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黄大仙高手论坛

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Class Notes

Sat, Sep 01, 2018

HERITAGE

(graduated more than 50 years ago)

Lugene 鈥淎rchie鈥 Bazuin 鈥47 and Ellie Jansma Bazuin 鈥48 met at Calvin, and on June 9, they celebrated 70 years of marriage. They鈥檙e retired now after serving churches in Iowa, Illinois, Colorado, and in Munster, Indiana, where they ministered at Second Christian Reformed Church for 27 years. After retiring from that church, Archie became a chaplain at Village Woods retirement center in Crete, Illinois, until he retired a second time at the age of 88. For many years he also spoke at Bible conferences from coast to coast. The Bazuins鈥 anniversary celebration took placeat Hartsfield Village in Munster, where they now live.

Jack Van Der Slik 鈥58 has authored a timely new book, The Korean Crisis: One People, Two Nations, A World on the Brink. Published by WildBlue Press, the book examines the 70-year separation and rivalry of the two Koreas and asks, 鈥淐an a viable condition for reconciliation be obtained?鈥 Professor emeritus of political studies and public a airs at the University of Illinois Springfield, Jack has written several books on international and domestic politics. (Available at the Calvin Campus Store.)

1960s

Dennis Tolsma 鈥61 has retired from聽Kaiser Permanente鈥攁gain. He retired the first time in 2012 as founding director emeritus of Kaiser Permanente鈥檚 research center. When his successor left unexpectedly in 2015, he was asked to come out of retirement and serve as interim director. In the past three years he has rebranded it as the Center for Clinical and Outcomes Research and helped put a new director in place. He believes this will be a true retirement! Before Kaiser, Dennis spent 30 years at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, where he still lives.

These 2nd VanderWerp dormmates Eric Evenhuis, Ken Klassen, Ron Bode, Don Batts, Jim Kos, George Heerema, Ray Slager, Ron Polinder, and Ken Van Iddekinge)聽have stayed connected since their graduation in 1968. Their friendship began in the fall of 1964 when all participated in 鈥淧roject V.鈥 The 鈥淰鈥 stood for 鈥淰alues,鈥 and it was an experiment the college tried to see if 76 first-year students, chosen at random, housed together, and placed in the same sections of the same core classes would show more interest in and a better grasp of class content than students not in the project. There鈥檚 no report on the success of the project other than the lasting friendship of these classmates, who reconnected at their 50th reunion in May.聽

Rehoboth McKinley Christian Healthcare Services and Cibola Medical Foundation hosted a continuing medical education event and reunion of physicians who served several聽months at Rehoboth Christian Hospital during their senior year in medical training. Besides seminars by several of the attendees, the event featured tours of the Rehoboth Christian School campus鈥攕ite of the original hospital鈥 and the current healthcare facilities. Pictured, seated, from left: Rich Miyamoto, Cynthia Miyamoto, Beth Dykstra, Louise Vander Lugt. Standing, row 1, from left: Marcia Battjes Bos 鈥69, Betty Houtman Kamps 鈥64,聽Cobie Muller, Ellen Batts, Jim Knoll 鈥70, Karen Bouman, Bill Bouman 鈥59, Lee Vander Lugt 鈥68, Joyce Dykstra. Row 2, from left: Lois Bangma Meyer 鈥69, Don Batts 鈥68, Ron Mulder 鈥68, Jack Kamps 鈥57, Phil Kamps 鈥61, Jay Dykstra 鈥61, Marilyn Cok Gjeltema 鈥57. Row 3, from left: Gary Bos 鈥69, Bruce Muller 鈥64, Alden Dykstra 鈥88, Ken Gjeltema 鈥79. Row 4, from left: Eugene Corbett, Jim Meyer 鈥69, Jan Mulder, Bryan Kamps 鈥82, Russell Kamps 鈥14, Kristy Zietse Kamps 鈥14, Kyse Faber Kamps 鈥59, Gerald Robertson.

