08-29-1987

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1987

Hope Begins 126th Year

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Orientation

Hope College begins its 126th academic year when orientation begins for new students on Saturday, August 29 (see related article). Classes will start on Tuesday, September 1. A moderate enrollment increase is being projected by college officials. The number of students expected to study at Hope this year is estimated to be 2,600 compared to 2,545 in 1986-87, according to Registrar Jon Husiken. This count includes part-time students and those s t u d y i n g in o f f - c a m p u s p r o g r a m s . The increase is attributed to an unusually large incoming freshman class which is expected to number 665 compare to 583 last year, said Husiken. The annual Fall Convocation will open the school year on Tuesday, September 1 at 7:30 p . m . in D i m n e n t . T h e Convocation will mark the first formal college event led by new president, Dr. John Jacobson. The speaker will be the Reverend Marchiene Rienstra, the senior pastor at Hope Reformed Church. She has held that post for the past three-and-ahalf years. Rienstra, the first woman senior pastor in the Reformed Church in America, which will be held on the DeWitt has entitled her address "Learn patio, beginning at 6:30 p.m. to Grow." She is a graduate of Monday night. Calvin College and Calvin The Fair allows new students Theological Seminary. Rienstra to get more information on is also a m e m b e r of the various student organizations. Attending Clergy Association at Representatives from groups Holland Community Hospital. ranging from the anchor to the The Board of Trustees will Ski Club are present to answer confer honorary Doctor of any questions students may Letters degrees upon Max have. Another highlight of DePree and Dr. Victor Eimicke orientation is D.R.I.N.K. — at the Convocation. Drinking Responsibly is Not DePree, the newly-elected Koincidental. To be held on chair of the Board, has served as Sunday night at 9 p.m. in the a trustee since 1982 and also Kletz coffee shop (in the recently chaired Hope's basement of DeWitt), D.R.I.N.K. Presidential Search Committee. features a non-alcoholic bar as A Hope graduate, DePree is the well as activities which give chief e x e c u t i v e o f f i c e r of students information on the Herman Miller, Inc. in Zeeland. affects of drinking. Eimicke, the former chair of Other features of orientation the Board from 1978 to 1987, is include: now an honorary trustee. The Various workshops and holder of three degrees from lectures which i n t r o d u c e New York University where he students and their parents to studied business and industrial college life and Hope College psychology, Eimicke is the specifically. Ranging from a tour president of V.W. Eimicke of the l i b r a r y to s t u d e n t Associates, a world-leading activities, these workshops are publisher of business forms. designed to a c q u a i n t new Major dates on the 1987-88 students to Hope's campus and calendar are: Inauguration of tell them what they can expect in President John Jacobson, O c t o b e r 9: H o m e c o m i n g coni. to pciqe 2

Highlights

First Donee Outside

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Highlights of this y e a r ' s orientation program include the i third year of Playfair for new students and a return to the outdoors for the first all-school dance. Playfair, which replaced the freshman dance three years ago, is designed to allow new students to get to know each other while having a lot of fun. It features different activities which force — in a friendly manner — students to meet each other. Although there is a lot of physical activity involved (students are requested to wear tennis shoes (sneakers for you Easterners)), it is light and designed for everyone. " P l a y f a i r was g r e a t ! " exclaimed one freshman at last year's orientation. "Some of it was silly but it let as have a fun time and meet new people." Playfair will be held Saturday night in the Dow Center at 9:30. After moving indoors last year — due to an excessive amount of complaints two years ago — the first, all-college dance will be outside again this year (as long as the weather cooperates). Beginning at 8 p.m. (and going until 11) on Monday night, the

dance will be held in the Pine Grove — with the band and its sound system pointing directly at the President's home. "When the dance was held outside two years ago, the band faced due east, right down 12th street. The police got complaints about the noise from Holland heights (which is almost a mile away)," stated City Councilman Phil Tanis, a recent Hope grad who is presently running for mayor. "Therefore, the city staff was very reluctant to allow the dance outside again this year. "But at our last council meeting, officials from SAC (the Social Activities Committee) and Bruce King (the new Director of Student Activities (see related article)) convinced the city council that the noise would be held down," Tanis continued. 45 Facing the band north into first, the president's home and then more college campus, downtown, and the river was a good idea. That should take care of the noise problem and allow students to have a good time since being inside at this dance just doesn't work," he concluded. The dance begins immediately after the annual Activities Fair

Weekend, October 9-11; fall recess, October 15-18; Parents' W e e k e n d , O c t o b e r 23-25; Thanksgiving recess, November 26-29; s e m e s t e r b r e a k , December 19-January 11; second semester begins, January 12; winter recess, February 13-16; Critical Issues Symposium, March 2; spring recess, March 18-27; Van Wylen L i b r a r y D e d i c a t i o n , A p r i l 21; commencement. May 8. Among m a j o r p r o j e c t s completed on the Hope campus this s u m m e r were the installation of a new telephone system and the additionof approximately 140 automobile parking spaces on property east of the Chessie system railroad tracks (Siberia II). Construction on the new Gordon and Margaret Van Wylen Library is nearing completion. The $8.7 million facility is expected to open in time for the second semester of the academic year. A new admissions house will soon be constructed on the corner of 10th Street and College Avenue. The $500,000 building will consolidate the admission office which is currently located in two cottages along 10th Street. The new two-story brick building will contain approximately 7,000 square feet. Several appointments to the faculty have been announced by Provost Jacob Nyenhuis. They include: Sandra Alspach, a s s i s t a n t p r o f e s s o r of commutation; Richard Batt, visiting assistant professor of geology; C. Baars Bultman, associate professor of education; Teunis Donk, assistant professor of education; Julie Fiedler, visiting instructor of English; Karen Frederickson, associate professor of music; Michael Jipping, assistant professor of computer science; Pilkyu Kim, assistant professor of political science; Lonnie Klein, intern in music; Perry Landes, visiting lecturer in theatre and theatre facilities m a n a g e r ; Andrea Meyer, intern in German; David Netzly, assistant professor of biology; Anthony Nieuwkoop, assistant professor of biology; Tomothy Pennings, assistant p r o f e s s o r of m a t h e m a t i c s ; Crystel P i n c o n n a t , visiting instructor of French; Patricia Roehling, assistant professor of p s y c h o l o g y ; Keith T a y l o r , cont.

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