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1989 News from Hope College, Volume 20.6: June, 1989 Hope College

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This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Hope College Publications at Hope College Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in News from Hope College by an authorized administrator of Hope College Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Hope .. _ ^ Holland, MI Non-Profit College Oraanization ADDRESS CORRECTION49423 1 1 postage REQUESTED PAID news from in a^HOPE COLLEGE JUNE 1989 FGBLISHED BY THE OFFICE OF PUBLIC RELATIONS, HOPE COLLEGE, HOLLAND, /MICHIGAN 49423

Music Breaches Barriers

Inside Xhis Issue

Alumni Weekend features Family expert is Spring sports season brings awards, togetherness and reunions family man individual triumphs

pages 6-12 page 13 page 16-17 news from CAMPUS NOTES HOPE COLLEGE Probability and StatisticalInference, which he coauthored with Dr. Robert Hogg of the University of Iowa, is in its 12th year Volume 20, No. June 1989 6 and third edition, and is used by colleges Published for Alumni, Friends and Parents and universitiesacross the country. of Hope College by the Office of Public GROUP EFFORT: Dr. Donald Luidens, Relations. Should you receive more than one associate professor of sociologyand copy, please pass it on to someone in your chairperson of the department,is one of community. An overlap of Hope College three sociologists involved in an on-going constituenciesmakes duplicationsometimes unavoidable. study of the religiousbeliefs and behaviors of post-WorldWar II Presbyterians. Editor: Thomas L. Renner '67 The sociologists’work will follow-up a Associate Editor: Gregory S. Olgers pilot study the group already conducted. The '87 project is supported by a grant from the Lilly Contributing Writers: Carrie Beecher Endowment Inc. of Indianapolis, Ind. '89, Kathleen McGookey '89 “In the last two decades, mainline Protestantism, including the Presbyterian Layout: Holland Litho Service, Inc. Church, has suffered significant member- Contributing Photographers: Paul ship losses,” Dr. Luidens said. “While Chamtiess '90, Ted Jungblut, Louis initial analysis of these losses suggested Schakel they were the consequence of denomina- Photo Staff: Jennifer Kochin '92 tional ‘liberalism’on social and political

news from Hope College is publishedduring issues, it has recently become clear that the February,April, June, August, October and real reason for the decline is a differentone. December by Hope College, 137 East 12th The principal cause for the membership Professor Elliot Tanis, right, was presentedthe 1989 Hope OutstandingProfessor Educator Street, Holland, Michigan 49423-3698. drop has been the changes in lifestyle (H.O.P.E.) award by Mary Taylor '89 and David Widmer ’89 Postmaster:Send address changes to news among the generation bom after the Second from Hope College, Holland,MI 49423-3698. H.O.P.E. PROFESSOR: Profes the graduatingclass to the professor who World War.” sor Elliot A. Tanis was presentedthe 25th they feel epitomizes the best qualities of the “The ‘Baby Boom’ generation has Hope College Office of Public Relations, annual Hope Outstanding Professor Hope educator. delayed its marriages and its childbearing. DeWitt Center, Holland, MI 49423-3698. Educator (H.O.P.E.) award by the 1989 Dr. Tanis has been a member of the Hope Many have never been married; others wait Thomas L. Renner ’67, Director Mary Lammers ’60, Kempker, Associate graduating class. faculty since 1965. He is the first member until late in their 20s or even 30s to begin Director Dr. Tanis, a professor of mathematics, of the mathematics department to receive having children. Each of these patterns Gregory S. Olgers ’87, AssistantDirector was honored during the college’s Honors the H.O.P.E. award. results in delayed — and often no — church Janet Mielke ’84 Pinkham, Assistant Convocation on Thursday, April 27. The He is nationally respected for his exper- involvement,”Dr. Luidens said. “In Director award, first given in 1965, is presented by tise in probability and statistics. His book Esther Cleason, Office Manager Sally Bassett, Receptionist- Scheduler Karen Bos, Secretary “The time required to distillthe mission achieve the following: of Hope College to that one sentence was A clearer understandingby the Hope NOTICE OF NONDISCRIMINATION:Hope well spent, for ever since it has sharpened College is committed to the concept of equal College community of where we can go rights,equal opportunities and equal protection the focus of everyone involved with the with this institution. under the law. Hope College admits students college. Broad support for pursuing these of any race, color, national and ethnic origin, “But now we have the amplification of aspirations. sex, creed or handicap to all the rights, these thoughts which is contained in John “—A firm grasp of what it will take to privileges, programs and activitiesgenerally Jacobson’s ‘A Vision of Hope in the Future. ’ achieve them. accordedor made available to students at Hope What a subtle, but great step forward this And, lastly, understandingand College, including the administration of its represents. Consider how it begins: support for the prioritiesthat will have to educationalpolicies, admissions policies, Quote, unquote is an eclectic sampling “ ‘Hope should be, and be recognized as, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic be applied along the way. of things being said at and about Hope the leading Christian liberal arts college in and other school-administeredprograms. With “If we achieve this much, the effort will College. regard to employment, the College complies the country. Hope should be, and be have been highly productive. Indeed, if we “The first thing I want to say is: don’t with all legal requirementsprohibiting recognized as, one of the nation’s leading accomplish that much, we shall be well on discrimination in employment. worry, getting involved with planning is not liberal arts colleges.’ our way towards realizingour shared vision going to be as bad as you think. “What a challenge this vision represents! of Hope in the Future. ” On the Cover: “ ‘Strategic planning’sounds like a As I see it, the Hope in the Future exercise — Dr. Richard J. Kruizenga ’52, guest heavy dose of some very cerebral process. is to make tangible what this vision means speaker at the kick-off dinner for the Hope "Christ is Risen!" proclaim the Russian And most of you don’t regard yourselves as and to provide a broad working plan for in the Future strategic planning exercise. words above the Hope College Chapel ‘planners.’ That’s okay, because one does getting us there. Without these mission Kruizenga is executive vice president for Choir. not need to be an experienced planner to statements, however, we would face an the Exxon Corporation,and involved with be an effective participant. For two weeks in May, the group almost hopeless task. Wth them, the their planning. “What’s needed when we sit in our conducted a concert tour of the Soviet down exercise becomes doable. Dr. Kruizenga is a member of the Hope 12 groups is a mutual thinking through, in “So how do we commence our work? Union. The scene on page one shows the College Board of Trustees, and is serving a common sense way, of the particular Based on my experience,I am going to choir performing in the Leningrad on one of Hope in the Future planning issues assigned to us. make five suggestions that I believe will be Baptist Church on Tuesday, May 16. groups: "Academic Strengths Now and for “To begin at the beginning:planning useful. the Future (What and How). " The choir discoveredthat members obviously involves where we’re going. “The first suggestionis that each group For more information about Hope in the music is a universal language,and found “Knowing where we want to go is explore the possible alternatives.My Future, see page three. their formal concerts and impromptu fundamental.In this regard we have a great second suggestionis: be quantitative performances well received. They also head start based on the initial work of whenever possible. The third one is, let’s learned that the Soviet people are open, Gordon Van Wylen in defining the mission be outward looking. The fourth is that our friendly and generous. of Hope College and John Jacobson’s planning should be hard-headed.The fifth subsequent elaboration: suggestionis that we be bottom-line The cover photograph was taken by Dr. “ ‘The mission of Hope College is to oriented. Michael a choir parent that Magan, offer, with recognized excellence, academic “At the end, what can we hope for? accompanied the group on its tour. The programs in liberal arts, in the setting of an “I do not think the result will be a detailed photographs on pages 14-15 were taken undergraduate,residential, co-educational master plan which identifieseach step to by Paul Chamness, a senior from college and in the context of the historic an even better future for Hope College. For Holland, Mich. Christian faith.’ my part, I would be delighted if we could

TWO NEW& FROM1 HOPfe COLLEGE, - JUNE- 1989 addition, having passed through the strug- gles of the Vietnam War and the civil rights movement, this generation seems to hold an on-going suspicion of all institutions — including religiousones. As a result of these changes in lifestyle and values, large numbers of Baby Boomers have refrained from joining mainline churches.”. More than 500 persons, selected from Presbyterian church membership rolls from throughout the country, will be interviewed for the study. Among the variables that will be examined will be the impact of education and income levels, divorce and other family disruptions,and the influence of parents on the religious behavior of those studied. STUDENT HONORS: Duy Dang was interviewed by Dr. Robert $chuller on the internationally televised Hour of Power program on Sunday, April 30. A junior and business major at Hope,

Dang is also the placekickeronthe college’s football team. He fled Vietnam to the United States as a child and was adopted by a family in Tecumseh, Mich.

Craig Stapert , a graduating senior from Grand Rapids, Mich., was awarded a prestigious Mellon Fellowshipin the Humanities. Stapert is the college’s first Mellon Fellowshiprecipient. The highly-competitive fellowships were Dr. Richard Kruizenga '52, executive vice president of Exxon Corp. and a member of the college'sBoard ofTrustees, addresses the awarded to 126 college seniors or recent members of the college’s Strategic Planning committees during the Hope in the Future kick-offbanquet. Dr. Kruizenga provided graduates who desire to begin graduate planning guidelines for the group, which is exploringdirections that will carry the college into the 21st Century. work in preparation for a career of teaching and scholarship in a humanistic Field. Stapert, a classicsmajor, intends to pursue Hope in the Future: planning process a doctorate in classical languages. Toni-Jo Sturm, a graduating senior from IV If any mernbers of the Hope involved and their enthusiasmfor the task ,” The award notice from CAPHE rated the Hudsonville,Mich, has been awarded one IV 1 community are involved in Hope in said President John H. Jacobson. college and its planning project highly. “In of the nation’s most prestigious honors in the Future, a strategic planning process that With each group having now developed the awarding of this grant we recognize the scientiFic study, a National Science Found- began this spring and will continue into strategic issues and identifiedopportunities significance of Hope College within the ation (NSF) Graduate Fellowship. 1990. related to its topic, future meetings will community of independenthigher educa-

Two other Hope seniors, biology major The Hope in the Future project is a major involve consideringimplementation re- tion. the value of the proposed activities for Tammy M. Long of Athens and chemistry planning effort designed to help the college quirements and compilingthe Findings.The your institution and their potentialvalue as major Ariane Marolewski of New City, set directions for the coming decade. The reports of the planning groups will ulti- an example for others,” wrote A.

N. Y. , received honorable mention recogni- planning is addressing 12 major topics, mately be integrated into a Final report that Richardson Love Jr., acting president of tion from NSF. including relationships with the Reformed will be forwarded to the board of trustees. CAPHE. Sturm was one of only 55 graduates to Church in America, the size and composi- To assist the college in its Hope in the The philanthropic consortium,comprised receive one of the fellowships for study in tion of the student body, the range of Future strategic planning, the Consortium of more than 30 major U.S. corporations the Field of chemistry. She will use her services in response to community and for the Advancement of Private Higher and foundations, awarded grants totaling award to attend graduate school at the college needs, and the relationshipbetween Education(CAPHE) awarded Hope one of $583,225.The grants made by CAPHE will University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana a liberal arts educationand career goals. 20 grants given to independent colleges and support a variety of projects in the areas of next fall, where she will pursue a Ph.D. For each topic there is a planning group universities. faculty and curriculumdevelopment, degree in organic chemistry. of between eight and 12 people, including The $42,225 grant, which will fund strategicplanning, market analysis and members of the college'sboard of trustees, approximatelyhalf of the planning project, institutional assessment in amounts ranging Alumni Fund faculty,alumni and friends of the college. is the First given to Hope by CAPHE. from $10,000 to $50,000. Members of the administrative staff and “It’s very nice to have the recognition Out of 700 eligible institutions, CAPHE record near; student body are also involved. that is implicit in receiving a grant from a invited 98 to prepare proposals. Following The groups First met duringThursday and prestigious grant-making agengy for the assessmentby at least four outside reviewers very First time,” said. “I think and discussions with CAPHE staff, 20 were drive ends soon Friday, March 16 and 17, and held a second Jacobson meeting Thursday,May 4. "I believe Hope what this grant represents is very substantial selected. Hope and Alma College were the As news from Hope College went to press in the Future is off to a very good start. help and very important recognition of both only Michigan colleges selected by the it was learned that the Annual Alumni Fund I’m impressed by the quality of the people Hope and strategicplanning." consortium, was approaching two all-time goals. The Million Dollar Milestone has been the theme of this year’s Annual Alumni' FACULTY KUDOS: Fund drive as Hope alumni are seeking to Joan Conway, professor of music, has communication, has been selected to was one of the three Hope faculty and staff contribute $1 million in a single year for been invited by the Music Teachers' participatein a summer seminar sponsored members involved in writing an article the First time. Through mid June, contribu- National Associationto travel to China on by the National Endowment for the publishedin the Spring, 1989, issue of tions were within $50,000 of that goal. This a cultural exchange-studytour this summer Humanities through Aug. 4 at the University AthleticTraining, the official journal of the year’s campaign closes June 30th. as part of the People-to-PeopleCultural of California, Berkeley. National Athletice Trainers Association. Alumni Association President $ue Brug- Ambassadors program. The seminar will be directed by the Entitled "FacilitatingTeam Grieving: A gink ’73 Edema also reported that for the The tour includes Hong Kong, $hanghai, internationally-known authority and expert Case Study," the article was co-authored by first time there could be 7,000 alumni donors Beijing and other major cities. on humor. Professor Stanley Brandesof the Ray; the Reverend Gerard Van Heest, to the Annual Fund. A record 6,984 alumni She also appeared as guest artist in the Department of Anthropology,Berkeley. The chaplain at Hope; and Joyce Hanlon, at the contributed to the Annual Fund last year. seventh annual Piano Festivalat Intcrlochen purpose of the seminar program is to time director of counselingservices. The “I applaud the enthusiastic generosityof so Arts Academy, and on the Grand Rapids provide institutionswith internationally- article outlines the grieving processes many alumni and call on others who are not Symphony Concerts a la Carte Series at the known scholars. associated with the death of a teammate, yet on board to consider sending an Annual Grand Rapids Art Museum. Richard Ray, head athletictrainer and using the 1987 death of a Hope football Fund gift before June 30th,” said Edema. James Herrick, assistantprofessor of assistant professor of physical education. player as a case study,

NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 1989 THREE EVENTS SUMMER REPERTORY THEATRE

Six spectacular shows comprise this summer’s season performed by the Hope Summer Repertory Theatre. Great Performances in 1 989-90

Curtain time is 8 p . m . for evening performances,2p.m.

for matinees. There will also be 5:30 p.m. performances The 1 989-90 Great Performance Series offers a variety of outstandingprofessional of Pump Boys and Dinettes. Shows take place in the productions. Just look at what’s in store on stage for the upcoming academicyear. DeWitt Center Main Theatre or in Snow Auditorium in Nykerk Hall of Music. Saturday Sept 16, 1989 Anything Goes — June 23 - Sept. 2 Modern Jazz Quartet Highlighted by the extraordinary score and witty lyrics Dimnent Memorial Chapel, 8 p.m. of Cole Porter, this razzle-dazzle musical will sing and dance into your heart. Toe-tapping tunes include “You’re Friday, Oct. 20, 1989 the Top,” “It’s Delovely,”“I Get a Kick Out of You,” Vienna Chamber Philharmonic

“Take Me Back to Manhattan,”and “Let’s Misbehave.” Dimnent Memorial Chapel, 8 p.m.

Our Town — June 30 - Sept. 1 Thornton Wilder’s celebration of human existence has Thursday through Saturday Nov. 2-4, 1989 moved audiences the world over for 50 years . Our Town Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company depicts life in a New Hampshire village with simplicity DeWitt Center Main Theatre, 8 p.m. and beauty. Little Shop of Horrors — July 14 - Aug. 31 Wednesday, Dec. 6, 1989 Suspense! Laughter! Chills! Music! This “horribly” Children’s Theatre Company: funny musical will have you screaming with laughter. “Raggedy Ann and Andy” Fun for the whole family. Holland Civie Center, 4 p.m. Romeo and Juliet — Aug. 4 - Aug. 30 Shakespeare’sgreat love story told against a backdrop Thursday,Jan. 11, 1990 of street brawls, masquerades and feuding families. Carl Halvorson, tenor Passionate language and powerful desires combine as Dimnent Memorial Chapel, 8 p.m. characters hurtle headlong toward tragic destiny. The Road to Mecca — July 13 - July 29 Thursday, Feb. 8, 1990 Master storyteller Athol Fugard sets this play in a small David Fedele, flutist South African town where he brings together an eccentric Dimnent Memorial Chapel, 8 p.m. artist, a spiritedschoolteacher and a Calvinist minister Raggedy Ann and brother Andy will be presented on Dec. 6. Thursday, March 8, 1990 for a classic battle of wills. Enjoy the beauty of this Lydian String Quartet finely-tuned drama, which will have a limited run. Dimnent Memorial Chapel, 8 p.m. Pump Boys and Dinettes — Aug. 1 1 - Aug. 26

Last year’ s breakaway hit is back ! Lift your spirits with Friday, April 6, 1990 Season tickets are: $40 for adults, $ 3 5 for senior citizens, $ 1 5 for this high octane mixture of country-pop and musical The Paul Winter Consort students and $85 for families. For season ticket information, write theatre. Limited-runfun! your reservations early. Make Dimnent Memorial Chapel, 8 p.m. Great Performance Series; Holland, Mich., 49423. Again directed by author Cass Morgan. For further information regarding show dates or ticket reservations call (616) 394-7890. KNICKERBOCKER THEATRE SPECIAL EVENTS A Cry in the Dark June 9, 10, 12-14 — DePree Art Center Exhibit ACADEMIC CALENDAR 1989-90 A Fistful of Dollars June 19-22 — Through June 18, the Holland Fiber Arts and Crafts Just Plain Daffy — June 23, 24, 26-29 Fall Semester (1989) Guild will sponsor a showing of fiber crafts in the The Mouse that Roared — June 23, 24, 26-29 Aug. 26, Saturday — Residence halls open for new DePree Gallery. Yankee Doodle Dandy — June 20-July 5 students at 8 a.m. New student orientation begins. The Art Center Gallery's hours are 9 a.m. -9 p.m. For information about show times call (616 ) 392-8167. Aug. 28 Aug. 28, Monday — Residence halls open Monday-Friday; 10 a.m. -5 p.m. Saturday; and 1-5 p.m. Aug. 29, Tuesday — Classes begin at 8 a.m. ADMISSIONS on Sunday. Sept. 4, Monday — Labor Day, classes in session Summer Sports Camps Oct. 6-8, Friday-Sunday — Homecoming Weekend Explorientation ’89 — July 16-22 Boys Basketball School — July 10-21 Oct. 13, Friday — Fall Recess begins at 6 p.m. A “mini-college”experience for students who will be Girls BasketballCamp — June 19-23 Oct. 18, Wednesday — Fall Recess begins at 8 a.m. juniors and seniors in high school for the fall of 1 989. Football Camp — July 30-Aug. 3 Oct. 27-29, Friday-Sunday — Parents’ Weekend For further information, call the Admissions Office at Swimming Program — June 12-22 (first session); June Nov. 23, Thursday — Thanksgiving Recess begins at 8 a.m. (616) 394-7850. 26-July 7 (second session) Nov. 27, Monday — Thanksgiving Recess ends at 8 a.m. Diving Camp — July 10-14 Dec. 8, Friday — Last day of classes ALUMNI AND FRIENDS J.V. Basketball Team Camp — July 10-13 Dec .11-15, Monday-Friday — Semester examinations June 18-24 ELDERHOSTEL — For additional information, please call the Dow Center Dec. 15, Friday — Residence halls close at 5 p.m. HOPE COLLEGE GOLF OUTING — July 19; Hol- office at (616) 394-7690. The program director is Dr. land Country Club. Shotgun starts at 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. Spring Semester (1990) George Kraft. Jan. 7, Sunday — Residence halls open at noon For more informationcontact the Office of Public Re- Double Reed Camp — July 16-25 Jan. 8, Monday — Registration for new students lations at (616) 394-7860. Held on the Hope campus, the Double Reed Camp is Jan. 9, Tuesday — Classes begin at 8 a.m. led by Professor Gail Wamaar who instructs aspiring May 5, Saturday — Alumni Day AUGUST SEMINARS double reed players. May 6 , Sunday — B accalaureate and Commencement Taught from July 31 - Aug. 5 For information,write Double Six courses are available for one-hour undergraduate more Reed Camp, do Hope College Music Department,Holland, Mich. SPORTS credit, two-hours undergraduatecredit, one-hour 49423. 1989 Football Schedule graduate credit or on an audit basis. The courses are Saturday, Sept. 9 ...... DePAUW, IND. 1:30 p.m. taught by the religion, English, math, education, (Community Day) nursing, physical education and psychology depart- VILLAGE SQUARE

Saturday, Sept. 16 ...... at Michigan Tech, 1 p.m. ments. Friday, June 23 Saturday, Sept. 23 ...... DENISON, 1:30 p.m. The six course offerings are: “The End of the World: Hobbyists, craftspersons and artists; the auction

Saturday, Sept. 30 ...... at Wabash, Ind., 1:30 p.m. Yesterday, Today, of Tomorrow?;” “Writing Journals;” committee for Village Square ’89 is soliciting items to Saturday, Oct. 7 . ADRIAN (Homecoming), 2:15 p.m. “Problem Solving for the ElementaryTeacher;” “Cross be made available at the June 23 auctiqri.If you are

Saturday, Oct. 14 ...... at Olivet, 1:30 p.m. Cultural Health Care;” “Adrenalinand Stress;” and interestedin making a donation , contact Mary Kempker Saturday, Oct. 21 ...... at Albion, 1:30 p.m. “Human Relations.” at (616) 394-7860 or write ’’Village Sqdare Auction; do Saturday, Oct. 28 . . ALMA, 1:30 p.m. (Parents Day) For more information, please call the Registrar's Office Mary Kempker; Office of Public Relations; Hope Saturday, Nov. 4 ...... at Kalamazoo, 1 p.m. at (616) 394-7760. College; Holland, Mich. 49423.

POOR NEWS PROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 1989 In the gospel accounts, Paul converts from a zealot follower of Judaism to an

ardent Christian . From a killer of Christians he becomes saved by the grace of God, having received the gospel as revealed by Jesus Christ. “All the accounts of Paul’s conversion end up making the same point: for him, Christianityarrives by a miracle. The truth

Paul wants to teach us is that it has no other way of arriving.We are all Pauls,” Dr. Boulton said. “But if indeed we are ‘all Pauls,’ then we have our work cut out for us. As with the early church, so with us: the family has to change; our family has to change,” he said. Dr. Boulton explained that the church of Paul’s time made a “quantum leap” from its Middle Eastern roots to wider acceptance in the Mediterraneanbasin. “Now the

church is poised once again for another leap in the same direction only further — into substantial conversationwith every major religious or ethnic group in the inhabited earth,” he said. Dr. Boulton observed that such Christian expansion could be extended to the Hope community with the help of the graduates.

“If you love your school , if you have some affection for the cantankerousPaul, but

most of all if you love the rejectedbut risen

Improvised mittens and warm blankets were creative ways to combat weekend temperaturesthat brought snow flurries the day before Son of God who shines through Paul’s Commencement and prompted fears that the college’s 124th Commencement would be moved inside for the first time since 1982. words, then you’ll join us in the complex and arduous task of making Hope a little less simply an earthly configuration of families, however strong, and a little 540 graduate on chilly Sunday more... the family of God.”»^

ore than 4,000 family members The conversation highlighted similarities tulip, remember Holland, and Hope and all and friends were in attendance when and differences between the Hope College the good times you had here. Through all

540 Hope seniors received their diplomas of today and of “Uncle John’s” and Prof. seasons, maintain a sense of humor, for the on Sunday, May 7 during the college’s 124th Cherup ’s class of 1964. And, in recalling sound of laughter is music we should never Commencement, held for the seventh experiences common to the 1989 graduates, be without,”she said. consecutiveyear at the Holland Municipal Prof. Cherup set the stage to celebrate their “Remember, some of the finest people Stadium. accomplisments. you will ever know, you know right now. Susan Mooy ’64 Cherup, associate “Your academic achievements are YO.U.,” Prof. Cherup said. professor of educationat Hope, delivered outstanding as recognized in our program Dr. Wayne Boulton, professor of religion the address. Prof. Commencement Cherup, today. And not written in the program is the at Hope, delivered the sermon “An Ayatollah selected to speak by the graduating class, personal achievement you have received Named Saul” during the college’s Bac- entitled her speech “Y.O.U,” for “You’re over the past four years,” Prof. Cherup said. calaureate. Speaking before a standing- OutstandingUnanimously.” “1 know how diligently many of you have room only audience in Dimnent Memorial Prof. Cherup began her speech with an worked to improve your GPAs, and you Chapel, Boulton invited the seniors to imaginary telephoneconversation between have been successful in your efforts — or return. a graduating senior and an uncle named you would not be here today receiving your Drawing from Mark Van Doren’s book John. “Ifl make a verbal first and ten,” she diplomas.” Autobiography,Dr. Boulton recalled the urged the audience,“feel free to cheer me “You are talented athleteswho have gone character of Eddie Shell who, visitingVan on.” the distance meeting your own personal Doren’s house as a youngster, did not know goals and establishingnew Hope records,” how to leave. “One afternoonlate, Mark she said. “In the performing and fine arts, consultedwith his mother privately about your talents were seen in numerous whether they should ask him to stay for

ways... And the class of 1989 has given supper. They decided against it, so Mark’s generouslyto others.” mother used the old standby: ‘Eddie, your Prof. Cherup left the graduates with three mother is probably expectingyou,’ ” Dr. hopes for the years to come. “First, hold Boulton said. fast to your belief in the Creator, for in this “Eddie was standing at last on the other fast-paced, ever-changing,computerized side of the screen door, and trying to say world, God will be contant and everlasting, goodbye as if his heart were in it. And giving you direction, courage and peace.” Mark’s mother said warmly: ‘Well, Eddie, “Second, enjoy your profession,” she come and see us again.’ Whereupon he said. “Third, like yourself; be a friend to opened the door and walked in,” he said. yourself. Discover the virtue of patience, “Hope College is like a big family," he

the power of kindness and the pleasure of said. "Like Eddie, it’s time for you to leave

contentment.” it. But we wouldn't be at all surprised or “And finally,” Prof. Cherup added, “in unhappy if — after you go play around in summer, travel. Travel to new places and that yard out there — you come back and discover other ways of living. When have supper.” autumn arrives and the leaves fall, take time Dr. Boulton used the story of the Apostle to rake some. When winter comes, don’t Paul to illustrate to the seniors the role they in Commencement speaker Susan Mooy '64 forget to play the snow.” can play, even after graduation , in contribut- This graduate added a personal emphasis spring arrives see a Cherup. “And when and you ing to the value of the Hope community. to the statement made by her cap and gown .

NEWS FROM HOPE COUJEGE, JUNE 1989 FIVE S ,v,l .il'liiL . j ..'.YLV 'Vt'.'ri J. T*VI Alumni Weekend ’89

Celebrating a shared past

'7, amily is as much a sense of belonging as of seem to fit well with "the other “Hope family support she received as a Japanese student. -T biological fact. songs,” where Marian Anderson ’31 Stryker’s Norden credited Hope for, among other things, Whilejoined with parents, siblings, aunts and birthday was concerned the tune was more than bringing his parents together. uncles through a blood relation that creates appropriate. The classes of 1928, 1929, 1934, 1939, 1944,

natural ties ^ are also joined to others by we shared Stryker, who celebrated her 80th birthday on 1949, 1954, 1959, 1964, 1969 and 1974 all held experiences that link us in a of the bond mind Saturday, Ma) 6, was the college’s alumni reunions during the weekend, which opened the and heart. In such a sense, our membership in director from 1957-74. During the Alumni evening of Friday, May 6 with dinners and other family reaches beyond the limits of genetic Dinner/Dance held Saturday evening, Stryker activities and continued through an alumni similarity to the greater possibilitiesof common was treated to a cake, a tribute by Alumni worship service held the morning of Sunday, interest and outlook. Association president Sue Bruggink ’73 Edema May 7. Some even stayed for a reception held Along with membership in a family travels a and the song, which was sung by the more than after the service and a brunch following the joy in the other members’ well-being and exis- 400 alumni attending the dinner. college’s 124th Baccalaureate.Others, parents of tence that transcendsthe immediate. Together or The dinner was also a time to celebrate the Hope students about to join the alumni family apart, we still care. And, when opportunities to accomplishmentsof four of Hope’s alumni through the Sunday afternoon Commencement reunite arise, and the first few awkward moments through the presentationof the 1989 Distin- ceremony, would stay still longer. of greeting and reacquaintancepass, the ties hold guished Alumni Awards. Recognized this year With the family reunion drawing to a close, true. The warmth of family togetherness allows were Dr. Andrew G. Nyboer ’39 of Rockford, however, the open pleasure of camaraderie us to shed the layers we don for the outside 111. , Dr. Sylvio Scorza ’45 of Orange City, Iowa, evolved into the bittersweet melancholy of world, and we find a place we belong. Yoshie Ogawa ’58ofWashington,D.C., and the farewell. Goodbyes were said, lets-keep-in- Alumni Weekend was such a time. Rev. Stephen M. Norden ’74 of Dublin, Ohio. touches exchanged and family members returned Back on the Hope campus , some for the first They all had been touched by membership in to the lives they had built. time in many years, even since graduation,more their Hope family, and regarded the membership Despite the passage of time and distance, than 800 friends found they were still close — fondly. Each, however, recalled Hope’s part in however, the roots will remain; the sense of bound by the ties of their Hope roots. Together his or her life differently. family persist. belonging will endure. once again they laughed, and cried and re- Nyboer remembered his father, long a custo- The minisced. dian on the Hope campus, and his honest way And, in five years, many will return again. They also sang — the Alma Mater, In That of providing Christian wisdom. Scorza men- They will say hello, smile at the memories and Dear Old Town of Holland, Michigan and even tioned the compassion he received after an share in the context of their past together the Happy Birthday. While Happy Birthday may not accident had left him paralyzed.Ogawa cited the people they have become,

SIX NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 1989 Row 1: Marie Verduin '34, Walvoord, Mildred Schuppert ’31, Marion Nyboer, Ruth Keizer, Floyd Folkert '39, Jan Folkert, Orville Beattie '39, Mary Beattie, Bill DeGroot '39, Barbara DeGroot, Nora Lee Holland, Albert Holland '34, Heath Goodwin '39, Alice Munro '39 Goodwin, Marian Anderson '27 Stryker; Row 2: Pauline Potter '35 Borr, Gertrude Holleman '34 Meengs, Andrew Nyboer '39, Bee 50 Year Circle Fairbanks '39 Welmers, Cliff Keizer '39, Isla Stegink '60 Beld, Virgil Beld '39, LaVern Sandy '29, Ruth Sandy, Cornelius Steketee '39, John Wybenga '39, Ruth Meppelink ’39 Reidsma, Vernon Reidsma '53, Gary Hoffius ’39, Jay Folkert '39, Harold Kleis '39; Row 3: John Sixty-sevenmembers of the Class of Golds '38, Bernie Siebers '30 DeValois, Esther DeWeerd '28, Thelma Kooiker '39 Leenhouts, Jack Leenhouts '38, Paul Holleman '38, 1939, numbering 125 at graduation, were Florence Holleman, James Nettinga '34, Cornelia Nettinga ’27 Neevel, Al Vegter ’39, Margaret Laman ’39 Vegter, Nelva Zandbergen inducted into the 50-Year Circle at a '39 Conser, Gertrude Dame '39 Schrier, Russ Ashby, Edith Smith ’39 Ashby, Jac Tigelaar '30, Florence Tigelaar, Lillian VanRaalte '37 ceremony Saturday afternoon. The group Lampen, Andrew Lampen '37, KatharineVanRaalte ’39 Davis; Row 4: Walter deVelder '29, Harriet Boot '34 deVelder, Willine Wybenga, encompasses all alumni who graduated Barbara Lampen ’38, Bob Vandenberg ’39, Dorothy Parker ’37 Luyendyk, Erving Hansen, Kay Stronks '39 Hansen, Margaret Nagy "42 more than a half-century ago. Osterhaven,Margorie Vyverberg '39 Rottschafer, Angeline Dornbos ’39 Donia, Robert Donia '39, Ed Damson ’34, Mildred Klow '33 Damson, Harvey Scholten ’34, Ruth Warner, Don Warner ’39, Wayne Woodby, Marian Bocks '38 Woodby, Elmer Hart ger ink '39, Margaret Baron Hartgerink; Row 5: Harold Elenbaas '39, Marge Elenbaas, Gilbert Plasman '36, Oliver Lampen '39, Miriam Lampen, Mildred Kirkwood '39 Faber, Earl Faber '38, Andy Vollink '38, Molly Vollink '39, Bettie Wishmeier,Bob Wishmeier '39, Cliff Marcus '39, Esther Bultman '39 Marcus, Willard Wichers '31, Leon Bosch '29, J. Norman Timmer '38.

