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Transcript of 09-01-2010
J S J C H O R V O L . 1 2 4
N O . 1
SEPTEMBER I. 2010 • SINCE 1887 "SPERA IN DEO" HOPE COLLEGE • HOLLAND. MICHIGAN
?
R • — I — ^ ^ — — • — 1 — — — - — HHOTOS BY HOLLY EVENHOUSE
A N C H O R E D I N O R A N G E A N D B L U E — Top: Freshmen students were Invi ted to put the i r handpr int on the i r class banner. Bo t tom lef t : Andrew Cutshal l
(*14) gets ready to add his handpr in t to the f reshmen banner. Bot tom r ight : Or ientat ion Ass is tant Kat Voorhorst (*12) helps f reshman move-in.
Class of 2014 arrives on campus Lindsey Bandy C A M P U S E D I T O R
O n Aug 27, 186 orientat ion assistants
wear ingbr ightorangeshir tseager ly waited to move in nearly 800 new f reshmen,
Hope's class of 2014. A large por t ion of Hope 's communi ty took part of the
weekend's jam-packed schedule, whe ther serving as an or ienta t ion assistant, an
assistant director or part icipat ing as a f r e shman or t ransfer s tudent . The
schedule was full of events to assist no t only new students , bu t also their families
to get acclimated to campus . The first event was "Mission
Improvable" which took place in Dimnen t
Chapel on Friday night. O the r events ranged f rom meet ing in smaller, s tudent-
lead Orienta t ion groups to s tudent seminars . In these seminars , s tudents had
the oppor tun i ty to mee t with professors
and s tudents who have similar academic
pursuits . O n e of the favorite events, like every
year, was the Playfair that took place
Saturday night in the Dow. Students part icipated in multiple high-energy,
goofy icebreakers with their entire class. Assistant Director Ronald RadclifFe
('11) said, "Playfair was particularly exciting this year; I had never seen a
group of f r e shmen so excited and willing to s tep outs ide of their comfor t zones to
mee t their class." Playfair was followed by a Cool
Beans Coffeehouse event in the Kletz with musical en te r t a inment by Hope's o w n
Stat ionary Travelers and Jacob Bullard,
featuring Laura Hobson. Al though the majori ty of the weekend
felt like a whirlwind of exci tement and exhaustion, m o n t h s of prepara t ion
preceded the weekend. Orienta t ion Directors Lauren Clack ('11) and Andrew
Haggerty ('12) spent the entire s u m m e r living on Hope's campus planning every
detail of the event unde r the supervision of Ellen Awad, d i rec tor of Student Life,
and Shauna Morin, associate director of
Student Life/Activities. W h e n asked about the experience.
Clack said, "If there is one th ing we did
right this year, it was hiring an ou ts tanding
staff." Rob Peterson ('11) echoed these
feelings when he said, "Being an A D was
a great experience; I got to work with an incredible g roup of people and got to mee t a great deal of the f r e shmen class
and 1 have high hopes and expectat ions
for their next four years." Carly Henkel ('12) said, "This has been
an awesome oppor tuni ty to grow closer in the Hope communi ty and I greatly
appreciate the parents ' grat i tude and enthusiasm. I think that the class of 2014
will be a wonderfu l addit ion to our family
here at Hope." All in all, all of the hard work and lack
of sleep tu rned out to be beneficial for the class of 2014 as they make their t ransi t ion
f rom h o m e to Hope. Eric Eeitering (14) said "It's awesome.
I loved it. I already love it here. It is so good to be away f rom h o m e finally. I have
never been on my own before and this is a good transition. Orienta t ion helped ease
a lot of anxieties because I have already m a d e a lot of f r iends and I feel like I
belong here now."
W H A T ' S I N S I D E
N A T I O N A L 3 V O I C E S 6 - 7
A R T S 4 S P O R T S 8
New Faces— Meet the 2010-11 Anchor
Staff! Page 5
loot! Who? - Breathe Owl Breathe to pre-
orm at Hope. Page 4
Got a story idea? Let us know at [email protected]. or call us at 3 9 5 1 7 8 7 7 1
2 T H E A N C H O R CAMPUS SEPTEMBER 1, 2 0 1 0
'Extreme Makeover: Hope Edition'
r H O T O BY HOLLY tVENHOUSE
COME ON IN, SIT RIGHT DOWN- The new Dow Health Center recept ion room awai ts Hope students.
T H I S W E E K AT H O P E
Thursday Sept. 2 Root Beer Kegger 8 - 9 p.m. D e W i t t Pat io sponsored by
Student Congress and Greek Life
Usher In! Music Depar tment Opening Convoca-
tion. 1 1 a .m. Wichers Auditorium
Friday Sept. 3
Drive-ln Movie 9 p.m. Pine Grove sponsored by SAC
Monday Sept. 6 Labor Day Truck Parade 9 : 3 0 a .m. Hol land Civic Center
Tuesday Sept. 7 Fulbright Information Session 1 1 a .m. Granberg R o o m . Van Wy len
Library
I N B R I E F
HOPE CELEBRATES COMMUNITY DAY
H o p e College invites s tudents
and Holland residents to a day full of activities Saturday,
Sept. 4. N o n - H o p e s tuden t s
can purchase an $8 ticket ($4
for children 5-11, chi ldren 4 and under free) that includes
admission to Windmil l Island
(open f rom 9-5 p.m.), four H o p e
spor t ing events and a picnic o n DeVos Fieldhouse lawn f r o m
4-6 p.m. Tickets are avaliable
for purchase in the H o p e ticket
office in DeVos Fieldhouse.
INDIE FILM SHOT ON CAMPUS
In July, H o p e College's campus was the backdrop for
several scenes in the filming of
the independen t film "Return to
the Hiding Place," the story of Dutch s tudents w h o saved the
lives of Jews dur ing World War
II. The film was shot in the Pine Grove, Graves and Voorhees
Halls. Centennial Park and
Windmil l Island were also included in the filming. H o p e
graduate Mat t Tailford ('97) was
involved in choosing Holland
and H o p e as a location for filming. Cur ren t H o p e s tuden t s
were also involved as extras on
the set.
SAFETY ALERT
There have been a series of
s t rong a rmed robberies in areas south of campus in recent days
The Holland Police D e p a r t m e n t
and H o p e College C a m p u s Safety would like to offer the following
safety tips: -Walk/park in well-lit areas
-Walk with one or more f r iends -Have an audible signal like a
whistle or alarm -Have cell p h o n e available when
walking and 911 on quick dial
-Car ry a small flashlight -Have keys ready in hand when
walking to vehicle (keys can be used to defend yourself)
-Tell f r iends where you are going and when you will be back
-Repor t suspicious behavior /peo-ple before it becomes a problem.
-Call C a m p u s Safety or 911
You may request Hope C a m p u s Safety escor t assistance f r o m o n e
c a m p u s location to another.