1970s

At the 2018 Tony Awards in June, Rich Hopper 鈥70 was one of the winners in the category 鈥淏est Revival of a Musical鈥 for Once on This Island. Rich is one of the play鈥檚 producers. He was a 2016 Tony nominee in the same category for his production of Spring Awakening. On August 13, an original musical he helped produce, Gettin鈥 The Band Back Together, opened on Broadway.

Pepperdine University presented Carolyn Vos Strache 鈥71 its 2017鈥18 Women in Leadership Award at a banquet in March. She鈥檚 been at聽the school for 38 years, beginning as a professor of physical education. For the past 33 years she鈥檚 been an administrator鈥擯epperdine鈥檚 longest-serving female administrator. Carolyn鈥檚 robust mentoring of students was especially commended in the award presentation.

Last October, Elizabeth A. Carlson ex鈥72 was awarded the Lucie S. Kelly Mentor Award at Sigma Theta Tau International鈥檚 44th Biennial Convention. Currently professor and chair of the department of adult health and gerontological nursing at Rush College of Nursing, she has held a variety of clinical and academic positions at Rush University Medical Center since 1976. She鈥檚 also received a number awards聽for her leadership and was instrumental in the development of the Doctor of Nursing Practice program at Rush.

In February, David Timmer 鈥73 was installed as the Jacob and Gela Schnucker Sessler Chair in Philosophy and Religion at Central College in Pella, Iowa. David has taught in the聽religion department at the college since 1980 and has published works on medieval Jewish-Christian relations, Franciscan missionaries in colonial Mexico, Dietrich Bonhoeffer鈥檚 life and thought, and more.

Ben Beversluis 鈥77 wrote the screenplay for the feature-length documentary From Wilderness to World Class: The Story of Holland, Michigan. The lm premiered to full houses in December聽at Holland鈥檚 Knickerbocker Theatre. Produced by the nonprofit Holland Film Group, the documentary traces core themes in Holland鈥檚 history as reflected in the people of Holland today. 鈥淭he understanding of cultural history I learned from professors like Ron Wells is still paying off,鈥 said Ben. After 30 years as a newspaper writer and editor in Grand Rapids and Holland, Ben is now a freelance writer and communications consultant.

Earl DeVries鈥78聽was recently elected chairman of the San Bernardino (California) County Fish and Game Commission. An avid hunter and fisherman, Earl was first appointed to the commission in 2014 and counts it 鈥渁n honor to serve our community in this way.鈥

Last November, Minnetonka, Minnesota elected a new mayor鈥 Brad Wiersum 鈥75. Brad is no stranger to the city鈥檚 operations, having served on the city council since 2003 and on several municipal boards. Minnetonka is a suburban city of 52,000 residents, located about 10 miles west of downtown Minneapolis.

1980s

Barbara Rottman Hoogenboom 鈥83 was recently presented with the Distinguished Graduate Mentoring Award at Grand Valley State University in Allendale, Michigan. The award honors a faculty member who has shown outstanding service in mentoring graduate students in the research process, including their publications and presentations. A professor in the department of physical therapy, Barb has mentored more than 90 graduate students in their research as they completed the clinical doctorate in physical therapy at GVSU.

In a meeting of the Senate Judiciary Committee on April 26, Senator Orrin Hatch paid tribute to Tom Jipping 鈥83, who served Hatch as a staff member on that committee for 15 years.聽鈥淭om is one of the true experts on judicial nominations,鈥 the senator said. 鈥淗e鈥檚 also handled a number of important bills, on topics ranging from disability law to religious freedom to art exhibitions.鈥 In May, Tom became deputy director of the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at The Heritage Foundation in Washington D.C.

In April, Ken Koornneef ex鈥85 became the CEO of Nobis Engineering, headquartered in Concord, New Hampshire. Ken has been with the company for 29 of its 30 years in business, serving most recently as its president. Nobis Engineering is a multidisciplinary engineering consulting firm with other offices in Lowell, Massachusetts, and Naugatuck, Connecticut.