CLASS FACTS Class of 1928

Number of graduates: 135 News on campus: Edward D. Dimnent is president. The cornerstonefor “Colonial Memorial Chapel" is laid, and work progresses throughout the year. The virtues of radio are touted by the anchor, which states “Nothing in the scientificfield appears so absolutely new.” An Armistice Day speech discusses military training at Hope during World War I. The freshmen lose the Pull, and The Fool is the senior play.

News off campus: Calvin Coolidge is president. Richard E. Byrd begins his expedition to the Antarctic, and Alexander Fleming discovers penicillin. The Bridge of

San Luis Rev earns a PulitzerPrize in fiction for Thorton Wilder, Wings earns the Academy Award for Best Picture,and New York sweeps the 1928 World Series, defeating St. Louis four games to zero.

7

Row 1: Joyce Klaasen Crookshank, Frank Moser, Theodore Bout, Anne VanderWerfWabeke, Clarissa Poppen Yager; Row 2: Dorothy Mulder Kruizenga, Herman Kruizenga, Geraldine Walvoord, Esther DeWeerd.

NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 1989 SEVEN ;-*nmgS8i!8igiWg!ii!lg!!^liI nmmm CLASS FACTS

Class of 1929

Number of graduates: 144 News on campus: Edward D. Dimnent is still president. A $25,000 Skinner pipe organ is donated to the college, and the chapel’s construction remains big news — the new building is dedicatedJune 7. The men’s societies form an inter-fratemity union, and old and new versions of a college honor code meet with general disapproval in anchor student polls. Fourth hour classes are cancelled so the entire student body and faculty can attend a lecture on television. Smilin' Thru is the senior play. News off campus: Herbert Hoover replaces Calvin Coolidge as President of the United States. Mary Pickford wins an Academy Award as best actress for her role in Coquette. From Jan. 1-7, an Army Fokker commanded by Air Corps Major Carl Spaatz remains aloft 150 hours, 40 minutes. The St. Valentine’s Day Massacre shocks Chicago. In the fall followinggraduation, the first phase of the Great Depression begins with the stock market crash.

Row 1: Sarah Klooster Olert, Edith McGilvra VanderHart,Virginia Bosch, Margaret Kloote, DirkMouw, Sarah Mouw, Walter de Velder; Row 2: Clarence Bremer, Leon Bosch, Al Vanderbush, Herm Laug, Jeanette VanderHill, Lavem VanderHall.

Row 1: Mildred Klow Damson, Ann Jackson Notier, Sheila McLean, Rudolph Frundt, Lois Bering, Marie Verduin Walvood, Mickey Essenburg VandenBosch, Gertrude Holleman Meengs, Nora Lee Holland, Albert Holland; Row 2: Ed Damson, William Heyns, Robert Notier, Chuck McLean, Lois Ketel Kinkema, Katherine DeJonh Frundt, Ferris Bering, Evelyn Roelofs, Gertrude VanZee, Harriet Boot deVelder; Row 3: Jim Nettinga, Harvey Scholten, Henry Kinkema, Dennis Roelofs.

Number of graduates: 120 Ladies of the Jury under the direction of Dollfus of Austria is assassinated by the Nazis. In America, It Happened One Night CLASS FACTS News on campus: Wynand Wichers is Mrs. W.H. Durfee in Carnegie Gymnasium president. The Hope basketball team wins in March. The Little Minister opens in May makes a run on the Oscars, earning Best the college’s first-everMIAA title, in any as the senior play. Picture, Best Actor (Clark Gable), Best Class of 1934 Actress (Claudette Colbert) and Best sport, since Hope joined the conference in News off campus: In Europe , World War I 1926 (although the title is shared with Alma begins to take shape. Hitler becomes Director. College). The Hope drama class presents Fuehrer of Germany, and Chancellor

EIGHT NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 1989 Row 1: Angeline Dornbos Donia, Ruth Keizer, Clifford Keizer, Marion Nyboer, Andrew Nyboer, Isla Stegink Beld, Virgil Beld, Lois VoorhorstLeestma, Harold Leestma, Jacoba

Dalebout,Bee FairbanksWelmers, Marian Folkert, JayFolkert, Thelly Kooiker Leenhouts,Floyd Folkert, Janet Folkert, Barbara DeGroot , Bill DeGroot; Row 2: Andrew Nyboer,

Don Warner, RuthWarner, Edith Smith Ashby, Margaret LamanVegter, Andy Vollink, MollyVaupellVollink,Orville Beattie , Mary Beattie,Bruce Stewart, Trudy Young Stewart, Jack Leenhouts,Elmer Hartgerink, Margaret Baron Hartgerink; Row3: John Wybenga, Willine Wybenga, Russell Ashby, Al Vegter, Alice Munro Goodwin, Heath Goodwin, Bob Wishmeier, Bettie Wishmeier, Kit VanRaalte Davis, Marge Vyverberg Rottschafer,Nelva Zandbergen Conser, Ruth Meppelink Reidsma, Vernon Reidsma, Gertrude Dame Schrier; Row 4: Oliver Lampen, Miriam Lampen, Cornie Steketee, Ruby Carpenter Steketee, Mildred Kirkwood Faber, Earl Faber, Robert Donia, Sarah Stowe Hoffius, Gary Hoffius, Bob Vandenberg, Erving Hansen, Kay Stronks Hansen, Marge Veltman Elenbaas, Hal Elenbaas, Esther Bultman Marcus, Clifford Marcus, John Olert.

Number of graduates: 125 some of its pages on green paper. The senior flies the first turbojet — aHeinkel He-178. CLASS FACTS News on campus: Wynand Wichers is still class produces The Enemy, a play set during The Yearling by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings president. Renovations on campus include World War I. wins a Pulitzer Prize. Gone With the Wind Class of 1939 improvements to Carnegie Gymnasium, News off campus: Franklin Delano is a major film event, and wins Oscars for Voorhees Hall (showers are added to both Roosevelt is president. In the fall after Best Picture, Best Actress (Vivien Leigh) upstairs floors) and the grounds. The graduation, Germany invades Poland and and Best SupportingActress (Hattie anchor celebrates Christmas by printing starts World War II. In August, Germany McDaniel).

CLASS FACTS

Class of 1944 Number of graduates: 122 News on campus: Wynand Wichers is still president. Hope is the site of an Army Specialized Training Program (A.S.T.P.), and hosts 252 soldiers — they eat in Carnegie Gymnasium, which has been transformed into a mess hall . As a result of the war, the student body is only slightly larger than half its usual size. Messiah is given in Hope Memorial Chapel for the 17th time. News off campus: FDR is still president. The Second Front opens when the Allies land at Normandy on D-Day, June 6. The G.I. Bill of Rights is enacted. The U.S., British Commonwealth and Soviet Union propose the establishmentof the United Nations. Bing Crosby wins a Best Actor award for his role in Going My Way, which wins Best Picture.

Row 1: lone Strick Lemmen, Marian VandeBunte, Vivian Tardiff Cook, Jack Krum, Miriam Siebert Krum; Row 2: Lloyd Lemmen, Norma Lemmer Koeppe, Gerard Cook, Dottie DeValois W\'nia, Charles Wynia; Row 3: Dorothy Kooiker VanWieren, Rose Winstom Muilenburg, Roger Koeppe, Lois Hinkamp Boersma, Vern Boersma; Row 4: Gil VanWieren, Helga Sawitzky Lucius, John Lucius, Fritzi Jonkman Sennett, Dorothy Wichers Clover, George Clover.

NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 1989 NINE Row 1: Bill Bennett, Paul Hinkamp, DonLam, Martha VanSaunLam,MaxBoersma, Connie Hinga Boersma, Bill Shewan, Ann Shewan, Mary Gallagher Rutgers, RheaVanHeest Arnold, Theresa Staal, Joan Sheel Dekker, Marian Holman Agre, Shirley Knot Leslie, Shirley Leslie Dykstra, Barbara VanDyke VaadeWaa, Alfy VandeWaa, Elizabeth Weaver Kragt, Marvin Kragt, Harold Fisher, Lenora DeBoer Ridden Herman Ridden Carol Hoogerhyde, Dave Hoogerhyde; Row 2: Walter Kennedy, Carol Hermance Kennedy, Jay Rutgers, John Arnold, Joyce Muilenburg Booher, Marie Buttlar Sparling, Dee Davis Reisert,John Smith, Marian Mastenbrook Smith, Muncie VandeWege Boeve, Nancy VyverbergVanHall,

Clayton VanHall; Row 3: Jack Robins, Liz Snow Robins , BillAppledorn,LoisTimmer Appledorn, Marcia DenHerder Kempers, JoAnn Moessner Koeppe, OwenKoeppe, EdChandler, Carolyn Ingham Chandler, Ted Boeve, Don Rinkus, Frances Scholten Rinkus; Row 4: Geo Buursma, Don Walchenbach, Elaine Bielefeld Walchenbach, Jean Wiersma Weener, Roger Kempers, Tim Harrison,George Zuidema, Vergil Dykstra, Betty Boelkins Boerman, Walt Boerman, Peggy Prins DeHaan, Amy Koning Kleinschmit, Bob Kleinschmit; Row 5: Jerry VanHeest, Marion DeMeester, Jay Weener, Lucy Brunsting Noordhoff, Bob Camp, Irene Heemstra Camp, Virginia Brower VanWieren, HaroldVanWieren, Warren Eickelberg, Nancy Schneider Eickelberg, Jack Jesser; Row 6: Rodger Decker, Bill DeMeester, Anno VanderKolk.

Number of graduates: 287 "Washington Bust Oratorical Contest.” Berlin. The North AtlanticTreaty Organiza- CLASS FACTS News on campus: Irwin J. Lubbers is Thomas Dewey beats Harry S. Truman tion starts April 4. Death of a Salesman president. A women’s dormitory (Durfee 144-18 in an anchor poll. The Board of wins a 1949 Pulitzer in Drama. The first Hall) is planned for the “Sunken Gardens” Trustees establishes a system for granting Class of 1949 around-the-world,non-stop flight runs Feb. location on campus. The removal of the honorary degrees. 27-March 2 as an Air Force crew in a Boeing balcony in Carnegie Gymnasium reveals News off campus: Harry S. Truman is B-50A Superfortress flies from Fort Worth, many old programs — one dates back to president, re-elected over Dewey. The Texas. May 30, 1907 and concerns the first Berlin Airlift supplies an encircled West

CLASS FACTS

Class of 1954 Number of graduates: 197 News on campus: Irwin J. Lubbers is president.The college plans to build a new men’s dormitoryat 10th Street and Colum- bia Avenue next to the science building (Lubbers Hall). Hope retains the All-Sports trophy — noteable accomplishments include MIAA co-championships in baseball with Alma and cross country with Albion. News off campus: The U.S. Supreme Court unanimously bans racial segregation in public schools in Brown vs Board of

Education of Topeka . Senator Joseph

McCarthy ofWisconsin is in the news. Five U.S. congressmen are shot on the floor of the House of Representatives by Puerto Rican nationalists(all recover). The first atomic submarine, the Nautilus, is launched. On the Waterfront wins an Oscar as Best Picture — and Marlon Brando earns Best Actor honors for his role in the film. Grace Kelly earns an Oscar as Best Actress for her part in The Country Girl.

Row 1: Neil VanHeest,Mary Lou Richards VanHeest,DickWeisiger, Janet Baird Weisiger, Richard Coffill, Mary Lou Ziegler Gy sbers , Norman Gysbers, Marilyn Spackman Muller; Row 2: Joyce Mulder Scholten, Anne Finlaw Holmlund, Wayne Berens, Harriet Berens, Elaine Ford Coffill, Lois Huizenga, Joyce Bierens French, Marge AlberVanDahm,Howard VanDahm; Row 3: Gene Scholten, Nevin Webster, Dot Webster, John Roundhouse, Ruth Benes Roundhouse, Jeananne Bondhouse Thomas, Myra Saunders DeGraaf, Jane VanderVelde Smith; Row 4: Don Jansma, Alice Klepper Jansma, Marilyn Forth, Bill Forth, Sue Zwemer Visser, Margaret Luneburg Visser, Helen VanLoo, Larry Smith; Row 5:Joyce Loch, Jim Loch, Bob Visser, Gartha Angus, Dave Angus.

TEN NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 1989 fliiMIII CLASS FACTS

Class of 1959 Number of graduates: 265

News on campus: Irwin J. Lubbers is still president. Congressman Gerald R. Ford Jr. addresses an all-collegeassembly. The Hope footballteam shares with Albion and Hillsdale the first triple MIAA champion- ship in the conference’s 50-year history. The basketball team wins its third consecutive MIAA crown. The sophomores win both the Pull and Nykerk. News off campus: Dwight D. Eisenhower is president. The St. Lawrence Seaway opens in April. Fidel Castro takes over as Cuban president Batista resigns and flees. Tibet’s Dalai Lama escapes to India. Ben-Hur wins an Oscar as Best Picture,and for his portrayal of the title role Charlton Heston earns a Best Actor Oscar. Simone Signoret wins an Oscar as Best Actress for her performance in Room at the Top.

Row 1 : Loraine Pschigoda, Wayne Westenbroek,Ruth KlomparensWestenbroek, Karen Nyhuis Olson, Shirley Schaafsma Bosch, Tedda DeVries Allen, Carolyn Zhe Dixon, Marcia Potts VandeVusse,Helen Platt Brockmeier;Row 2: Harold Gazan, Nancy Benedict Gazan, Phyllis Prins Brown, Art Olson, Ted Bosch, Carol Beuker Krauss, Bentie Boniel Lydon, Jake Kaufman, Dave VandeVusse, Richard Brockmeier; Row 3: FrederickBrown, Barbara Sanko Brown, Judy Kuiper Hoffs, Harley Brown, Marlin Fusing, Jack Krauss, Doris

Taylor Brumels, Winona Keizer Willing, Lois Griffes Kortering, Verno Kortering, Charlotte Leaske , Fred Leaske; Row 4: Bill Brookstra, Vernon Hoffs, Bert Swanson, Doris Stickle Peschel, Bruce Brumels, Dave Willing, Gardner Kissack, Carol Brandt Yonkers, Russ Yonkers; Row 5: Nancy Demarest Widmer, Doris Schmidt Harter, Karen Saunders, Robert Saunders, Kathryn Kurth Scudder; Row 6: Sue Brookstra,Sue Edwards Paarlberg,Jan Koeman Smith, Sandy Dressel Ver Beek Row 7:Don Paarlberg,Chuck Skinner, Marilyn Wassink, Jerry Wassink, Carl VerBeek, Ken Scudder, Mar-Les Williams, Dick Williams.

CLASS FACTS

Class of 1964 Number of graduates: 469 News on campus: Calvin A. VanderWerf is the college’s new president — and receives a warm welcome from the anchor. Work proceeds on the Physics-Math Building (VanderWerf Hall), which is nearing completion.Alpha Phi Omega arranges to have a 1 ,760 pound, eight-foot anchor monument constructed on the lawn facing Graves Hall. The football team shares an MIAA co-championship.The sophomore class wins the Pull. News off campus: The assassination of President John F. Kennedy places Lyndon B. Johnson in the White House as president. Confusion is added to a mourning nation’s shock as Kennedy’s accused murderer, Lee Harvey Oswald, is in turn murdered. Kenya receives its independence. Rex Harrison earns an Oscar as Best Actor for his portrayalof the proper Professor Higgins in My Fair Lady, which also earns an Oscar as Best Picture. Julie Andrews earns an Oscar as Best Actress for her portrayal of the title role in Mary Poppins.

Row I: Harriett Wein Nordstom, Diane La Boueff Murray, Judy Swieringa Hoffmann, Jackie Schrotenboer Burggraaff, Vivian VanBlarcom, Judy Beukema West, Audrey Prins Rasmussen. Ann Knudsen Mitchell, Louis Garter Staple, Daniel Chan; Row 2: Steve Nordstom, Gary Haverdink, Arlene Beimers Haverdink, Myra Rozeboom, Bonnie Wissink Fields, Lucille Wood Nagelkirk. Gayle Ruisard, Tom Dykstra, Fred Wezeman, Arnold VanZanten; Row 3: John Dryfhout,Raylene Scholtens, Marty Scholtens, Georgia Hinvnann Makens, Barbara Freggens O'Brien, Leora Remtema Elders, Judy Kollen Portinga,Carolyn Church Turkstra, Bruce Turkstra, Carol Diephouse Rose, Barry Werkman; Row 4: Glenn VanWieren, Mary VanHarn Nagelvoort,Glenn Cherttp, Susan Mooy Cherup, Joy O'Connor Bornschein.Marcia Osterink Immink, Jacquie Krause Dawkins, Carla VandeBunte Sterk. Vernon Sterk; Row 5: Jan Blom Shoup, Rosemary Piersma Dykema, Skip Nagelvoort.June Davis Vanderlaan, Pat Elzerman Eeingenburg, Paul Eenigenburg, Karen Blum Disegna. Ruth Wozney Sneed. Helen Rose Vanderherg; Row 6: John VanZant, Linda Nott VanZant, George Meyer. Bob Vanderlaan. Bob MacKay. Doug Walvoord, Barbara Hartgerink. Ron Hartgerink,Mike Schrier, William Church. Sandra Sissing Church. Bob Tigelaar. Mary Klein Kansfield. Mary Peelen Tigelaar. Jean VanDePolderGuthery. Carol Mogle Boerhave; Row 7: Nancy Wessels Broeils. John Broeils. Bruce DeDee. Dorothy Born DeDee. Dave Zwurt. Betty Slot Riters; Row 8: Dick Ruselink. Al Osman. Judy Cameron Ruselink. Don Thompson. Carol Roberts Thompson. Gayle Rypstra Petldie. Sharon Dykstra LeBlanc. Alverna DeVisser. Dave DeVisser; Row 9: Glenn Pietenpol, David Stegink, Paul Wackerbarth,Cindy Hill Wackerbarth.Linda Selander Schaap. Diane Samec; Row 10: Norie VandenBerg Koelbel. Linda Walvoord Girard. Janice Schulz Melichar.

Bruce Welmers. David Mouw. Paul Fried ( '46). Karen Voskuil Mouw. Linda DeWitt Wesselink.Dave Wesselink.

NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 1989 ELEVEN CLASS FACTS

Class of 1969 Number of graduates: 417 News on campus: Calvin A. VanderWerf is still president. Reforming the early curfews imposed on female students is a major issue, as is the peace movement. Groundbreaking for the Student Cultural and Social Center (named the DeWitt

Cultural Center in recognition of a $600,000 gift from Dick and Jack DeWitt) takes place during Homecoming. A small fire in Voorhees Hall prompts concerns about the building’s future, and forces the relocation of its inhabitants.The administration signs a contract that will place a phone in each dorm room by the start of the next school year. News off campus: Richard M. Nixon replaces Lyndon B. Johnson as president. In July, Apollo II astronauts Neil A. Armstrong, Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. and Michael Collins take man’s first steps on the moon. Also in July, Senator Edward M . Kennedy pleads guilty to leaving the scene of the accident at Chappaquiddick, Mass, in which Mary Jo Kopechne drowned . John Wayne earns an Oscar as Best Actor for his role in True Grit.

Row 1: Jeff Green, Dale Grit, Lou Voskuil Grit, Lynda Brown Crandall, Candy Marr, Kathy Mulder Parker, Arlene Stellik Richardson, Dave Ross, James Shalek, Jan Spooner

Kamm, Harold Kamm, Larry Bone; Row 2: Bruce Formsma, Susan Bosman Formsma, Tim Crandall, Cyndie Bache, Nicole Gerow Finney, Suzette LuckhardtSchwab , Ron Hook, Rich Herbig, Leslie Nienhuis Herbig, Mary Browning VandenBerg, Barbara Timmer; Row 3: Don Luidens, Peg McNamara Luidens, JeffMcllwaine,Donna Grasman Brown, Roger Weiden, Carol Weiden, Mike Elzerman, Pam Fulton McLaughlin, Mary Whitney, Phyllis Beck; Row 4: George Arwady, Lynn Koop Arwady, David Brueggemann,Marti Terpstra, Karen Zeh Baumgardner, Pat Nevenhoven Kirkpatrick, Molly Helm Wakelee, Miriam Butterfield Johnston, Cara Hendrickson Paplawsky; Row 5: Ron Vanderbeek, Lynn Wyman Vanderbeek,Charlie Lang, Christy ZuverinkVanderhill,Gilda Davis Holvick, Paula Frissel Bone, Susan Johnson Kuiper, Lee Hegstrand; Linda Kozel Hegstrand, Peter Paplawsky; Row 6: George McGeehan, Coert Vanderhill, Jim Marcus, Russ Bonnema, Linda Bonnema.

CLASS FACTS

Class of 1974 Number of graduates: 412 News on campus: Gordon J. VanWylen is president.The Peale Science Center opens and is dedicated. Phelps Hall, a women’s dormitory, goes co-ed. KnickerbockerHall, which no longer houses the Knicks, is renamed Lichty Hall. The Hope football team is undefeatedin conferenceplay and wins its first MIAA championship in 20 years. Robert DeYoung, dean of students, is appointedinterim director of development.

News off campus: Richard M. Nixon is president, although the Watergate con- troversy eventually prompts his resignation — polls find that 44 percent of Americans favor impeachment. Patricia Hearst, 19-year-olddaughter of publisher Randolph Hearst is kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army. The Godfather,Part II earns an Oscar as Best Picture.

Rowl:JoFilipek, Sue Drenkhahn, Mary Meade Sutton, Charlie Sutton, Debra Lam, Nick Lam, Wanda Goetz Beiswenger,JoDee Keller, Jane Felden Jeltes, TomJeltes, DeBadeau- Creswell,Deb Bian Lingle, Kris Lukens Rose, Steve Rose; Row 2: David Daubenspeck, Katie Nelson, Zuellen Marshall Wiersma, Brian Koop, Cathy Walchenbach Koop. Ginny Reed Kruisenga, Roxanne Vanderveer, Bob Schoening, Leslie Dykstra, Marianne VanHeest Bouwens, Joel Bouwens, Nancy Boersema, Barbara Gerding Warsinskey,Susan Kerle Callam, Marcia Dykstra Howe; Row 3: Jim Flanigan, Gayle Spangler Flanigan, Kevin Neckers, Kathy Smith, Bruce Poetter, Barbara Nylander Poetter, Judy Miersma Phillips, MaryJane Smits Timmer, Marcia Beugel Wolff, Robert Wolff, Kathy Stroven, Jean Boven Norden, Steve Norden, Sarah Hickok, Tim Merkle; Row 4: Dave VanderWeide, Jean Langerlaan VanderWeide,Meg Gerber Wilkens, Greg Gronwall, Kathy VanderMolenVollmer,Barry Brugger, Trish Lemmer Gosselar, Dutch Nyboer, Cyndy Hartman Nyboer, Drift}' Holtz, Ken Meeuwsen, Scott Lenheiser, Ron Bultema;

TWELVE NEWS FROM HOPE, COLLEGE, JtINE 1989 , Faculty profile Family man

years, and included listing the pros and by Kathleen McGookey ’89 cons. Then there were postponements for graduate school, finding jobs and simply Tust call him Mr. Mom. Hope profes- “until we were ready.” Reflecting on the . I sor James Piers is as comfortable time period, Prof. Piers whimsicallysays louring in class as he is changing his “Well, we must have made a decision in nine-month-oldson’s diapers. there somewhere.” “We wouldn’t be considered traditional,” In taking such an active role in his says Prof. Piers of his family. “My wife and children’sdevelopment. Prof. Piers feels he I share a variety of responsibilitiesaround is more sensitive to the conflict that many the house, and it’s been an agreement from women feel between home and work, a the beginning of our marriage that home topic he has lectured about in his “Sociology responsibilitieswould be shared." and the Family” class. “I think that’s a The Piers' household is run by juggling conflictthat, on occasion. I’ve experienced, schedulesand chores and late nights. He and have also noted in some of my col- stresses the teamwork aspect of his leagues who take an active interest in their marriage. children,” he says. Prof. Piers teaches “Sociology of the He believes that these feelings may Family” and “Social Interventions,” and reflect a societal trend. “Maybe our society coordinates the social work Field placements is moving toward understandingthat the for the Sociology and Social Work depart- conflict between work and parenthood is ment. He will be teaching a new course, also one that’s concerning some men.” “Human Behavior in the Social Environ- “It’s important to commit to parenthood,” ment," in the fall. he continues. “Then it can be a much more Prof. Piers graduated from Hope in 1969 enjoyableexperience. Not just when the and earned his M.S. W. from the University children can discuss intellectual issues, but of Michigan in 1972. He joined the Hope much earlier, where you have the tactile faculty in 1975, and was recently promoted sensations of just holding them and cuddling to full professor. them.”

Prof. Eiers’ wife, Deedee (Gunther '71 ), “And sometimes those more challenging is a half-time teacher with the Holland sensations of dragging yourself out of bed Public Schools. They have two children: at three in the morning,” he adds. Christian, age four, and Carter, the newest Prof. Piers is dedicated to his family, but addition, who is nine months old. is also dedicated to his career at Hope . He Prof. Piers’ smile grows wider as he was departmentalchairman for Five and a An expert on the family, sociology professor James Piers brings a personal perspective speaks about his family. “I think I’ve had half years, and now along with colleague to his professional work. Pictured clockwise from the right are Professor Piers, Carter, those hopes for a traditionalfamily after a Professor Deb Sturtevant is working on Christian and Deedee. day when I’ve worked hard, maybe1 I'm developing an accredited social work program. tired, because the night before was my night volunteer as nursery school helpers. First two groups of Hope students to the to be on call with the nine-month-old,”he His professional interestsinclude foster He also helped develop a support group Japanese university in 1980 and 1981. parent and foster worker training, hospice says. “Sometimesin the morning, after a for widowed persons. He is no longer When he was a student at Hope, he was long, long night, when I’ve a long day to staff stress management,psychotherapy involved with the program, but has kept influenced by his professors, which pro- track of its progress. “It’s really blossomed vided him with an added motivationto not of but of “Maybe our society is moving toward — because me, because my return to his alma mater. “It was almost as two cofounders,”Piers says. “I can’t take if to come to Hope would be to give back understanding that the conflict between any credit for what it’s become — that’s all some of the gift that they had given me,” their doing.” he says. work and parenthood is also one that’s “If there’s anything I apply to my own Prof. Piers also lists his wife and parents family, it’s the factual informationthat I concerning some men.” as important. "My parents — their influence learn by continuingto be prepared for was in both the religous and humanitarian ‘Sociologyand the Family,’ ” he says. — James Piers realm. They taught me a strong respect for “With my constant study of family forms, other people, as well as the religiousvalues look forward to, I wonder what it would and family therapy. He is active nationwide family conflictsand resolutions,those areas that I hold." He continues, “My wife was have been like to have a full night’s sleep." and also in Canada in the trainingof social are what I can more regularly apply and and continues to be influential in providing workers, and has written a book. Fostering probably try." But Prof. Piers is happy with the role he support and stimulus.” has played in his children's development. the School Age Child. “I don’t know how skillful I am at it,” He notes that he hopes he shows towards “I wouldn't trade it. I appreciate the early “I’ve been doing seminars, keynotes and he is quick to add with a smile. his students the same genuine interest and interchanges,” he says, adding that he has training around the country for social work “I enjoy Hope. It’s a very easy place to support his professors showed him. "I found statistical evidence that men who are professionals,” Prof. Piers explains. He work and provides the environment for me certainly would like to believe that I can active in their baby's First three months are recently completed a major week-long to do what I want. I especially appreciate aid others in reaching their human potential closer to their children later on. “I Figured seminar in Toronto, Canada. His work has the support for the new social work program — whether it would be colleagues, students, if I was going to do this, that 1 might as even taken him to Juneau, Alaska, where we’re beginning," he says. “There really is my children or my wife.” well really commit to it." he conducted training seminars for the a sense of collegialityhere, and strong “I’m not always certain whether I’m "Some men, in some generations, and I state’s department of human services. support from other colleagues to perform really helping another person, whether I’m think somewhat even today, don’t know Closer to home. Prof. Piers leads adult well.” really being interestedin how they’re being much about changing diapers and making “Sunday school" classes at Holland-area "The students also deFinitely keep my dealt with, whether I’m really aiding them bottles,” he says. “I only wish that somehow churches.“We typically cover issues and interest here. They aid in keeping me vital, in getting basic needs met or whether I'm 1 were 20 now — to have that energy, family, discussing conflict,conflict man- so I really appreciate the interaction with inhibiting them,” he says. flexibility and stamina of a parent at an agement, different family forms and them, and the stimulation they provide — earlier age.” male-female equality issues,” Prof. Piers the questions, comments and general "But if there’s a philosophy that I work He stresses that the decision to have says. interest.” under, it would be that I have a responsibility children when they did was something he Prof. Piers and Deedee are members of In the early 1980’s, Prof. Piers was for other human beings and that responsibil- and his wife thought out carefully.The Christ Memorial Reformed Church in involved in the development of the Hope ity should be to aid them in meeting their decision-makingprocess lasted several Holland. Mich., where they sometimes College-Meiji Gaukuin program. He led the potential.”^

NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 1989 THIRTEEN By popular demand, the choir performs at the Pribaltiskaya Hotel in Lenim asked that they give an impromptu performance. Lenin looks on from behu Laura Dennis, a junior from Traverse City, Mich., gives treats to children in Tallinn.

