04-27-2011

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HOPE COLLEGE • HOLLAND. MICHIGAN

"SPERA IN DEO'

APRIL 27, 2011 • SINCE 1887

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ARTS

FEATURES

SPORTS

Gone Missing

Senior Farewell

Hope Baseball suffers losses

Hope College Theater ends season strong

Hope says good-bye to the Class of 2 0 1 1

The Dutchmen fall to Adrian over the weekend In a double-header.

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Earth Week challenges campus to 'think green' Madalyn Muncy CAMPUS NEWS CO-EDITOR

To raise awareness about environmental issues and to educate the Hope College c o m m u n i t y on environmental ethics and energy conservation, the college celebrated Earth Week April 15-21. A variety of events marked the celebration, f r o m music to lectures to meet and greet with local farmers. Events were sponsored by several c a m p u s organizations, including Student Congress, Sustainability Committee, Environmental Issues Group, Social Activities Committee, Residential Life, Green Cottage and Concert Series, in an attempt to reach out to all students as well as the public. Hope has continuously been a continuously p a r t of the sustainability discussion. Efforts to make H o p e s ecological footprint smaller have been put in place t h r o u g h o u t the past few years, with b o t h Phelps and Cook dining halls going tray-less, the introduction of recycling bins in d o r m rooms and the reduction of energy used on campus, as

well as reducing the a m o u n t of paper used in the library and residence halls by double-siding copies and encouraging students to print to PDF files. The week kicked off with Earth Jam on April 15 in the Pine Grove. Despite somewhat chilly and gusty weather, students t u r n e d out to listen to Hope's o w n "Idelide" and Joshua Davis, a Michigan-based musician and songwriter w h o is currently finishing a solo album. Organic and vegetarian food and the opportunity to create a recycle T-shirt were part of the event. The film "Climate Refugees" was shown Monday, followed by a panel discussion. "Climate Refugees" is a d o c u m e n t a r y about global warming and population displacement directed by Michael Nash, who spent two years traversing the globe visiting hot spots where rising sea levels are threatening people's survival. To expose t h e c a m p u s to the benefits of vegetarian food, dining services hosted a vegetarian lunch at Phelps, Cook and the Kletz. For o n e meal, students were asked to

PHOTO COURTESY OF PUBLIC RELATIONS

G I V I N G B A C K — In an effort to engage In sustainability and to recognize the importance of Earth Day, a t r e e was planted In the Pine Grove near Graves Hall during Easter weekend. Students are encouraged to get Involved with campus groups' efforts to promote " g o i n g green" on campus. helps save money, as well as the it was interesting to learn that give up meat and try vegetarian environment," Mindy Carlson eating vegetarian isn't just about options. ('13) said of her vegetarian "Though what I ate is eating healthy. Actually, eating experience. commonly offered at Cook as vegetarian can help reduce S E E EARTH, P A G E 2 a vegetarian option, I thought fossil fuel emissions, which

at Ho

Jon Huisken to retire after 42 Huisken was a 1965 graduate of Calvin College and spent his first few years after college Midway through my interview working as a middle school and with Jon Huisken, Gary Camp, junior high school teacher. "What I keep telling people w h o is the associate director of is that I sort of just fell into this admissions and international recruitment at H o p e College, job. I've always wanted to work at the college level. This opporstrolled in. He greeted Huisken while referring to him as a leg- tunity came along, I looked at it and d e t e r m i n e d that it was inend and told h i m that his son, teresting to me. I c a m e at a point Michael Camp, was currently in time when there was a lot of teaching English and philosophy transition here, and I was able in Cambodia. Huisken, who will retire as to build from there. So it's been sort of a progression of responregistrar and dean of acadmic sibilities. W h e n I started here I services this semester, told C a m p had an office of two people and to keep in touch and asked him now it's considerably more." to relay a message to his son. W h e n he first joined Hope's "Tell him 1 r e m e m b e r him; I staff he was the assistant regisr e m e m b e r him well." trar and was p r o m o t e d to regisThis dedication to the students of Hope College has marked the trar a year after that. In 1989 he career of Jon Huisken, w h o be- was p r o m o t e d again to dean of academic services and registrar. gan working at Hope in 1969. " W h e n 1 see students who I've In those years, one thing has really worked hard with, stu- stood out as the highlight of his dents w h o were struggling, stu- job. "What do I like best about dents w h o often came in here, it? Probably my work with studidn't see any prospect of gradudents. It's always been front and ating, of success- seeing them cross the stage and graduating center in my work, advising stuhas given me great pleasure," dents, helping students progress through the institution and their Huisken said. Chris Russ

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academic programs so they can graduate." W h e n asked about the least enjoyable aspect of his job, a clear answer also arose. "Meetings. Yeah, meetings, I enjoy some, but s o m e are not productive. I will not miss meetings." Even while his responsibilities grew at Hope, he took on another position, a part-time teaching job at Davenport University, where he taught business math and business writing. These talents eventually transferred to Hope where he teaches a business writing course that he has taught to this day. Huisken discussed the two primary benefits this position brings. "One is staying in touch with students but also putting myself in the place of a faculty m e m b e r to see what a faculty m e m b e r goes through, and what we ask them to go through in this office, because we have a lot of things that we need faculty to do for us." Since he began his work at the college, Huisken has seen the student body develop and go through a n u m b e r of changes. O n e of the changes he obFEATURES

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Jon Huisken

served is simply the students interaction with technology; the fact that they are constantly connected and electronically tuned in to what is going on around them. Another change he noted is in t h e way students learn, saying that they have transitioned f r o m a system of lecture and response, to one of active learnine and critical and interactive

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Got a story idea? Let us know at anchor@hope.edu. or call us at 395-7877.

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problem solving. W h e n he has time away from his many duties at the college, Huisken makes some time for reading and classical music, a m o n g other things. He listed three books that recently had made an impact on him. These works were "The Book of Negroes" by Lawrence Hill, "The SEE

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04-27-2011 by Hope College Library - Issuu