completed and were announced to-day by Dr. Paul Fried, Director of the program and cha i rman of the His'.ory Depar tment at Hope.

A new fea ture of next summer ' s program will be a choice of study tours. Students may register for either the Romance Language area tour or t h e German Language area tour.

The 16-day Romance Language tour will be headed by Dr. Edward Savage of Hope's English depart-ment. Savage, who has lived and traveled extensively throughout Europe and the middle Eas t , will lead his group through France , Italy, and Austria.

Dr. Fried, who has directed the Vienna program for the past nine years , will lead the other study tour through France , Luxemburg, Germany. Switzerland and Austria.

Hope and Calvin Discuss British Journal Prints Paper

Sociology Seminar Plans Hope Sociology Professor Discussion of a new summer soci-

ology seminar in conjunction with Calvin College is now underway in the Sociology Department.

Under the proposed program, students enrolling in certain sum-m e r courses would be placed in "good homes" in the inner - city. These homes, mostly of Christian Negroes, would give the student practical experience, while he is taking six to nine hours of class-room credit, possibly in a nearby r<

Mr. Ear l HkH, chai rman of Sociology Depar tment , or-

iginally~cortCelv6d this idea af te r a visit to the Michigan Conference on Inter-Group Relations and Edu-cation early in November at Wayne State. This conference dealt with the problems of educating the culturally deprived and preparing capable teachers for this work.

"Long dissatisfied with analyt-ical sociology with its ineffictive-ness due to not putt ing the evi-dence to use ," Hall believes that "this new project , in taking advantage of the environment, will be very effect ive ."

Calvin College is a l s o in terested in making this project a

reality, possibly locating next sum-mer in Grand Rapids, for its f i rs t year . Eventually, probably in its second year, t he p rog ram will move to Chicago and Detroit for more typical inner-city work.

Calvin and Hope College sociol-ogy sitaffs have been meet ing to-gether monthly since September. The objective of the two depart-ments working in close association is pr imari ly to exchange teaching methods and ideas for mutual benefit .

Another project under their con-sideration for next fall is the ex-change of courses. Donald R. Wil-son, " a first-rate physical and cultural anthropologist" a t Calvin may come down to teach one course in anthropology, while Donald A. Clelland, a Calvin grad-uate, might teach an Urban Com-munity course in exchange.

Donald A. Clelland, Hope Soci-ology professor, and William A. Faunce of Michigan State Univer-sity recently had their pape r "The Professional Socie ty" published in the British sociology journal. New Society.

This British journal , a monthly periodical put out for sociology laymen, has a -wide circulation in the United States.

The paper, f i rs t presented at the American Sociological meet ing in September, was 'based on a study of a Michigan industrial commun-ity, a city which has a greater percentage of workers in the labor force than almost any oither city in the United States. The city had become highly professionalized due largely to automation.

The purpose of the paper was to show how automation changes the work force and to show how the

work force changes the commun-ity. Interviews with three m a j o r groups in the city, scientific pro-fessionals, technicians, and hourly workers , enabled them to compare varying opinions and att i tudes.

Conclusions concerning changes resulting f rom automation which were different than changes f rom earlier phases of industrialization are summarized as follows: There was a decline in class cleavage; an increase in communi ty partici-pation; a dispersion of communi ty power; and a new determination of social s t a tus by professional s tatus.

Both groups will reach Vienna on July 3 when the six week academic session will begin.

As in the past college credi t courses will be offered in both the German and English languages and will be taught by a European faculty.

At the end of the second week of study there will be a three-day t r ip to Prague, Czechoslovakia, and at the conclusion of the fourth week of study there will be an optional t r ip to Budapest, Hungary or Bel-grade, Yugoslavia. Both tr ips will confront s udents with the reality of Communist-controlled Eas te rn Europe.

Following the academic session in Vienna, s tudents will have the opportunity to visit the world-famous Salzburg Music festival in Salzburg, Austria as they t rave l independently for twenty days be-fore reassembling in Amsterdam for •he flight to the United States scheduled for Setpt. 3.

One of the outstanding aspects of the Vienna Summer School is t h a t it gives a student i fhe opportunity to study first-hand the Austrian people and their customs. While in Vienna, s tuden 's a re housed in private homes and take breakfas t in thei r respective homes.

The entire group has lunch in the dining room of the Institute of European Studies and for evening meals , a cash refund is given so that students m a y visit different res taurants , where they can ex-periment with Austrian dishes.

Anyone interested in attending the Vienna Summer School m a y obtain a ibrochure or application f rom Dr. Paul Fried in Room 308 of Van Raalte Hall.

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