Making friends with music

Laura Magan, a senior from Phoenix, Md., exchanges a heart-felt hug with a parmioim following the choir's performance at the Leningrad Baptist Church.

The rewards of this tour to the Soviet Union are immeasurable”

the churches. bless you.” A woman behind him said

by Roger Rietberg ’47 Nor will I forget the conversationin something in Roumanian, and then he said.

small groups with students at the secondary “My friend says ‘The peace and love of school, or the visit in the apartment of a God to you.’” (Editor's note: Director Roger Rietberg Baptist pastor, his wife and son one evening Let me take this opportunity to express offers his impressions of the Hope College in Tallinn. Choir members had similar as 1 did at the airport at Schipol my immense Chape! Choir's first tour of the Soviet mwww experiencesin the homes of some of the gratitude to the members of the choir for Union, which lasted May 10-24 ): members of the church. all their efforts in making this trip a reality t 7he rewards of this tour to the Soviet 1 could go on and on , but let me include for us all , for their Fine singing and for what Union are immeasurable. this one last incident which will stay with they brought to those for whom we sang in

For me it consisted of seeing the inspired me a long time. We had just sung a few the Soviet Union. I also commend them for faces of our choir members as they per- anthems in a Russian Orthodox church now what they, through their receptivityand

formed, seeing them interact with those for preserved for its history, its beautiful murals sensitivity, have brought back with them. 1 t

whom we sang in concert — both in church and icons. The group in front of us included know that they will be sharing it with hosts services and in informal, unscheduled some Roumanians, one of whom asked of people in the months to come and opportunities in places visited we — and where we were from. treasure it in their hearts forever. the warmth of the people as we expressed Then he added “You play beautifully," And to those who contributed through to each other the peace and love of God. meaning “You sing beautifully.”And after their gifts to making this trip possible, What they expressed on their lips shone on a pause he said “You were making songs to heartfeltthanks from every choir member in their faces as the buses pulled away from Director Roger Rietberg Tallinn. God?” I shook his hand and said, “Yes, God — and for me.

FOURTEEN NEWS FROM HOPE CO ’mmerngt

Tim Vanderveen,a 1989 graduate from Spring Lake, Mich., and all the choir received a warm reception after performing at the Moscow Baptist Church.

r...

inLeningrad. Soviets who heard them rehearsing in the hotel had m behind. •

•: j .

Chris Barrett, a junior from Fraser, Mich, (left), and Tom Bouwer, a 1989 graduate from East Grand Rapids, Mich., (right),met a fellow Dan Beyer, a junior from Allegan, Mich, (top right), and Ken Olivier, \aithioner soccer enthusiast at a town on the Estonian border while enroute to a sophomore from Caledonia, Mich, (bottom right), were treated to Tallinn from Leningrad. lunch at home by a group of Russian girls.

“This trip will he something that will be forever remembered”

stunned by the presence of God. naval cadets arm-in-arm.While they were lid, by Bruce Vander Kolk ’90 As we observed the service these feelings riding down the escalator to the subway of

( Editor's note: Senior Bruce Vander Kolk only increased, a presence that only comes another group of cadets was going up,

a from God was everywhere. It was evident glaring at the group of eight. One of the less of Hamilton, Mich, kept journal while on the tour. Here are highlights): that everyone worshipping there meant it eight, a cadet, yelled something in Russian, :ns( some with all their heart. They were engaged in and then yelled with great intensity"We foi Day 3. Saturday, May 13 a sacred act, an act that drew in' our hearts have American friends. We have American iy We rose for an 8 a.m. breakfast and and out our tears. friends.” -hai’ departed at 9:15 a.m. for a 70 kilometer trip north to Zagorsk to visit the Trinity and Day 5. Sunday, May 14 Day 15. Wednesday, May 24 for St. Sergious Monastery. It took more than After singing with a group of about 70 We have experienced something that can d an hour and 45 minutes to cover the people on the streets of Leningrad, four not be sufficientlydescribed in words for i.l distance, and our bus driver even managed members of our group started to get close there are no words adequate for our thoughts sis to get a speeding ticket. to four Soviet naval cadets — three un- and feelings. I hope that all who read this We went to the Assumption Cathedral iformed, and one not. They all knew some can understandwhat we did, who we where a worship service was taking place. Beatles songs, so they sang Let It Be and touched, and why to each and every choir gh The feeling we had as we entered this Yesterday together. member this trip will be somethingthat will cathedral was amazing. We werein awe at Eventually, the guys said they had to be forever remembered. We’ve been to the iber the beauty, hushed by the reverence, upset leave and their new-found friends walked Soviet Union and back. We are exhausted,

Bruce Vander Kolk in Kiev. at what we felt to be our intrusiveness-and with them — American civilians and Soviet yet even more so we are exhilarated!

0P£ COLLEGE, JUNE 1989 FIFTEEN Personal triumphs mark spring season, but 88-89 no “banner” year

~J71or the first time in a decade the current Buys Sr. ’37, was the MIAA shotput l* Michigan IntercollegiateAthletic champion in both 1936 and 1937. He held

Association (MIAA) All-Sports banner is the shotput record until 1969 and was on not hanging in the Dow Center on the Hope hand at the 98th annual Field Day to watch College campus. his grandson win the gold medal. Matt’s A string of nine consecutiveMIAA father, Chris ’66, was the MIAA pole vault All-Sports championships won by Hope champion in 1963. And his uncle, Ekdal, College since 1979-80 was snapped by Jr. ’62 was an All-MIAA basketball player

Calvin College in a race that went down to at Hope his senior year. Talk about tradition ! ! the last week of spring sports competition. Senior Tauna Jecmen of Jenison, Mich, The All-Sports championship is based on received All-MIAA track honors for the the cumulativeperformance in the MIAA’s second year in-a-row as she repeated as the 17 sports for men and women. Calvin ended 3,000 and 5,000 meter run champion. Her with 135 points while Hope was second brother, Scott ’85, was an All-MIAA with 126 followed by Kalamazoo 99, Alma footballplayer his senior year. And each was 98, Albion 94, Adrian 47 and Olivet 29. brilliant in the classroom,as both have The spring sports season had many bright earned Academic All-American honors. moments, including several national caliber It didn’t stop there. Jecmen finished 10th performances. at nationals in the 5 ,000-meter run and was Senior Mary Busscher of Hamilton, 14th in the 10,000-meterrun. Busscher’s Mich, captured the silver medal in the shotput throw at nationals was 44 feet, shotput at the NCAA Division HI track and 5'/2 inches. The national champion was field championships. Her All-American Shannon Quigley of the University of performance was the highest in Hope California at San Diego with a throw of 45 tennis player and the recipient of the .487. It marked the fifth time in the 1980s history in track and field for a female feet, 2'/4 inches. league’s sportsmanshipaward. The MVP that a Hope player led the MIAA in batting athlete. Sophomore J.R. Schoon of Fremont, award is presentedby coaches and the and the 10th time in history. Hope’s other The women’s tennis team repeated as Mich, became a second generation All- sportmanshiphonoree is determinedby the MIAA batting champions were Gene Van MIAA champions and earned a third MIAA athlete. He was the league champion league’s players. Sandro, who set a Hope Dongen ’60, Ron Van Huizen ’64, Chuck consecutivetrip to the NCAA Division III in the 400-meter intermediate hurdles and Langeland ’67, Gary Frens ’69, Bob Lamer national tournament. And Hope sent its first career record for singles (65-19) and qualified for nationals in the 1 10-meter high doubles (69-15), competed as an individual ’74, Pete Rink ’81, Randy Cutler ’85 and representatives in a decade to the NCAA hurdles^ His father, Jon ’63, earned All- in the NCAA tournament four consecutive Jim Klunder ’ 87 . Breithaupt also set MIAA tournament men’s tennis tournament. MIAA honors in football as an offensive years. (10) and Hope (12) records for doubles in In track, the men’s and women’s teams end. The younger Schoon is also a wide The future is bright for the baseball and a season. Another sophomore, pitcher Seth had several record-breaking performances receiver on Hope’s football team. Parker ofThree Rivers, Mich., also received and NCAA qualifiersas each ended in third softball teams, as underclassmen achieved Two senior athletes achieved milestones All-MIAA honors as he was undefeated place in the MIAA. The softball and distinction this spring. In softball,sopho- in their college careers when each was voted against opponents with a 4-0 record, baseball teams each finished second in their more Eileen Malkewitz of Grand Ledge, All-MIAA a fourth straight year. Dianne record. respective league races. Mich . became the first Hope player to pitch Brown of Byron Center, Mich, became the a victory over every MIAA opponent.One In addition to her accomplishment at Hope’s tradition as a college with a deep first softball player in MIAA history to nationals, Busscher was voted the most intercollegiateathletic tradition was un- of the triumphs was a thrilling 5-4 decision receive all-league honors every year and valuable female MIAA trackster for the iquely displayed this season in track. In over Calvin. It turned out to be the Knights’ Colleen Sandro of Grand Rapids, Mich, second straight year as she won the league fact, it was truly a family affair! only MIAA loss. joined Hope alumna Kim Baxter ’87 In baseball, sophomore Vic Breithaupt of shotput and discus championships each for Freshman Matt Buys of Grand Junction, Beckman as the only four-time All-MIAA Traverse City, Mich, collected seven the third consecutivetime. She improved Colo, became a third generation Hope women’s tennis players. straighthits in a season-endingdouble- her own Hope record in the shotput with a All-MIAA athlete after winning the league throw of 45 feet, 1 inch. shotput championship with a throw of 47 Sandro also earned the rare distinctionof header victory over Olivet to raise his being voted the MIAA’s most valuable MIAA batting average to a league-leading It was one of six school records set in feet, 4 1/2 inches. His grandfather,Ekdal J .

Mary Busscher '89 of Hamilton. Mich., Colleen Sandro '89 of Grand Rapids, Sophomore J.R. Schoon of Fremont, Mich, Sophomore Eileen Malkewitz of Grand was a NCAA All-American. Ledge, Mich . , pitched a victory over every Mich., four-time All-MIAA women’s qualifiedfor nationals in the 1 10 meter high tennis player. hurdles. MIAA opponent. SIXTEEN NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 1989 Women’s League helps Hope

corating and refurnishing Otte Conference by Carrie Beecher ’89 Room and the dining room in Phelps Hall. The League’s most recent project has been the refurbishing of Dykstra Hall. Pledging $150,000, the League purchased t began as the dream of Edith Walvoord. T all new lobby and cluster furniture,and X Coming to Hope in 1920 to be a provided new shelving, desk tops and chairs housemother, she found Voorhees Hall for every room. quite barren. Containing little more than a Upon the completion of their Dykstra clock and a table to hold each day’s mail, pledge, the Women’s League for Hope the building’s lounge desperately needed College will have donated one million furnishing. Determined to remedy the dollars to the improvement of Hope’s situation, organized a tea party in Walvoord campus. It was the League’s annual bazaar her home for in the community and women — Village Square — that provided most of shared her plans to raise money to decorate the funds. and furnish the hall. When Durfee Hall was built in the 1950s, loved the idea, and by The women 1925 the college could not afford to furnish it. Voorhees Hall was completely and beauti- President Lubbers presented this situation fully furnished. Pleased with their ac- to the League and asked them to undertake complishment, the women formed the the pledge to raise the necessaryfunds.

Women’s League for Hope College and Faced with a goal of $50, 000, the League began to raise funds to furnish other needed a big fund-raising idea. When Janet residence halls. Albers-Yonkman proposed the idea of a Today, the Women’s League is committed bazaar, some were skeptical. But the to Walvoord's dream — to constantly League chairperson asked Evie Smallegan, Freshman Man Buys of Grand Junction,Colo., like his grandfather, Ekdal J. Buys Sr. improve the appearanceof Hope’s residence a long-time member from Zeeland, Mich . , '37 in 1936 and '37, earned the MIAA shotput championship. halls. to investigate the idea. Within a year, the The League is divided into chapters League held its first Village Square — and women’s track. Jecmen put her name on the 1979 when senior Spencer Helmbrecht of according to location,and has been respon- raised the money needed. marks in the 3,000, 5,000 and 10,000 meter Okemos, Mich, competed in singles play, sible for raising the funds to furnish many Now a major annual event. Village runs while sophomore Abby Van Duyne of and joined teammate Dirk Vande Poel, a residence halls, including $60,000 for Square features delicious cuisine, creative Flint, Mich, set a new standard in the junior from Holland, Mich. , in the doubles Phelps; $100,000 for the Van Zoeren crafts, festive entertainment and sales. This 400-meter dash. Hope’s 1,600-meter And competition. Library; $91 ,900 for the fraternity complex year’s day-long Village Square will be held relay team of Van Duyne, senior Amy The appearanceof a Hope doubles team and Gilmore Hall; and $30,000 for rede- on Friday, June 23. Strieker of Arvada, Colo., junior Julie in the national tournament was especially Darling ofSodus, N.Y., and freshman Amy meaningful for coach Bill Japinga who was Buttrey of St. Paul, Minn, set Hope and the NCAA College Division doubles MIAA records. champion in 1958 and 1959 while playing Freshman Craig Flowerday of Holland, for Kalamazoo College.

Mich, had a banner First year in track as he Helmbrecht was defeated in three sets in earned All-MIAA honors with the distinc- the First round of singles play while the tion of being the league’spremiere sprinter. Helmbrecht/VandePoelduo advanced to the

Flowerday set a new Hope record in the round of 16 before being eliminated. It was 100-meter dash, won the MIAA champion- the best performance by a Hope men’s

ship in the 200-meter dash and led off doubles team at nationals since 1969, when Hope’s MIAA champion 400-meter relay Doug Barrow ’69 and Ron Visscher ’69 team . Others members of that championship advanced to the quarterfinals. team were junior Mark Travis of Norwell, The women’s tennis team won one of Cal Bruins Betty Whitaker '62 Jackson David Veldink ’91 Mass., senior Jon Weston of Grand Rapids, '61 three matches in the NCAA tournament, Mich., and sophomore Jeff Brown of which was played in Claremont, Calif. Muskegon, Mich. Among the Hope fans rooting the Flying Hope sent its first representatives to the Dutch was 1916 alumna Sara Winter Alumni Board elects three NCAA men’s tennis championships since Zwemer. r | ihe Alumni AssociationBoard of andTim Van Heest ’76 of Anaheim, Calif. 1 Directors elected its three officers for (Western Region). 1989-90 during its spring meeting in May. Cal Bruins ’61 is director of research, The Board also made three new appoint- planning and evaluation for the Scottsdale ments and several reappointmentsto its Public Schools in Phoenix, Ariz.

ranks. His wife, Bonnie Beyers Bruins, is also

Sue Bruggink '73 Edema of Grand a 1961 Hope College graduate. Bonnie is a Rapids, Mich, was re-elected the board’s kindergarten teacher at Paradise Valley president. Re-elected the board's vice- Christian School. president was Jeffrey Cordes '80 of Mes- Cal and Bonnie have three children quite. Texas. Mary Damstra ’68Schroeder —Christine, a 1985 Hope graduate, Kat- of Grosse Pointe, Mich, was chosen the hryn, a 1988 Hope graduate, and Chuck, board's secretary, replacing Beverly Bame who is completing high school this year. '50 Kerr of Nassau. N.Y , whose term Betty Whitaker ’62 Jackson of West ended. Melbourne. Fla. teachesjunior high school The board's three new members are Cal English on a part-time basis. Bruins '61 of Phoenix. Ariz. (Southwest She and her husband Everett,a graduate Region), Betty Whitaker '62 Jackson of of RPI and an engineer for Grumman West Melbourne, Fla. (Southeast Region) Melbourne Systems, moved to Florida from and David Veldink ’91 of Jenison. Mich, New York in 1987. They have twochildren

(junior class). — Paul, who is nine, and Nancy, who is Relected to the board were William seven. Aardema '79 of Parchment. Mich. (Michi- David Veldink ’91 of Jenison, Mich., a Fauna Jecmen 'S9 of Jenison, Mich., 3,000 Spencer Helmbrecht '89of Okemos. Mich, gan Region), John Abe '79 of Naperville, first-generationHope student, is a psychol- and 5,000 meter champion. competed in singles and doubles pla\ at the III. (Central Region), Cordes (Southern ogy/sociologymajor. His sister Buffy is a NCAA men’s tennis championships. Plains Region), Edema (Michigan Region) 1989 Hope graduate.

NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE; JUNE 1989' SEVENTEEN i. i- > I I rn; i 9 R 1 f II It « li 11 8lr T1 Kf B B S 9S 8 9 1IH ALUMNI NEWS.

by Janet Mielke ’84 Pinkham

A lumni Weekend 1989 is now just a ^^memory, but what a wonderful one! More than 500 people attended this year’s

activities and I had the opportunity to meet many of them — including a member of

the class of 1 924. Their love for our Alma Mater was present everywhere 1 looked. People were laughing, hugging and ex- citedly discussing what had taken place since they last met. Friday evening, the reunion classes of

1939 - 1974 held off-campus activities.I was able to visit several of their gatherings and found everyone enjoying themselves.

When I arrived at The Sandpiper, where the class of 1944 was meeting, 1 found George Lumsden reading a light-hearted poem he had written about their years on campus. At Point West the class of 1969 was chatting and listeningto '60’s tunes in

front of the fireplace. At the Holiday Inn I found the class of 1954 in their freshman beanies! They were kind enough to explain the tradition to me and told me of singing At left are the four 1989 DistinguishedAlumni Award recipients and Alumni AssociationPresident Sue Bruggink '73 Edema. Pictured the Alma Mater on command, (as a first left to right are Yoshie Ogawa '58, Dr. Andrew G. Nyboer '39, Dr. Sylvio Scorza '45, Edema and the Rev. Stephen M. Norden '74. semester freshman,I would have been hard At right, Marian Anderson '31 Stryker, alumni director at Hope from 1957-74, reacts with joy and surprise when her 80th birthday is pressed to do so!). announced during the Alumni Dinner on Saturday,May 6. Pictured are Stryker’s son, Dr. John Stryker '60, current alumni director I then visited the class of 1964 where I Janet Mielke ’84 Pinkham and Stryker. discoveredmore than 100 people in atten- dance. I was treated to a “Remember Muskegon Area Retired School Personnel and Age Movement. He wrote meditations for the April. when...?” slide show selected from the 15 Michigan Education Association. 1988 Words of Hope devotional booklet. boxes of slides Janet Blom Shoup, the class notes Lavern R. Sandy '29 is serving as pastor of First Katharine(i. Nan Raalte '39 Davis of Canandaigua. PresbyterianChurch of Fort Wayne. Ind. N.Y. is involved in her church. First Congregational reunion chairperson, had brought with her. C. Lester Vande Poel '29 last year at age 81 competed Church of Canandaigua, and Guild for the Handicap- On Saturday the class of 1959 viewed News and information for class notes, marriages, in two nationaltennis tournaments, a continuationof ped — an organization that volunteers service and births, advanced degrees and deaths are compiled for financial assistance,primarily to children. slides of their children’sgraduation pictures an interest in tennis that extends to the days he played news from Hope College by Greg Olgers. The deadline on the Hope tennis team. Willard G. De Groot '39 of Santa Barbara. Calif, and tried to guess who the parents were. for the next issue is July II. and wife Barbara took their entire family — children Carl VerBeek made a humorous presentation 30s and grandchildren — on a camping safari to Kenya. Africa last August. of what had happened on campus and in 10s Ruth VanAlsberg ’31 Colts of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Jay Folkert ’39 of Holland. Mich, is stillserving as the area over the last 30 years . The class of lead a lour from her church to the Holy Land April 29 secretary-treasurerof the Classical Board of Benevo- through 9. She has worked at Coral Ridge lence. R.C.A...whiehprovides financialaid to Hope 1974 produced a video of their reunion Harvey Ramaker T8, a resident of LaSata Home in May Ccdarburg, Wis. attended and greatly enjoyed a special PresbyterianChurch for 18 years, and is currently students who plan to serve the R.C.A. in a full-time memories and set it to music. program by the Hope College Chapel Choir in church librarian. She reports that the church is building capacity. As a final note, mark your calendar now Gibbsville,Wis. in March. Choir member Elizabeth a large new facility for church activities, including a Marguerite Bergen ’39 Hess of Holland. Mich, is involved in House to House for Cancer. so that you will not miss the annual Hope Cochrane "89 is a niece. library. Alfred Bulthuis ’34 and wife Agnes celebrated their Gary 1 loffius '39 is in his third \ ear as parish associate College Golf Outing at the Holland Country 20s 50th wedding anniversary on Feb. 22. with First PresbyterianChurch in Hot Springs. Ariz. Club on July 19th. For more information William J. Heyns ’34 ol Wyoming. Mich, became a ClifTord R. Keizer ’39 of Socorro. N.M. and wife 50-year memberof the Stale Bar of Michigan in 1987 Ruth visited Thailand in 1988 and met with nearly 30 call the Public Relations Office at (616) Ann Decook '22 Wahl is 88 and living in Hebron, and a 35-year member of the Kiwanis Club in 1986. former students who had received informal English Ind. She is very proud of her children. 394-7860. Lester Kieft ’34 of Lewisburg.Pa. is a training instruction from them in Socorro while study ing in the PriscillaBekman ’28 Bowen-Collhurstis working specialistfor the eastern half of Pennsylvania for the United States. as a pastor'sassistant in New York, N.Y. tax-aide program of AARP. Thelma Kooiker '39 Leenhouts of Holland. Mich, Joyce Klaasen ’28 Crookshank of Holland, Mich, is Hazel Dick ’34 Marx of Columbus. Ohio just is ins olved with severallocal organizations,including interestedin photgraphy. and has had several prints published a genealogy. Descendants of George Stutter the Women's LiteraryClub. Hospital Guild. Church published. and Jane PetlierantSottler. A copy is in Holland's Choir and Tennis Travel Team of the Holland Tennis Leon H. Kleis ’28 of Holland. Mich, is president of public library. Club. the Wolverine Senior Golf Association. Harvey L. Scholtcn ’34 of Grand Haven. Mich, has FlorenceMeengs '39 l.ingle ofTawas City. Mich, Frank Moser ’28 is a consulting scientist with the been a member of the Ottawa Area IntermediateSchool was named a 1988 Outstanding Nancianne of the Year ALUMNI BOARD OF DIRECTORS Donnelly Corporation in Holland. Mich. Board from July. 1947. to the present. On Oct. 7. he by the Elks Auxiliary. AgnesN.1>s.se '28 of Clarksville.Ind. was honored received a PresidentsAward from the Michigan Clifford Marcus '39 and Esther Bultman '39 Officers at a luncheonfor several years service as volunteer Association of School Boards "In recognitionof Marcus of Lansing. Mich, are celebratingtheir 5()lh Sue Bruggink '73 Edema, President,Grand librarian of the Westminster Village Kentuckiana extraordinaryand distinguishedservice as a leader and wedding anniversary in June. Rapids, Mich. Library. appreciation for his tireless devotion to the improve- Andrew G. Nyboer '39 of Rockford. Ill is a 1989

Jeffrey Cordes '80, Vice President,Mesquite, Leon A. Bosch ’29 has since 1 977 been a member of ment of public education." Hoik College DistinguishedAlumni Award recipient. Texas Leisure World corporate boards and/or committees, Mildred “Mickey” Esscnburg ’34 Vanden Bosch of In retirementhe gives seminars and speaks to churches Mary Damstra '68 Schroeder, Secretary,Grosse serving twice as president.Leisure World is a planned, Holland. Mich, is still involved in several church on the Old and New Testaments and other subjects. gated retirementcommunity of 21,000 residents. Pointe, Mich. organizationsand a talent volunteer in the Adult Day He also enjoys his 17 grandchildren, fishing,flying, Walter De Velder ’29 has made several trips to the Care Center at Evergreen Commons. travel and reading. Board Members People'sRepublic of China since 1980. He had served Lois VanderMeulen '36 Ellert of Boulder. Colo, saw Marjorie R. Yyvcrbe '39 Rottschafer of Grand William '79, Parchment, as a missionary in China for several years. Aardema Mich. Rapids. Mich, was for seven years an assistant teacher Elida Den Herder ’29 De Vries has been involved in her play Fools G«/

EIGHTEEN NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 1989 Harold S. Fisher ’49 is a member of the board of 40s Seminary iul&jlluud.Midi. Hchadpreviauslyserved - -Coalitionof .Nraghborhood -Associations. -She has on directorsat Sugar Creek RV Park Association of as senior pastor of Fifth Reformed Church in Grand a monthly basis as a specialcorrespondent written a Bradenton. Fla., where he and wife Joyce have spent Kloisc Itoynlon '41 Itosch and husband arc cnjoyiny Rapids. Mich. He and his wife. Jean Wiersma '49 column on child support for the local newspaper. In six months each year since retiring in 1984. a happy and fulfilling rclircmcnilife. Their second Wecner. live in Grand Rapids. 1987. she received an award for beina the volunteer hook on seashclls. Sctislicll*of SviiiIutii Arabia, was Timothy S. Harrison'49 of Lebanon. Pa. is professor Ruth B. Jorgensen '49 Wiercnga of Grand Haven. of the year from the Mental Health Association forthe of surgery and phy sioiogyat Penn State Universityin launched in Muscai. Oman in February and is selling Mich, has traveled as an official delegateof Presbyte- State of Virginia. Hcrshey. Pa. well. They conlinue lo s|X-nd hall ol'lheir lime in Oman rian Women to India. Nepal. South Africa and Glenn Hine ’54 of Spencer. N.Y. is executive director Harvey Hcerspink '49 of Grandv ille. Mich, is a and hall of iheir lime in Lake Wylie. S.C. Namibia. She was also a Presbyterydelegate to Mexico ofTioga Opponunities Program Inc. of Owego, N.Y. nationalstudent loans officer with Calv in College. Allan .1. VVcenink'43. associalefor siewardship of and participatedin a moderator's conference with Robert Hoeksema '54 is serving as senior minister Lake Michigan Prcshyiery.has also been appointed Marvin Jalving '49 of Dunedin. Fla. has been active BenjaminWeir in California.Along with husband with Addisville Reformed Church in Richboro. Pa. in church choirs and consistory at various R.C.A. James '47 she went to Ghana, West Africa forthe First inlerim senior paslor of Weslminsler I’reshylerian Anne Finlaw ’54 Holmlund of Hudsonville, Mich, Church in Grand Rapids. Mich. churches through the years. PresbyterianChurch of Grand Haven, where a day care is employed on a part-timebasis at Jenison (Mich.) center has been named for their family. Vernon Bocrsma '44 is a physician in Holland. Mich. Roger D. Kcmpcrs '49 of Rochester. Minn, is High School as an accompanist. I'-dna Nyland '44 Brown lives in Alluras.Calif, and employed by (he Mayo Clinic in Rochester and is a George D. Zuidema '49of Ann Arbor. Mich, is vice Lois Huizenga ’54 of Hudsonville. Mich, works in owns and operales Faye's Jewelry and Gills. consultantand professorof obstetrics and gynecology. provost-medicalaffairs for the Universityof Michigan. retailsales for Baker Book House in Grandville.Mich.