Madalyn Muncy A S S I S T A N T C A M P U S E D I T O R
While s tudents enjoyed their s u m m e r vacation, renovat ions
on campus were in full swing.
Though subtle, these renovat ions add to the beauty of c a m p u s and
comfor t of s tudents . O n c e a staple in Gilmore,
Durfee and Phelps Halls, lofts are no longer necessary. New
loftablc fu rn i tu re allows s tudents to spend less t ime building their
bed configurat ions making
move-in smoothe r and less
t ime-consuming. Durfee also received new dressers, desks
and carpe t ing in all rooms . Gi lmore resident Lynn
Moss ('13) praised the new
improvements . "I am very excited abou t the n e w furni ture .
It was so m u c h easier to move
in. I didn't have to worry about
building a loft." H o p e College cont inues
to find ways to be green.
Improvemen t s in Gi lmore Hall, several cot tages and the Schaap
Science Cente r all cont r ibute to
Hope 's desire to be sustainable. Gi lmore Hall received new
windows that are t inted and
t h e r m o p a n e d to increase energy efficiency, as well as an electrical
upgrade. Twenty- three cot tages
received energy audits by sustainable technology exper t
the DwellTech company for
r ecommenda t ions to decrease energy use. As a result, new
weathers t r ipping, caulking, insulation and venti lat ion have
Chris Russ A S S I S T A N T S P O R T S E D I T O R
D o r m r o o m s have got ten a
new addit ion this semester—a recycling bin is now in each
d o r m room on campus .
This is t he latest project in a series of r e fo rms that began
with the creat ion of a C a m p u s
Sustainability Task Force in the 2008-2009 school year.
The initiative for the project
came f rom Hope's s tudent
congress. The project was delegated
to the Student Congress Sustainability C o m m i t t e e which
communica ted with the H o p e
adminis t ra t ion to obtain fund ing and approval for the recycling
bins. Co-chair of t he sustainability
commi t t ee Marc Tori ('12) first
me t with Dean of Students Richard Frost, and Residential
Life Director Dr. Jobson who
fully suppor ted the plan. After administrat ive approval
the recyc l ingbinswerepurchased
using money obtained th rough
the H o p e Fund. "We acquired $2,000 to buy
the recycling bins, and I don ' t
even think all of that was spent
o n them," Tori explained. "We had a good consensus to spend
the money on the recycling bins
been implemented in many of
the houses.
Schaap Science Center received new light fixtures that con t r ibu te to Hope's energy
conservat ion initiative.
O n a smaller scale, the Keppel House, which houses the c a m p u s ministr ies offices, received a new
roof.
VanderWerf Hall has also received upgrades. Wi th a
n e w roof and new labs for the compute r science and
engineer ing depa r tmen t s , the remodel to VanderWerf br ings
a m o d e r n update to growing
majors at Hope. The 25-year-old compute r
science s tudent lab gained 230 square feet. Two group study
r o o m s were also added. Students
will be able to plug in their laptops and use large moni tors ,
keyboards and mice at the newly
designed laptop stations.
Perhaps the largest project on c a m p u s this s u m m e r was the
remodel ing of t he Dow Health
Center. Work began in May after classes ended and just wrapped
up in early August . Taking over
the old athletic t ra ining room, the facility has ample space to
bet ter serve s tudents .
New addi t ions include two addit ional exam rooms, larger
t r ea tmen t rooms, a consul tat ion
r o o m and a much larger
recept ion area. Linda Bos, a nurse at t he
health center, said, "The new health center is just beautiful .
W e are very blessed! W e have
basically doubled our space."
and for the mos t par t there's been a lot of suppor t behind it.
I really did feel a lot of suppor t
and encouragemen t f rom staff
a n d students." m J
GRAPHIC BY BRITTANY LAPHAM
A few s tudents in formed of the spending did hold some
reservations. Kristen Craig (12) said, "1 feel like the money could
have been spent on someth ing better, like gett ing nicer fu rn i tu re
in the rooms." Al though Hope 's d o r m s
already have had recycling systems in place, t he addit ion
Cindy Sabo, health center
associate director and nurse,
stated, "The center is more efficient to work in. O u r goal is to
a ccommoda te more students."
The health center has no t been updated since the Dow Center
opened in 1978. Sabo said there
has been some shuffling and
taking over of space, but the center has no t received a m o d e r n
renovat ion until now.
Sabo said the new design is more convenient for staff as
well as s tudents . The waiting
area has at least doubled in size and all supplies are now located
in the same location, making it easier for the staff to locate what
they need.
of the new bins improves that
system. Residents of the do rms will
be ins t ructed to do the following with regards to their recyclables:
W h e n the blue recycling bins in
each r o o m b e c o m e full, residents are to br ing t h e m to o n e of their
building's recycling centers .
paper p roduc t s and containers.
Al though this projec t was organized by Student Congress 's
Sustainability Commi t t ee , many of the other envi ronmenta l initiatives o n campus have
been initiated by the C a m p u s Sustainability Task Force, which
is more focused on making the
Overall, the renovated clinic provides more space, storage
and ability to treat more
s tudents , saving s tudents t ime and perhaps even tr ips to the
emergency room.
"We want s tudents to be comfor tab le and think of the
health center in a positive
way. I th ink that because of the renovat ion s tudents will be
r eminded to take bet ter care of
their health," said Sabo.
Though Hope's c a m p u s has no ex t reme changes, these s u m m e r
improvemen t s undoubtedly enhance the college, cont inuing
to make it a modern and comfor table place to s tudy and
live.
campus as a whole improve
environmentally. The task force was most
notably responsible for the removal of trays f rom Phelps
Dining Hall.
The task force was fo rmed in response to the organization
Green Report Card giving the
college a grade of "D-" in their
2009 repor t . "We didn't want them to
judge us again wi thout our part icipation, so we decided
to take a more active role," Tori
said. H o p e improved its score o n
the repor t card to a "C+" on the
organization's 2010 repor t card. Hope's score can be viewed
on the organization's website,
www.greenreportcard.org. W h e n asked about the change
in the report card. Tori was
pleased with the results. "It's improving a lot, I'm
really happy with the progress we've madeThere are still a lot
of places we can improve, but it's difficult because it takes a
lot of money and energy f rom people. And we don't have the
personnel dedicated to it. Ideally
we would have ful l - t ime people dedicated to the project , but we
don't have the resources for that
right now."
