03-03-1967

Page 1

Eighth (•1#

Crown in Eleven

e Tie for Championship By Bob Vanderberg

The Flying Dutchmen of Hope College won their eighth MIAA basketball title in 11 years as they whipped the Albion Britons, 87 - 64, Wednesday night at the Civic Center. Both the Dutch a n d K a l a m a z o o ' s Hornets finished with 1 0 - 2 league m a r k s .

3!

And, to m a k e the finish all the more a p p r o p r i a t e , thefinalbucket was a 15-footer by red-haired senior Jim Schoon, possibly one of the most p o p u l a r players ever to don a Hope uniform.

CHAMPIONSHIP PLAY—Floyd Brady drives for two of his 34 points in Wednesday night's game. His tremendous output was not needed as Hope easily rolled to an 87-64 win over the Albion Britons, which put them in a tie with Kalamazoo for first place in the MIAA standings.

German Scholar Heller Will Speak Next Friday Dr. Frich Heller, professor of G e r m a n at Northwestern Cniversity, will speak to the All-College Assembly in Dimnent Memorial Chapel next F r i d a y m o r n i n g at

9:30 a.m. His lecture will be entitled " Y e a t s and Nietzsche." PROFESSOR HELLER, an internationally known scholar and a u t h o r , is a native of Prague, Czechoslovakia, and a naturalized British citizen. He received degrees in law, philosophy and G e r m a n literature from the Cniversity of P r a g u e a n d a Ph. 1). from C a m b r i d g e University. Previous to his appointment in 1960 at Northwestern University, he has lectured a n d taught in various college and university positions in Europe and America.

DR. ERICH HELLER

C o m m e n t i n g on the address, Dr. Gerhard Megow of the G e r m a n department affirmed that "Dr. Heller should be particularly interesting to our college c o m m u nity since he holds his position in the highest r a n k s of literary criticism due to a unique vision which strikes m a n y c h o r d s suggestive of the tradition from which independent liberal arts colleges like Hope have s p r u n g . "

OTHER SENIORS MAKING their final a p p e a r a n c e s of their college careers were starters Carl Walters and Jim Klein. Walters directed the attack a n d added five points while Klein contributed several interceptions and steals and came up with nine m a r k e r s . Center Bruce Van Huis and g u a r d Gary R y p m a , both of whom will be back next season, also aided the cause with fine

V A N Z O E R E N LIBRARY wUl be open on S u n d a y s from 2 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. a n d 8:15 to 10:15 S u n d a y evening. The Executive Committee acted on the recomm e n d a t i o n s of the Student Life a n d Religious Life Committees which suggested these h o u r s . The closing of the library f r o m

IFC, Pan Hell Decide to Drop All-College Sing In a joint meeting of the Interfraternity Council and the Pan Hellenic B o a r d last T h u r s d a y , the Greek societies voted to cancel the all college sing for this year, according to Tom Hendrickson, president of I.F.C. Discussion of the sing w a s reopened because there seemed to be a general lack of interest in the fraternities a n d the sororities, said .lohn Leenhouts, Cosm o p o l i t a n I.F.C. representative. Wrhile the sing m a y be quite enj o y a b l e to those who sit a n d watch it, it m e a n s little more t h a n one to two h o u r s of hard w o r k each night for two to three weeks for those w h o must participate in it, said Hendrickson.

The S a t u r d a y closing will be changed from 10:15 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Student use of the l i b r a r y on S a t u r d a y evenings was light, and the longer hours on S u n d a y were balanced by the earlier S a t u r d a y closing in an effort to offset increased expenses. THE SUNDAY LIBRARY hours also passed the faculty Mond a y night. Dean of Academic Affairs William S. Mathis said that the Executive Committee's affirmative decision was not sought in an effort "to pre-empt faculty responsibility." " T h i s was not the spirit of the Committee's decision," he said. Rather, "there was a time fact o r , " Dean Mathis said, in bringing the p r o p o s a l to the B o a r d ' s Executive Committee before the faculty voted on ii. He reported that the motion passed in the faculty meeting with little discussion. Pending the negotiation of fin a n c i n g a r r a n g e m e n t s , the Committee a o o r o v e d the construction of a new d o r m i t o r y north of a n d adjacent to Gilmore Hall. Clarence Handlogten, Director of Business Affairs, a n n o u n c e d that the new d o r m will be m a d e possible t h r o u g h a g r a n t from the Central Reformed Church of G r a n d Rapids.

BUT, AS U S U A L , thespotlight was stolen by MIAA scoring c h a m p i o n , Floyd Brady. Thejunior jumping-jack f o r w a r d poured t h r o u g h 34 points, tying his previous career-high total. In addition, Floyd pulled down m a n y rebounds, helping the Dutch to a 46 - 26 a d v a n t a g e in that department. B r a d y ' s 34-point p e r f o r m a n c e g a v e him a s e a s o n ' s total of 5 3 3 tallies, including 311 against MIAA competition. The Chicagoa n ' s league scoring a v e r a g e was a robust 25.9 points per game. T H E FINAL 23-POINT m a r gin of victory does not indicate

how close the contest was for the first 20 minutes. Actually, the Albion s q u a d threw a great scare into the crowd as they pulled out to an early lead, largely on the fine outside s h o o t i n g of sophomore g u a r d Fd Stephens. With the Britons leading 8 - 5. an Albion p l a y e r picked off a Hope pass and went in tor the lay-up. As the ball rose t o w a r d t h e ' r i m , B r a d y leaped high and knocked the ball a w a y , only to have the referee call g o a l tending. This call seemed to bother the Dutch, as Albion increased its lead to a frightening 1 6 - 7 . Determined to g a i n a s h a r e of the league title, the Dutchmen fought back a n d cut the Britons' m a r g i n to 21 - 17 on Walters' 20-footer. A LAY-UP by the " B r u t e " and a tip-in by Lloyd Schout tied the battle 21 - 21 with 8:3JJ left in the half. Hope finally took the lead for g o o d with 3:40 remain(Continued on Page 8)

anc or

OLLAND, MICHIGAN

79th ANNIVERSARY -

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Hope College, Holland, Michigan