In April, Mike Bos 鈥85 became the new director of ticket operations for The College Football Playoffs, the organization overseeing the post- season play that determines a national champion for NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision, the top level of college football in the United States. Before taking this position, Mike was senior associate athletics director at the University of Texas Austin.

Syllabic Press recently published That Said, a volume of new and selected poems by Robert Schreur 鈥85. The book collects poems from ten of his previously published volumes along with new poems. A 1993 PhD in English from Johns Hopkins University, Robert is a licensed clinical supervisor at the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center; he also maintains a private psychotherapy practice.

Scott Brill 鈥89 is the new chief financial officer for Young Life, a global Christian outreach mission to middle school, high school, and college students. He comes to the organization from Target Corporation, where he held several senior-level positions. Of his new post, Scott said, 鈥淚 can鈥檛 imagine a better organization where my financial skill set can put service first and help build God鈥檚 Kingdom!鈥

1990s

The law firm Foster Swift Collins & Smith recently elected attorney Jennifer Siebers Van Regenmorter 鈥90 in its Holland (Michigan) office to lead the firm鈥檚 health care practice group. She has also been recognized for her contributions to health care law in Best Lawyers in America 2018.

In March, Christy Anderson 鈥92 celebrated her 50th birthday with a trip to the United Kingdom. The day she arrived in London, a young woman saw her Calvin-branded backpack and asked if she was an alum. Eleosa Chong 鈥18 was in London on spring break and, like Christy, was looking for the entrance to Westminster Abbey鈥檚 evensong. The two eventually found it, enjoyed the service together, and discovered further connections:
Eleosa is from Seattle, where Christy lived until 2014, and Eleosa spent the summer of 2014 in Christy鈥檚 new hometown of Austin, Texas. 鈥淲hat a ridiculous set of coincidences,鈥 said Christy. Or, in Brit-speak, 鈥淢ad!鈥

Dan Hoang 鈥92 has produced Je虂sus, le Don d鈥檜ne Vie (Jesus, the Gift of a Life) in partnership with the French branch of Compassion International. Directed by his wife, Myriam, the musical theater piece features 36 cast members, including the couple鈥檚 nine-year-old son. It premiered at The虂a虃tre Andre虂 Malraux near Paris, where the 850 seats sold out a week before the performance. Dan had the opportunity to tell French president Emmanuel Macron about the show, which is now touring France through December 2019.

Stephen Scholler 鈥94, a senior vice president at Wells Fargo Financial Advisors in Grand Rapids, Michigan, has been recognized as a Best-in-State Wealth Advisor by Forbes for 2018. Steve has 24 years of experience in聽the financial services industry.

The University of Michigan Medical School has honored Scott Owens 鈥94 with the 2018 Kaiser Permanente Award for Excellence in Pre-Clinical Teaching. Two Kaiser awards are given each year to faculty members nominated by students and other faculty for outstanding teaching. Scott is an associate professor of gastrointestinal and hepatobiliary pathology at the school and is the director of the Division of Quality and Health Improvement.

The Michigan High School Athletic Association has announced that聽Mark Uyl 鈥96 will become its next executive director in August. Mark
has been assistant director since 2004, coordinating the MHSAA鈥檚 officials, running the statewide baseball program, and leading the organization鈥檚 catastrophic and concussion care insurance plans. He鈥檚 perhaps best known as one of the top baseball officials in the country, working the College World Series in 2014 and 2017 as well as officiating college football for 12 seasons.

For 11 years, Jonathan DeVries 鈥97 has taught music at St. Hilda鈥檚 & St. Hugh鈥檚 School in the Morningside Heights neighborhood of New York City, where he now chairs the department. On November 18, 2017, Jonathan made his Carnegie Hall conducting debut as the artistic director of the Canterbury Choral Society. In a聽performance of Mahler鈥檚 Eighth Symphony, he led the combined ensembles, including two adult choirs, full symphonic orchestra, eight soloists, and 350 student singers from nine聽of New York City鈥檚 best schools and churches. Also on the program was a world premiere by Rollo Dilworth, who was commissioned to write a concert-length work for the occasion specifically celebrating youth choirs.