Dorm rooms receive recycling bins
• •
T h e
r e c y c l a b l e s
are then sor ted be tween
S l I M T M B I K 1. 2 0 1 0 NATIONAL T H E A N C H O R 3
Hope earns
bragging rights C O U R T E S Y OF H O P E C O L L E G E
P U B L I C R E L A T I O N S
H o p e College cont inues to
fare well in multiple college guides as the newest edi t ions
of a variety of the publicat ions debut in t a n d e m with the advent
of the school year nationwide. Recent or soon- fo r thcoming
guides that list H o p e among the select number of inst i tut ions they
single out for praise include the
2011 "Americas Best Colleges" published byNUS News & World
Report , the 2011 "Fiske Guide to Colleges" and the "Americas
Best Colleges 2010" published
by Forbes Magazine. The annual rankings
compiled by US News & Wor ld
Report have once again included H o p e College among the 100
best liberal ar ts colleges in the
nat ion.
School N a m e
1 Williams College 1 Amherst College J Swarthmore
4 Middlebury 4 Wellesley 6 Bowdoin College 6 Pomona College 8 Carleton College 9 Davidson College 9 Havertbrd 71 Kalamazoo 88 Hillsdale College 88 Hope College 101 Calvin College I I I Albion College 137 Alma College
US NEWS & WORLD REPORT TOP LIBERAL ARTS SCHOOLS
The college is 88th ou t of 266
insti tut ions that are considered national liberal ar ts colleges in
the rankings. A year ago H o p e was ranked 92nd. The overall
rankings are based on the
publ icat ions m e a s u r e m e n t of academic quality as indicated
seven categories peer assessment,
and graduat ion of faculty resources,
selectivity, financial
a lumni giving.
th rough including
retent ion s tudents ,
s tudent resources, graduat ion rate pe r fo rmance
and high school counselor
ratings. The listings in the undergradua te research/creative
projects and undergraduate-teaching categories are based on
nominat ions f rom senior college adminis t ra tors f rom a round the
country.
Provost Dr. Richard Ray had
this to say about the recent at tent ion Hope has received,
"Hope College is distinctive among the thousands of o ther
colleges and universities around the country for the high quality of
its academic program delivered in the context of the historic Chris t ian faith. We are proud of the many ways our faculty
engage with s tudents to create a vibrant learning community .
That these efforts have garnered the at tent ion of those who study the national higher educat ion
landscape is gratifying."
Holland battery cell plant sparks national attention Aftan Snyder C O - N A T I O N A L E D I T O R
O n July 15 in southeas t
Holland, g round broke for the new LG C h e m / C o m p a c t Power Inc. bat tery cell manufac tur ing
plant. Projected to bring in hund reds
of jobs, many view the plant as a bright spot in a ra ther bleak
e c o n o m y / The special event at t racted several area leaders,
including Mayor Kurt Dykstra and Gov. Jennifer Granholm, as
well as someone a bit higher up
in the chain of c o m m a n d . "Having the president of the
United States coming to our communi ty is someth ing that
doesn't happen very of ten and
is a t r emendous honor," Dykstra
said. President Barack O b a m a
helped break g round for .the plant , and delivered a speech
endors ing its p rospec ts and his hope for cont inued economic
growth. Obama ' s stop in Holland is
par t of his Recovery S u m m e r
Campaign . Funding for the
plant comes partially f rom a $151 million U.S. Depa r tmen t of
Energy grant .
"The O b a m a adminis t ra t ion has been ins t rumenta l in
p romot ing our strategy in
diversifying the economy and c rea t ing jobsbymakingMich igan
a global center for advanced battery research, deve lopment
JULY 1 5 — President Barack Obama speaks at the LG Chem groundbreaking ceremony.
and manufacturing," said
Granholm's press secretary Liz
Boyd. Granho lm has been a longt ime p roponen t of green
manufac tu r ing industr ies in Michigan.The $303 million LG
C h e m / C o m p a c t Power plant
will specialize in automot ive battery cells for electric and
hybrid vehicles. Current ly those batteries are
p roduced in places like Korea,
but last year Michigan became the first s tate to offer bat tery
plants cer ta in tax incentives to
encourage development .
Since then Michigan has a t t racted six other battery cell
manufac tu r ing plants. " W h e n we passed the
Recovery Act last year," says Sen. Debbie Stabenow, "Michigan
received over half of the national battery funding available.
N o w Michigan ranks third in the count ry for clean energy
patents." The Holland plant will sell
supply cells to the Chevrolet Volt extended-range electric
car. In the week before the groundbreaking ceremony. Ford
Moto r Co. and Compac t Power
announced that it too would cont rac t with the plant for the
use of batteries in its electric
version of the Ford Focus. The plant is expected to begin
selling their bat tery cells by early 2012, and will eventually employ
between 400 and 500 workers.
"Clearly the president has bought into the green energy
agenda, said U.S. Rep. Pete
Hoeks t r a . " I think what it does is it may
help pu t West Michigan on the m a p a little bit if there are
investors looking for a location.. . This is really an oppor tuni ty for
West Michigan to put its best
foot forward." In June g round broke in
Midland for a Dow Kokam $600 million l i thium-ion battery
plant, a t tended by Vice President
Joe Biden, and work is currently underway to build a $220 million
Johnson Controls-Saft l i thium-ion plant, also in Holland.
As debate over proposed NYC mosque heats up,
location of ground zero memorial becomes unclear Matt Lee C O - N A T I O N A L E D I T O R
As the U.S.
approaches the nine-year anniversary of
the Sept. 11 terror is t
attacks, the area where the Twin
Towers of the World Trade Center once
stood is the focus of a heated f r eedom of
religion debate.
For the first t ime since 2001,
the news coverage is no t focused on
what was there, but wha t should be built
close to g round zero. The debate over the
cons t ruc t ion of a p roposed m o s q u e
and Islamic center two blocks f rom
ground zero has exploded into one of
the most polarized issues since the health
care debates earlier
this year. Debaters f r ame
i t . as a moral issue versus a const i tut ional right,
an issue of sancti ty versus an issue of f reedom. A recent poll
conducted by C N N shows that 70 percent of Amer icans are
opposed to the const ruct ion of a mosque blocks f rom ground zero
P
KOIO COURTESY ASSOCIATED
AERIAL V I E W - When look ing at an aer ia l photo of
t he area where the Wor ld Trade Center towers once sto-
od, It is relatively easy to d is t inguish ground zero
f rom the rest of t he ci ty.
while 29 percent are in favor.
The Const i tu t ion reserves an individual or group the right to pract ice their religion freely and
peacefully. But for some it is more of an issue of respect than a consti tutional issue. Protestors
of the mosque are
fighting to keep the sacredness of the area
and r e m e m b e r those who lost their lives as
a result of the Musl im
extremists who flew two hijacked planes
into the World Trade
Center towers. In a recent speech
President Barack
O b a m a stated, "As a citizen, and as
president, I believe that Muslims have the same
right to pract ice their religion as everyone in
this country." New York Mayor
Michael Bloomberg
praised Obama's speech as a "clarion defense of
f r eedom of religion." Bloomberg also told the
press that he believes this issue will fade
when the November
elections are finished. How close is too
close? W h e n looking at an aerial pho to of the
area where the World Trade Cente r towers once stood,
it is relatively easy to distinguish ground zero f rom the rest of the city. On the s t reets of Manha t t an ,
however, the answer becomes a little unclear.
