11-06-1959

Page 1

HOPE COLLEGE ANCHOR November 6, 1959

Hope College — Holland, Michigan

LXXII—6

THE COVETED C U P . .

SL Week Activities Beginning Sunday "Who communicates with God?" will be the theme for Spiritual Life Week to be held on Hope's campus November 8-12. Leading chapel services and participating in seminars, devotions, and discussion will be Doctor Henry Kuizenga. Henry Kuizenga is the pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Ann Arbor, Michigan, a church serving a parish of townspeople and university students. Dr. Kuiz— enga received his Bacher* *1 l nl T • ' o r , s a n d Master's degrees in Theology from Princeton This year an airplane and Seminary and the degree of

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Showing Film Monday Night For SL Week EITHER THE FRESHMAN or Sophomore Nykerk chairman will be holding this cup tomorrow night. To win the cup, a class must win 5 out of the possible 9 p 0 i n ts. Photo—Vande Vusse

Holding Nykerk Contest At Civic Tomorrow Today is November 6th —Friday. Tomorrow is November 7th —Saturday. Tomorrow is Nykerk. Nykerk — i t means a lot to the Sophomore women — t h e Sophomore class as a whole in fact. The Freshman class have a stake in the thing too, to hear them talk. Evi Carter, Virginia Topp, Sharon Grossman, Jan Reimersma, and Judy De Ryke haven't been around all week. As interclass and class chairmen, they've been too busy. Edna Hollander, Shelby Braaksma, Ruth DeWitt, Evalyn Hol^ lander, Leona Jansen, and Janet Hollander have spent most of their time in the music building. Freshman and Sophomore songs have to be perfected. Judy Tysse and Ruth Vander Meulen have been coaching Judy Sietsema, Ruth Flikkema, Renetta Dykstra, Ellen Frink, and Nancy Vander Kolk — t h e Sophomore Play — " J u s t a Little Bit Crazy." Arlene Cizek and Lynn Feltham are similarly wrought up while coaching Karen Crandall, Jane Woodby, Nancy Wees, Donna Davis, and Barb Blunt who make up the cast of the Freshman Play, "Little Prison." Betty Vicha and Barb Walvoord have been putting in the final touches for the oration. And Mary Ann Klaaren has been assisting Pat Vanderbeek rehearse in every spare minute. Last minute lines have been learned, earlier stage defects and trouble areas cleared up — t h e plays are ready for presentation. "Little Prison" or "Just a Little Bit Crazy." Weeks of rehearsal, harmony, sectionals, nerve stretching and tension — t h e result? Songs "It's a Big Wide Wonderful World" and "Kerry Dance" in their final forms. The two will go into competition. The orators will take possession of the stage respectively. Each has practiced, revised, rewritten, has been advised and now will share the fruits of her labor. And all this takes place tomorrow night at the Civic Center (8:00). We may never know which parts of the program won, but one thing we will know is — which class won.

To Honor Moms and Dads On Campus Next Saturday Mom and Dad's Day, the annual show-off-for-the-folks time of the year, has been slated for Saturday, November 14 and will be under the direction of cochairmen Sue Evans and Doug Neckers. Parents arriving in the morning will find all campus buildings open to them from 10:00 until 4:00 in the afternoon. Dormitories and Fraternity Houses will hold individual Open House between 4:00 and 8:30 p.m.

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At the Hope-Northern Ohio football game beginning at 1:30, recognition will be given to the Moms and Dads present. After

the game a buffet supper, under the auspices of Mr. Dressner, and Slater Food Service, will be served at Durfee. At 6:00 and again at 7:00 a Talent Show featuring outstanding campus entertainment, will be presented in the Music Auditorium as the conclusion to the day's events. Working behind the scenes of this year's Mom and Dad's Day as committee heads under Sue and Doug, are Roger Achterhof, Dining Committee; Bobbie Russell, Entertainment; Jim Anderson, Publicity; and Janet Riemersma and Beverly Joeckel. Participation.

The Quest, a film depicting man's age-old search for the answers to this life and to the life to come, will be shown in the Music Building Auditorium on Monday, November 9, at 7:15 P.M. In vivid colors the film shows us the wreckage of mighty cities and empires in the ancient and mysterious lands of the Middle East. As a cry of warning from the past, this newest film narrated by Dr. William Culbertson of Moody Bible Institute points out the futility of man's greatest and most wonderful efforts to plan for the future and to rationalize life and even death.

The ANCHOR encourages every student and faculty member to write letters to the editor on any subject. Each letter should be typewritten and placed in the ANCHOR mailbox the Monday preceeding Friday's publication.