On Valentine鈥檚 Day, Callie Lewis Feyen 鈥98 celebrated the publication of her first book, The Teacher Diaries: Romeo and Juliet. The memoir traces the trials and triumphs of teaching Romeo and Juliet to eighth graders, interlacing that experience with Callie鈥檚 memories of her own growing up and how they influenced her teaching. A main theme of the book, Callie writes, is that shared stories 鈥渃an mend what鈥檚 broken and forge new paths鈥攁 timely theme for our society in general.鈥 (Available in the Calvin Campus Store.)

Newly released, The Routledge Handbook of Literary Translation was co-edited by Ben VanWyke 鈥99. Ben, who passed away in September 2017, helped launch the first PhD program in translation studies in the U.S. at Binghamton University. He was a professor in the department of world languages and culture at Indiana University鈥揚urdue University Indianapolis.

Brad Mockabee 鈥99 was recently named principal of Grand Rapids (Michigan) Christian High School. Since starting at the school following his Calvin graduation, Brad has worked in a variety of roles. He鈥檚 served as a Spanish teacher, varsity football coach, Winterim coordinator, and dean of curriculum prior to this appointment.

2000s

In January, Jonna Van Schepen Fey 鈥00 (third from left), who lives with her husband and children in South Africa, traveled to Kenya to visit 2016 Distinguished Alumni Award honoree Margaret Njuguna 鈥94 (seated, far right) at En-Gedi Children鈥檚 Home. Margaret opened En-Gedi in 2013 as a place of safety for children with severe developmental and physical disabilities. Seeing Margaret鈥檚 work confirmed for Jonna the need to bring a similar kind of program to her home, north of Pretoria. To find out more about En-Gedi, visit en-gedichildrenwithhope.org.

In April, Matt Hoekzema 鈥01 was named vice president of property management for First Companies, a Grand Rapids-based real estate, construction, and property management firm. Matt and his team ensure that all First Companies properties are functional, well-main-tained, and professional looking for building owners and their tenants. Prior to this position, Matt worked for 10 years as the assistant director of Calvin鈥檚 physical plant.

Joseph Stubenrauch 鈥01 has won an American Society of Church History book prize for The Evangelical Age of Ingenuity in Industrial Britain, published by Oxford University Press. He was awarded the 2017 Frank S. and Elizabeth D. Brewer Prize for out- standing scholarship in church history by a first-time author. In the book he maintains that British evangelicals in the late 18th and early 19th centuries created novel approaches to evangelism, even using hot air balloons and the telegraph. Joseph is an associate professor of history at Baylor University.

Nathan T. Zwagerman 鈥06 has been appointed director of pituitary and skull- base surgery at the Medical College in Wisconsin, the nation鈥檚 fourth largest private medical school and Wisconsin鈥檚 largest private research institution.

Lakewood Construction in Holland, Michigan, has named Kyle Engbers 鈥09 its new vice president. He previously served as a project manager and director of safety at the firm, which he joined in 2015.

After finishing his residency in internal medicine and pediatrics at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago in June, Jared Rispens 鈥09 joined
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention鈥檚 Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS) in Atlanta. EIS officers are dispatched to the front lines of disease outbreaks of all kinds, from Ebola in West Africa to bedbugs in Tennessee. As a 鈥渄isease detective,鈥 Jared will聽join the vessel sanitation team, which prevents and responds to gastrointestinal outbreaks on cruise ships. He hopes to spend a lot of time at sea!

Despite the civil unrest there, Calvin alums living in Managua, Nicaragua, got together for a potluck reunion in May. Pictured left to right, they are: Kim Karsten Holtrop 鈥97, Steve Holtrop 鈥97, Jessica Jonker Starkenburg 鈥01, Liam Starkenburg, April Hoekstra Homkes 鈥02, Mark Homkes 鈥02, Katey Westergren Park 鈥14, Kyu Park 鈥13, Ruth Arrowsmith Ippel 鈥04, Andrew Ippel 鈥04, Dan Van Zoest 鈥93, Lisa Riebkes Van Zoest 鈥91, Jared Benthem 鈥02, Susan Potter Benthem 鈥04, and 19 future Knights!