In a recent repor t by Fox
News, N e w Yorkers and tourists
a round M a n h a t t a n were asked about the location of g round
zero. Andrew Slawsky s tood outside the proposed area for
the Islamic center and mosque
and claimed that ground zero is not here. "To me, ground zero
is any site that was destroyed or damaged on 9/11 — mostly
the hole in the ground," Slawsky
said. Maureen Santora, whose
firefighter son was killed at
the World Trade Center, has a different take. She said that
g round zero extends far beyond the hole in the ground. It extends through the whole city where
debris covered the s t reets and body par t s were found years
later. "It will always be a place
where my son was murdered .
I don't care what they call this place," Santora said. "It will be a
cemetery."
Nelson Warfield, a Republican strategist who works
in New York told Fox News, "It's a mixture of geography and
conceptual issues," he said. "The concept of an Islamic communi ty
center in close proximity to the scene of the greatest attack
by Musl im extremists on this count ry is hard to delineate in
t e rms of lines o n a map."
4 T H E A N C H O R ARTS S E I T E M B F . R I, 2 0 1 0
T H I S W E E K I N A R T
Wednesday Sept. 1 Coffee House Andrew Belle at the Kletz
9 to 1 1 p.m.
Saturday Sept. 4 Music at Lemonjello's Pistolbrides, Johnny Unicorn. Jes
Kramer, and The Abscission
8 p.m.
Free admission
Sept. 8 Wednesday Brick by Brick Fundraiser show by Hope for kids
8 p.m. (doors at 7 :30 p.m.)
Free admission
Students take the stage with HSRT shows Katie Schewe A R T S Co-EorroR
W h e n H o p e s tudents left
c a m p u s for t he summer, the stage was set for the Hope
Summer Reper tory Theatre .
Every summer , this professional theater company
moves on to Hope 's c a m p u s with a mix of dis t inguished
professionals and young theater
s tuden t s f rom all over the Uni ted
States. Having such a highly regarded
Breathe Owl Breathe opens
Concert Series Saturday
Caitlln Klask A R T S Co-EDrroR
The H o p e College Concer t
Series has worked tirelessly this s u m m e r to bring a band
to c a m p u s for the beginning
of the semester: Breathe Owl
Breathe. Special guests are The Photographers of Traverse City
and Hope 's o w n Jacob Bullard.
The concer t will be held at
the Knickerbocker on Saturday, Sept. 4. Tickets are f ree for
Hope Students w h o present
identification and cost $8 for t he public. The show begins at
8 p.m. Headl iners Breathe Owl
Breathe are folksy music ians f rom the Midwest . This show is
a part of their fall t ou r around
the Midwest and the East coast . J. Edward Keyes writes on the
eMusic website, "The band's
music is terrifically disarming, [ f ron tman Micah] Middaugh's
cracked t enor ambling over
acoustic guitars, [Andrea] Moreno-Beals ' cello swooping
in gracefully, like a w a r m breeze or a host of doves. It's
the soundt rack to the Brothers Gr imm, a lively stroll th rough
the enchan ted forest."
The core of their indie acoustic sound at t r ibutes to their
songwriter, Micah Middaugh, who fo rmed the band with cellist
Andrea Moreno-Beals several
years ago. Middaugh brought college fr iend Trevor Hobbes
into the mix later. Their sound is similar to the likes of Bon Iver,
Horse Feathers, Andrew Bird or o ther indie bands with singer-
songwri ter types of lyrics and
sounds . The band is also an ar t project
of sorts . O n some occasions,
they have m a d e drawings
and paint ings to accompany
their C D s on some occasions. Their stage pe r fo rmances also
demons t r a t e their passion for
expression. O n e open ing band with a
very similar sound is called
The Photographers , though
they have been called These Romant ic Bandits or a variety
of o ther names . Their breathy
vocals mi r ror those of Sam Beam of Iron & Wine, and their
sound has a sparse, attic-like feel.
Bullard, a m e m b e r of HCCS, has played a round c a m p u s several
t imes before. He will also o p e n
for Breathe Owl Breathe. Af te r several successful shows
last semester including Iron &
W i n e s sold-out per formance , HCCS expects high a t t endance
at Breathe Owl Breathe. John Rebhan, who has helped to fill
in d i rec tor Josh Wunderl ich 's shoes while Wunder l ich is
in Switzerland, predic ts high
a t t endance at the show. "We m a d e a Facebook event
for the show, and about 100 people have already said they'll
attend," he says. Many Hope
s tudents may want to a t tend based on the incentive of f ree
admission. "The show may
even sell out," says the Conce r t
Series.
thea ter company on campus allows Hope s tudents to get
in on the act. HSRT hires undergradua te
s tudents as in terns f rom
colleges a round the country. Hope s tudents are also able
to take part in these great
in ternship oppor tuni t ies . Act ing in terns play a large
role in HSRT, but s tudents assist in o ther d e p a r t m e n t s as
well, such as cos tume, lighting,
scenery, sound, publicity and
managemen t . In all, HSRT brings in just
over 100 people to help with these product ions . Typically 15
to 20 Hope s tudents will also
join the staff each summer . HSRT pu t s on seven
pe r fo rmances t h roughou t
the s u m m e r at th ree different
venues. These venues include the
DeWitt stage, t he Knickerbocker
Theatre and the DeWitt Studio. These p roduc t ions include
main stage product ions , as
well as children's product ions . Having mult iple venues makes
it possible for HSRT to pu t on several different pe r fo rmances
in one day. The professionals that are
b rought in f rom all across the
count ry are paired up with s tudents for t he summer . This allows s tudents t he rare
oppor tun i ty to no t only take par t in a professional theat re
company, bu t also work closely
with those who are already immersed in the field that
interests t h e m most .
Ben Hertel '10 was one of
eight acting in terns for HSRT this summer . He participated in
four of the seven shows: "Into the Woods," "An Italian Straw Hat,"
and both of the children's shows,
"Richard Scarry's Busytown" and
"The Brand N e w Kid." Hertel said, "To say I was
busy with these would be a vast
understatement ." The s tudents
would rehearse for abou t 10
hours a day.
W h e n they weren ' t rehearsing, their help would be needed
th roughou t the many technical
d e p a r t m e n t s in the theater. "We would run two kids
shows dur ing the day every Monday, Wednesday and Friday,
with other shows at night," Hertel said. "Needless to say, my
caffeine intake jumped up qui te
a bit for t he summer." Hertel also stressed how
amazing this un ique experience has been for him. Although the
hours were long and demanding ,
Hertel could no t have asked for a
bet ter s u m m e r job. Hertel said t he children's
shows have been one of the mos t impor t an t aspects of his
experience this summer .