Marilyn Zandstra'44 Ettema of Holland. Mich, is a He has been editor-in-chiefof Fertility and Sterilily Philip B. Huizenga ’54of Portage,Mich, isemployed volunteerat Evergreen Commons and Evergreen since 1 976 and associale editor or on the editorial board 50s by the State of Michiganas a psychiatricreview Commons Adult Day Care Center. on four other journals.He has been a member of the physician for the DisabilityDetermination Service. Roger E. Koeppe "44 is professor of biochemistry Rochester Rotary Club since 1963 and on the board Jack Irwin ’54 of Albuquerque,N.M. is a research Eugene Scholten'50 is now self-employed after 30 of directors of Childrens'Home Society of Minnesota scientist working through a private grant on a project and head of the department at Oklahoma Stale years as school psychologistin Holland. Mich. He has Univcrsily. since 1967. entitled "Bayesian Statistics in Earthquake Prediction." a private practice,teaches three graduate courses at Norma Winifred l.emmer '44 Koeppe lives in He also writes on a free-lancebasis. Owen J. Koeppe '49 is a professorin the department Grand Valley Stale University and is a consultant for Gerald Jacobson '54 is a teacherand coach with the Stillwater, Okla. wilh her husband and is employedas . of biochemistry at Kansas State University of Kent County Head Start program. a bookkeeperby Murphy's Potpourri. Whitehall (Mich.) schools. Manhattan.Kansas. Robert A. Schuiteman '50 has joined Ferris State Jack K. Krum '44 of Leawood. Kan. is presidenlof Donald E. Jansma ’54ofOrland Park, III. is pastor Karl Kragt '49 is a pastor in the PresbyterianChurch. Univ ersity of Big Rapids. Mich . as associate dean of IngredientTechniques Inc. of the Reformed Church of Palos Heights, HI. U.S.A. in Seaton. III. He and his wife. Hazel Vander the School of Business. George l.umsden '44 of Birmingham.Mich, is Richard Kanode ’54 is employed in newspaper Woudc '49 Kragt. have spent many years as Milton Ten Have ’50 is United Methodist pastor at self-employed, has been lisled in Who's in the - publishing as the manager of credit and insurance Who missionaries. Munilh and Pleasant Lake, Mich. Midwest from I986-X9 and has published six books. relationsfor Press-EnterpriseCompany of Riverside, Marvin N. Kragt ’49 and wife Elizabeth M. Weaver Janet Kinkema ’51 Moor and husband Jim are living Rose Winstrom '44 Muilenburg leaches at Palos ’49 Kragt arc living in Orrvillc. Ohio, where he works in a large, historic home on Marc Island.Calif. Jim Verdes (Calif. ) High School, where she is also the drill David Kempker ’54 is retiring in June after completing forthe J M Smucker Company as managerofproduct is a U.S. Navy chaplain — their previous duty was in team inslructor. This past year she receivedthe PTSA hisfinal year as a counselor at Holland (Mich. ) High control.In June. 1988. he received the Institute of Okinawa. continuing service award. Food Technologies Quality AssuranceDivision Jerold Pomp '51 Of Tenstrike.Minn, is semi-retired Elaine Lokker '44 Nettles of CopperasCove. Texas William Kisken ’54 is a surgeon with the Gundersen Outstanding Service Award in New Orleans. La. and helping is eldest son as calling pastor inTenstrike as a nurse is a life member of the Red Cross. She Clinic of LaCrosse, Wis. Robert C. Laman ’49 works for TP. I . Restaurants Community Church. He had triple by-pass heart recentlybecame a member of Founders Circle Sherwin L. Kroll ’54 and wife B. Joan Whitsitt ’54 Inc. of Memphis. Tcnn. as special projectsmanager surgery on Dec. 22. but reports he is recoveringrapidly. Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Kroll live in Springfield,III., where he is a teacher in corporate video. James Harvey ’52 has been named president and Worth. Texas. of chemistry and physiology with SpringfieldSchool Charles J. Larson ’49 of Taylor. Mich, is medical board member of the Associated SportsFans. a new Marian VandeBunte ’44 of Grand Rapids. Mich, is District186. supervisor in intensivecare at Wyandotte(Mich.) nationalassociation organizing sports fans to help active in visiting shut-insthrough her chua-h's care Hospital Medical Center. Earl A. Laman ’54 of Des Plaines,III. is employed preservethe basic values in sports and to representthe program. She is also a member of the Kent Association by Brook Clinic Associates,PC. as a psychotherapist John Mac Donald IV ’49 of Sarasota.Fla. was named interests of fans when major sports decisionsare made. ol Retired School Personnel and the Michigan (individual;marriage and family; group) in Oak volunteerof the year by the Opera Society of Sarasota The organization'sfounder is Jack Anderson,the Association of Retired School Persons. Brook, 111. in 1987. nationallysyndicated columnist. Delbert Vandcr Haar '44 of Orange City. Iowa is Edwin A. Martin ’54 is employed by the State of Philip G. Meengs ’49 is planned giving officer of the Arend D. Lubbers '53 of Grand Rapids, Mich, has secretaryfor stewardship developmenifor the Michigan’s Department of Social Servicesas a social Fine Arts Museums of San FranciscoT Calif. been electedlo Grand Bank's Board of Directors.For Reformed Church in America. worker. Lucille Brunsting’49 Noordhoff of Taipei. Taiwan the last 20 years, he has been presidentof Grand Valley Jean Vanda Wege '44 continues to remain involved Norman Meaning ’54 is a pastor for First Reformed is employed by the Reformed Church in America. State University. wilh Firsl Reformed Church in Zeeland. Mich. Church in Doon, Iowa and Bethel Reformed Church Russell Norden '49 is liv ing in Ku Yokohama.Japan David Angus ’54 is a classroom teacherin the Lansing Arnold J. '44 of Sioux Center, Iowa volunteers in Lester,Iowa. Vermeer and working for the Reformed Church in America as School District. with local high school industrial arts classes. Isabel M. Stewart ’54 Mestler ofTarzana. Calif, is a missionary-teacher. H. Wayne Berens ’54 ofTrenton, N.J. is president employed by Sutro & Co. Inc. of Westlake Village, Frances Colenbrander '44 Vermeer of Sioux Center. Clifford E. Paine '49 in December was honored at a and owner of Revere Travel Inc. He was elected to Calif, as a senior sales assistant. Iowa spends lime wilh church-relatedand community retirementdinner by the Fcnnville (Mich.) Board of serve as chairmanof the Institute of CertifiedTravel Marilyn Spackman ’54 Muller is employedby West organizations. Education, which cited him for 50 years of service on Agents (ICTA) in 1989. Georgia Medical Center of La Grange, Calif, as a Evelyn Mulder '44 Weller of Rockford. III. is a the board. Jack O. Boerigter ’54 is directorof developmentat microfilm clerk and camera operator.She is an member of First EvangelicalFree Church. Missionary Donald Rinkus ’49 is a teacher in the Grandville the University of Minnesota-Waseca.He and wife ordained deacon and elder in the PresbyterianChurch, Circle and the SinissippiQuilt Club. (Mich.) public school system. Delores have a four-horse Belgian Hitch they use in U.S.A. and sings in church choir. Bob Wishmeier '44 is finishinga two-year term as John C. Robins '49 of Benicia,Calif, is a physician parades and fairs. Victor Nuovo ’54 is the Charles A. Dana Professor presidenlof Morgan Chapel Village Homeowners wilh the Veterans' Administration. John E. Busman ’54 of Lakewood, Colo, is senior of Philosophy and department chair at Middlebury Association, a private residential community outside JayG. Rutgers '49 of North Wales. Pa. isdirectorof pastor of Our Saviour's Reformed Church. College in Middlebury, Vt. He published a book. ofTryon and Columbus. N.C. He also runs Road King qualitycontrol with Summers Labs. Richard Coffill '54 serves as senior pastor at Decrpark Visionary Science+,through Wayne Stale University Drivers'Club, an Associationof Unocal 76 comprised Chester Schemper '49 is director of Latin American Reformed Church in Port Jervis.N.Y. He is also Press in 1988. ol SO.OOO members, all professionaltruck drivers. and new language publicationsfor World Home Bible chaplain of the Port Jervis police and fire departments, Winifred “Winnie” Koopsen ’54 Oakland teaches Dorothy De Valois '44 Wynia of Rock Valley. Iowa is League in South Holland. III. a member of Rotary Club, the General Program at Milwood Elementary School of the Kalamazoo involved in church groups, hospitalauxiliary and Henry I. Shaw Jr. ’49 since 1962 has been chief Council of the R.C.A. and presidentof the" Hope Public Schools. LOVE ecumenicaiBible studies. historianat the U.S. Marine Corps headquarters in Center of Port Jervis. N.Y. Harold Oppermann ’54 of Scarville.Iowa is a tool Theodore Zwciner '45 is director of the U.S.C.-P.LH. Washington. D C. He received the Company of Elaine Louise Ford '54 Coffill lives in Port Jervis, and die maker for Fleetguard of Lake Mills, Iowa. Family PracticeResidency Training Program in Military Historians Distinguished Service Award in N.Y.. where she is choir directorand bell choirs Jean Wierenga ’54 Otto of South Haven, Mich, was Whittier. Calif. 1988. directorfor DecrparkReformed Church. a seminar leader at the 1989 keformed Church William Appledorn '49 of Birmingham.Mich, is an Roland Simnielink '49 isdirectoroffinancial aid for John J. Corry ’54 of New York N.Y. received a Women's (RCW)Triennial, and was honored by Hope engineer in specificationsand applicationwith Kerr Northwestern College in Orange City. Iowa. Gannett Fellowship at Gannett Center for Media Church and RCW as the author of the RCW denomina- Pump and Suppl) Co. of Oak Park. Mich. Theresa C.Staal '49 of Holmes Beach. Fla. is owner Studies, Columbia University,for the 1988-89 tional 1989 study book and leaders’guide. Peace John Arnold '49 is professor of philosophy at Ohio of Newman AV Communications in Grand Rapids. academic year. He is currentlywriting his third book, Under Pressure University -Zanesville. Mich. which will primarily be a professionalmemoir. Robert J. Prins ’54 is presidenlof Iowa Wesleyan Katherine Ponstine '49 Bell of Bowling Green. Ohio Minnie Te Ronde '49 of Livonia. Mich, retired on Anita Decker ’54 of San Dimas, Calif, is a legal aide College of Mt. Pleasant,Iowa. has been teaching fourth grade with the Otsega schools Aug. I. 1987 alicrpraclicingsodalwork in the greater in the law department of Southern CaliforniaEdison J. ’54 is pastor of Grecnlcafton since 1964. Detroit area for 35 years. Norman Ratering of Rosemead. Calif. Reformed Church in Preston. Minn. Waller J. Boerman '49 and wife Elizabeth Boclkins John E. Tirrell '49 of Claremont. Calif, was Dennis J. De Haan ’54 of Grand Rapids, Mich, is FrederickK. Reinstcin ’54 of Northridge, Calif, is '49 Boerman are living in Rockford. Mich., where recognized by Oakland Community College in employed by Radio Bible Class as the editor of Oar a self-employed painter. he is a physician. Farmington. Mich., which named its student center Daily Bread. John H. Roundhouse ’54 is department head of Mary VandeWege '49 Boeve and husband Ted Boeve Tirrell Hall. Myra J. Saunders ’54 DeGraaf teaches fifth grade counseling with Midland (Mich.) Public Schools. '49 ate living in Holland. Mich., where she is Donald VandenBerg '49 is senior pastor of St. Paul's at Holland (Mich.) Heights Elementary School. James C. Schoeneich’54ofHowell, Mich, isamalh semi-aMired from the Holland Public Schools but still Union Church in Chicago.III. Richard J. de Maagd '54 of Cincinnati,Ohio is a teacher with the Fannington (Mich.) Public Schools. working its a substituteteacher. Dale W. Vanden Brink '49 is a physician liv ing in high school English teacher for the Wyoming (Ohio) John R. Scholten ’54 of Port Jervis, N.Y. is a music Harry Buis '49 is senior pastor of First Reformed Rolling Hill Estate,Calif. schools. teacher with the Minisink Valley Central Schools. C hutch of Demotic,hid. Robert H. Vander Laan '49 ol Cuyahoga Falls. Ohio John Robert Dethmers '54 is a self-employed Sharon T. Scholten'54 of Northville,N.Y. is the Robert I). Burton '49 is a physician liv ing in Grand since retiring from E.l. du Pont de Nemours as a senior practicingattorney at law in Lansing, Mich. minister of First United Methodist Church in Rapids. Mich. technicalspecialist hits been involved in consulting. Walter DeVries ’54 is executive director ofThe North Northvilleand United Methodist Church in Marian Schrocder'49 Butcyn of Bakcrslielcl. Calif, Glenn Van Haitsma "49 is professor of English at Sarolina Institute of Politics in WrightsvillcBeach, Edinburg. N.Y. served on the executive hoard of the Kern County Carroll College in Waukesha.Wis. He was nominated N.C. The program's purpose is to improve the overall Francine DeValois ’54 Schramm of Brookfield.Wis. Volunteer Center from 1987-88. to and accepted for membership in the Society for quality of political leadershipin North Carolina at the is a registerednurse with Community Memorial Carolyn Ingham '49 Chandler of Media. Pa. is a Values in Higher Education (SVHE) in 1988.’ state and local level. Hospital in MenomoneeFalls, Wis. mathematics teacher for the Wallineford-Swarthmore Gerard Van Heest '49 of Holland. Mich, is chaplain William E. Forth ’54 isadentist in N. Syracuse. N.Y. Donald Shull '54 of Portage, Mich, is guidance School District. of Hope College. Joseph M. Fowler ’54 of Walden. N.Y is a high directorfor Portage Northern High School. Iblan Chappell'49 of La Habra. Calif, is a semi-re- Arkie Widen '49 Van Raalte retired from The school physics teacherwilh the Brunswick schools in Jane L. Vander Velde '54 Smith of Zeeland. Mich, tired psychological consultant to management. Holland Sentinelin 1988 after working as a. staff writer Greenwich.Conn. is senior organist for First Reformed Church and Rodger W. Decker '49 of Laurinburg.'' N.C. is for 23 years. Bernice Keizer ’54 Fowler of Walden. N.Y. is an employed in retail sales by the Dutchess Shop. employed by St. Andrews PiesbyterianCollege and Harold Van Wieren '49 of Holland. Mich, received eighth grade mathematicsteacher with the Valley Robert J. Struyk '54 is chairmanand managing diteclor of health services and directorof the Burris a stale 30-year award for officiatingsports. Central schools of Montgomery. N.Y. partner of Dorsey and Whitney in Minneapolis. Minn. RehabilitationCenter. Judith E. Mulder '49 Van Znntcn is assistant director Joyce Bierens ’54 French of Grand Rapids. Mich, Raymond Teusink '54 is calling pastor for Westmins- Shirley Leslie '49 Dykstra of Fairfax.Va. is of ClarendonHills (III.) Public Library. has been a corporatesecretary for Associates Business ter PresbyterianChurch in Yakima. Wash. sell-employed,working for Red Carpel Real Estate as Donald Walchcnbach '49 of Grand Rapids. Mich, is Forms Inc. on a part-time basis since 1968. She is an associatebroker. involved in the Reformed Church in America's Jeananne K. Bondhouse '54 Thomas is a receptionist involved in a variety of civil, religious and charitable for Langeland MemorialChapels in Kalamazoo.Mich. 'ergil Dykstra '49of Rockv ille. Md. is administrative "Putting People in Mission" fund-raisingdrive as organizations. ' - Margaret Alber ’54 Van Dahm works as ministry 'ice presidentof Montgomery College of Rockv ille chairpersonof the Case Committeeand Lay Chair] ver- Norman Gysbers '54 and wife Mary Lou Ziegler for son . coordinator Westwood Rcfomied Church of William I). Dykstra '49 of Grand Rapids. Mich, is '54 Gysbers live in Columbia, Mo., where he is Muskegon, Mich, on a part-time basis. presidentol Win. Dykstra Group. Betty Vcnhuizen '49 Weber of Holland. Mich, professor of education and counseling psychologyat Gretchen Vonkman ’54 Vanden Berg of Grand W. Warren B. Eickelberg '49 ol Amity ville. N.Y. is teachesa weekly Bible club in a local public school, the University of Missouri. Rapids. Mich, is employedon a part-timebasis as an prolessor and diteetorofthe premedical curriculum at is a library volunteer at Evergreen Commons, tutors Ruth Bloodgood ’54 Hascup works in the purchasing administrativeassistant for Opera Grand Rapids. Adel phi University of Garden City. N.Y. He also at a local Christian school two morningsper week, department of Benjamin Moore and Co. in Mary Lou Richards’54 Van Heest is corresponding serves as a consultantin researchand dev elopment at and leaches IBS and children'sworship. Montvale, N.J. secretary of the Grand Rapids ( M ich .) area Reformed Human Resomvcs Center, working with severely R. '49 since 8 has been the Jay Wecner May Henry Helen Howard '54 Hanson of Harrisonburg. Va. is Church Women. disabled children and adults. Bast Professor of Preaching at Western Theological presidentof her neighborhoodassociation and Henry Van Houten ’54 is an attomey-at-law in NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 1909 NINETEEN had four books published, and a fifth in press. with her family is a member of the Hill Cumnrah Carl Ver Beck "59 is a partner and chairmanof the Boonton, N.J. Pageant Cast in Palmyra, N . Y. Sheas also a volunteer labor law group with Vamum Riddering Schmidt and Helen Van Loo '54 of Kalamazoo.Mich, is leaching David Coster '59 of Morris. N.Y. teaches fourth, fifth and sixth grade language arts and sixth grade social librarian/specialisl at the Family History Center in Howlctt of Grand Rapids, Mich. He has also served adults part-timethrough Vicksburg (Mich. ) Adult studies for Gilbertsville(N.Y.)*Central School. Concord. N.H. and continues to serve on several church, community Education. He plans to retire in June of 1990 and move to Florida. William Noorlag '59 is presidentof Lock Slock and and college committeesand boards, including as a Joan Kragt '54 Vannette is employedby the Holland Barrel Express Inc. of Rockford. III. Hope trustee and executive committeemember, a (Mich. ) Public Schools as an instructional assistant in Linda Buys '59 Coster of Morris, N.Y. teaches Paul E. Northuis ’59 of Wyoming, Mich, is director member of the General Synod executivecommittee of the resource room of Van Raaltc ElementarySchool. kindergarten at Gilbertsville(N.Y.) Central School. of operations for the Forest Hills (Mich.) Public the Reformed Church in America,and a member of Lawrence E. Vecnstra'54 is pastor of the Second She plans to retire in June of 1990 and move to Florida. Schools. the character and fitness committeeof the State Bar. Refonned Church ofTarrytown.N.Y. Susan R. Culbertson'59 of Orange. Calif, is Diane Oldenburg ’59 Nyhof teaches fifth grade at Sandra Dressel ’59 Ver Beck is a substituteteacher Margaret Luneburg ’54 Visser of Grant. Mich, is employed by Crystal Cathedral of Garden Grove. Tri-ValleyCentral School in Grahamsville, N.Y. with the Grand Rapids (Mich.) Public Schools. Her retired from full-time teaching and working part-time Calif, as directorand tutor-trainer for Laubach Literacy Lois Puehl '59 Ohl of Grand Rapids. Mich, is a commitments have included serving on the board of as a substitute teacher. Center. She received the 1987 Outstanding Director substitute teacherat the elementary level for the Kent directors ofthe Grand Rapids Symphony.Opera Grand Suzanne Zwemer '54 Visser and husband Robert Award, a state-level award presented by California Intermediate School District. Rapids. MichiganOrchestras Volunteers Association Visser '54 are living in Plymouth, Mich. He is retired Literacy Inc. She is also a breeder of top-quality Arthur L. Olson '59 of Hastings, Mich, is assistant and Women's Committee for the Grand Rapids . from teaching,and she teaches at Canton (Mich. ) High standard schnauzers. directorof the MichiganJudicial Institute for the Symphony. School. Hetty Vos '59 Crews of Woodstock , N . Y. is currently Isla Van Eenenaam ’59 Ver Meulen of Columbus. Alyce Joanne Hilmert '54 Walker of Port St . Lucie . on the board of Hospice Association of Ulster County MichiganSupreme Court. Ohio is a fifthgrade teacherfor the Columbus School Fla. is an English teacher at John Carroll High School Inc. Norman J. Overbeek '59 of Grandville. Mich, is for Girls. in Ft. PierceTFIa.She is presentlythe director of music Robert de Forest '59 is pastor of Hawthorne (N.Y.) manager of Kostcr Excavating of Jcnison. Mich. Wayne R. Vriesman '59 of Downers Grove. III. is at the First PresbyterianChurch of Port St. Lucie, Reformed Church. Donald Paarlberg '59 isan orthopedic surgeon living vice presidentof the Tribune Broadcasting Co. in serving as organist and choir director. Leslie DeVries '59 of Grand Haven. Mich, is a teacher and practicingin Coldwatcr. Mich. Chicago.III. Nevin B. Webster '54 is pastor of Grace Reformed with the Mona Shores Public Schools of Muskegon. Bruce E. Pearson '59 of Holland. Mich, is a math Carol Hondorp’59Wagnerof Palos Heights. III. has Church of Allen Park. Mich. Mich. teacher for the West Ottawa schools. had a number of commitments,including serv ing on Richard Weisiger '54 is principal of Sicomac School JamesG. DeWitt "59 is pastor of Cal vary Reformed June E. Short ’59 Peterson is a nursery school teacher the Hope College board of trustees and the Reformed in Wyckoff, N.J. and presidentof the Wyckoff Church of Grand Rapids, Mich. with Pine Grove Nursery School jn Albany. N.Y. Church in America's "Putting People in Mission" PrincipalsAssociation. Carolyn Zhe "59 Dixon is a physical therapistwith Loraine M. Pschigoda‘59 is a researchchcmist/staff fund-raisingdrive. Barry C. Whitsitt '54 of Oxford. Ga. is employedas the Croydcn Ave. School of the Kalamazoo (Mich.) assistantwith Upjohn in Kalamazoo. Mich. Una Hunt ’59 Ratmcyer of Jersey City, N.J. is Jerome H. Wassink ’59'of Holland. Mich, is a family an administrativeassistant IV by Fulton County in Valley Intermediate School District. secretaryfor print resources(editor/writer in the office physician with Holland Family MedicineP.C. Atlanta,Ga. , Mich, is Marlin A. Ensing '59 of Wyoming Spencer Weersing '59 is a self-employed dentistin of communication)for the Reformed Church in John J. Witte ’54ofTallahassee,Fla. is employedby semi-retiredfrom teaching, working as a substitute Montague.Mich. . where he lives with his wife. Sally the State of Florida as a state health officer. He was America in New York, N.Y. teacher twice a week. June DeVVolf ’59 Weersing. Dorothy Kroontje'59 Ricehillis a third grade teacher promotedto full professor of epidemiologyand Jack Faber ’59 of Holland. Mich, is a dentistin Wayne Westenbroek ’59 lives in Holland, Mich, and in District 670 in Luveme. Minn. biostatistics by the Universityof South FloridaCollege Zeeland, Mich. Shirley Volkema ’59 Richardson of Farmington. teaches fifthgrade for the West Ottawa Public Schools. of Public Health, and receiveda commendationmedal Harold Gazan '59 of Grand Ledge, Mich, is a deputy Mich, was presentedthe 1987 Citizenofthe Year award Jane Klaasen ’59WesterbekeofStevcnsville. Mich, from the U.S. Public Health Service. directorwith the Michigan Departmentof Social is a substitute teacherfor the BerrienCounty schools. by the Farmington/FarmingtonHill Chamber of Ethel Smith ’57 Brown is the assistantlibrarian in Services. Commerce. She has served on several local commit- E.J. Westerbeke ’59 is a physician living in the tax law library of Peat Marwick of New York, Mary Hoffmyer ’59 Grier is a therapist with Bethany tees, and is currentlyon the Farmington City Council. Stevcnsville.Mich. N.Y., the world's largest accounting firm. Christian Services in Grand Rapids, Mich. Kenneth G. Roberts ’59 is manager of regulatory Nancy R. Demarest *59 Widmer of Bemardsville. George W. Mgzzei ’58 of Massapequa.N.Y. has Carol Gaskin '59 Griffing of Delta in British affairs for the DePuy Co. in Warsaw, Ind. N. J . is a calalogucr/headof technicalservices for the successfullycompleted all phases of the American Columbia,Canada works in the accounts department Artel Newhouse ’59 Scheid of Alto, Mich, is a Bernards Township Library. Board of Orthodontics' comprehensiveexamination of the Tsawwassen Medical Clinic. substitute teacherfor the Caledonia (Mich. ) Commu- Joseph Woods ’59 of Spotswood. N.J. is pastor of for certificationin orthodontics.He is on the faculty John Hamersma ’59 of Lakehurst, N . J . , semi-retired , nity Schools and part-time office and bookkeeperfor Spotswood ReformedChurch. He was grand marshal of New York University as an associateclinical works with the visitation ministry of Pinelands Alto Precision Inc. of the 1988 MemorialDay Parade and 1988 volunteer professor,and conducts a practicespecializing in Reformed Church of Toms River, N.J. Donald W. Scott ’59 of Essex Junction. Vt. is of the year for the MiddlesexCounty Unit of the orthodontics in Massapequa. Marilyn Kortenhoven ’59 Hanson of Burlingame, employedby the Synod of the Northeast (Presbyterian American Cancer Society. Ev Nunhouse ’58 will extend his sabbaticalleave to Calif, is a teacher in Millbrae, Calif. Church) as mission funding counselor for New York George J. Worden '59 is vice presidentof Northwest- 15 months. After teaching stints at DartmouthCollege Doris Schmidt ’59 Harter of Moscow, Idaho is active State. ern MichiganCollege in Traverse City. Mich. He is and Montana State University,he has accepted a with First United Methodist Church, currentlyserving Kenneth E. Scudder ’59ofTrenton, Mich, retired in involved in a number of community organizations, visiting professorshipat the University of Colorado as wedding coordinator,in the choir and on various June. 1988 after teaching in the Southgate (Mich.) includingTraverse City Area United Way. (Boulder) for the summer. committees. Community Schools for 25 years. He and wife Russell C. Yonkers ’59ofBcdford.Ind. isafinance Austin A. Aardema ’59 is a family physician in Fort Janet Giljam ’59 Hefferon of Waterloo, N.Y. is an Kathryn Kurth ’60 Scudder are looking forward to representativefor Deere Credit Services Inc. Myers, Fla. accountant/bookkeeper with Lucchesi Ford Inc. of spending most of their time at their summer home in Carol A. Brandt ’59 Yonkers lives in Bedford. Ind.. John D. Allen ’59 of Hagaman, N.Y. is a French Seneca Falls, N.Y. She is active with United Methodist Gaylord, Mich, following her retirement. where she is involved with a number of church and teacher with Galway (N.Y.) Central Schools. Church of Waterloo, and received awards for Charles E. Skinner ’59 of West Hurley. N.Y. is an community organizations. Theresa Devries Allen ’59 of Northville,Mich, is a accounting excellence for the past two years. engineer for IBM. Terril J. Zylman '59 of Little Rock. Ari/.. is a bookkeeper atAllen HospitalofLivonia, Charles Hesselink’59 is pastor of Glen Reformed Animal Mich. publicationsrepresentative for Jostens. and is a Church of Fultonville,N.Y. Janice Kocman ’59 Smith of Nunica, Mich, is an Donald Andree ’59 is a math teacher and coach in member of the Jostens PresidentsClub. the middle school of Gull Lake Schools in Richland, Mary Jane Costing ’59 Hoffman is a medical ABE-DD teacher for the Muskegon (Mich.) Public Mich. • technologistin the emergency department laboratory Schools. 60s Barbara Reuss ’59 Applen of Peoria, III. teaches of Greenville (S.C.) Memorial Hospital. Richard Stadt '59 of Gary. Ind. is a visiting lecturer seventh and eighth grade English and literature at Vernon L. Hoffs ’59 is senior pastor of Bethany at Purdue Calumet University of Hammond. Ind. He also does education work with Tri-Town Mary Klaaren '60 Andersen of Champaign, III. has Pioneer Jr. High School in Dunlap, III. Reformed Church of Redlands, Calif. Community Church of Schererville.Ind.. where he is assistant received the President'sPrize Fellowship to study at Janet Wessels ’59 Bast is program secretaryfor South Larry Izenbart’59 is pastor for Bethany Reformed pastor. an agent for Chicago Theological Seminary in the fall.' Metropolitan Association of Flossmoor, III. Church in Sheboygan. Wis. He is currentlyserving on He became GuaranteedMutual Carl Dejong ’60 is now pastor of congregationalcare Darrell W. Beernink ’59 of Normal, 111. is vice the board of trusteesat Northwestern College in Insurance Co. in January. and disciplcshipat the Calvary Reformed Churh in presidentand actuary for State Farm Life Insurance Orange City, Iowa. Phyllis Steunenberg'59 is a third grade teacherwith the" Sheldon (Iowa) Community Schools. Orland Park. III. His former pastorate was in Hospers. Co. in Bloomington,III. Jerome Julien '59 is minister of First Christian Iowa. Carroll Bennink ’59 teaches in the Grand Haven Reformed Church of Sheldon. Iowa. James Stevens ’59 of Fruitport,Mich, is pastor of L. William Kuyper ’61 was featured in the Spring (Mich.) schools. Myron J . Kaufman ’59 is pastor of First Presbyterian Word of Hope Church. 1989 issue of Council Newsletter,a publ ication of the Helen Wade ’59 Beuker teaches English part-timeat Church of Wyandotte.Mich. Doris Stickle ’59 Peschel of Palo Alto. Calif, is volunteers of the New York Philharmonic. He plays Grand Rapids (Mich.) Junior College. Carl Dwain Kcmme ’59 of Allendale. Mich, is a employed by the Veterans Administration as a registerednurse/hospice assessor. She is also involved the french hom. Janet Groenewold ’59 Bieri is a credit administrator teacherand coach for theCoopcrsville(Mich.) Public Betty Vicha '61 Van Wyk is a registeredinvestment with Attwood Corporation in Lowell, Mich. Schools. in several church organizations. advisor with FinancialObjectives Group Inc. She was Gerald Boeve ’59 of Sarasota,Fla. is districtdirector W. Gardner Kissack ’59 of Chicago Heights, III. is James R. Stout ’59 is a general partner with Smith-Nash-Stout. a financialservice company he recentlyre-elected to a second four-yearterm as Oak of the west coast of Floridafor Century 2 1 Real Estate an instructor of English for Thornton Frac. South High helped form, in Midland.Mich. Park (III.) Township Clerk. She is a member of the of Florida.He was featuredin the Jan. '89 Who's Who School in Lansing. III. board of directorsof the Oak Park chapter of Zonta in the Southeast and is author of the book The Eugene M. Klaaren ’59 is an associate professor of BertSwanson ’59ofSt. Anthony. Minn, is president Inc. International. Mathematicsin Real Estate. religion at Wesleyan Universityof Middletown . Conn . of Swanson Fund Raising Counsel of Roseville. Minn. He was elected to a second term as president Mary Peclcn '63 Tigelaar recently returned to William F. Bogart ’59of Blossburg, Pa. is chairman Helen M. Hungerink ’59 Kocpke is a substitute teaching English at the UniversityolTexas at Dallas. of the department of foreign languages of Mansfield teacher for the Algonac (Mich.) schools. of the MinnesotaChapter of the National Society of Raising Executives is serving She is also a privateconsultant in book binding, University in Mansfield, Pa. Vernon Kortering’59 of Muskegon , Mich, is a trial Fund (NSFRE). on NSFRE's national board of directorsfor a third year restoration and preservationand has (aught bookbind- Marianne Wildschut’59 Boonstra of Holland , Mich, lawyer for plaintiffs in personal injury, workers ing and restorationsince 1976. is an English teacher for the Muskegon (Mich.) compensationand social securitydisability. His firm and is also on the board's nationalethics committee. Russell Sybesma '59 is senior pastor of Hope Doris Houck '64 Bertocci of New York. N.Y. is Heights schools. is Libner VanLeuvan and Kortering P.C. administratorfor clinical services for the Mental Calvin Bosman ’59 is a circuit court judge for the John W. Kraai ’59 is an assistant mechanicwith North Reformed Church in Kalamazoo. Mich. JohnTen Pas '59 is an orthopedic surgeon living and Health Division of Columbia University Health -• State of Michigan in Grand Haven, Mich. Florida Christian School of Tallahassee, Fla. Service and a liaison mental health professionalfor Edwin R. Bredeweg ’59 of Twin Lake, Mich, is John Krauss ’59 is a physician living in Philomath. practicingin Grand Haven. Mich. He is active on the the Juilliard School. She recently completed a chapter, superintendentof the OakridgePublic Schools. Ore. specializingin obstetricsand gynecology. staff of North Ottawa Community Hospital . where he with a co-author,entitled "The Meaning of the Lillian M. Johnson ’59 Brodie recently moved to Carol Beuker ’59 Krauss lives in Philomath, Ore. was chief of surgery in 1988. Search," which will be published later this year in The North Dighton, Mass. Her husband, Craig, retired and has been involved in many church and community John H. Van Dam '59 is the semi-retiredpresident Psychology of Adoption by Oxford University Press. from the U.S. Army as a colonel after 25 years of groups. of Modem BeverageCo. Inc. of Holland, Mich. Ronald Vanden Brink '59 is a staff physician(internal Sandra Daviou '64 Biel of Frankfort.III. is a school service and took a positionas a logistics manager for Charlotte Wierda ’59 Leaske is a teacherconsultant psychologistfor Arbor Park School District 145 in Oak GTE. for the Holland (Mich.) Public Schools. medicine) with the Barns Clinic and Northern Michigan Hospitalsof Pctoskey.Mich. He is currently Forest. Ill William Brookstra ’59 of Muskegon. Mich, is an FrederickLeaske ’59 of Holland, Mich, is assistant Carol Mogle '64 Boerhave is a telecommunication accounting supervisor with Howmet Corporation of superintendent/specialeducation for the Ottawa Area presidentof the Northern Michigan Medical Society. Mary L. Vandc Pool '59 is a teacher with Department analyst II for for ForemostInsurance Corporation of Whitehall, Mich. Intermediate School District. of Defense Schools. She is presentlyteaching at Grand Rapids. Mich. John Brouwer ’59 is pastor of Altoona-Hallie United Thomas Lewis ’59 of Arlington, Texas is employed Incirlik Air Base in Adana. Turkey, and previously Susan Bentull '64 Boersma of Mequon. Wis. is Methodist Churchesand living in Altoona, Wis. by Hewlett Packard Co. of Irving , Texas in manufactur- director of music ministriesfor May flower Congrega- Harley L. Brower ’59 of Grandville, Mich, is vice ing as a specialist-computersystems. taught in Okinawa, Japan for eight years. Kenneth Vander Brock '59, who is semi-retired,is tional Church of River Hills, Wis. presidentof sales for Batts Inc. of Zeeland, Mich. Stanley H. Lin ’59 of Edinboro. Pa. is coordinator interim pastor with Bethany Reformed Church of St. Ervin J. Bolks 64 is an executive vice presidentwith FrederickM. Brown ’59 of Clarks Summit, Pa. is of technicalservices for the Baron-Forncss Library of WCI-FinancialCorp. of Ml. Prospect, III. an associate professor of psychology at The Pennsyl- EdinboroUniversity of Pennsylvania. Petersburg, Fla. Joy O’Connor '64 Bornschein is employed by the vania State University. Clyde W. Loew '59 is pastor of Worth (III.) Church Paul Vander Maat '59 is a stuff member of the Los Alamos (N.M.) National Laboratory. Kingston (N.Y.) City School District as an elementary Harley D. Brown ’59 of Holland, Mich, is an English of the Nazarenc. Mike Vander Ploeg ’59 of Holland. Mich, isdircetor school counselor and adult education counselor. teacher with the West Ottawa schools. Ronald Lokhorst ’59 is minister of Good Samaritan ofthe Learning Foundation and Counseling Center of Jackie Schrotenboer '64 BurggraafTis a reading Bruce C. Brumels ’59 is a high school principal with Reformed Church of Gahanna, Ohio. teacherat Washington Elementary School in Holland. the McBain (Mich.) School District. Ellyn Arcndsen ’59 Martin of Chester Springs, Pa. Zeeland. Mich. JeanetteAbma ’59VandeWegeofHollund.Mich, is Mich. Albert Bursma Jr. ’59 of Sudbury, Mass, is is a substituteteacher for C.C.I.U.and N. Chester Henry Breederland'64 of Holland. Mich, is a president-schooldivision for D.C. Health of Co. Tech School. a substitute teacherwith the Hamilton schools. She is active in many Maplewood Church organizations. vocational carpentry teacher for the West Ottawa Lexington, Mass. Thomas B. Miller ’59 is director of the Nebraska Law Public Schools. Dennis Camp '59 is professor of English with Enforcement Training Center in Grand Island. Neb. Susan Graves ’59 Van Kuiken owns "Susie V" ArvinTcn Brink ’64ol'Glen Rock. N.J. is currently Sangamon State Universityof Springfield,III. He has Carol Jane Luth ’59 Neil of West Swanzcy. N.H. Designs in Fabric in Ada. Mich. TWENTY NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 1989 .ill < r i; n li ii ’j b ii 'jiliLqiin Anilvj' i;') ri -noin i > I J i rl o non a n l U /\\i ul uri ni // < ii rili! ^ b ii .b irzilriu| i.'o-yl lied iic uo l k nilnoa t-.n'lh . ; intenlionalinlerim pastor for the i.T I... V , • ...... i Second Reformed Tinley Park, III. She was named to the International M he was in the U.S. Army. Kansfield ’62 will spend• a sabbatical year at Church of Hackensack,N.J. Reading Association(I.R. A. ) Honor Society in 1 988 . John H. Dryfhout’64 of Windsor. Vt. is superinten- Mansfield College, Oxford. Dale Brinks ’64 is a high school English teacherwith Carol Anne Cronk ’64 Dalman of Glendale. Mo. dent and chief curator of the National Park Service of Karen Woodley ’64 Kiry of South Haven, Mich, is the Grand Haven (Mich.) Public Schools. does volunteerwork, primarilyfor her son's schools. the U.S. Departmentof the Interior. an account representativewith Michigan Gas Utilities Thomas J. Broeker ’64 is directorof the Eugene She is currentlycompleting her fifth year as book- Rosemary Piersma ’64 Dykema is a reading teacher of Benton Harbor. Mich. Counseling and Hypnosis Center and presidentof Rest keeper for the bookstore at his current school. at Sylvan Christian School of Grand Rapids, Mich. Ingeborg Bauer ’64 Knight of Baltimore, Md. is a Assured Inc. of Eugene, Ore. He is involved in several Westminster ChristianAcademy. Thomas W. Dykstra ’64of Hermosa Beach, Calif, is financial aide to Senator Mikulski of the U.S. Senate organizations,including Shiutei Shalom Inc. (a Ruth Mae De Boer ’64 of Lakewood, Colo, is a computersystems analyst for First Interstate Bank in Washington,D.C. non-profitJewish education/residentialorganization studying accounting at Red Rocks Community College of , Calif. Lenora “Norie” VandenBerg ’64 Koelbel of andWhiteBird (non-profit,low-cost counseling). He so that she can sit for the C.P.A. exam. She was a Gay DeYoung ’64 Ebbens of South Holland. III. is Missoula, Mont, is self-employed as Co-owner of became a licensed minister in 1987. volunteerwith the national headquartersof Gary Hart involved with a number of church organizations. Great Northern Book Company. She sponsors book Nancy Wessels ’64 Broeils ofWyckoff, N.J. is a staff for President in 1987, and still does volunteer work Paul Eenigenburg’64 is a professorof mathematics fairs in which she takes txx>ks to schools and works accountant for William J. VicnicontiCPA of Franklin with the local Democraticparty. with Western Michigan University of Kalamazoo, with childrenin selecting books — two of the schools Lakes, N.J. Bruce C. DeDee ’64 is a package engineer with Green Mich. are on an Indian reservation. She also gives presenta- James Ceton ’64 is in Madoua, Niger, West Africa, Bay Packaging in Kalamazoo, Mich. Leora May Remtema ’64 Elders is a substitute tions to teachers and librarians about what is new in as a missionary surgeon for SIM International. Betty Hesselink ’64 Deitz is a high school teaching teacherwith the Holland (Mich.) Public Schools. She children'sbooks at M.E.A. and reading conferences, Daniel Y.K. Chan ’64 of Fountain Valley,Calif, is assistant for the Guilderland (N.Y.) Central School is also involved with a number of church and and leads a monthly book discussion group for the directorof BPL Toxicology Lab. He is directinga District. community organizations. forensictoxicology lab to curb drug abuse in Gloria Heuvelhorst’64 De Kleine is a medical Bonnie Wissink ’64 Fields of Chicago, III. is a social Wendell Kollen ’64 of Maumee. Ohio is a research professionssuch as nuclear power plant work, technologistin the student health center of Cal Poly worker for Lincolnwood(III.) School District 74. professor with the University of Toledo (Ohio). transportationand law enforcement. State University in San Luis Obispo, Calif. Barbara R. Fisher ’64 of Grand Haven, Mich, is Earl C. Koops ’64 of Bloomfield Hills, Mich, is Susan Mooy ’64 Cherup is an associateprofessor of David De Visser ’64 of Zeeland, Mich, is a family employedby Ottawa County, Mich, is a judicial clerk manager of manufacturing and PH engineering for education at Hope. She was the 1989 Commencement physician with Holland Family Medicine of Holland, in probate court. Ford Motor Co. speaker on Sunday, May 7. Mich. He is chief of staff elect of Holland Community Charlotte Van Huis ’64 Folkert is an elementary James Korf '64 is a speech and theatre professorfor L. Charles Christensen’64 is an urologistin Hospital. teacher for the Lansing (Mich.) School District. Calvin College of Grand Rapids, Mich. Midland, Mich. He is becominginvolved in decorative NancyTe Winkle ’64 DeVos ofWayne,Pa. isaschool Judith Kollen ’64 Portinga of Marshall, Mich, is a Gailerd Korver ’64 of Pleasanton,Calif, is employed waterfowl carving. social worker with the William Penn School District math paraprofessionalwith Kellogg Community by Hexcel Corporation of Dublin, Calif. Judy Steegstra ’64 Christensenof Midland,Mich, of Yeadon, Pa. College of Battle Creek, Mich. is currentlyworking on an M.B.A. through Central James De Vries ’64 is professor of history with Esther Harpham ’64 Kuiper of Troy, Mich, teaches Linda Walvoord ’64 Girard of Moraga, Calif, is a English and mathematics for the Rochester (Mich.) MichiganUniversity. Monroe (Mich.) County Community College. He is a self-employed author. Her eighth book for children, William R. Church ’64 is a diagnostic radiologist member of several organizations,including the Public Schools. We Adopted You, Benjamin Koo. was published in Feb. , with GrandTraverse RadiologistsPC. inTraverseCity, Monroe County Genealogical Society,the Monroe Robert J. Lanting Jr. ’64 of Greenlawn,N.Y is 1989 by Albert Whitman. She had an article, Mich. County HistoricalSociety and the National Council director of sales adminisuation and training for Pfizer “Archimedesand the King’s Golden Crown,” in the Ann Gardner ’64 Clowe is a special education teacher on Public History. Inc. of New York, N.Y. May, 1989 issue of Cricket magazine. at Bay Trail Middle School in Penfield,N.Y. She William De Young ’64 of Basalt, Colo, is vice Mary Folkert ’64 Laverman of Glendale, Ariz. is a Bruce Goodwin ’64 is pastor of Rea Avenue Reformed directs church choirs in Penfield and Syracuse, N.Y. presidentof Aspen (Colo.) Savings and Loan. Latin teacher for Brophy College Prep, of Phoenix, Church of Hawthorne,Mich. He is involved in several Thom Coney ’64 of Medina, Ohio is a communica- Karen L. Blum ’64 Disegna is an elementary teacher Ariz. church and community activities, committees and tions satellite systems engineer for NASA. with the Holland (Mich.) Public Schools. David Lewis ’64 of Mahopac, N . Y is a senior systems organizations. Judith Hoffman ’64 Cordia of Clymer, N.Y. is Joni Van Der Veen ’64 Dunn is a self-employed sports analyst for IBM in Somers, N.Y. chairman of the division of nursing of Jamestown consultant in Stamford, Conn. She was a member of - Linda Nilsson ’64 Goodwin is a senior technical Robert H. MacKay ’64ofStevensvillc,Mich, ischief (N.Y) Community College. She received a faculty the All-AmericanTriathlon Teams of 1987 and 1988. processor for Louis Bay II Library of Hawthorne,N.J. executive officer of BerrienTeachers Credit Union of award of excellence in 1987. Marcia Vande Vrede ’64 Dunning and husband She is involved in several church and community St. Joseph, Mich. He is involved in several church Leanne Ridderhoff’64 Crabbe of Orland Park, 111. Thurlow have permanently settled in Freeport,Maine organizations. and community organizations. is a reading specialist at V. J. Andrew High School of after having lived in three states and Germany while Alfred Grams ’64 is senior pastor of Calvary Baptist Georgia Hinzmann ’64 Makens is a substitute Church of Dearborn, Mich. teacher for the Forest Hills Public Schools in Grand Claire Osborn ’64 Grozinger of Redondo Beach, Rapids, Mich. Calif, is a research technician with the University of Edward Marsilje ’64 is owner ofThe Title Office of Southern Californiain Los Angeles, Calif. Holland, Mich. Sharon Dykema ’64 Habben of Morrison, III. is Joseph H. Mayne ’64 of Evanston, III. is an associate coordinator/teacherof the elementary talentedand professor in the department of mathematical sciences gifted program of Morrison Unit School District #6. of Loyola University of Chicago (III.).He is the She also owns and operates “Sugar ‘n’ Spice," a tea founder and conductor of the Loyola Chamber room and gift shop that has also grown to a catering Orchestra, a group of Chicago-area professional business since its establishment in 1975. musicians, which has given more than 40 concertsat ’64 of Holland, is Jane Handlogten Hamlin Mich, Loyola and performed more than 1 10 different musical a teacher with the Zeeland (Mich.) Public Schools. compositions since 1977. Ronald L. Hartgerink ’64 has been appointed Douglas Me Cullough ’64 is senior professor of presidentof Wyckhoff Chemical Company, a design at the Universityof Calgary in Alberta,Canada.