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train have been chartered for eastern students going home for the Christmas vacation. The airplane is a DC6, a U.S. overseas airliner which holds one hundred people. It is scheduled to leave Grand .j u io Rapids on December 18, some^ . j «. , time in the mid-afternoon and „ . . r n j • »• fly non-stop to LaGuardia Air, . xj i. Y 0 in eW 0r ^ T . . 11 . , * i • r. j It will arrive back in Grand „ j m. 4. T Rapids on January 4. The cost • l u ocr-ic * i j 4.u~ is to be $55.45, including the bus trip to Grand Rapids. As an added feature, meals will be served in flight. The train is scheduled to leave December 18 from Kalamazoo late in the afternoon and will return January 4. Transportation will be provided to and from Kalamazoo. The cost for this complete trip • tAH ao j n ir, is $49.48 and will terminate in New York City making a few stops on the way. At the beginning of the week of November 1, a down payment of $30.00 is to be paid by those planning to go by air6 T • ; •is payable plane. The remainder after Thanksgiving. These arrangements were made through a newly formed Student Council c o m m i t t e e which is headed by Bobbie Amos and Jack Millard; and with the cooperation of Mr. Visscher.

Doctor of Philosophy from Yale University. He served as a Director of Christian Education at the Prospect Presbyterian Church of Maplewood, New Jersey; and as a pastor of the Brick Church of ^ ^ _ _ XT East Orange, New Jersey. . -. , . After having served as a , , . . ^ « chaplain in the Air Force for . ^ three years during World War II he has acted dean of men and . x . . associate professor of Bible at „ r. ,i *. w i u Carroll College at Waukesha, 6 Wisconsin from 1947-1949. He has also been an instructor in Religion at Princeton University. Dr. Kuizenga has been a member of the Board of Trustees of Princeton Theological Seminary since 1957. At present he is also a frequent contributor to " T h e P u l p i t , " a . , r , ,. journal of modem preaching, A„„ A , and president of the Ann Arbor-Washtenaw C o u n c i l of Churches. Beginning the week on Sunday, will be a devotional Vesper program in Dimnent Chapel to hel PF e a c h s t u d e n t m a k e a P e r -

IRC Delegates Hearing Ford At Tomorrow's ConfereiKe The Hope College International Relations Club will host the 6th Annual Conference of Western Michigan I.R.C. tomorrow. "Marxist Experiment in Satellite Europe" will be the general topic for discussion. Keynote speaker for the event will be Gerald R. Ford, representative for Michigan's Fifth Congressional D i s t r i c t . Mr. Ford is a member of the House Military Appropriations Committee and has just returned from Poland and the Soviet Union as an observer for this committee. AT 2:00 P.M., after the noon luncheon, Mr. Ford will speak on "Economic Effects of Marxism in Poland." At the conclusion of Mr. Ford's talk, four afternoon discussion groups will convene and will be centered on Poland. Hungary, Albania, and Yugoslavia. Following the seminars there will be a dinner at 5:30 and a panel discussion at 7:00 p.m. THE I.R.C. IS looking forward to large delegations from Albion, Aquinas, Central Michigan. Grand Rapids Junior College, Muskegon Community College, Olivet, Kalamazoo, Nazareth, and W e s t e r n Michigan University. —

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Hope, being host this year, will have six delegates who will also be the Program Committee f o r the conference. The General Chairman is Andrew Sens. Sens is a sophomore majoring in Political Science. In charge of registration and publicity is James McDowell and Ian Jones. McDowell is a Physics major and Jones is majoring in Political Science, Tho S o c i a l H o s t e s s for the e i Alberta Litts. C0nferenC 8 All ^ f o r the con. 0 u ^ ^ u f e r e n c e a r e bem handled by K Justine Dakin. Both Miss Litts and Miss Dakin are majoring in Political Science. Supervising the conference is Dr Fried, faculty advisor to the I.R.C. Dr. Fried is an Assistant Professor of History, and through his energetic participation in I.R.C. has made Hope's International Relations Club one of the most outstanding in the country.

DR.

HENRY

KUIZENGA

sonal preparation for the week. The women's choir under the direction of Mr. Rietberg, will offer musical selections at this service which is to be led by Dr. B. Kruithof. Chapel services throughout the week will be changed from 8:00 to 9:30 a.m. through a rescheduling of morning classes. "Prayers Axioms" will be the topic for Monday morning. On Tuesday, Dr. Kuizenga will discuss "Prayer and Your God." Arrangements for conferences with Dr. Kuizenga may be made with him after the morning chapel services. Students are urged to take advantage of this opportunity. Afternoon seminars to be held each afternoon at 4:00 P.M. in the Kletz will deal with the book, P r a y e r a n d P e r s o n a l R e l i g i o n by John B. Coburn. All students are encour(Cont'd on page 3)

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