March 3, 1967

Dutch Treat Arrives

Co-eds Get Their Chance Hope's coeds will have six d a y s to display their ability to employ sly, cunning tactics d u r i n g Dutch Treat Week, March 6 t h r o u g h 11. D U T C H TREAT WEEK activities will include The Bachelor Bank, Mills, Kletz, A & W Days a n d " T h e H a p p e n i n g . " These events will present t h e c a m p u s women with an o p p o r t u n i t y to act r e g a r d i n g their previously regis-

New Library Hours, New Dorm 6:30 p.m. to 8:15 p.m. w a s done as encouragement to students to participate in activities " i n keeping with the spirit of the d a y , " according to the Committee's decision.

performances. Van Huis tallied 17 points, including 13 in the first half, and also did a great job on the b o a r d s . After hitting just one free throw in the first half, the G r a n d Rapids junior helped s p a r k Hope's second half blitz by connecting for eight points.

COLLEGE

Exec Board Approves:

New h o u r s for Van Zoeren Library, new housing, faculty s a l a r y increases a n d the projected size of next y e a r ' s student body were a m o n g the questions decided by the Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees in its meeting last F r i d a y .

Years

C E N T R A L REFORMED has pledged $ 2 5 , 0 0 0 per y e a r until it h a s donated $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 . Women residents of Beck Cottage, which is located on the site of the new d o r m , felt the action of the Committee early this week. The entire cottage was vacated, and residents were relocated in other c a m p u s residences. The Committee also decided to s a v e Voorhees f r o m razing in what was termed " r e s p o n s e to the overwhelming sentiment expressed by alumni, a l u m n a e , and coeds now on c a m p u s . " Thecampus l a n d m a r k will be preserved and remodeled.

tered complaints weekends.

of

dateless

M o n d a y ' s Bachelor Bank, 6:30 p.m. in the basement of Durfee, will feature a date d r a w i n g by 21 of Hope's most eligible bachelors. Girls who have deposited their n a m e s in the box in Van Raalte Hall must be present to qualify if their n a m e is d r a w n . The 21 men, three from each fraternity and three f r o m the freshm a n class, will be given a complimentary gift as part of the date. The Kletz will be the center of action Wednesday with coffee a n d rolls being sold at half price. "Kletz D a y , " in effect until 4 p.m., stipulates that the coeds pay for the snacks. Mills Day, T u e s d a y from 6:30 p.m. until closing, will give the Dutch Treaters a chance to sweeten up their dates with ice cream. All s o d a s , shakes, malteds a n d sundaes (except hot fudge) will be only twenty cents at Mill's House of Flavors. T h u r s d a y has been declared Dutch Treat W e e k ' s " A & W D a y . " Special prices will include: $ 1 . 1 5 for chicken and s h r i m p dinners;

20 cents for shakes, s u n d a e s and onion rings; 15 cents for French fries; 10 cents off on all sandwiches (except h a m b u r g e r s ) ; 15 cents off on all baskets; a n d only 45 cents for their olive k i n g b u r g e r . Girls must present their Hope 1.1). cards to take a d v a n t a g e of these specials. S h a k e s p e a r e ' s " R i c h a r d 111" will be shown F r i d a y at 8 : 0 0 p . m . in Dimnent Memorial Chapel as a Mortar Board film. S a t u r d a y ' s dance, " T h e Happening," sponsored by the sophomore class, will culminate Dutch Treat Week. Dressed in levis and sweatshirts, the students will dance to the sound of " T h e H e a r d . " A minimal c h a r g e of one dollar will enable couples to dance from 8:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. Special lighting effects will radically transform the a t m o s p h e r e of Carnegie Gym for this event. Co-chairmen of Dutch Treat Week are Bob H u i z i n g a a n d Barb Smallegan, with S a n d r a Tomlinson a n d Lee Bolt in c h a r g e of publicity. Lad McQueen is a r r a n g i n g the Bachelor Bank a n d Don Luidens is in c h a r g e of " T h e H a p p e n i n g . "

T H E COMMITTEE e x p a n d e d the faculty by a p p r o v i n g thecreation of 12 m o r e faculty posts a n d voted generous s a l a r y increases. The hikes come in two areas: first in a n across-the-board adjustment for cost of living increases, and second, in merit increases. MR, HANDLOGTEN a n n o u n c ed that the Committee h a d a p p r o v ed the decision to seek interim financing for the construction of the $ 1 . 5 million Student CulturalSocial Center. The Committee set a projected enrollment of 1,814 full-time students for the fall semester of 196768. However, no action was taken on a n interim report submitted by a subcommittee studying the projected enrollment for the next decade. This report will be considered at the full b o a r d meeting scheduled in June.

I DO?—Marryin' Sam, who looks somewhat like Dr. Arthur Jentz, performed the ceremony during Dutch Treat Week last year. Girls get their chance again nezt week as the Kletz, A&W and Mills offer them opportunities to treat Hope's most eligible bachelors.


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