2010s

After she lost her husband, Danny VanderSpek 鈥10, to cancer in 2014, Corrine Junga VanderSpek 鈥10 wanted to find a public way to continue his legacy. Because they met and grew聽in their faith at Calvin, she and Danny鈥檚 loved ones decided to endow a scholarship in his name that will be awarded each year to a student who is pursuing electrical engineering, Danny鈥檚 vocation, and who prioritizes faith聽鈥渂y living it and sharing it with others.鈥 Besides the money that Danny鈥檚 family is raising for the scholarship, Richard Vander Vaart 鈥85 is donating proceeds from the sale of Still Can鈥檛 Help Myself, his second book of short stories and daily devotions. When Danny was in high school, Richard was the pastor for his profession of faith; he also spoke at Danny and Corrine鈥檚 wedding and Danny鈥檚 funeral. (Available in the Calvin Campus Store.)

Amanda Roels DeLong 鈥13, realtor and associate broker with Patriot Realty in Grand Rapids, has been named to Realtor Magazine鈥檚 2018 Class of 30 Under 30鈥攜oung stars rising in the聽real estate industry. She was chosen from more than 300 applicants for the award. A feature of Amanda鈥檚 practice that stood out to judges was her ability to help clients of diverse backgrounds, including those that speak little to no English, purchase their first home in a very competitive market.

Kendra Pennings Kamp 鈥14 graduated last spring with her PhD in nursing research from Michigan State University. Her dissertation examined social support and self-management behaviors among emerging adults with inflammatory bowel disease. Kendra and husband Scott Kamp 鈥13 have moved to Seattle, Washington, where she will be a postdoctoral fellow at the University聽of Washington School of Nursing.

Among the 17,000 attendees at the American Physical Therapy Association鈥檚 Combined Section Meeting in New Orleans in April were these five young Calvin alums. They found each other and held a mini-reunion. All are studying to become physical therapists, and four聽of the five presented research at the conference. From left, they are: Lexi Scott 鈥15, studying at the University of Dayton; Amy Sybesma 鈥15, California State University Sacramento; Autumn Oostindie 鈥15, Elon University; Cole Evans 鈥16, University of Illinois; Cassie Van Dyke 鈥15, University of Michigan.

Allison Bosch Rowe 鈥16 remembers well the first time she stuck an IV needle into a patient鈥檚 arm. Besides her sweaty palms, she remembers how encouraging her clinical instructor, Joel Vedders 鈥94, was in that nerve-wracking moment. Now both Allison and Joel work on聽the outpatient surgical services unit at Blodgett Hospital in Grand Rapids, and in April the hospital presented both with the DAISY Award for Extraordinary Nursing. The international award recognizes nurses not only for their clinical skill but also for their compassion. Allison calls nursing 鈥渁 privilege, providing shade in some of the largest deserts people walk through.鈥

The American Association of Geographers presented Janaya Crevier 鈥16 and her collaborators the 2018 Alternative Mode of Scholarship Award for their project Ways Home: The Story Map. As a Fulbright Scholar in Vienna, Janaya worked with four teammates to create an interactive map telling the stories of four people with refugee backgrounds who are making new homes in Austria. She now works with MAPSCorps in Chicago, creating maps that connect people with local resources and community assets. Of the award-winning project, she says, 鈥淲orking on The Story Map was the beginning of what I hope will be a lifetime of learning to listen, to narrate stories with data and maps, and to use my skills to build change with my community from the ground up.鈥 To see The Story Map, visit bit.ly/2GOzofF.

The independent, nonprofit, Charles Stark Draper Laboratory in Cambridge, Massachusetts, has named Jonathan Manni 鈥17 a Draper Fellow. The award provides financial, technical, and mentoring support to Jonathan through- out the course of his PhD studies in engineering at the University of Colorado. He received the fellowship for his project to improve the way cameras are used to guide robots through new environments, both in the air and in space.