"The children's shows proved to be the mos t rewarding,
because we were of ten giving
these kids their very first
theatrical experience," Hertel said. It is experiences like this
that make all of their hard work
worthwhi le .
DePree displays "In Retrospect" through Oct. 1
Caitlin Klask A R T S C O - E D I T O R
The first exhibit to hit DePree
Art Cen te r this semester opened Aug. 23 and will con t inue until
Oc t . 1. Entitled "In Retrospect :
Artists ' Books and Works O n
Paper," t he exhibit features
works by Maureen C u m m i n s , A n n Lovett, and Nava Atlas.
The t h e m e of the exhibit
is sampling - sampling old
books, letters, pictures or o the r
memorabi l ia . All three art ists used their
sampled materials to compile
an entirely new piece with an extraordinari ly different
meaning . The books ' conten t
sparks irony, cynicism, thought fu lness , con tempt and
more for its readers .
According to the artists, the materials c ame f rom various
sources bo th public and personal,
f r o m attics, libraries, museums , ca rdboard boxes in closets and a
set of o the r origins. The overall effect s t imulates
an entire spec t rum of
responses . C u m m i n s , o n e con t r ibu tor
to "In Retrospect," comes f r o m
High Falls, N.Y. and runs her
o w n studio in Brooklyn. Her highly acclaimed work has been
featured all over the country, and she has been recognized with a
mul t i tude of awards.
She graduated f rom Cooper Union School of Art .
C u m m i n s found old letters and pho tographs to present her
themes . They depict such grave topics as madness , slavery and
agony. A n n Lovett, a photographer ,
artist and professor, has qui te a bit of work behind her as
well. Her art has been widely displayed th roughout New York,
and one of her classes concerns
photographic artist books. Her cont r ibut ion to "In Retrospect"
comes f rom a background full
of expertise and on the specific
subject . Lovett takes her subject
f r om personal substance. O n e of her main themes in "In
Retrospect" is irony and the
i ronic relat ions of her subjects . The exhibit is b o t h a protest
and a m e m o r a n d u m . The
HOTO BY MOLLY tVENHOUSt
B O O K S O N D I S P L A Y - Artists sample old documents to compile new books In DePree's current exhibit.
material f r om public places more contrast of personal and public
than personal documents . She has included historical
clippings and extracts relating to
war, loss and grief. Atlas considers herself an
author. She creates and publishes
in New York. She describes her work as an "examination of
gender issues and sexism," and she draws her material entirely
sources should make for an interesting variety of audience
responses. There will be an opening
recept ion for "In Retrospect" on Friday, Sept. 10, at DePree
Gallery f rom 5 to 6 p.m. Art is ts
will present their works ^nd conduc t a brief discussion at
4:30 p.m.
SEPTEMBER 1, 2 0 1 0 FEATURES T H E A N C H O R 5
Introducing: Anchor '10-'11 staff
i 1 ̂
V9 \ t i \ «1 ^ « « m *
rfT a j
4^ Features—John Rebhan ('11) & Alyssa Barigian ('12)
— — r — — :
• ..
Co-Editors in Chief-Karen Patterson ('11) & James Nichols ('11)
JL Sports-Christopher Russ ('12) & Bethany Stripp ('12)
FAR RIGHT: National-Matthew Lee ('11) & Aftan Synder ('11)
RIGHT: (From left) Photos-Holly Evenhouse ('11), Ads-Shelby Wyant ('12) & Production-Ann Malone ('11)
BELOW: (From left) Voices-Mag-gie Almdale ('11), Copy-Annelise Belmonte ('12), Raina Khatri ('10) & Lindsey Wolf ('12). Not pictured: Amanda Karby ('10)
(From left) Graphics-Emily Dammer ('13) & Brittany Lapham ('12). Not pictured: Lyndsey Vanderveld ('11)
§ * n
(From left) Arts-Caitl in Klask ('13) & Katie Schewe ('11)
(From left) Campus-Lindsey Bandy ('12) & Madalyn Muncy ('13)
1 Photos by Holly Evenhouse
Hey, Anchor staff! What is the craziest thing you brought baek to Hope?
Wonder Woman cape
A big f lu f fy TotDro s tu f fed animal
A " th igh m a s t e r "
ID pounds of Guatemalan cof fee
A bit of wool f r o m a sheep in Scot land
A six-pack... (of too thpas te )
A j a r of rocks
6 T H E A N C H O R VOICES S E P T E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 0
Paradoxical perspectives
1 K a r e n P a t t e r s o n & James N i c h o l s
Editors-in-Chief
Traditionally, the first column of the year by the editors-in-chief speaks to how optimistic they are about the upcoming school year. Optimism is a great thing to have; when that optimism is combined with a great staff adviser, a staff can truly flourish.
If you've never met Kathy Nathan before, you're missing out. Really. From her great story ideas and quick wit to her fabulous outfits that look like a Tal-bots ad campaign, Kathy has kept The Anchor staff accountable from year to year while providing creative advice
and friendship. We admit that it's easy to take Kathy
for granted and just thank her every time she refills our candy bowl, but when she's still in the office at 1 a.m., we realize as a staff just how valuable she is. Every student organization at Hope has a staff adviser—some are more hands-on than others. In our minds, Kathy
strikes the perfect balance. During staff training week this year,
Kathy took time out of her day to come in and teach our staff AP style, and she did it in far better form than we could ever have hoped. Each week she sits down with editors from the different sections and shares story ideas that she has. And we're not quite sure how it's possible, but she seems to know every single person that we may ever need to speak to for a story. For that, we as a staff are eternally grateful.
Without realizing it, Kathy has made our jobs as Editors-in-Chief easier. Knowing that she is always available to
O d e t o K a t h y
assist us with anything we need is like having a pocket-sized tell-all book that can engage in conversation with you.
We're fallible just like everyone else; we are just as prone to errors as the next student, but she is always gentle in her corrections. She pushes us as chiefs to be at our besf both at The Anchor and in our personal lives. The same treat-ment is given to the rest of the staff. We know Kathy isn't perfect and she (prob-ably) makes mistakes just like the rest of us, but for her commitment to the Anchor, she cannot be faulted.
As we sit in our office, feasting on leftovers provided by Kathy when she invited our entire staff over to dinner at her house, we think about the upcom-ing year, and can't help but be grateful as well, for our editorial staff.
We look forward to working with our already impressive staff this year and are confident we can put together qual-ity issue after quality issue in the hope that you all can truly feel informed and involved around Hopes community. We look forward to engaging with you and hope that you'll participate as ac-tive citizens of this Hope community through feedback, letters to the editor, and writing articles. We look forward to engaging with you in dialogue and hope that you have the chance to meet Kathy and get to know her as we have.
Karen and James would like everyone to remember: fish are friends, not food.
VOICES O F HOPE COLLEGE: THE ORIENTATION EDITION
"It's not that hot here! What are you guys whining about?"