13-year-oldmanufacturer of bulk pharmaceutical Janice Schulz ’64 Melichar of Stormville,N . Y. is a '’.o n chemicals based in Kalamazoo, Mich. He and his reading teacher/consultantwith the Carmel (N.Y.) family have settledin South Haven, Mich. CentralSchools. In 1 988 she was a workshoppresenter Gary L. Haverdink ’64 is president of Ottawa Kent at the InternationalReading Associationconvention in r . Insurance Inc. of Jenison, Mich. Toronto, Canada. Arlene Beimers ’64 Haverdink of Jenison,Mich, is William L. Meengs ’64 is chairman of the department is chairperson of the 1990 Hope College Village of cardiology at the Bums Clinic of-Petoskey,Mich. Square. He was listed in the Who's Who in the Midwest in Bruce Hepburn ’64 of Lancaster, Pa. is executive 1987-88. vice presidentand treasurer ofTatco Inc. of Leola, Pa. George J. Meyer ’64 of Flushing,N.Y. is a professor Mary Vollink ’64 Hilbrecht of Kalamazoo,Mich, is of psychologywith Suffolk Co. Community College a substituteteacher with the Galesburg-Augusta and assistant professor at Hofstra University in the Schools. marriage and family therapy program. John W. Hoekstra ’64 of Wheaton. III. is vice Judith Miedema ’64 of South Holland, III. is a junior president-human resources for Culligan International high school language arts teacher at Lansing (III.) of Northbrook, 111. Christian School. Karen DeYoung ’64 Hofman is employedhalf-time Robert H. Miller '64ofEpping,N.H. is director of as an executive secretaryat Augusta (Ga.) College. corporate compensationfor Health Northeast of She is a coordinatorat the Fine Arts program at Augusta Manchester, N.H. College and an organist/pianist at Lakemont Presbyte- David R. Mouw ’64 is a family physician with rian Church in Augusta. Tallulah Health Center in Robbinsville,N.C. Wendell Hofman ’64 is an associateprofessor with Karen Voskuil ’64 Mouw of Robbinsville,N.C. is Medical College of Georgia in Augusta, Ga. pastor of United Methodist Church. Mary K. Nevenzel’64 Huizen works in the office of Diane E. LaBouefT ’64 Murray is director of libraries Huizen’s FurnitureCo. Inc. of Grand Rapids, Mich. at DcPauw University in Grcencastle. Ind. Richard Huyler ’64 of Bridgewater, N.J. is director LucilleAnna Wood ’64 Nagelkirk of Zeeland, Mich, of physical distributionfor The Mennen Company of is a substitute teacherfor the West Ottawa and Zeeland Morristown, N.J. Public Schools and a substituteteller for First Marcia Osterink ’64 Immink of Holland, Mich, is MichiganBank. In June, 1988 she was appointed a first grade teacher with the Hudsonville (Mich.) organizing presidentof a new Western Michigan Public Schools. chapter of the National Society Colonial Dames I7lh RalphE. Jackson Jr. ’64 of Ballwin, Mo. is president Century by the national officers in Washington, D.C. of Cooper Industriesof St. Louis, Mo. Terry Nagelvoort’64 lives in Wyckoff,N.J. and is Hope College Barbara Vander VVerf ’64 Jacob of Marysville, owner and managing directorof Nagelvoort and Co. Mich, is a freelancewriter. She is currentlywriting a of New York, N.Y. salt-free cookbook. Mary Van Harn ’64 Nagelvoort is living in Wyckoff,

Earl S. Johnson Jr. ’64 is senior pastor of First N . J . and bookkeeper for Nagelvoort and Co. of New Village Square PresbyterianChurch of Plattsburgh.N.Y He had two York, N.Y. 1988 publications,both by Cohesbury Press: fames- Thomas L. Nederveld ’64 of Mason, Mich, works Jude and Galatians, Ephesians. for the Michigan Department of NaturalResources as Robert E. Jones ’64 of Pittsfield, Mass, is manager a wildlifehabitat specialist. of human resources in the manufacturing division of Bonnie Dyer ’64 Newton is an attorney in June 23,1989 General ElectricPlastics, which has nine sites in the Seminole. Fla. United States,Canada and Mexico. Stephen Nordstrom ’64 teachesat Clio (Mich. ) High James L. Jurries ’64 and wife Ginger Hiiizenga ’64 School. Jurries live in Holland. Mich, where he is self-em- Chris J. Noteboom ’64 of Overijse, Belgium is ployed in land development.Both currentlyattend managingdirector of Noteboom Partnersin Brussels, Western Theological Seminary in Holland. Belgium. Nancy Schadewald ’64 Kain is a teacher in Bernadine Vojak ’64 Nyboer of Anchorage.Alaska Montville. N.J. She traveledto France in April with is self employed with Interior Design Services. 4 4 a group of high school students as teacher-chaperone Jan Nyboer ’64 of Anchorage. Alaska is a physician n and history resource person. in private practice. He is the 1988 winner of the Chad Mary Klein ’64 Kansfield of Rochester.N.Y and her Ogren Memorial Ultramarathon. family will leave the U.S. on June 30 to begin a Barbara “Bobbie” Freggens ’64 O’Brien of 12-monthstay in England, where husband Norm Alexandria, Va. has been an educationalsecretary/ad-

NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 1989 TWENTY ONE Mich, hr 1988' Her husband; James, ran as the RobertTigelaar'64 is p professoi; in the department marketing and planning for the diesel systems di\ ision min'istraii'-cas-SislaiuTor Uig Fairfax Co. (Va. ) I'ublic Democratic candidate for the Fifth District's Congres- of dermatologywith the University of Texas Medical of Stanadyne Automotive Corp. ofWindsor. Conn. He Schools. Now that her childrenarc teenagersshe plans sional seat she reportsthat the experience was an Center of Dallas.Texas. is responsible for sales to originalequipment — to return to work for Congress. exceptional learning opportunity and allowed her to Herbert K. Tillcma "64 is with the department of manufacturers and for marketing support services, and Daniel L. Ogden '64 of Clifton.N.J. is a member of has been with the company for nearly 10 years. meet many wonderful people. political science with the University of Missouri in the Island Singer,a choral group, and guest soloist. Beth VanKuikcn '67 Buys had an article published Edward C. Conlon ’69of Ringwood.N.J. is a teacher Columbia, Mo. He is past president of the Synod of the Mid-Atlantics in a periodic newsletterof the Malaysian-American of social studies and language arts. He received an Belle Kleinheksel '64 Veltman of Rockwood. Mich, and chairman of the Church Planning and Development Commission on Educational Exchange. The article, honorable mention through the New Jersey Governor's is a self-employed private piano instructor. She Commission P.S.M.A. entitled "Thriving on the Fulbright Experience," Teacher Recognition Award. volunteers as pianistfor the local junior and senior Albert J. Osman '64 is a teacher with the Holland outlinesthe experiences she and her family are having CarolineEshbach '69 Cornish of Milton. Mass, is high school choirs. (Mich.) Public Schools. He taught a class in precal- in Kualit Lumpur. Malaysia. a semi-retiredsecond grade teacherat Dexter School. Vivian Van Blarcom '64 is a first grade teacher in culus at Hope during the 1987-88 academicyear. Joe Kusak ’67 has been selectedas sales manager for James D. Cronk '69 is a teacherat Zeeland ( Mich. ) Summit. N.J. Peter Paulsen '64 of Ridgewood. N.J. is a synod Roundhill Properties,a new real estate company Middle School. Shirley Brown '69 Dayton of Jean A. Van De Polder '64 is an assistant professor executive with the Synod of the Mid-Atlantics of the Granger. Ind. is an elementary teacherin Mishawaka, of psychiatry with the University of ColoradoHealth located in Alamo. Calif. Reformed Church in America. John A. Tanis ’67 will be chairperson of the Ind. '64 and '64 Sciences Center of Denver, Colo. Thomas Peddie Gayle Rypstra Pcddie department of physics at Western Michigan University Peggy Eileen Dean '69 De Boer is a ReformedChurch Helen Rose '64 Vandenberg ofWyckoff, N.J. is live in Grandville,Mich. . where he is a teacherin the beginning Aug. 21. A Western MichiganUniversity in America missionary to the Choi Indiansof Chiapa. directorof staff developmentand trainingin the public school system. faculty member since 1980, he has been the recipient Mexico. Glenn \V. Pietenpol ’64 is vice president and trust department of mental health at St. Mary’s Hospitalof of several grants to support his research.Currently, he Gary Dennison "69 lives in Chatanooga. Tenn. with officer of Chemical Bank and Trust Co. in Midland. Passaic. N.J. and a colleague are studying fundamental interactions his wife. Ruth Dykstra ’69 Dennison,where he is a Richard Vander Borgh '64 is pastor of Old North Mich. in ion-atom collisionsin Western Michigan Univer- senior actuarialassistant with Provident Life and of N.J. Prins '64 is living in Alexandria. Reformed Church Dumont, Audrey Rasmussen sity’s acceleratorlaboratory. Accident Insurance Company. In Nov.. 1988 he Va. and working as an attorney in Washington.D.C. June Davis ’64 Vandcrlaan is a kindergartenteacher Vern Plagenhoef '68ofLivonia. Mich, last yqar was became an associatein the Society of Actuaries. Robert H. Ripley '64 is vice presidentof corporate with Fort Plain (N.Y.) Central School. one of the official scorers for the World Series and Jack Den Uyl '69 is a bank auditorwith Citi/cnsTrust William Van Hovcn Jr. '64 of Swarthmore.Pa. is a environmental and technicalaffairs for Guardsman All-Star games. He has been a sports writer for 20 and Savings of South Haven. Mich. Products Inc. of Rapids, product manager for E.I. Du Pont de Nemours of Grand Mich. years, and is secretary-treasurerofthe BaseballWriters Edward Dobbin '69 of Halifax, Pa. directsschool Ralph Robrahn '64 of Darien. 111. is minister of Wilmington.Del. Association of America. marchingand concert bands of students in seventh visitation and family life with Christ Church of Oak FrederickVan Tatcnhove "64 runs his own business David G. Abel '69 of Waukegan. III. is currently through 'l2lh grade. Last season, the marchingband in marketing, market and consumerresearch consulting Brook (III.). enrolled as a doctoral candidate at the University ot - he directswon many first places at competitions and Myra J. Rozeboom '64 is an elementary teacher with in Duxbury, Mass. Wisconsin-Milwaukee.His doctoral research will placed ninth in Group II in the Tournament of Bands Nott '64 is a seventh grade the Jenison (Mich.) Public Schools. Linda Van Zant language investigatethe impact of environmental toxicantson AtlanticCoast Championships. arts teacher for Canton (III.) School District #66. Gayle Ruisard '64 is a second grade teacherwith the Janet Sebens'69 DutcherofCoupeville.Wash, is a Keith Van Zoeren '64 of Wyoming, Mich, is vice the developmentand survival of amphibians. He is Zeeland (Mich.) Public Schools. currentlyemployed as a project assistantfor a middle school counselor. Judy Cameron '64 Ruselinkof Angola. Ind. is a president and associateadministrator of Pine Rest NASA-funded project investigatingmethods to Mary Alice Marosy '69 Egy ofTroy. N . Y. is a research media specialist with the Prairie Heights School Corp. Christian Hospital in Grand Rapids, Mich. characterizeand monitor micro-organismal fauna biologistwith SterlingDrug Inc. of Rensselaer. N.Y. Richard Ruselink '64 is an associateprofessor of Charles Veurink '64 is an orthopedic surgeon in within a manned space station. Michael Elzerman '69ofWestBloomfield. Mich, is mathematics and computer science with Tri-State Richmond. Ky. Dennis C. Alexander'69 is chief pilot for Kanairlnc. vice presidentof McKinley Associates Inc. of Ann University of Angola. Ind. He received a grant from JacquelineK. Joseph '64 Vines’ is an instructorof of Cape Coral. Fla. Arbor. Mich. the Lily Foundation Inc. to develop during the summer communicationand management with Davenport Jane Ann Ardapple '69 is an art instructorlor Judith Rae Workman "69 Estell is a missionary a course in using the computer to solve differential College of Business in Grand Rapids. Mich. kindergartenthrough sixth grade students lor Morrison teacherand housewife !i\ ing in Huai ien. Taiwan. ROC. equations. Barbara Heneveld '64 Visscher of Charlotte.Mich, (III.) Community Unit District #6. Marcia Mizevitz ’69 Evans of Dolton. III. is chairman Harriet DeVos ’64 Rust of Berwyn. III. is assistant teaches fourth grade in the Olivet (Mich.) Public Karon Armstrong ’69 of Minneapolis. Minn, is a of convention production for her fraternal organization. to the senior vice presidentof American Learning Schools. toxicologistfor.JM (Minnesota Mining and Manufac- Eastern Star. Carol Hockzema '64 Visser of Burbank.Calif, is a Corporation of Chicago. 111. turing) iit St. Paul. Minn. She is currentlyworking on Paula Raab '69 Farquharson of Schenectady. N.Y. clinical psychologist in Pasadena, Calif. Diane Samec ’64 of Schaumburg.Ill . is a fourth grade her master’sdegree in internationalmanagement at St. is an unemployment insurancereviewing examiner for teacher at Parkwood School of the Elgin (III.) Public John Voss ’64 is coordinatorof emergencypsychiatric Tltomas College in St. Paul. She recentlyparticipated the New York State Departmentof Labor. Schools. sendees for Kitchcner-Waterloo (Canada)Hospital. in "Japan Experience '89." a study of Japanese Nicole Gerow '69 Finney is a teacher for Children's Patricia Sayler ’64 of Bayside, N.Y. is a self-em- Paul Wackerbarth '64 of Silver Spring, Md. is a management and culture at the University of Osaka. Workshop of Grand Rapids. Mich. ployed riding instructor, contractofficer for USI A and foreign service officerwith the U.S. Departmentof Japan. Bonny Miller ’69 Forbes of Boulder. Colo, is a insurance representative. State in Washington. D.C. He served as an elder with George Arwady ’69 is publisher of the Kalamazoo self-employed artist who also works for her husband Northwood PresbyterianChurch in Silver Spring from Linda Selander ’64 Schaap of Barrington . Ill . works (Mich.) Gazette. Bill, a psychologist, part-time. as a substituteteacher. 1985-88. Mary Lynn Koop ’69Arwady of Kalamazoo.Mich, Bruce Formsma ’69 of Holland. Mich, leaches Cynthia Hill ’64 Wackerbarth of Silver Spring, Martin A. Scholtens ’64 of Hingham, Mass, is Md. is involved with several community and church music, art. geography and mathematics for the Zeeland president of Star Market Co. of Cambridge.Mass. is in the process of becomingrecertified in elementary activities, including Project Literacy.Project Charlie (Mich.) Christian Schools. education. She recentlycompleted six weeks of Janet Blom '64 Shoup is owner of Magic Tree Dianne Hagle '69 Formsma of Blue Mountain. Miss, intensivePolish training in preparationfor a three-year and Girl Scouts. Bookstore, a children’s bookstore in Oak Park. III. She Emilie Emi Azeka '69 of Kihei Maui. Hawaii is the is a self-employed piano teacher. is currentlyan elder. Christian education chairperson tour in Warsaw. self-employed proprietorof a hand-painted clothing Susan Bosman ’69 Formsma of Holland. Mich, is and Sunday school superintendent of Fair Oaks Arlene F. Arends ’64 Walters is program director and business,"Emi Lanakila of Maui." She has published an elementary'string teacher with the Grand Haven PresbyterianChurch. youth associate for the Synods of New York and several non-fictionstories in Maui Inc. magazine. (Mich.) Public Schools. Michael Shrier ’64 of Montgomery. Ala. is an Mid-Atlantics of the Reformed Church in America Cynthia Bache ’69 of Dearborn.Mich, is a teacher Elaine Franco ’69 is an associate professor with the (RCA) in Warwick,N.Y. She authored the 13th chapter education specialist with the U.S. Air Force. UniversityLibraries oflhc Universityof Ncbraska-Lin- of Team Ministry,a book published by the Christian with the Gibraltar(Mich.) School District. Lois Breederland’64 Skibins is a substitute teacher coln. Reformed Church (CRC) with both RCA and CRC Lance Banninga ’69 is presidentand chief executive with the Warren (Mich.) Consolidated Schools. Ray Fylstra ’69 of Hinsdale. III. has relocatedhis law people in staff ministry as contributingauthors. officerof The Mitchell Corporation, an insurance James Slee ’64 is a chemist with Amoco Chemical practiceto the firm of Joyce and Kubasiukin Douglas Walvoord ’64 is one of three physicians brokeraae firm in South Holland. III. Co. of Naperville. III. Nancy Mitchell '69 Banninga is a substitute teacher Chicago.III. Ruth Ann Wozney ’64 Sneed of Cantonment,Fla. is staffinga urology clinic at South Haven (Mich.) for kindergarten through eighth grade at Calvin A. Gary Gauger ’69 of Northville.Mich, is vice Hospital. a guidance counselor at A . K . Suter Elementary School . Community Christian School in South Holland. III. presidentand general sales manager for Walbridgc. Darrel W. Staat ’64 of Hartsville,S.C. is vice Maryanne Beukelman’64 Ward is librarymanager Phyllis J. Beck '69 is an inventory management Aldinger of Livonia, Mich. president for developmentand administrationfor of Paccar Technical Center of Mt. Vernon, Wash. superintendent for the U.S. Air Force at Offutt Air George B. Goehner "69of Emerson.N.J. is manager Florence (S.C.) Darlington Technical College^ Wesley Wasdyke '64 of Manchester. N.H. is an Force Base in Nebraska. She has received a Meritorious of marketing services with Degussa Corp. of anesthesiologistand president of Associated Anes- Louise Garter ’64 Staple ofGrand Rapids. Mich, is Ridgefield Park. N.J. thesiologists of Manchester. He is also assisting priest Service Medal. a substituteteacher for the Kent Intermediate School PatriciaIrwin ’69 Bennett is a self-employed piano Philip Gorier '69 is an employment assistantw ith District. at Grace' Episcopal Church of Manchester. teacher in Sandy Hook. Conn. Meijer Inc. in Grand Rapids, Mich. He was named David J. Stegink ’64 of Muskegon. Mich, is Richard Welsh '64 is a professor in the department Charles H. Bibart ’69 is vice presidentof control 1986 Rehabilitantof the Year by the Michigan assistancepayments supenisorfor the Muskegon of psychiatrywith the Universityof Kentucky Medical developmentfor The Upjohn Co. ol Kalamazoo.Mich. Commission for the Blind. County Departmentof Social Services. He was Center in Kentucky. Neil Blahut ’69 of Chesterfield.Mo. is manager of Judith Deenik '69 Gouwens is an instructional selectedby the Lumbertown Music Festival to give a Barry L. Werkman "64 of Holland, Mich, is business product developmentfor InternationalInc. ol St. specialist with the Hoover (Ala.) City Schools. She manager and controllerat Hope. He is on the board MTS half-hourvocal concert (baritonesolo) at Hackley Park was a presenterat the AmericanAssociation of School of directorsof Holland Hospital, Louis, Mo. in June. 1988. Community Hawaii Marilyn Robson ’69 Blahut of Chesterfield.Mo. is Administrators'convention in Orlando. Fla. in March, Vernon Sterk ’64, a missionary,is currentlyliving in DistributionCenter and LakeshorcH.M.O. an education administratorfor Real Estate Board Metro and was a presenterat a conference on Outcome-Based Zeeland. Mich. Judith L. Beukenia '64 West is employed part-time St. Louis. programs in Victoria. Texas in November.She is also Penny J. Stoner ’64 ofTroy. Mich, is a chemistry in customer service and as a teller trainer with Metcalf Donna McKenzie '69 Bleau teaches in the Littleton in the 1988-89 edition of Who's Who Among Young teacher at E.W. Seaholm high school. State Bank in OverlandPark. Kan. (Colo.) Public Schools. American Professionals. Mark A. Suwyn '64 is group vice president for Frederick Wezeman '64 of Palos Heights. III. is Dennis L. Bobeldyk '69 is a manufacturing engineer Eric Grabo '69 of Ormond Beach. Fla. received a imaging systems and medical products for E.I. Du professor and chairmanof the department of biology for Haworth Inc. of Holland. Mich. citationof appreciation front the American Legion. Pont de Nemours ofWilmington.Del. He receivedan at Loyola University of Chicago (III ). Arthur J. Bolt '69 of Spring Lake. Mich, is business Bonnie Jean Gray '69 is a professor of philosophy "Outstanding Alumnus - 1988" award from the James Wiegerink ’64 is a dermatologist in Los manager of the Hudsonville (Mich.) Public Schools. and director of the honors program at Eastern Kentucky nationalJunior Achievementorganization. Angeles, Calif. Lawrence B. Bone ’69 of Orchard Park. N.Y. is an University in Richmond. Ky. PatriciaRuud ’64 Suwyn teaches fifth grade for the Ruth Van Witzenburg ’64 is a teacher in Buffalo assistant professor of orthopaedic surgery for SUNY Jeff Green '69 is a self-employed physical therapist Avon Grove School Districtin West Grove, Pa. She Grove, III. Buffalo. in Zeeland, Mich. was cited for outstanding teaching in the 1988-89 Thomas P. Wombwell ’64 is a self-employed financial Russell R. Bonnema '69 is president of The Rushn Dale H. Grit '69 is an associateprofessor in the ' Who's Who in Education. consultant in Winchendon. Mass. He begins law Corporation Inc. ofOrland Park. III. His wile. Linda, computerscience department of ColoradoSlate John Swart ’64 is superintendent of employee school at Valparaiso University this fall. is the firm's seerctary/treasurcr. University in Fort Collins. Colo. relations of E.I. Du Pont de Nemours of Clinton.Iowa. Dale Wyngardcn ’64 is a planner and engineering Donna Lynn Grasman '69 Brown of Grand Rapids. Lou Voskuil '69 Grit offiirt Collins.Colo, isa junior Nelson J. Tecroney ’64 owns a dairy farm in coordinator for the city of Holland, Mich. Mich, is an elementary master teacher in the high school reading teacher. Clymer, N.Y. David A. Zwart ’64 is an administratorand teacher Coopcrsville area public schools.She is the past owner Michael Gulish ’69 of Springfield.Mass, is national PatriciaFrancis ’64 Tell and husband James R. Tell at Rose Park ChristianSchool in Holland, Mich. Hope of Donna's Preschool Inc., which was later adopted directorof visual advertisingfor Casual Comer in ’65 have been living in France for the past three years, has appointed him an associateprofessor of education by the Coopcrsvilleschools as a public school program. Enfield.Conn. Casual Corner has 810 stories coast to where Jim is employed with IBM Europe. They arc and its new Kellogg science coordinator — duties he David Brueggemann’69 is a registerednurse with coast, includingHawaii, which has given him a great enjoying travelingand becoming part of the French will assume on a full-timebasis in July. Lutheran Medical Center in Omaha. Neb. opportunity to travel. culture. They are both activelyinvolved in Emmanuel David A. Dalman ’65 of Midland, Mich, received a Richard Bruggers ’69 of Lakewood. Colo, is chief James B. Gunther '69 ol Arlington Heights. 111. isa Baptist Church, a mission church for the English special recognitionaward from the Dow Chemical of the section of InternationResearch Programsfor senior systems manager with AllstateInsurance ol speaking. Company Central Research Laboratoriesin recognition the Denver Wildlife Research Center of the USDA's Northbrook. 111. GlenA.Terbeek ’64ofWinnetka,III. is a partner and of his contributionsto the developmentof their Animal Plant Health Inspection Service. Julie Heger ’69 of Oak Park. III. is a third grade directorof consumer products industrieswith Tribiology program (high performancelubricants) Susan Emerick ’69 Bruggink is a perceptionteacher teacher at Newberry School in Chicago.III. AndersenConsulting, Arthur Andersen & Co. of during the last four years. He has been a research Linda Kozel ’69 Hegstrand of Madison,Wis. is a manager in Central Research since 1984. Recently he for the Eastern (Pa.) area school district. Chicago,III. Thomas Bruggink '69 is an associateprofessor with residentin pathology at the University of Wisconsin DonaldThompson’64ofClay, N.Y. is a ninth grade was named commercialdevelopment manager for LafayetteCollege in Eastern.Pa. He receiveda 1989 Hospital and Clinics. global studies teacher for the East Syracuse-Minoa Dow's ordered polymers program in the Dow U.S. A. faculty development grant from the Sloan Foundation. Harvey Heneveld '69 is pastorof Christ Community (N.Y.) Schools. He and his wife, Carol Roberts ’66 Plastics Group. Edith Byers ’69 of Phoenix. Ariz. is a case manager Church, a Reformed Church in America church in Thompson were short-term missionaries to Chiapas, Harvard J. Van Belois ’65 is a captain with the U.S. for Child ProtectiveServices. Since 1971 she has been Canton. Mich. Mexico last summer, and he was an adult advisor for Navy and assigned to serve with a naval hospital in it volunteer for (he Institute of Cultural Affairs. Leslie Nicnhuis '69 Herbig is an English teacher at the ProjectTimothy group that went to Chiapas in the Puerto Rico. P. Ann Slaughter '69Catchicklives in Grand Rapids. Hamilton(Mich.) High School. summer of 1987. William W. Fuge ’66 has become directorof

t'iWiS FRQM HOJRE COLLEGE, JUNE 4989 TWENTY TVKO, t Hc-rbig ’69 is a social sludicsteacher at Richard Springfield , Ohio. She also teachescello and performs ascents in will be published in the 1989 Hamilton(Mich.) High School. chamber music. Christine Tempas '69 is self-employed in the field of AmericanAlpine Journal. Roger Herrick Jr. '69 of East Hampton.Conn, is the Bonnie Brandsma ’69 Mannes of Wyoming. Mich, dentistryin Sheboygan Falls, Wis. James Penning ’69 is directorof state and federal manager of the agency marketing group and training teachesEnglish to grades nine through 12 at Hudson- Martha Terpstra ’69 of Kalamazoo,Mich, is a social programsfor the Cleveland (Ohio) City School for TravelersCorp. of Hartford. Conn. ville (Mich.) High School. worker for the MichiganDepartment of Social District. Services. Sandra Heyer '69 of Indiana. Pa. is an instructorat James C. Marcus ’69 is general financemanager for Marilyn Oetjen ’69 Philipp of Long Beach, Calif, the AmericanLanguage Institute at Indiana University Trendway Corp. of Holland, Mich. Barbara Timmer ’69 in March began as the general is business manager for Atkinson, Andelson, Loya, of Pennsylvania.She has authored three ESL (English Candace Rae Marr ’69 is an equal employment counsel for the House Banking Committee in Ruud and Romo, a professionallaw corporation in as a Second Language) textbooks:Picture Stories for specialist with the U.S. Railroad Retirement Board in Washington. D.C. She just finished three years in the Cerritos, Calif. She and husband Edward are about to De.viiiiiinnCowwimu alioii. True Stories in the News Chicago, III. She was the 1988 chairperson of the General Counsel’s office of the Federal Home Loan purchase a bicycle shop. and More Trite Stories in the News. Federal Women's Program Subcommitteeof the Bank Board. She received a Special Performance James C. Piers '69 of Holland, Mich, is a professor Alice Grant '69 Hill of Saul! Ste Marie. Ontario. Chicago Federal Executive Board. Award from the Bank Board this past December. of sociology and social work at Hope. Canada is a service representativefor Bell Canada^ Dale D. Matthews ’69 of Germantown.Wis. is pastor Donald TTuman ’69 of Melrose, Mass, is associate Zaide Pixley ’69 of Kalamazoo. Mich, is an adjunct Douglas Honholt '69 of Ada. Mich, is executive vice of New Life Community Church, a Reformedchurch counsel for Keystone Provident Life InsuranceCo. of assistant professor at Kalamazoo College. presidentof Universal I-orest Products of Grand in Milwaukee.Wis. Boston, Mass. Chris Plasman ’69 is presidentof Hickory Business Rapids. Mich. George Me Geehan ’69 is a teacher in the Holland Mary K. Van Reken ’69 operates a privatepractice Furniture in Hickory, N.C. Ronald J. Hook '69 of Huntington Woods. Mich, is (Mich.) Public Schools. in clinical psychologyin Chattanooga, Tenn. Julie Morgan ’69 Pounders of Pell City, Ala. is a psychotherapistwith Dr. R. Bar-Lcvav & Assoc. Charles McMullin Jr. ’69 of Simsbury. Conn, is Jack Van Wieren ’69 of Ridgecrest,Calif, is a coordinator of physical therapy services for the PC. in Detroit.Mich. second vice presidentand real estate portfolio manager mathematician with the Naval Weapons Center at Alabama Institute for the Deaf and Blind in Cheryl llcrens '69 Hulst is a third grade teacher at for The Phoenix of Hartford, Conn. China Lake, Calif. Talladega, Ala. Holland (Mich.) Heights Elementary School. She is Marilyn Yzenbaard ’69 Meeusen is an eighth grade Lee Vande Wall '69 of Hingham, Mass, is northeast Arlene Stehlik ’69 Richardsonis office manager of working towards her master's degree in elementary English teacherwith the Grand Haven (Mich.) Public regional manager of Multivac Inc. Toefco Engineering Inc. of Niles, Mich. She is also education at Western MichiganUniversity. Schools. Richard Vanden Berg ’69 and Mary Browning ’69 a teacher in adult education for the Edwardsburg Alan Jones '69 of Burr Ridge. III. is a high school Lawrence Metzger ’69 of Stratford.Conn, is senior Vanden Berg live in Grand Rapids, Mich . . where he School System. principalin School District 94 in West Chicago.III. vice presidentof Mechanics and Farmers Savings Bank is regional manager of Progressive Insurance. Lenora De Boer ’69 Ridder of Holland. Mich, is Al’s school was recognized by MadelineWill, of Bridgeport, Conn. Lynn Wyman ’69 Vandcrbeek of SterlingHeights, self-employed through Possibilities Church Consult- undersecretaryof the U.S. Departmentof Education. Sally MacBarron ’69 Metzger teaches fifthand sixth Mich, is a handicap awareness presenterfor the Faster ing, which she runs with her husband, Herman J. John C. Kallemyn ’69 is vice presidentof American grade English at Chapel Elementary School in Seal Society of Macomb Co. and self-employed as a Ridder ’49. She was one of two delegates chosen Federal Savings and Loan in Des Moines. Iowa. Stratford.Conn. tutor. She is also involved with several community from the Reformed Church in America to attend the Harold J. Kamin ’69 is a physician/internistin New Richard J. Mezeske ’69 of Holland, Mich, is a organizations.In July she will move with her family last meeting of the World Council of Churchesin Milford. Conn. He is presentlyon the board of teacher at the Michigan Dunes Correctional Facility to Utica, Mich. Vancouver, BritishColumbia. managersof New Milford Hospital. and is a part-time instructorin the education depart- Ruth Vander Burgh ’69 is a music instructorfor Merylee Riether ’69 ofWyckoff,N.J. is a sixth grade Marla Vander Kooi '69 Keuning of Holland. Mich, ment of Hope. kindergarten through fifth grade students with Gold teacher in Dumont, N.J. is a substituteteacher for the West Ottawa Public Beppy Albers ’69 Michel of Covina, Calif, is Beach (Ore.) School District 3C. Rohn J. Ritzcma ’69 and Jane Breckenridge’69 Schools. currentlyenrolled in the master's of art therapy Coert VanderHill’69 of Holland, Mich, is an agent Ritzema live in Santa Rosa, Calif. He is head PatriciaNevenhovcn '69 Kirkpatrick is a first grade program at CaliforniaState Universityin Los Angeles. with State Farm Insurance. He is a member of the administratorof Santa Rosa Christian School. Rohn teacher at North Landing Elementary School of She had an article, "Art Therapy in Substance Abuse State Farm Hall of Fame and State Farm Century Club, was recentlyelected the Northern Californiadistrict VirginiaBeach. Va. She is co-chairpersonof Christian Programs,” published in the Jan./Feb., 1988 issue of and is a State Farm travelingmillionaire. representativeto the Associationof ChristianSchools Education and a member of the consistoryof Christian Professional CounselorMagazine. - Christy Zuverink ’69 VanderHill ofHoIIand, Mich, International(ACSI). Church Uniting. Laura Hammon ’69 Mol of Silver Spring, Md. is a is involved in the local PTC, League ofWomen Voters Thomas A. Roberts ’69 of Cutler, Ind. is a psychiatric William K. Klebe '69 of Shippensburg. Pa. is a writer in the Division of Child Protection at the and Hope Theatre Guild. nurse specialist with Wabash Valley Hospital in West manager with Wendy's Internationalin Carlisle.Pa. Children'sHospital National Medical Center in Stephen Vander Weele ’69 of Canton, Mich, is a Lafayette,Ind. Judy Muuro ’69 Klebe of Shippensburg, Pa. is a Washington,D.C. technicalworkleader with Detroit Edison Company. James E. Robertson Jr. ’69 is administratorof kindergarten teacher with Corpus ChristiSchool of Sharon Wilterdink’69 Moses of Arlington, Va. is George Visscher ’69 of Clifton,N.J. is an associate Greater Community Hospitalof Creston, Iowa. He is Chambersburg,Pa. She is currentlyhelping to write vice president for capitalmarkets for AT&T Credit fellow of the senior scientific staff of Sandoz of East president-electof the Creston Rotary Club and Iowa and implement a language/processwriting program in Corporation in Washington.D.C. Hanover, N.J. Hospital Association District D. her full-daykindergarten. The school will be using Jean Vander Laan ’69 Mulder is presidentof Molly J. Helm ’69 Wakelee is assistant to the office David W. Ross ’69 is a teacherwith the Grand Haven literature and process writing to teach reading Evergreen Abstracting Co. Inc. of Queensbury,N.Y. manager of Lind-Hart Mini-Ship of Hamburg. N.Y. (Mich.) Public Schools. readinessskills and beginning reading. Kathleen Anne Wilson ’69 Mulder is employedwith She is 1988-89 treasurerof the Hamburg and John Rowe ’69 of Oak Park, 111. is an unit leader in Robert P. Klein ’69 of Hawthorne,N.J. is an the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Kansas City, SouthtownsArea-Church World Service CROP Walk. in-patientpsychiatry at Rush Presbyterian St. Lukes operations supervisor with the Social Security Mo. as an ecologistwith responsibilitiesas project She is also active in her church, serving as vice Medical Center in Chicago, 111 . He is currentlynational president of women’s fellowship,Sunday school Administration of ihc Departmentof Health and manager for the permit section and district wetland treasurer for Advocates for Child PsychiatricNursing. teacher and lay reader. Human Services. coordinator.In 1988 she received an EEO on the Spot In 1988, he had an article, "Attachment Theory and James Knott ’69 ofLake Ariel, Pa. is a self-employed Award for work on the federal women’s program Peter C. Walther ’69 is directorof music for First broker. The Pennsylvania State Police presented him the Milieu Treatment of Children,” published in the PresbyterianChurch of Gloversville,N.Y. committee and a Corps of Engineers Suggestion Award Journal of Child and Adolescent PsychiatricNursing. with a "Meritorious Citizenship Award." for work on a computer wetland program. Mary Richards ’69 Watson of Chappaqua,N.Y. as Another article, "Nursing Assessmentof Children of is a member of the York Choral Society appeared JanVoogd ’69KooikerofJenison, Mich, director David Erik Nealssohn’69 of Flint, Mich, was invited New Alcoholics,” will be in the Journal of Pediatric of music at Zion Reformed Church of Grandville, to sing before Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II in with Peter, Paul and Mary on a nationally-televised Nursing. Mich. holiday special as well as in two live performances in England on June 26, 1987 representingthe American Douglas Rozendal ’69 is assistant controllerof Carnegie Hall in 1988. Pamela L. Fulton ’69 Me Laughlin of Hudson, N.H. churches at the 60th anniversary celbration. Dec., is a on deliverer. is involved with Soundcastle Recording Studio of Los Angeles, Calif. Roger A. Weiden ’69 of Fremont, Mich, is a child Meals Wheels She Shirley Nevins ’69 of Grand Rapids, Mich, is a fifth Lloyd Schout ’69 is director of rehabilitation services support investigatorfor the State of Michigan. a number of church and community activities. grade teacherand junior varsity girls basketballcoach for Holland (Mich.) Community Hospital. Diana Williams ’69 Weiss of Kintnersville,Pa. is a Lucy Wang ’69 Lee is a senior researchassistant with with the Kenowa Hills Public Schools. St. Louis (Mo.) University Medical School. Kenneth Schroeder’69 is a consultantwith the Mayo music teacher at Holland ElementarySchool of the John Nonhof ’69 is director and secretary/treasurerof Clinic of Rochester, Minn. Council Rock School District. She has been involved John Leenhouts '69 is a physician living in Grand J&J Industriesand presidentof Aalten's Products of Suzette Luckhardt ’69 Schwab of Onstead, Mich, Haven, Mich. Holland, Mich. in several solo recitals in the past five years and within is an elementary art teacherwith (Mich:) Jack Ligtenberg '69 of Niles, Mich, is a professional theTecumseh the past six years has participatedin three dual-soprano Emily J. Gibson ’69 Ow of East Lansing, Mich, is Schools. solo/duct recitals. medical service representativefor 3M Riker. a part-time instructorwith Lansing Community Ruth King ’69 Seiger is a first grade teacher at Mary Kooiman ’69 Ligtenberg is a substitute teacher College. Colleen VerHage ’69 Werley is a medical technologist BellevilleSchool in Newburyport,Mass. with Hackley Hospital Laboratory of Muskegon, for the Niles (Mich.) Community Schools. She has Cara Lee Hendrickson ’69 Paplawsky of Grand Jeffrey Seise ’69 of Waldwick, N.J. is a teacher for Mich. This past year she has activelybeen helping coordinated and is currentlyteaching children's Rapids, Mich, is a secretaryand substituteteacher. worship. the Park Ridge, N.J. schools.He received a Governor’s raise the funds needed to send her daughter’s Peter A. Paplawsky ’69 is self-employed in general Award for Teaching Excellence in 1988. 14-member high school choir to New York. N.Y., James Lotterman ’69 of Big Bay, Mich, is a dentistryin Grand Rapids, Mich. James A. Shalek Jr. ’69 of Winfield, 111. is a senior surveyor-foreman. where it has been invited to perform at Camegie Hall . Kathleen Mulder ’69 Parker of Arlington, Va. is a agent forThe PrincipalFinancial Group ofWestmont, Mary Whitney ’69 of East Lansing, Mich, is a Donald Luidens ’69ofHol!and, Mich, isan associate 1988-89 fellow in women and public policy with the 111. He is a life and qualifyingmember of the Million systems engineer with ElectronicData Systems of professorand chairperson of the department of Women’s Research and Education Institute in Dollar Round Table and 1 988 Associate of the Year of Lansing, Mich. sociology at Hope. Washington,D.C. the Hinsdale Agency of the PrincipalFinancial Group. Peggy ’69 Luidens of Holland, Mich, is Mary Ann Hooyer ’69 Wierks of Selkirk, N.J. is McNamara David W. Paterik ’69ofOrlandPark, III. is a senior He is currentlya board member of Midwest Center, pastor of Delmar (N. J. ) Reformed Church and is vice a self-employed educational consultant. systems consultantwith AmericanComputer Systems. which provides placement for foster children. presidentof the Albany Synod. Barbara Mackey ’69 of Urbana, Ohio is directorof David E. Pavlick ’69 of New York, N.Y. is a James B. Slager ’69 is directorof the student Mary Girton ’69 Willcocks is a real estate sales community programsat Wittenberg University of psychotherapistin private practice.His first two counseling service of in Oxford, associatewith Realty One of Strongsville,Ohio. She Ohio. is also employed by the StrongsvillePublic Schools Susan A. Jones ’69 Smith of Georgetown,Mass, is as a substituteteacher. the owner/proprietorof ProfessionalWord Processing Barbara Andrews ’69 Williamsof Dinole, Calif, is Service. clinical coordinator of education and a physical Jon Smoker ’69ofElkhart, Ind. is a caseworker for therapist with French Hospitalof San Francisco,Calif. theStateof Indiana.Asemi-profcssional weightlifter, PatriciaHolcombe ’69 Willis of Charlotte,N.C. is a Alumni Arts Competition this January he set a national powerliftingrecord for partner/consultantwith Alfred/Funderburk Personnel. Masters (age 40 and older) of a 545 squat 170 pounds Thomas Working ’69 of Holland, Mich, is a teacher body weight. with the Byron Center (Mich. ) Public Schools. He is Carolyn Gaugler ’69 Spadafora of New Haven, currentlya part-time member of the music facultyat Conn, does free-lanceeditorial work for Greenwood Hope. Alumni Invitational Art Show Press of Westport, Conn. Rosalie Hudnut ’69 Wright of Grosse Pointe Farms, Dorothy A. Spencer ’69 is directorof the Ingeborg Mich, is a 1988-89 volunteer facilitator for the S. Kauffman Library and associateprofessor at Systematic Trainingfor EffectiveParenting (S.T.E.P.) CaliforniaSchool of ProfessionalPsychology in program. Fresno, Calif. Alumni Opus Carol Gauntlet! ’69 ZajacofYpsilanti, Mich, is an David Stoepker ’69 of Portage, Mich, is a assistant professor in the departments of obstetrics/ psychologist with Pine Rest Christian Counseling gynecology and anatomy/cell biology ofWaync State Center in Kalamazoo, Mich. University in Detroit,Mich. She is a co-principal Stephen Struck ’69 of Cheshire, Conn, is manager investigatoron two components of the Fetal Alcohol Entiy deadline: July 13, 1989 of marketing and product engineering for Olin Research Center funded by N.I.H. from 1987-92. Corporation of Waterbury, Conn. Sally Cook ’69 ZuithofT is a teacher'saide in Sherry Medendorp ’69 Styf is employed part-time kindergarten and first grade in Wallace School in as a teacher for fourth and fifth grade gifted and Sterling,III. For rules and entiy forms, contact the talentedstudents and part-time as an elementary Mary Ellen Rynbrandt '69 Zwart is a part-time substituteteacher by the Hastings (Mich.) Area Office of Public Relations, Hope College, elementary school librarian for the Kalamazoo(Mich. ) Schools. public schools. Holland, Michigan 49423 Glenn Sypcrda ’69 is a physician in Tampa, Fla. Susan Holmes '69 Tell and husband William Tell ’70 70s are living in Roseville,Calif. In 1988 they published a Bible memory program. Well-VersedKids, designed Robert Bates ’70 is one of three physicians staffing for elementary-aged children. a urology clinic at South Haven (Mich.) Community

NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 1989 TWENTY THREE InternationalConference of Hewlett-Packard Hospital. programmer for Wilson Hill Associates of Battle job coordinator with the Kent Intermediate School Com- puter Users in September. Ken Bradseil ’70, the ReformedChurch in America s Creek, Mich. District. Kenneth W. ’74 of Jenison, Mich, is a ministerof education and faith development,was Gail Ringsmith ’74 Buis is proprietorof Computing Rick Hakken ’74 of Grand Rapids, Mich, is assistant Meeuwsen research assistant with the Hope College biology named “Educator of the Year" by CERCA (Christian Possibilities of Portage, Mich. golf course superintendentof the Grand Haven (Mich.) Educators of the Reformed Church in America). Joan Kacewich ’74 Burke is employed by the U.S. Golf Club. department. Ken Nienhuis ’70 of Houston, Texas has assumed new Air Force as a media relations specialist. The public Norman C. Hamm ’74 is pastor of the Reformed H. Tim Merkle ’74 of Gahanna, Ohio is senior responsibilities as directorof market operations for affairs office in which she works won the 1988 U.S. Church of Germantown, N.Y. assistant prosecutingattorney on the criminaltrial staff of the Franklin County Prosecuting Attorney in MidCon Marketing Corp. Air Forces in Europe Directorof Public Affairs Award Mary Brouwer ’74 Harkema is a teacher’s assistant Linda Provo '71 Fulton is employed by Exxon Co. for settingup and running the first Soviet Site and reading teacher for the Holland (Mich.) Christian Columbus, Ohio. Janet Boger ’74 Mignano of Bloomfield Hills, Mich, as an exploitationgeologist in Midland, Texas. In InspectionTeam visit to RAF Greenham Common in Schools. is a support supervisorII in the store support area with April, 1988 she lecturedto Hope geology classes on July, 1988. The team inspected items/assetsin Kenneth R. Fell ’74 is associateminister of Woodside what a petroleum geologist does. She has developed compliancewith the terms of the intermediate-range United Methodist Church of Silver Spring, Md. Kmart Headquarters in Troy, Mich. E. Milkovits ’74 of Alexandria,Va. is a a second career as a church organist. Nuclear Forces Treaty. Sarah Anne Hickok’74ofPrairicVillage, Kan. isa Joan systems analyst for the federal government. Since 1982 she has Susan Klaner ’71 Madden of Ml. Clemens. Mich, Chadwick C. Busk ’74 is corporatecounsel for Meijer self-employed marketing consultant. was chosen by her school district as Outstanding Inc. in Grand Rapids, Mich. John H. Hoftiezer ’74 of Monroe, N.Y. is a design volunteered as elephant management program Teacherof the Year. She teaches physicalscience and Linda Dick ’74 Busta of Granville,Ohio is choir physicistfor LeCroy Corp. of Chestnut Ridge, N.Y. interpreter for Friends of the National Zoo. Carol Weurding ’74 Moerman lives in British AIDS education at ChippewaValley High School . She director of First PresbyterianChurch of Ncward, Ohio. Yvonne DeMaar ’74 Holtz of Macatawa,Mich, is a will represent the high school level in the ahnual Susan Voorhees ’74 Buys teaches mathematicsand physical education teacher with the Jenison Public Columbia,Canada. She is involved with marriage WDIV/Newsweek program to honor exemplary science at St. Joseph School in Stuart,Fla. Schools. enrichment and parenting programs, and is Home- educators in the Detroit Metropolitan area. Sylvia Ceycr ’74 of Cambridge,Mass, is a professor Rebecca Eisenbise ’74 Hostetler is a first grade schooling her children. Paul Strong ’71 is now Midwest directorof sales at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. teacher with the Fleetwood(Pa.) Area Schools. Charmaine Mrazek ’74 of Columbia,Md. is senior merchandising for CPC InternationalBest Foods H. David Claus ’74 of Coloma, Mich, is vice Margaret “Peggy” Thoman ’74 Huber is office physicist in the applied physics lab of Johns Hopkins Division in Naperville, III. presidentof administrationof Mercy-Memorial manager and assistant corporate secretaryfor University of Laurel, Md. Carol Hector ’73 Braaksma is living in Beijing, Medical Center of St. Joseph, Mich. Ingersoll-Rand Financial Services of Reno, Nev. Terry Muilenberg ’74 of Madeira Beach. Fla. is a China, where she teaches English as a second language Sidney W. Colvin ’74 of Scotia, N.Y. is supervisor Barb Basnett ’74 Inman of Holland. Mich, is a self-employed business consultant. at the Beijing Police Academy. of homes for W.A.l.T.T. Houses Inc. physical education teacher and coach at Zeeland David J. Naberhuis ’74 of Grandville. Mich, is Chris A. Lehman ’73 Jackson has been appointed John E. Conatser’74 of Lincolnshire,III. is president (Mich.) Middle School. She presentlycoaches eighth Financialmanager of Michigan Public Power Agency associatevice presidentfor planning and budget at of Goldman, Conatser and Co. Ltd. of Chicago,111. grade volleyball. of Kentwood. Mich. Oklahoma State University. On Jan. 1 his company acquired Jentronics,Inc., a Jane Felden '74 Jcltes of Ada. Mich, is a volunteer Kevin J. Neckers ’74 of Holland, Mich, is a commercialloan officerand vice presidentof Great Esther Luttikhuizen’73 was one of 1 1 artists manufacturer of speciality, high quality wire harnesses worker in her neighborhood for the March of Dimes. participatingin "Beyond Craft: A Celebration of for electronicand medical industries. Emily L. Johnson ’74 of Sparta, N.J. was selected Lakes Bancorp of Grand Rapids, Mich. Creativity"at the Visual Arts Museum of the New York Michael K. Cooper '74 of Gaylord. Mich, is a partner as the 1987-88 Teacher of the Year for the Byram KatherineNelson ’74 of Femdale, Mich, is office City School of Visual Arts. The displayof contempo- in DuBois, Westerman and Cooper. Township Public Schools. She also received the manager and financialconsultant for Concept rary crafts opened March 8 and continued through Deborah J. Badeau ’74 Creswellof Grand Rapids, "Govcmor'sTeacherRecognition Award" on May 20, Technologyof Birmingham, Mich. April 7. Mich, is a self-employed, certified piano instructor. 1987. Stephen M. Norden ’74 is founding pastor of New Margaret Sudekum '73 is studying veterinary David Daubenspeck ’74 of Edina, Minn, is associate Werner W. Jorck '74 and Barbara Watt ’74 Jorck Hope ReformedChurch in Dublin, Ohio. He is a 1989 Hope College DistinguishedAlumni Award recipient. medicine at Michigan State University in East pastor-ministerto adults of First Covenant Church of live in Columbus, Ind. He is manager of financial Mary A. Hasper ’74 Normark of Houston, Texas is Lansing, Mich. Minneapolis, Minn. services for Irwin Management Company. a founding member of The Houston Flute Quartet, Richard L. Allen ’74 of Canton, Mich, is a senior Linda F. Bush ’74 Deal is organist for First Baptist PhyllisW. Kallemyn ’74 of Maumee. Ohio is product which has been invited to perform and give master systems programmer with United Technologies Church of Urbana, 111. She has completedtwo accounting manager for Dana CommercialCredit, the Automotiveof Dearborn, Mich. genealogy/family history books on two branches of leasing division of Dana Corporaion. classes at the 1989 Summer InternationalFlute Festival in Peru. She also teaches in the applied music program Barbara Jo Nietering ’74 Andrus is an adult basic her ancestors,one in 1986 and one in 1988. JoDee Keller ’74 of Dixon, 111. is a school social for the Cy-Fair and Katy Schools in Houston. education teacher with Grand Haven (Mich.) JohnDeHeus’74ofSkillman, N.J. is district manager worker with the Lee County Special Education Dixey VanderWerf ’74 Nunes of Somerville, Mass, Community Education. She received the 1987 award of Bell CommunicationsResearch of Piscataway,N.J. Association. is an employee benefitsadministrator for The for Outstanding Teacher for Adult and Community Thomas E. Dekker ’74 is pastor of Green Oak Garry P. Kempker '74 of Wyoming, Mich, is Sheratom Corporation of Boston. Mass. Education in Ottawa County. Reformed Church of Oak Lawn, 111. assistant vice presidentof personal trust services for Nyboer ’74 of Spring Lake, Mich, is a Betsy Wackernagel ’74 Bach is a professor in the Karen DeWitt ’74 Denney of Bloomingdale,111. is Old Kent Bank andTrust Company of Grand Rapids, Andrew self-employed dentist. department of interpersonalcommunication of the manager of Independent Advisors Inc. of Itasca, 111. Mich. Jr. ’74 City, is Cynthia S. Hartman ’74 Nyboer of Spring Lake. University of Montana at Missoula. She received a Nancy A. DeVries ’74 is chaplain of Coe College and Robert G. Kibbey ofTraverse Mich, a criminal investigatorfor the U.S. Treasury. Mich, is a receptionist/dentalassistant in her husband's merit award for excellence in teaching and service in associateprofessor of First PresbyterianChurch , both Terry L. Robinson ’74 Kochi moved to Geneva, office. 1988. of Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Her father, Calvin DeVries Debra Ann Johnson ’74 Palmer of Elmhurst, III. is Paul Bach ’74 of Missoula, Mont, is a clinical ’42, is the church’s senior pastor. Switzerland in January. a staff nurse in the open heart unit and intensive care psychologist with Western Montana Clinic. Judy O’Keefe ’74 Drake of Silver Spring, Md. is Deborah Koning ’74 Kiekoverof Holland, Mich, is unit of Hinsdale (III.) Hospital. Thomas Begley ’74 is parish priest of St. Thomas director of Millian Methodist Preschool of Rockville, an athletic trainer at West Ottawa High School and Elizabeth Ann Boone ’74 PSirkar ofHolland, Mich, Orthodox Church in Sioux City, Iowa. Md. As a member of her church’s Five Octave teacher in AlternativeHigh School. She was chosen is a social worker for the State of Michigan. Wanda Goetz ’74 Beiswenger is a school social Handbell Choir she was invited to perform at the to representthe State of Michigan on a regionalhigh Elizabeth Meengs ’74 Parker is a teacherwith Sunny worker with the Jackson (Mich.) Public Schools. Kennedy Center in Washington,D.C. at Christmas school trainer’s panel at a trainer’s convention in Hill Preschool in Zeeland, Mich. Ross F. Bertran ’74 is owner/producer of Communi- along with nine other selected handbell choirs from March. Jill Bolhous '74 Peirce is a middle school counselor cation Directions of Gorham, Maine. He received a around the country.Their performanceas one, large, Susan Miles ’74 Knoll ofHolland, Mich, is employed for the Fremont (Mich.) Public Schools. 1988 BrodersonSilver Award in advertisingand was mass choir was broadcast on national television. part-time as an administrativeassociate with Milcare William T. Pekich ’74 is presidentofWilliamT. Pekich a 1988 charter inductee in Who's Who in Entertain- Sue A. Drenkhahn’74 of Holland, Mich, teaches Inc. of Zeeland, Mich. Janet L. Koopman ’74 is a budget analyst with the and Associates P.C., C.P. A. s of Grand Rapids. Mich. ment. first grade at JeffersonSchool of Grand Rapids, Mich. U.S. Departmentof in Washington,D.C. In Dec. , 1988 he received the Paul Harris Fellowship, Fred Bertsch III ’74 of Washington,D.C. is a Janet Zagers ’74 Dykema is an elementary teacher Commerce C. JohnKorstangeJr. ’74 of Fremont, Mich, became awarded by Rotary Club of Grand Rapids-South for lieutenantcommander in the U.S. Navy. with the Kentwood Public Schools. past service. Jan Beukema ’74 is a self-employed artist in Grand Leslie Dykstra ’74 of Fairfax,Va. is a customer a pamter in the accounting firm of De Long & Co. Douglas Peterman '74 of Heights. Mo. is Haven, Mich. She has been commisionedby LaBarge consultant with Business Ware Inc. C.P.A.’s on Jan. 1. is in a scientist with McDonnell Douglas of St. Louis, Mo. Mirrors Inc. of Holland, Mich, to do art work. She is Daniel M. Dykstra ’74 is stationedin Awareness Day Lucy Beagle ’74 Kramer of Lakewood. Colo, He is a member of the evangelism committee of John also employed part-time by the Muskegon Chronicle for three local school districts. the ministry at Faith Community Church. Virginia ’74 Odessa, Calvin FhesbyterianChurch. as a paste-up artist. John G. Foster ’74 is a supervisor/casemanager for Reed KruisengaofLake Mich, David E. Phillips ’74 of De Forest.Wis. is a senior Paul Boddy ’74 made 132 consecutive in-bounds Kandu IndustriesInc. of Holland, Mich. is a sixth grade teacher with the Lakewood Public section supervisor with Hazleton Laboratories of serves for his Bogota co-ed recreationalteam. Paula Huey ’74 Fox of Shoreview, Minn, is a Schools. is Madison,Wis. Nancy L. Boersema ’74 of Dover, N.J. is a legal community librarianwith the Hennepin County Nicholas B. Lam ’74 of Portage, Mich, purchasing Diana Pierson ’74 of Grand Haven. Mich, is director secretarywith Maloof, Lebowitzand Bubb. Library, agent for the city of Kalamazoo, Mich. of the Coopersville (Mich.) District Library. Lucinda Gordon ’74 Boes of Hudsonville, Mich, is Janet Meyer ’74 Frederickof Chester, N.Y. is a Connie Moore ’74 Lamando of Port Jervis,N.Y. is a vocal teacher with the Bruce E. Poetter ’74 is president of Real Estate a self-employed piano teacherand vocal music teacher programmer-analyst for Troll Associates Inc. of music Monroe-Woodbury Valuation Services of La Grange, III. He is a senior at TriUnity Christian School in Wyoming, Mich. Mahwah, N.J. School District. Fair instructorfor both the Society of Real Estate Theodore J. Boeve ’74 of Hudsonville, Mich, is Wayne B. Freisatz ’74 of Denver, Colo, is a geologist Deborah Firmbach '74 Lawrence of Haven, Appraisers and the U.S. League of Savings and Loan territory manager for Herman Miller Inc. of Zeeland, with NW Geologic Consulting. He is working toward N.Y. teaches remedial mathematicsand reading for Associations.He is also a life member of the S.R.E.A. Mich. an M.S. in geology and geologic engineering at the the Fulton City Schools. Ronald Leigh ’74 is pastor of Scotchtown Presbyterian Young Advisory Council. Jeffrey S. Booi ’74 of Lake Odessa, Mich, is systems University of North Dakota. Kathy J. Poll ’74 of Shelburne, Vt. is manager of a developmentmanager of management information Roxanna Spurgis ’74 Gable of Ludington, Mich, is Church of Middletown,N.Y. Burlington, Vt. JC Penney store. systems for ForemostInsurance Company. directorof administrativedata processing and a Erik C. Lower '74 is self-employed and living on JoDee Keller ’74 Rasplicais a school social worker Carolyn Borgert ’74 is general manager of K-mart professor with West Shore Community College of Bois Blanc Island, Mich. with the Lee County Special Education Associationof #9012 in Jasper, Ind. She was chief fence judge of Scottville,Mich. Kristin Lukens-Rose ’74 of Blanchard, Mich, is Dixon, 111. the Pan- Am Games equestrianthree-day event and of Bruce D. Geyer ’74 of New Llano, La. is clarinet directorof the domestic violence and sexual assault Edwin C. Redder II '74 of Holland. Mich, is a the Rolex Lexington three-day Olympic selection section leader of the U.S. Army Fifth InfantryDivision program of Women's information Sendee Inc. of graphic designer with Merrifield Incorporated of trials. band. He was music director fora local production of Grand Rapids, Mich. Kathy Mulder ’74 is a part-time systems Grand Rapids, Mich. He has an extensive rock and Barbara Kastelin ’74 Boss is employedby Newaygo the musical Music Man at Camp Zama, Japan in Maas analyst for the ChandlerSchools of Grand Rapids, roll record collection,and stillroots for the Detroit (Mich.) Community Education as a part-timeteacher May-June, 1988. Tigers. of senior citizenclasses. Amy Lincoln '74 Giust is a self-employed artist.She Mich. David Maatman ’74 of Solona Beach, Calif, is Ronald M. Rewerts ’74 of West Bend. Wis. is a deputy Cynthia Dustin ’74 Boyd of Winona, Minn, is a is currentlyteaching for the Hattiesburg (Miss.)Give director of electronicreference for Education Systems sheriff in WashingtonCounty. counselor for Family Service of Winona. Arts Council and has receivedseveral art competition Dale A. Rice ’74' was recently named manager of Randy Braaksma ’74 is living in Beijing, China awards. of San Diego, Calif. Terry C. Major ’74 of Dexter, Mich, is a cardiovas- hazardous and industrialwaste for Engineering-Sci- where he is an editor for New World Press. GregM. Gronwall ’74 of Fairfield, Ohio is employed cular pharmacologist in the pharmaceutical research ence Inc. of Fairfax,Va. Dale and Susan recently Chuck Brooks ’74 of Grand Rapids, Mich, is by Niagra Machine andTool as a sales representative division of Parke-Davis, a Warner-LambertCo. moved to Virginia from New York with their two employedby New York Life in corporateand personal covering Indiana, Kentucky and Southern Ohio. He received a 1988 Recognition children,Sara (5) and Heather (3). financialplanning and by Amway Inc. as executive LoisVeenhoven ’74GuderianofLake Zurich, 111. is Employee Award from and has five publicationsin Linda Peterson’74 Rice of Grand Rapids, Mich, is securityofficer, self-employed as a musician, teaching,composing and Warner-Lambert, had an elementary vocal music teacher with the Wayland Elynn S. Brouwers ’74 is manager of the traumatic performing. Several of her pieces have been performed peer-reviewed scientific journals since 1982. Union Schools. She is actively involved in the brain injury program at Mary Free Bed Hospital and in public recitals and concerts, including at Elmhurst Carolyn Stansfield ’74 Mangan of Menomonee Christianeducation department at St. Mark's Rehab Center in Grand Rapids, Mich. College and Harper College. Falls, Wis. is a child and family therapistfor St. Episcopal Church in Grand Rapids, where she directs Gail Orndorff ’74 Brown of Unadilla, N.Y is a Nancy L. Milne ’74 Gus of La Porte, Colo, is Acmilian's/Lakeside in Milwaukee,Wis. a trainingchoir for four, five and six-year-olds. teacher in Tri-Town Nursery School of Sidney, N.Y. employed in accounts receivable of Accounting Gregg Mast ’74 and Vicki Kopf ’74 Mast live in Mary K. Rich ’74 isa rural carrier for the U.S. Post Barry L. Brugger ’74 is a teacher at Grand Haven Services of Colorado State Universityin Fort Collins, Guildeland, N.Y. He is the senior pastor ofThe First Office in Holland, Mich. (Mich.) Senior High School. Colo. Church in Albany (N.Y.). Dennis C. Robins ’74 of Milwaukee.Wis. is a Robert Bruinoogc ’74 is co-pastor of Sparta First Mary Gustin ’74 is a senior research assistantwith John Mayo ’74 and Mary Helen Millard ’74 Mayo supervisorforWiscraft Inc. (Wisconsin Enterprisesfor PresbyterianChurch of Groveland, N.Y. with his wife, the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. relocatedto St. Louis, Mo. in June, 1989 so that John could responsibilitiesas the officerin charge the Blind).He attended the annual National Industries Mary Jo Walters ’75 Bruinooge. Larry Hagberg ’74 oflbcson, Ariz. is a Bible translator assume for the Blind Conventionin Washington,D.C. as a Rena J. Buchan ’74 is acting assistant directorof and linguistics consultantfor the Summer Institute of of the U.S. Army Dental Clinic in St. Louis. William S. Me Andrew ’74 is manager of computer delegate. housing for village communitiesfor the Universityof Linguisticsinlhcson. He expects to complete a Ph.D. Vicki Wiegerink '74RumpsaofGrand Rapids. Mich, Florida in Gainesville. in linguistics at the University of Arizona in 1991. and technicalservices for the DonnellyCorporation is self-employed as a family group home-daycare Timothy Buis ’74 of Portage, Mich, is a computer Julie Miller ’74 Hakken of Grand Rapids, Mich, is of Holland, Mich. He will be speaking at the

TWENTY FOUR NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 1989 <* .3'/i-Uorv -.(At f>v.v» •••v.n jrm -rA-ws provider. - • • i- • in July from a year spent teachingEnglish at Zhejiang Joyce E. Sawinska ’74 of Akron. Ohio is children’s Roger A. White ’74 of Spring Lake. Mich, is an University in Hangzhou, China. a publishing subsidiary of Gulf-Westem. librarian of (he Akroh-SummilCounty Public Library. elementary teacher with the Grand Haven (Mich.) Todd Erickson’81 is teachingsculpture at the Center Lisa Martin ’85 is employed as a counselor by the Karen A. Vander Molen ’74 Schaner of Holland. schools. for Creative Studies/Collegeof An and Design in Vintage Program of Allegan, Mich. She is working Mich, is an elementary vocal music instructor for the William Whitlock ’74 is an environmental attorney Detroit,Mich. He and his wife, Sheila, are enjoying with substance abuse treatment and prevention with Byron Center Public Schools. with The Upjohn Company of Kalamazoo, Mich. a new home and studio. youths, and co-dependency and addictionwith women. Cathy J. Schueler’74 of Santa R;, N.M. is an art Zuellen Marshall’74WiersmaofLaGrange, III. is Clark Coding ’81 is living in Grand Rapids, Mich, Kimm Larson-Mulder ’85 has been working in therapist forThe Diabetes Center of Lovelace Hospital teaching Spanish in adult education, tutoringin and working as a free lance writer and at a hotel . He out-patientsurgery at Mercy Hospital in Muskegon, in Albuquerque. N.M. She is currently developing an Spanish and math, teaching homebound and Home- was recently creditedin Citizen Welles, Frank Brady's Mich, for the past two-and-one-half years. art therapyprogram for a local medical center that will schooling one of her children. biography of Orson Welles, for his contributionsas Susan Burrell ’85 Nykamp of Grand Rapids. Mich, include adolescent and children populations dealing Meg Gerber ’74 Wilkens is directorof human Brady's research assistantin 1980. is currentlyteaching adolescent students at Pine Rest with diabetes,cleft palate and hemodialysis. resourcesat Universityof Cincinnati(Ohio) Hospital. Judy Uecker ’81 Lanning is an examiner/investigator ChristianHospital. Sandra K. Zoodsma ’74 Sheppard ofS. Plainfield. Robert J. Wolff ’74ofCrestwood.III. is an associate for the Texas State Board of Insurance. Wendy Vander Hart '85 has just received a call as N.J. is assistant tax manager for National Starch and professor of biology at Trinity Christian College of Steven J. Sayer ’81 has been installed as pastor of associate pastor of the First Congregational Church of Chemical Corp. of Bridgewater,N.J. She was one of Palos Heights, III. the 122-ycar-oldPottersville Reformed Church in Reading, Mass. She will be oidained in Boston on four New Jersey women to receive an Executive Marie Beugel ’74 Wolff is directorof work services Pottersville, N.J. June 25. Women of N.J. Award for managerial women at Elim Christian School of Crestwood,III. Thomas Bayer ’82 has joined St. Vincent Hospital in Robert Appell '86 is a graduate studentin chemistry attending business graduate school in 1988. Lynn Quackenbush ’74 Zick of Jenison. Mich, is a Green Bay, Wis. as an assistant administrator. at the Universityof Chicago. He competes in a track Karen Ruthe’74ShoemakerofRidott,III. isasocial district sales manager for Avon Products.As a member Abby Jewett ’82 is working with the developmentally club, and married wife Amy in 1988. worker at Freeport (III.)Memorial Hospital. of the Avon District Manager Circle of Excellence, disabled as a family support servicescoordinator for Michael Bullard ’86 works as a nationalaccounts Kathy A. Smith ’74 of San Diego, Calif, is an attorney she received a 1988 trip to Japan. Shiawassee (Mich.) County Community Mental representativefor Batts Inc. in Zeeland, Mich. with Lewis. D’Amato, Brisbois and Bisgaard. James L. Beran ’75 is project manager with Prodigy Health. Kent Coy ’86 has been promoted to general manager William C. Smith ’74 of Zeeland, Mich, teaches Services Company, an IBM/Searsjoint venture, in Nancy Scholten ’82 Kamstra teaches physical of the Red Lobster restaurantin Lynchburg, Va. fourth grade at West Elementary inGrandville,Mich. White Plains, N.Y. education at Zeeland High School. Jon DeVoogd ’86 of Muskegon, Mich, is a product Mary VanderHooning ’74 ’Smith is director of music Mary Jo Walters ’75 Bruinoogeis co-pastorof Sparta Suzi Kane ’82 is living in Elk Grove, Calif and sales representativefor the Coil Anodizers Division of at First Reformed Church of Zeeland, Mich. First PresbyterianChurch of Cleveland, N.Y. with her working for the CaliforniaAssociation of Hospitals. Lorin Industries. Ann Voskuil ’74 Staal leaches music in Khartoum husband, Robert Bruinooge ’74. Bryan Lindquist’82 of Anoka, Minn, for the past Janet Evans ’86 is general manager of the Colonial (Sudan) American School. Penny Lind ’75 Schmidt is director of volunteerand five years has been employedby AirTex Ind. as a sales Hotel and projectcoordinator of Cannery Row Thomas H. Staal ’74 is emergency program officer youth services for the American Red Cross in representative. Quarters, both in South Haven, Mich. for the U.S. Agency for InternationalDevelopment in Muskegon. Mich. Tim McGee ’82 of Remington, N.J. has been Barbara Lotterman ’86 Feldhauserhas moved to Khartoum,Sudan. John E. Klanke ’76 has accepted a positionas senior promotedto assistant manager-marketingfor Ortho Reno, Nev. , where she works as a nurse in a hospital Martin J. Stark ’74 of Westford, Mass, is manager biologist with Ebasco Services Inc. in Lyndhurst, N.J. Pharmaceutical in Raritan, N.J. cardiac and emergency unit. of funding and operationsfor Digital EquipmentCorp. Edward M. Mackiewicz ’76 has been promoted and Paul Voorhorst’82ofWarsau, Ind. is a biostatistician Amy Herrington’86 is teaching English and Gemian of Marlboro. Mass. moved from AmericanAirlines’ Central Division field at the De Puy Co. at Yan Bian University in Yan Ji City in the People’s Frederick Stevens ’74 of Bellevue, Wash, is an office in Chicago. III. to the Headquarters facility in James Matthew Boullosa’83 completedthe winter Republic of China. operatingsystems programmer for Boeing Computer Dallas,Texas. He works for System Operations session in volunteer work as gym coordinator for the Kim Waldorf ’86 Mercer is teachingkindergarten at Services. Control as manager of operations analysis and YMCA Youth Basketball program for grades one the Beauvoir School, which is part of the National Kathy M. Stroven ’74 teaches third and fourth grade manages a staff of analysts that report on the daily through four. Cathedral, in Washington,D.C. at Racine (Wis.) Christian School. operating performance of American Airlines.He has Russell Dykstra- ’83 has finishedhis residency LisaTjoelker ’86 ofWyoming, Mich, is aTOYS Child Mary Elizabeth Meade ’74 Sutton of Gladstone, located in Hurst, Texas. trainingin family medicine and is going into private Care Center primary caregiverat Butterworth Hospital N.J. is the part-timedirector of Christianeducation at David M. De Zwaan ’77 is manager of the Flint, practicewith Dr. Wm. Bonzelaar in Holland, Mich. in Grand Rapids, Mich. St. Bernard’sEpiscopal Church in Bemardsville, N.J. Mich, division of Roadway Express Inc. Dave Kempker ’83 is working for The Packaging Lisa Jurries ’86 Waldorf is employedby the Sy osset Gordon Thompson Jr. ’74 is directorof youth Martha M. Farley ’77 is a sales engineer for the House in Chicago, 111. (N.Y.) School District and is a Sunday school teacher ministriesat Highland PresbyterianChurch in electrical distribution and control divisionof the G.E. Stephen Pinkham ’83 is working in the Sales Division at Brookville (N.Y.) Reformed Church. Fayetteville, N.C. He is stillactively writing and Company in Los Angeles, Calif. She is also a volunteer of Espec Corporation in Zeeland, Mich. Scott Watson ’86, spent 16 days in Haiti doing medical performing music. tutor for Long Beach Project Read, a chapter of Stephen A. Renae ’83 is currentlyin the second year mission work for a retired pastor of a Haitian Christian Michael H. Van Buren ’74 is pastor of Ottawa Laubach Literacy International. of internal medicine residency at Hartford (Conn.) Church. Reformed Church of West Olive, Mich. Gary Paul Kirchner ’77 was commissionedas an Hospital. Minako J. Yoshikawa ’86 is enjoying a third year at Timothy D. Van Dam ’74 of New York, N.Y. is sole officer in the United States Naval Reserve. He will be Mark L. TYudcIl ’83 is currentlya postdoctoral the Tokyo branch of Morgan Stanley as a businessunit proprietorof a design business. He has also been drilling as a public affairs officerin St. Louis, Mo. associateat Imperial College in London, England. controller, and is back in Tokyo after an assignment teaching part-timeat Pratt Institute in the graduate Kenneth Lobb ’77 works in the operator services in Hong Kong last year. school of design. department for NYNEX in New York, N.Y. Todd Garth ’87 of Muskegon, Mich, was commis- Fay J. Van Eenwyk ’74 of Ambler, Pa. is a physician Eric Smevog ’77 is a major and militarytest pilot sioned on April 5 as a HabitatInternational Partner in with Family Medical Associates of Abington (Pa.). based at Edwards Air Force Base, and is currently Class of 1984 a ceremony at Habitat for Humanity headquarters in Robert Van Voorst ’74 is pastor of Rochester involved in preliminarytesting of the advanced tactical 5th Reunion Americus, Ga. Todd now begins three years of service ReformedChurch of Accord, N.Y. fighter for McDonnel 1 Douglas Corp. He and his wife in Islamabad, Pakistan. Steven Vander Brock ’74ofHolland, Mich, teaches Sonya have five children. Homecoming Weekend Bonnie Glenn ’87 is living in Washington, D.C. , and with the Fennville (Mich.) Public Schools. Eileen Doyle ’78 Flower, head librarian at Weston currentlyworking for Arthur Anderson. Laura Tebben ’74VanderBrock of Holland, Mich, (Ohio) Public Library, was named “Woman of the October 6-8 Marian E. Hill ’87 of Augusta, Mich, is working is an assistant professor of English at Grand Valley Year" for the village by the Weston Chamber of toward a master’s degree in exercise physiology at State University. Commerce. She and her husband Steve recently Amy E. Belstra ’84 is employed by Barnhart Western Michigan University. Gordon Vander Slice ’74 owns “Vander Slice presented a workshop on tandem storytellingat the Advertising in Denver, Colo. Cynthia Hollenbeck’87 Petersen has been accepted Orchards" in New Era, Mich. Northeast Chapter of the Ohio Library Association VictoriaA. Brunn ’84 is taking a one-year sabbatical into the Ph.D. program at Michigan State University Roxanne Vanderveer ’74 of Cadillac, Mich, is Chapter Conference. from her positionat the Universityof Califomia-Irvine and will begin this September. She has also been employedby the Wexford County Departmentof Julie Raabe ’78 Gentry currentlyteaches dance Medical Center to work as a child development awarded a $13,000 assistantshipfor her first year. Social Services. part-timeat Kent State University and performs and consultant and research associatein Montpellier, Teresa van den Hombergh ’87 is a first-year Peace Nancy June Mangun ’74 Van Wechel of Boulder, gives residenciesin dance for elementary children France. Corps volunteer in Bahra, Tbnisia. Colo, is a project manager at Telcor of Englewood, through Young Audiencesof Greater Cleveland Inc. Timothy S. Dieffenbach’84 was ordained on June Jim Webster ’87 lives in the Homewood Rossmor, Colo. She came back to Hope recentlyto give a workshop 3, 1988 following his May, 1988 graduation from 111. area and teachesphysical education to kindergarten for prospective teachers in one of the college’s David Vander Weide ’74 of Apopka, Fla. is a branch Western Theological Seminary. He is now serving as through fifth grade students at Western Avenue education classes. manager for Castle North Corporation. He was an associateminister at Central Reformed Church in Elementary School. John Robert Scholten ’78 is an attorneyin Okemos. featured in the Nov. , 1988 issue of Supply HouseTimes. Grand Rapids, Mich, as minister of youth outreach. Kelly McKinley ’88 Boatman and husband Scott Mich. Jean C. Langerlaan ’74 Vander Weide of Apopka, Rebecca Reid ’84 Dernberger is manager of reside in Bloomington,Ind. where Kelly attends Pamela Beane ’78 VanVolkenburgh placed second Fla. is bloodbank supervisorof the Waterman Medical Manpower Temporary Services in Holland, Mich. Indiana University and is working toward her Master in the lightweightdivision of the 1989 Singapore Center of Eustin, Fla. Rick Dernberger ’84 of Holland, Mich, is branch of Science in Environmental Science degree. Amateur Bodybuilding Competition. manager of CoMerica Bank in Cascade, Mich. Brian K. Veneklasen’74 is assistant store manager Krista Koelling ’88 Bullard works as an industrial Juli Harper ’84 is teaching first grade at St. Brigid and buyer for Lokker-Rutgers Co. of Holland. service representativefor Manpower in Grand Haven, School in New York, N.Y. In January she began a Mich. Kathy VanderMolen ’74 VoIImer of Grand Haven, Class of 1979 master’s program in early childhood education at Daphne Fairbanks ’88 eventually plans to attend Mich, is taking graduate classes towards a master’s Fdrdham University. graduate school and work, and is currently employed degree in education. 10th Reunion Brad Kuipers ’84 of Grand Rapids, Mich, has been as a mother to her three-month old baby. Homecoming Weekend chosen to spend Aug. 18 through Sept. 4 as a trainer Brian E. Pereika ’88 of Manila in the Philippinesis at the U.S. Olympic Training Center at Lake Placid. in officer cadet school in Singapore undergoing r~ HOpr ai hxxmi — October 6-8 N.Y. He is otherwise employed as an athletic trainer training as part of a two-and-one-half year period of for Steelcase. compulsorymilitary service. A MILLION Mayrie “Mimi” Boyce ’79 completedin April five Michael Spitters ’84 is associateminister at Central Janis Rudnick ’88 is the regulationschemist for years as an administrativeassistant with the Grand Christian Church in Ft. Worth, Texas. He plans to Thetford Corp. in Ann Arbor, Mich. DOLLAR Rapids, Mich, area promotioncompany operated by receive his M.Div. degree from Brite DivinitySchool. Phil Simon. Texas Christian University,this December. class of 1989 MILESTONE Gale Easton ’79 recentlypassed his National ChristopherD. Stagg ’84 of Upper Montclair, N.J. Commission on Certificationof PhysiciansAssistants is employedas a software consultantfor Gari Software Ronald Azarbarzin ’89 will work for Erickson board examination with high recognition.In addition Ass. Inc. in New York, N.Y. ChemicalCo. There’s still time to to his P. A. degree and certification, he has certification Scott Van Arendonk ’84 and Jennifer Ten Have ’85 David Baird '89 will attend Wayne State University CELEBRATE! in both surgery and medicine, in emergency medical Van Arendonk are head residentsin VoorheesHall. School of Medicine. technology and in advancedcardiac life support Scott, currentlyassistant chaplain at Hope, traveled to Norman Bingham ’89 will attend Western Michigan systems. Nicaragua in November representingHope with an University. Mail your reunion gift Ray Vande Giessen ’79 is pastor of Church of the RCA delegation. Daniel Bleitz '89 will attend the University of Savior of the ReformedChurch in America in Livonia. Alethea C. Vissers ’84 was recentlypromoted to the Michigan. TODAY! Mich. position of inter-office accountant for SIM’s U.S. Thomas Boelman ’89 will attend the Universityof DOLLAR DONOR 80s office, an internationalmission organization.Last fall Montana. CLASS GOAL/TO DATE GOAL/TODATE she went to Ethiopia to help audit SIM’s office there. Thomas Bouwer ’89 will work for Arthur Andersen Susan J. Anderson ’85 is working on her master's Consulting. 1939 $35,000/$23,000 Brenda J. Hafner ’80 is employed as outpatient 70/60 degree in nurse anesthesia at Abbott Northwestern in Jennifer Brown ’89 will attend AmericanUniversity 1944 therapist with Catholic Social Services of Grand $25,000/$15,500 63/44 Minneapolis, Minn, and is employed by Staffing WashingtonCollege of Law. 1949 Rapids, Mich $40,000/$32,500 115/120 Alliance as a part-timecritical care RN. Martha Camp ’89 will pursue a master’sdegree in 1954 Carol Arnoldink ’80 McCarthy is teaching for the $30,000/$I7,100 90/80 Lorri Hargreaves ’85 Heneveld is teaching special animal ecology at Iowa State University. 1959 Kenosha Unified School District in Kenoska,Wis. $25,000/$25,000 123/97 education in Saranac, Mich. Her husband, Kevin, Chileshe Chipampata ’89 will attend Western 1964 $50,000/543,000 195/164 Melanie E. Miskotten’80 will be serving as the first owns and operates a computercompany in Hastings, Theological Seminary. vice presidentof the Holland/Zeeland Chapter of the 1969 $25, 000/522,500 186/153 Mich. Jacqueline Christy ’89 will attend Western Theologi- InternationalManagement Council. The purpose of 1974 $20,000/$14,000 186/125 Marnie Marsters ’85 has accepted a position with cal Seminary. IMC is to provide excellentprograms of management Prentice Hall Inc. of Paramus,N.J. Mamie is Timothy Cotter ’89 will attend Cooley Law School Tbtal $250,000/$192,600 1,028/843 and leadership trainingfor those who must lead. employed as a writer/editorin the Law and Business in Lansing, Mich. Paul Bosch ’81 and his wife. Pam, will be returning division.Prentice Hall is a pan of Simon & Schuster, Juliann Dagg ’89 will attend Princeton Theological

NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JC1NE 1989 TWENTY FIVE Elizabeth Veldink '89 will attend Western Theological homemaker and deputized matron, returningto Seminary. Caleb Clay, Nov. 27, 1988. Seminary and work at Christ Memorial Reformed Sandor and Rene Gerber 'll Olah, Jubilee Anne. part-timehealth nursing after her childrenwere reared, Sally Davis ’89 will work for Wagner, Hemdel and retiring in 1974. Noyes, consulting geologists,in Burlington. Vt. Church. March 8, 1989. Douglas ’74 and Shahla Peterman, Halleh, Nov. 10. After retirement,she was assistant chaplain for Ryan Dodde ’89 will attend Wayne State Medical Helena Weisl ’89 will attend Western Michigan convalescent ministries,playing the organ and School and work in the Butterworth Hospital E.R. University. 1988. ministeringto the needs of patients. She was a cousin Kimberly Doyle ’89 will work in the advertising Kimberly Westrate ’89 will attend Western Michigan James Michael and Joanne Monroe '73 Shaw, of President Martin Van Buren. University in the MSW program. Timothy James, March 29, 1988. department of Vu/Tcxt Information Services, a Surviving are her husband, Pete B. Harris of San Angela Wiedemann ’89 will attend the Universitaet Earl 'll and Barbara Pell '80 Slotman,Kimberly Knight-Ridder Company. Bernardino; two sons, Kenton Peter Harris of Redlands Dien Duong ’89 will attend Western Michigan Mainz in West Germany. Ann, Jan. 30, 1989. Martin J. and Ellen Stark, Gregory, Nov. 9, 1988. and Kirk Rhoden Harris of Lytle Creek; a daughter, University. Laura Wingate ’89 will teach for the International James T. '80 and Patricia Walker ’80 Stokes, Kathryn Ann Harris McCormick of Colton; two Toni Ferdinand '89 will attend Medical College ol Thomas School System in England. grandchildren;a sister, Miriam Van Buren Veddcr of Jeremiah. Dec. 2, 1988. Wisconsin in Milwaukee,Wis. Lisa Winkels ’89 will work as a staff accountant with Kenneth and Mary Smits '74Timmer, Mark Robert, Palo Alto; and seVeral nieces and nephews. Jonathan Fikse ’89 will be employed by Ernst and Touche Ross in Grand Rapids, Mich. Nov. 2, 1988. Whinney public accountants. Colombe Bosch ’23 Heinburger of Stockholm, Lawrence Zwart '89 will work for UARCO Inc. Donald and Deborah Ellison 'll Tylenda, Joshua Peter Fonkcn ’89 will attend the Universityof Maine, Sweden, formerly of Holland, Mich, died onTuesday, Stephen, April 17. 1989. Departmentof Wildlife. March 28, 1989, in StockholmHospital. She was 88. Mark '78 and Susan Gibbs '79VanArendonk.Laura Michelle Geiger ’89 will assume a management Bom on Aug. 26, 1900. she also graduated from marriages Gibbs VanArendonk.Oct. 19, 1988. positionat Lynn Mayer Gladiola Farms of Bronson, Holland High School and the National College of Jim and Janet Corrctore '82 Vandcrgrift,Linnaea Mich. Education in Evanston, III. At one time, she taught David C. Bading and Lena Daniels ’80, March 11, Carl Gelderloos ’89 will attend SUNY at Stony Brook Faith. Oct. 27, 1988. school in the Detroit. area. 1989, Falls Church. Va. Mich. in physics. Stephen '79 and Susan Weener ’81 VanDop, Paul Mark Bankert and Colleen A. VanderHill '83, She married Gunnar Heinburger of Stockholm in Steven Gortsema ’89 will attend Caltech. Stephen, Jan. 24, 1989. 1928. He preceded her in death in 1968. She had been Brian Groendyk ’89 will work for J.R. Automation. December 17, 1988. Vic and Anne Karstcn '81 VanHccst,Peter John, a citizenof Sweden since 1928. Jonathan Lee Beyer '87 and Carissa Lyn Duistcrmars May 18, 1988. Susan Henry ’89 owns Great Lakes Pizza with her Surviving are a brother,Gerald Jay Bosch of ’88, Dec. 30, 1988, Grand Rapids, Mich. Robert and Sharon Mckjean '71 Vautin, Amy husband Henry. Holland; a sister-in-law, Mrs. Randall (Gladys) Bosch Scott Boatman and Kelly McKinley '88. Aug. 13, Elizabeth, Nov. 17, 1988. Jon Hofman ’89 will attend the Indiana University of Holland; nieces and nephews. 1988, Grand Rapids, Mich. Paul '82 and Karalyn Voorhorst, Benjamin Paul, School of Journalism. Jon DeVoogd '86 and Linda Deephouse, Feb. 11, April 7, 1989. June Muehlenbrock ’66 Marsilje of Holland, Amy Holm ’89 will work for AndersenConsulting, 1989, Muskegon, Mich. Philip '81 andChristineWam.Spencer Philip, Nov. Mich, died on Sunday, April 16. 1989. She was 73. Arthur Andersen & Co. in Detroit,Mich. Jeffery LynnGabier, Lisa Ann Kortering '85, Dec. 8, 1988. She was a member of Hope ReformedChurch and Jack Holman ’89 will work for Mass. Mutual 10, 1988, Traverse City, Mich. Richard and Barbara H. Gcrding '74 Warsinskey, of the church's guild. She was a Sunday School Insurance. Patrick M. Gerula and Sally J. Manahan '80, June David Richard. Nov. 15, 1988. teacher, and a member of various church committees. Tauna Jecmen ’89 will work for Andersen Consulting 18, 1988, Pultneyville, N.Y. David and Jane Wickert '81 Werner, Erin Anne, July She was an active member of Kappa Kappa Gamma Dan Kaylor and Betsy Emdin '76, Oct. 21, 1988, and Co. 13, 1988. Sorority,the Grey Ladies, Holland Garden Club. Karen Jekel ’89 will attend Western Michigan Holland, Mich. Tad and Sharon Wilson '84 Westveer. Nathaniel JuniorWelfare League. Holland Community Hospital University. James MacGregor '85 and Kathy Anne Metzger '85 , John, Sept. 5, 1988. Guild and the Mustang Club. Amy Johnson ’89 will work for Hblland (Mich.) Dec. 30, 1988, Grand Rapids, Mich. Surviving besides her husband are two sons, Edward Community Hospital and Community Education. Timothy Patrick McCarthy and Carol Lynn H. and Thomas H. Marsilje, both of Holland; a Carol Johnson ’89 will attend Western Theological Amoldink '80, Nov. 26, 1988, Racine, Wis. daughter,Mrs. Jan (Louise) M. Leestma of Chicago, ‘ Seminary. Richard A. Medema '78 and Mary Ann Fenner, advanced degrees 111.; seven grandchildren;and a sister, Mrs. Arthur Patricia Johnson ’89 will enter the MD/Ph.D. Rockville, Md. (Kathryn) Mervenne of Holland. program at Indiana University. Brian Mercer and Kim Waldorf '86, March 18, Linda M. Aldrich '85. M.A. in counseling Michael Kannisto ’89 will attend Texas A&M 1989, Long Island. N.Y. psychology, Ohio State University.March 17, 1989. William “Cal” Poppink ’65 ofTecumseh, Mich, VictoriaA. Brunn '84, master of science in child died on Saturday, April 15, 1989. He was 46. University. Max Molinaroand Kathy J. Miller '70, May 20, development.University of Califomia-Davis, Dec., He was bom on Oct. 6, 1942 in Grand Rapids, Kevin Kilburg ’89 will attend Western Michigan 1989. Mich, to William ’37 and Loma (Calhoun) Poppink. University. Robert Nykamp and Susan Burrell '85, June 18, 1988. On Dec . 28 , 1 968 he was married to Martha Morlock Glenna Kriekard ’89 will work in orthopedics at 1988, Holland, Mich. Todd Erickson ’81, MFA in sculpture,Cranbrook Butterworth Hospital. Academy of Art. in Hillsdale,Mich. She survives. Mark W. Olthoff '72 and Carol Osbom Salebra, Kent Krive ’89 will work for Phoenix Designs of Abby Jewett '82, master's degree in social work, He was Lenawee Intermediate School District April 22, 1989. Zeeland, Mich, as a programmer/analyst. Michigan State University,June, 1988. assistantsuperintendent of general services.Before William Kunisch H ’89 will attend Luther-Northwest- Frank Pepe and Lisle Westfall '80, April 16, 1989, Garry P. Kempker ’74, ABA National Graduate Trust joining the Lenawee Intermediate District in 1971 he - em Seminary. Brookside, N.J. School, Northwestern University, 1988. was a teacher and coach in the Addison and Manchester Stacy Kyes ’89 will work for Kyes Agency Inc. Todd Rose ’88 and Peggy Jencks '88, March 18, Susan Walkotten 'll McKay, MBA in corporate school districts. He was a member of the First Thomas Kyros ’89 will attend Northwestern School 1989, Waterford. Mich. finance.Western Michigan University,Dec., 1988. PresbyterianChurch of Tecumseh and several Diane Samec '64, master's degree in learning educational organizations. of Law. James A. Schmidt and Penny Jo Lind '75, Oct. 6, disabilities. Northern Illinois University,Aug., 1988. He participatedin many community activities. He Robert Lane ’89 will work at Windcrest Promotions 1988. in Saugatuck, Mich. Mark L. Trudell '83, Ph.D. in organic/medicinal was involved in the Lenawee United Way Campaign, PaulT. Stears '78 and Laurie Brown ’85, May 28, Heather Lawrence ’89 will attend Western Michigan chemistry. University of Wisconsin-NJilwaukee, May, the Region II Employment Training Consortium,the 1988. Private Industry Council board of directors,and University. 1989. Mark L. Trudell '83 and Margaret Hall, July 18, Charles '73, University Lenawee County Child and Family Services, serving Nicole Leitz ’89 will attend the University of Vander Broek M.B.A., of 1987, Sheboygan,Wis. as president in 1985. In 1982 he received the Wisconsin. Notre Dame, May, 1989.

Mark Allen Wagcnschutz'87 and Karen , distinguishedvoluntary sendee award from the Child Thomas Livingston’89 will attend Notre Dame. Dawn Wendy Vander Hart '85, M.Div. Andover Newton Thmmy Long ’89 will attend the University of Veramay '88, Oct. 22, 1989, Olivet, Mich. Theological School, May, 1988. and Family Services agency. Michigan. Eleanor Verburg ‘61 Van Dyke. Master of Arts in He was also active in the Tecumseh Ki wanis Club, being named its man ofthe year in 1985. He was also Jessey Lopez ’89 will work for Donnelly Corporation child development, Michigan State University,March, involved in the Herrick Park PTO. serving as president as a manager. 1989. births from 1983-85, the Adrian Training School Citizen Jill McCandless ’89 will attend Indiana University. Anita Rynbrandt'51 VanWyk, M.A. in theology. Fuller Theological Seminary, June, 1989. AdvisoryCouncil, the Allen H. Meyers Foundation Amy McQuillan ’89 will attend Ferris State University Robert '80 and Tamala Bos, William Robert, April Paul A. Veld '85, Doctor of Optometry,Illinois advisory board, and as a volunteer for the American College of Optometry. 12, 1989. College of Optometry, May, 1989. Cancer Society,receiving the courage award in 1988. Timothy Moermond ’89 will attend Western Scott and Kay Neevel '82 Brown, Julia Esther, April Mary E. Wiersema '61 Vermeulen,Ed.S. in He served as an MIAA footballofficial for seven Theological Seminary. 16, 1989. counselor education. Northern Illinois University, years, YBA basketballcoach and Tecumseh recreation Timothy Nieuwenhuis ’89 will attend Michigan State Kim C. '76 and Margaret Vanden Berg ’76 Buckley, Dec., 1988. baseball coach. He also belonged to the Tecumseh University. Benjamin Gilbert,April 27, 1988. Lois Hultquist '69 Willis, certificate of accounting, Country Club. Harumi Niino ’89 will attend InternationalChristian Russell K. '82 and Lome C. Sherwood ’87 Camp, Sauk Valley College, May, 1989. Besides his wife, he is survived by his parents,of University in Japan. Russell Christopher, Feb. 22, 1989. Sault Stc. Marie. Mich.; two sons, Kevin and Andy, Ronda Oosterhoff’89 will attend Carnegie Mellon James D. '85 and Kelli J. Campbell,Gabriclle both at home; three sisters, Grace '63 Hodgson of University. Marie, July 13, 1988. Raleigh, N.C., Lynn Johnson of Freehold. N.J. and Timothy Peterson’89 will enter the U.S. Marine Rick '84 and Rebecca Reid '84 Demberger,Brittany deaths Sue Poppink-Brock"75 of Lansing. Mich.; and one Corps pilot trainingprogram. Noel, Dec. 21, 1988. Jack BrinkerhofT’50 of Wyckoff, N.J. died of a brother.James "Dutch"" Poppink '67 of Holland. Dacia Pickering’89;.will attend the University of Terry and Carol Koterski '70 Dugan, Steven, Sept. heart attack on Thursday, March 23, 1989. He was 63. Minnesota. 5,’ 1988. He was bom of Jan. 14, 1926 in Hasbrouck Heights, Frederick H.TerVree '32 of Holland, Mich, died Janet Poit ’89 will work as a production assistant with Patrick M. and Sally J. Manahan '80 Gerula, Joseph N.J., and later served with the Army Air Force during onThursday, March 23, 1989 at his home. He was 79. Channel 7 in Detroit, Mich. Nicholas William, Feb. 11, 1989. World War II. Aftergraduating from Hope he worked He was bom and raised in Holland. He was Peter Rhoades ’89 will attend the School of Business William '81 and Christina ’82 VanEyl-Godin, for the United Jersey Banks for 34 years, taking early employed by Hart and Cooley and Tulip City Duck at Western Michigan University for his M.B.A. and PhillipBenjamin, Dec. 23, 1988. Farm, retiring from H.E. Morse in 1976. He was a work at Old Kent Bank of Holland. Donald and Lois Veenhoven '74 Guderian, retirement in 1985 following by-pass surgery. He was a member of the Midland Park Christian member of Beechwood Reformed Church. John Schloff ’89 will attend Wayne State Medical Alexandra, Nov. 7, 1988. Reformed Church, where he served as elder and on Surviving are his wife, Jeanette;a daughter, Mrs. School. Michael and Diane Vannette '74 Hagan, Luke Evan, various classicalcommittees. He was also active in Glen (Judy) Windemullerof Holland; a daughter-in- Eric Shugars ’89 will attend Northwestern University April 16, 1988. the promotion of Christianeducation and on the public law, Diane Ter Vree of Grand Haven, Mich.; four Dental School. Larry '74 and Nancy Hagbcrg, Ezra, Dec. 28, 1988. rpiminns i-nmmittee of the Eastern Christian School grandchildren;and a sister-in-law. Flora Ter Vree of Charyn Sikkenga ’89 will attend Indiana University Kevin and Lorri Hargreaves'85 Heneveld, Tamra Association. Holland. Law School. Lynne, Aug. 30, 1988. He is survived by his wife, Joan Wilson '50 Laura Skinner ’89 will work at Pine Rest Christian David and Sandy Wade 'll Henion, Jessica Lynne, Brinkerhoff; four children,Jane, a missionary in Henry J. Van Duine ’26 of Grand Rapids, Mich, Hospital as an activity therapist. Feb. 22, 1989. died early Sunday, April 16, 1989, after sufferinga Julie Smith ’89 will attend SUNY at Stony Brook in Ricardo and Connie Wehner '80 Hernandez,Elena Japan, N. Scott of Black Mountain, N.C., Paul G. of cellularbiology. Opelousas. La. and Timothy J. of Doylestown.Pa.; massive stroke. He was 85. Seville,Feb. 24, 1988. He was the former chief of surgery at Saint Mary's Craig Stapert ’89 will attend the UniversityofTexas Kirk '82 and Kimberly Mooi '82 Hoopingamer, and three grandsons. He was prededed in death by another son, John Peter, in 1984. Hospital , retiring in 1979 after 50 years in medicine. at Austin for a doctorate in classics. Meredith Rae, March 7, 1989. He graduated'from the University of Michigan in Stephen Stine ’89 will attend the MilwaukeeCollege Dan and Betsy Emdin ’76 Kaylor, Gabrielle Lee, Word has been received of the death of Mrs. Paul 1930. and served his internshipand residency at Henry of Medicine. Aug. 11, 1988. Brouwer ’31, who died of cancer on Wednesday,Nov. Ford Hospital in Detroit.Mich. After his residency, Tbni-Jo Sturm ’89 will pursue a doctoratein organic John '76 and GretchenKlanke, Kimberly Diane, he spent 12 years in Byron Center. Mich, as a country chemistry at the University of Illinois at Champaign- 30, 1988. She was buried in Holland, Mich. Feb. 10, 1988. physician. His wife, Helen, served as bookkeeper, Urbana. James '81 and Nancy Markle, Collins Thomas, Martha Van Burcn ’29 Harris died on Friday, receptionist,surgical assistant, nurse, dieticianand Nancy Sward ’89 will anend the UniversityofTexas Sept. 17, 1988. March 31, 1989. She was 80. cook. at Arlington. Kevin and Sheri VandcrWerp '79 McCarthy,Cohn She was bom in Rossman, N.Y. and attended He moved intoGrand Rapids, in 1946, joining the J. Russell, Feb. 27, 1989. Adrienne Thomas ’89 will work in internal auditing Philmont High School. After graduating from staff at Saint Mary's and opening an office in the George and Sharon Wilterdink '69 Moses, Paul, Hope for NBD of Grand Rapids. she earned her B.S., R.N. in 1934 from Good Medical Arts Building. He became chief of surgery in Oct. 1, 1988. Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles, Calif, and her 1952. Robert Thurston ’89 will work as a buyer with Roger and Kimm Larson '85 Mulder, Kyle Andrew, P.H.N. from the University of Berkeley in 1938. He was also a diplomat in the American Board of Universal Forest Products. March 17, 1988. Prior to her 1948 marriage to Pete B. Harris, she Surgery, a fellow in the InternationalCollege of Donald Umlowski ’89 will attend Wayne State Law Mark ’84 and Lisa Castor '84 Nagclvoort, Tyler was employedby the San Bernardino (Calif.) County Surgeons. School. Harrison, Jan. 22, 1989. Public Health Department.She was a devoted Other memberships included the Association of Scott VanAelst ’89 will work for Prince Corp. Andrew '74 and Cynthia S. Hartman '74 Nyboer,

NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JUNE 19.89 TWENTY SIX Atomic Scientists,the American Association of Geriatrics, the AmericanAssociation of Gastroenterol- ogy. He was also an elder at Garfield Park Reformed Church. Surviving are his wife. Helen; his children, Pauline and Henry Voorhees of California,Jerry and Barbara KEEPING HOPE STRONG Van Duine of Grand Rapids, and Bruce and Susan VanDuine of Grand Rapids; nine grandchildren;and 12 great grandchildren. TODAY AND Delia Helder ’28 Van Eenenaam died on Monday, TOMORROW April 10, 1989 in a Zeeland nursing home. She was 83. Bom in Holland, she graduated from Holland High School before attending Hope. She taught in the Holland Public Schools and, along with her husband, owned and operated Van Eenenaam Grocery, later known as Land of Food. She was a member of Second Reformed Church, “Alumni support — a mark of recognized excellence. where she was past superintendent,a Sunday School teacher and a member of the Ladies Aid Society. Our goal this year is 50% participation in She was preceded in death by her husband, George, in 1962 and by a brother, Melvin, in 1946. She is reaching the $1,000,000 milestone.” survived by a brother, Raymond Helder of Holland, severalnieces and nephews.

Sherwin Walters ’SO of Holland, Mich, died at his home on TUesday, April 18 following an extended illness. He was 62. A retired purchasing vice president for Herman Miller Inc., Walters was employed by the company for more than 28 years, beginning his employment in 1956. He served as quality control manager, assistant merchandising manager and customer servicemanager before assuminghis first management position in Goal purchasing in 1965. In 1976, he received the first Carl F. Frost $1,000,000 management award. He was involved in numerous programs at Herman Miller, and served on the board of IMT/MIL Tech, a Herman Miller subsidiary. He was granted the Paul Harris Fellow from the

Zeeland (Mich . ) Rotary,and served on the consistory of Second Reformed Church, as a directorof Evergreen Commons Senior Center,and as a volunteer for Hope. He attended Hope and graduated from Michigan State University.He served with the U.S. Navy during Goal World War II. Surviving are his wife, Ruth Walters; two sons, 50% participation Richard Walters ofHackensack,N.J. and Michael G. Walters of Zeeland; a daughter, Mrs. Douglas (Virginia) Vos of Zeeland; a brother, Glenn Walters of Grand Rapids, Mich.; and three grandchildren.

James F. White ’46 of Stuart, Fla. died on Thursday, March 30. He was 68.

He was bom in Grand Rapids , Mich, and lived most of his life in Holland, Mich. He lived in Stuart the last five years, while spending his summers in Douglas, Mich. He was a member of Hope Church and BPOE No.

1613 . A veteran ofWorld Warn, he was a commander in the U.S. Navy. He managed Beach Milling Company in Holland and later became a realtor. He was a 52-year member of the Macatawa Bay Hope College has many challenges today and i Yacht Club, serving as commodore in 1966. He was also a member of the Miles Grant Country Club in ahead ---- maintaining enrol ment, raising fun Stuart and Clearbrook Country Club in Saugatuck, Mich. He served as a member of the Republican State keep tuition costs from sk^p:keting Central Committee. 1 helpi He is survived by his wife, PhylissPelgrim White; Hope grow and mature of A a’s lea a daughter, Pamela Hadas, and a son, Gregory White, both of New York, N.Y.; his mother, Marion Whiteof Holland;one grandson; an aunt; his mother-in-law.Eve liberal arts institutions. Pelgrim Meyer of Grand Rapids; and a brother-in-law, George Pelgrim of Honolulu, Hawaii.

Word has been received of the death of Lee You are part ol cann namic Widman, husband of Loraine Pomp '39 Widman of Midland, Mich. He died on Monday, April 17, 1989. nity. We need He was 72. pray< nvolve mee^ffft chalh of to< Elmer “Curly” Wissink ’35 of Holland, Mich, died nd to on Wednesday, April 5. He was 76.

Bom in Zeeland, Mich. , he was a member of Grace Episcopal Church and a past vestry member. He was a 193 1 graduateof Zeeland High School and graduated drengtj the oui ding r from Hope with a degree in business administration. He was presidentof Commercial Terminal and ned b] ling y< lumni ThinsferCompany Inc., and served as a broker for Wolverine Express Inc. and Me Lean Thicking Co. LLIOl He served eight terms with the Holland City 3LLA1 LEST Council, from 1969-1977, and was a member of the Holland Exchange,Holland Chamber of Commerce, ur gift I make Terenc Holland Country Club, Holland Elks Club, Delta Nu Thmsportation Fraternity, Kiwanis Club, and a past member of the Dial-A-Ridc Commission. Surviving are his wife, Margaret (DeVries); a son, . DePre Chair Steven T. Wissink of Holland; a daughter, Ann Wtssink-Adams,of Sudbury, Mass.; three grand- College of Tru children; one brother,Bert Wissink of Grand Rapids, Mich.; and two sisters, Mrs. Kenneth (Evelyn) Wooden of Kalamazoo, Mich, and Mrs, Herman 1979-80 1981-82 (Gertrude)Telgenhof of Zeeland. 1983-84 1985-86 1987-88 1988-89 sympathy to MILLION DOLLAR MILESTONE CAMPAIGN ENDS JUNE 30! Word has been received of the death of Alvern Kapenga, husband of June Meeusen "50 Kapenga of Holland, Mich. He died ofleukemiaonJan.14, 1989.

NEWS FROM HOPE JUNE t9$9 TWENTY SEVEN 1989 Hope Summer Repertory n Theatre

m

1989 Playbill ANYTHING GOES opens June 23 m OUR TOWN opens June 30 S ' .* LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS opens July 14

%} . , ROMEO AND JULIET opens August 4 THE ROAD TO MECCA opens July 13 PUMP BOYS AND DINETTES opens August 11

and two plays from ; THE CHILDREN’S PERFORMANCE m TROUPE opens August 16

FRESH FACES OF ’89 :M one performance August 20

18TH SEASON OPENS JUNE 23 616/394-7890

TWENTY EIGHT NEWS FROM HOPE COLLEGE, JONE 1989