- Student f rom Arizona
"It's so nice here! Everyone just smiles!"
- Every single incoming f reshman.
"Man, that dude's a really good dancer! He's funny!"
- Girls, referencing an Orientat ion assistant
"Did your Dad like Phelps too? Mine went back for seconds, three
times'.' - Gilmore girl
"I love my triple, we're going to be best friends!"
- Dykstra girl
" Your parents didn't leave 'til Sunday? Mine are still here"
- Kollen Hall resident
Beautiful feet
S o n o f A r e s
This summer I had the pleasure of meeting a demi-god. Working as a camp counselor you hear all sorts of in-teresting stories and meet all kinds of interesting people, but never had I met anyone as out of the ordinary as Jacob.
I met Jake on a Sunday morning. His parents dropped him off outside my cabin and we began to chat. I asked him if there was anything he wanted me to know about him in order to make the next two weeks as fun as possible—this is where it got crazy. Jake's face suddenly turned serious; he came close as though hewas about to tell me an important se-cret. I was expecting to hear something along the lines of "I have a bed-wetting problem," or "my mom doesn't like me to drink chocolate milk," but instead he put his hand on my shoulder and whis-pered, "I'm the son of Ares."
At first I thought he was just be-ing a little goofy. Maybe he'd finished reading "The Lightning Thief" on the drive up here and was playing around. Then we went to join the other guys in the cabin and it got even funnier. Jake stepped over the threshold, gave a low growl like a fierce 12-year-old animal and tore his shirt f rom top to bottom.
Just one shirt, right? No real harm done. Little did I know that the shirt-rip-ping would continue, sometimes once, sometimes twice a day, culminating in an epic scene at the last campfire when his New York Yankees jersey was torn off and sacrificed to the lames. Holy. Cow.
I know from my description it sounds
like lake wasn't all there upstairs, but he was. He was actually a really com-passionate and social kid in between fits of shirt-shredding. And though he stuck to his act day in and day out, there were times when I could tell he was try-ing to convince himself more than any-one else of his special identity. Half way through the week, I learned that he ac-tually was adopted, and the people who had dropped him off on Sunday were
not his birth parents.
B r y a n t Russ Columnist
That's when I started to understand: the truth of Jake's story was so cold and lackluster that he'd rather be someone else. In fact, he had to be someone else. So instead of being the abandoned little boy who nobody seemed to want, he made up a new story to live in. Though he knew that he was pretending, his made-up story gave him more meaning and identity than his real one did.
The funny thing is, we do the same thing. While I've never claimed to be the son of a Greek god, I have pretend-ed to be someone else in order to fit in. I've been so bored with my own story at times that I've wanted to be someone else, somewhere else. Jake is just more
creative, I guess. John Eldridge writes, "We have no
idea who we really are. Whatever glory was bestowed, whatever glory is being restored, we thought this whole Chris-tian thing was about something else. Trying not to sin. Going to church. Being nice. Jesus says it is about heal-ing your heart, setting it free, restoring your glory. A religious fog has tried to veil all that, put us under some sorts of spell or amnesia, to keep us from com-ing alive. As Blaise Pascal said, 'It is a monstrous thing...an incomprehensible enchantment, and a supernatural slum-ber.' When anyone turns to the Lord, the veil is taken away. A veil removed, bringing freedom, 'transformation, glory. Do you see it? I am not making this up—though I have been accused of making the gospel better than it is. The charge is laughable. Could anyone be more generous than God? Could any of us come up with a story that beats the one God has come up with?"
The truth of our identity is a beauti-fully exciting thing. We are free to stop pretending and live into our roles as
children of the living God. Bryant wants all the new students
to get psyched because they're about to have the best years of their lives.
I j i u c c s h c 5 ! -• N i i l : • 1 j
78 E 8th St., Holland, r ight
across f r o m the Hawor th Center .
We feature hnl th products,
hetlthy proiria smoothiet m d c
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A N C H O R 2 0 1 0 FALL SEMESTER STAFF
Karen Pat terson Co-EniTo*-i\-Cnitf
James Nichols Co-EnnoR-is-Cmtf
A n n M a l o n e PRODIICTIOS MW U.IN
L i n d s e y B a n d y CAMPUS Nfns EDUOK
M a d a l y n M u n c y ASSJ. C I I /M/S Atens ENNOR
Aftan Snyder Nuiowi Ntu* Co-EnuoK
M a t t L e e N.ir/ov 1/ A/£ii\ Co-Eimon Katie Schewe /l«r\ Co-EmioR
C a i t l i n K l a s k ARTS Co-EnnoR M a g g i e A l m d a l e K(i/C£\ EDITOR
J o h n R e b h a n FLHHRES CO-EDIIOR
A l y s s a B a r i g i a n FT \riiR£s CO-EDITOR
B e t h a n y S t r i p p SPORTS EDITOR
C h r i s R u s s ASST. SPORTS EDITOR
K a t h y N a t h a n Stiff ADIISOR
E m i l y D a m m e r GRIPIIKS CO-EDITOR
L y n d s e y V a n d e r v e l d GR\PHKS CO-EDITOR
B r i t t a n y L a p h a m ASST. GR\PHHS EDITOR
S h e l b y W y a n t ADS M\\M.tR
Mike Connel ly BnsisBss M w K.f«
H o l l y E v e n h o u s e PHOTO EDITOR
L i n d s e y W o l f C(V» EDITOR
A n n e l i s e B e l m o n t e ASST. COP) EDIIOR
R a i n a K h a t r i ASST. Coh EDIWR
A m a n d a K a r b y ASST. COPY EDITOR
SE P T E M B E R 1,2010 VOICES T H E ANCHOR 7
Want to get your name in print?
Naturally,The Anchor is always looking for print-savvy students to j ump on board the staff.
But you can gain some of the same fame that the weekly staff has, just by wr i t ing a letter to the edi-tor, w i thout worry ing about cramming yet another extra-curricular into your crazy-hectic schedule. Or, if you're interested in wr i t ing a story, come to our weekly meetings, Sundays at 6 p.m. We'll brain-storm story ideas for the upcoming issue, and writers are always welcome to jo in in, every t ime!
Come check out the oppor tuni t ies to get your name in print as a story writer. Either way, SPEAK UP! We want to hear your voice!
You've got an opin ion, so wr i te us. If it's a letter, we'l l need your name, your graduat ing year, and a letter of no more than 500 words: short, painless, and to the point. Shoot it to our inbox (anchor@ hope.edu) no later than 6 p.m. the Monday before our Wednesday issue. The student body is wai t ing to hear f rom you.
x HIWE
From the inside out Ann Malone
Production Manager
At the start of it all
New student orientation is scary. Acutely aware of the craziness involved, I tended not to go to most events out-side of the orientation assistant meet-ings. But, I've come a long way. Being an orientation assistant for the second year this year, it hit me again: orienta-tion is scary. Today while I was sitting outside Phelps, waiting for new stu-dents to move in, I started talking to a new student, a young woman waiting for her parents. It was like looking in a mirror. After a few minutes, she asked how one made fr iends at Hope College. I did a double take.
For three years, I had thought I was the only one who suffered f rom that in-tense longing for home, that desire to not feel overwhelmed by all the happi-ness surrounding me. I told her about the activities fair, and how there were so many things to get involved in. We talked about Greek life, about Nykerk and The Pull, and everything else on campus. I told her about my f reshman year, and the similar feeling of isolation
that 1 encountered. She asked about orientation assistant
groups, and I told her that I met some fantastic people I was still friends with, all during orientation activities planned by my orientation assistant and my resi-dential assistant. I even told her about the first Anchor meeting I didn't go to; I literally walked into Mar tha Miller, saw all the people, and turned right back around, not even entering the room!
While this is funny now, I was appalled
then. I had tons of friends in high school,
and judging by the number of people that recognize m e each summer 1 re-turn home, I wasn't a wallflower. 1 was in choir, drama, freshmen orientation and advanced placement classes. I de-bated. I was involved. The first two years at Hope, I was 'ehh.'
I was in Nykerk, and I at tended events. But I was afraid to take that step, almost afraid to truly go to col-lege. I always admired those people who knew everybody, and felt like I ought to have been one of them. My junior year of college was fantastic, and I have so much to look forward to in the
coming year. In retrospect, it would have been so
easy to begin college the way I'm going to end it. But I didn't, and 1 can only look back on the experience and be grateful for what it is has given me. I still made fantastic friends—I was just a little late in the game. She asked me how to make friends. I responded, "You just have to close your eyes, take a breath, and jump." Jump in to whatever activity has always intrigued you, but you've never taken the t ime to check it out. Explore all the things Hope has to offer, because there are plenty of things out there. And hey, you might even make a few new friends out of the deal.
Anne is really glad she doesn't have
to carry futons any longer!
mm
Maggie Almdale Voices Editor
Off the radar, out in the open It's cliche to talk about change. At least, that's what I'm told. But
frankly, it's everywhere—the hum of our lives is the constant roll of change, f rom text flashing onto our cell phones, to the car that drives past our apartment window or dorm window or LJ's-JP's window, to the incessant flashing of colors and pictures on television or the YouTube video you've watched five times because, well... just
because. Fuzzy-eyed and blurry, our lives t h r u m by—too quickly, it
seems. Not just visually, but emotionally and physically, ev-erything moves. If you're new to Hope, you've signed on for
one of the biggest changes in your life—you're in a new, college community. (Congratulations!)
Well as Voices editor this year, I'm hoping to X "tweak" some things—hopefully you'll be pleased.
But any changes made will just be experi-ments: taking the opportunity to test the
boundaries, to get beyond what's been done before or add a new
^ * twist to what's already
been tried. Further, I echo the hope of Karen Patterson and James Nichols, The Anchors editors-in-chief, and wish that you'll write to The Anchor this year, and talk to us!
Remember that letters to the editors can be sent to anchor@ hope.edu at any time of the day, week, month, any time of the school year. In fact, we'd love to hear f rom you. Literally speaking. I mean, why else do you think we mention it in every issue? (Up-perclassmen, you have no excuse for staying silent inside your dusty
dorm rooms and cottages.) Part of being a community means you talk with those around
you—we are not meant to live alone inside little bubbles of our-selves," throwing parties for one. As a student-run newspaper, we try to present the life of Hope College and the ideas and interests of
the entire campus. Speaking for the Voices Section, I'd like to throw a party for
ya'll—a party of varied opinions, life stories, perspectives and ideas. You're welcome to join in for the fun: enjoy reading, and yes, you might even enjoy writing. Huh,
imagine the thought of it...
i
Our Mission: The Anchor strives to communica te campus events tr i roughout
Hope College and the Holland communi ty. We hope to ampli fy awareness and
promote dialogue through fair, object ive journal ism and a v ibrant Voices sec-
tion.
Discla imer The Anchor is a product of s t u d e n t e f f o r t and Is f u n d e d th rough
t h e Hope College S tuden t Act iv i t ies Fund. The op in ions expressed o n t h e
Voices page are solely those of t h e au thor a n d do not represent the views of
The Anchor. One-year subscr ip t ions to The Anchor are avai lable for $ 4 0 . The
Anchor reserves the right to accept o r re ject any adver t is ing.
Letter Guidelines: The Anchor we l comes al l let ters. The s ta f f re-
serves t h e right to edi t due to space const ra in ts , persona l at-
tacks or o ther edi tor ia l cons iderat ions. A representat ive sam-
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d iscussed wi th Editor-in-Chief. Please l imi t le t ters to 5 0 0 words.
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3 ? T H E A i s i r H R
8 T H E A N C H O R SPORTS SlilTEMBER 1. 2 0 1 0
Men's basketball enters new coaching era Bethany Stripp S P O R T S E D I T O R
Every year brings changes
to any team's roster at H o p e
College, and the men's basketball t eam is no exception. Though
new faces are expected on the
cour t , for the first t ime since 1977, a new face will also be
leading the team. After guiding the Du tchmen for 33 seasons,
Glenn Van Wieren retired f rom
his posit ion as head coach of the men's basketball last year.
Filling the space is longt ime assistant coach and former H o p e
basketball player Matt Neil.
Neil played basketball in high school and con t inued playing at
Hope. After graduat ing he took a job as a teacher and basketball
coach in the Holland Public
School system, fulfilling a d ream
he'd had for qui te some time. "I was always interested in
being a teacher and a coach,"
Neil said. "From as early as the sixth grade 1 thought that that 's
what I wanted to do."
Neil coached basketball for
three years at Holland High School before re turn ing to H o p e
and coaching the |V team for
nine years. He later became an assistant coach for the varsity
squad. Neil noticed a difference
be tween the speed and s t rength
required to play at the varsity
PHOTO BY COLTON W R I G H T
N E W L E A D E R S H I P — Mat t Nell w i l l guide the basketbal l t eam th is winter .
level, and as an assistant coach, he was directly involved in these
aspects of the game.
"My mission was to teach them how to work hard and
teach them that early, so that
when we s tar ted pract ice they
fully under s tood expectations," Neil said.
In becoming head coach,
Neil is cont inuing on a unique
tradi t ion in Hope basketball. Like his predecessor Van
Wieren, w h o played under
fo rmer head coach Russ DeVette
before becoming head coach himself, Neil played under Van
Wieren in the 1980s. And, just
like DeVette was a role model for
Van Wieren, Van Wieren was a
role model for Neil.
"I don ' t know if there's been
anyone who has influenced me more on this c a m p u s than (Van Wieren) has and he did it at a
very format ive point in my life," Neil said. "Between the ages
of 17 and 21 he really was an
impact player in my life at that
point and remains so." As someone who has been
a par t of Hope's basketball
p rogram for over 25 years, Neil
knows how hard the coaching staff has worked to build Hope's
basketbll reputat ion. He hopes
to cont inue runn ing a high
integrity p rogram dur ing his
t ime as coach. He also has
three other goals for the team: purpose , passion, and pride.
"(One of our) goals is to find
purpose in what we're doing, coaches and athletes alike," Neil
said. "We need to opera te with passion, and we can do that and
be humble at the s ame time. 1 also think we have to have some
pride in this insti tution. Pride in the fact that it is an academic
center, pr ide in the fact that it's a place of excellence, pr ide in the
fact that we t rust God to lead
all of us in what we're doing and how we're moving about our
everyday lives."
Neil is also interested in s tudent suppor t for the athletic
t eams at Hope. As founder of the Dew Crew, he hopes to see
s tudent suppor t go beyond
men's basketball and into other sports .
"1 don ' t want people to feel as
though the Dew Crew is simply
an exclusive men's basketball ideal here," he said. "I'd like them
to organize and get to soccer
matches and volleyball matches
and goodness, even get ou t to a cross count ry mee t some time.
That would be my hope: that
our s tudents get out to football
games and soccer matches and volleyball matches, just like they
do for basketball. 1 think that it's
impor tan t to do that."
Vande Hoef to lead Flying Dutch in Softball Chris Russ A S S I S T A N T S P O R T S Eo r rop
The re t i rement of head
coach Karla Wol te rs at the end
of last year's Softball season was a significant event not
only for H o p e College's athletic
d e p a r t m e n t but for the H o p e
c o m m u n i t y as a whole. Wolters served as the head of the Softball
p rogram for the past 22 years.
The mos t direct evidence of her legacy can be seen in the fo rm of
the recently completed Wolters
Softball Stadium.
Her replacement is first t ime head coach Mary Vande Hoef,
a 2003 graduate of Centra l
College, located in Pella, Iowa. Vande Hoef has spent six years
coaching at the Division III level,
first as an assistant at Ithaca College, N.Y. and later as an
assistant under George Wares at
her alma mater.
Wares was also Vande Hoef ' s
coach in her t ime as a player at
Centra l and she stated that he has had a significant impact o n
her coaching philosophy.
"I think one of the biggest
things that he taught me was to take risks, and to not be afraid,"
she said.
W h e n asked abou t the t ransi t ion be tween coaches,
r e tu rn ing captain Abby Phillips ('11) explained her thoughts on
the subject . "Coach Wolters is an amazing
w o m a n and was a wonder fu l coach," Phillips said. "However,
we are excited about the change,
and are hopeful about ex tended
success under the lead of Coach Vande Hoef."
Vande Hoef issued a similar sen t iment while discussing her
first year as coach.
"I'm sure there will be some
changes but
I definitely
want to draw on the
t radi t ion and
history that
exists within the program,"
she said.
I n
addit ion to her role with
the softball H
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p r o g r a m ,
Vande Hoef
will serve
as director of Hope 's
i n t r a m u r a l
p rogram and assistant director of the Dow Center. This posit ion
has allowed her to begin to
interact with a n u m b e r of her players before the season
begins.
Vande Hoef also became familiar with her t eam by
watching many of them play on a s u m m e r t eam in Byron Center.
Building personal relat ionships with her players
is an essential aspect of her
coaching approach. "As a coach you get to have a
pretty active involvement in the
lives of your players," she said. As a coach on the Division
III level, Vande Hoef feels that her players have more of an
oppor tun i ty to develop in ways
not exclusive to athletics. "I'm really passionate about
the Division III philosophy of building s tudents as whole
PHOTO BY HOLLY EVENHOUSE
F R E S H P E R S P E C T I V E - Vande H o e f s f i rst head coach ing job is for Hope's sof tba l l team.
people, as s tudent athletes," she
said. W h e n responding to the idea that this level of college
athletics is somehow less
significant, Vande Hoef was qui te clear that she completely
re jects this idea
"At Hope, you're here first and foremost to get your degree, and
that 's what 's going to car ry you after college," s h e said.
Vande Hoef expressed a good deal of op t imi sm when asked
about the upcoming season. "The goal on any t eam that
I coach is to win a national championship," she said. "There
are some years where that 's
a realistic goal, and there are some years where it might not seem like that , but I think if you
don't talk about it, and you don ' t
d r e a m about it, it's never going
to happen."
T H I S W E E K I N S P O R T S
Wednesday
Women's Soccer vs. Corners tone at 4 p . m .
Friday Men's Soccer vs. G o s h e n a t 7 p . m .
Sept. 1
Sept. 3
Sept. 4 Saturday Volleyball vs. Thel l at 1 0 a . m .
Cross Country Bill Vanderbi l t Invi lat ional a t 1 0 : 3 0 a .m.
Football vs. Illinois Wes leyan at 1 : 3 0 p .m.
Men's Soccer vs. M i l w a u k e e School of Engineering
at 6 p .m.
I N B R I E F
FOOTBALL
The men's football team has
been ranked four th in a pre-sea-
son poll of MIAA football coach-es. Coaches were not allowed to
vote for their o w n team. Trine
was ranked unanimously as the
top team in the league. Trine has won the league for the past
two years. H o p e will open its
season at h o m e on C o m m u n i t y Day, Saturday, Sept. 4. The t eam
finished last season with a 3-7 overall record and a 3 -3 confer-
ence record which earned them
four th place irt the MIAA stand-
ings.
VOLLEYBALL
The Flying Dutch volleyball
t eam has placed four th in the
American Volleyball Coaches Association pre-season poll.
Last season's t eam earned a Final
Four appearance in the Division
III Championships . In addit ion, the squad tallied 34 victories, a
Hope College volleyball record.
Washington-St . Louis, who de-feated Hope in the Final Four,
is ranked first in the poll. Calvin
College is ranked ninth.
W O M E N ' S SOCCER
Hope's fall spor ts season offi-
cially begins Wednesday, Sept. 1. The women's soccer t eam plays
its season opener against Cor-
ners tone University. This will be the squad's first comple te season
in the newly completed Van An-
del Soccer Stadium.
CROSS COUNTRY
The U.S. Track & Field and
Cross Count ry Coaches Asso-ciation have ranked the women's
cross count ry team second in the N C A A Division III Great
Lakes region. The men's team was not ranked in the pre-sea-
son poll. The poll ranked the top 10 teams in each region.
Calvin topped bo th the men's and women's poll. Last season,
Hope 's women's team finished second in the MIAA and placed
sixth at the N C A A Great Lakes Regional. The m e n s team also
finished second in the MIAA and placed 10th at the N C A A
Great Lakes Regional.