


|
|
|

|
|
|

|
|
|
Active Summer Precedes Start of School Year at Hope;
Opening Convocation Is Sunday, Aug. 25, at 2 p.m.
Posted August 7, 2002
HOLLAND -- A variety of highly visible
improvements will greet students when they arrive at Hope
College later this month.
Most noticeably, the new science center has
progressed from being a hole in the ground to sporting
girderwork that provides a sense of the building's final
shape. Construction will continue throughout the coming
year.
As a part of the science center project, a home on
12th Street has been moved to 14th Street between College
and Columbia avenues. The relocated home, named for its
former owner, retired music professor Dr. Anthony Kooiker,
will house seven male students beginning this fall.
The project is also prompting the relocation of
psychology's offices from Peale to an office building that
the college has acquired on the north side of 10th Street
east of Central Avenue.
In other work, the three northwestern racquetball
courts in the Dow Center have been converted for use as
weight and fitness rooms, each 2,400 square feet. The
weight room will have new equipment, and the fitness room
will contain a mix of old and new. The former weight room
is being made into a dance studio, and the wrestling room
next door, also a dance studio, is having its floor
refinished. All four rooms will be air conditioned.
The theatre lobby patio of the DeWitt Center has
been replaced. The look east of DeWitt has also changed,
with the college and city having replaced neighboring street
lights with lamp posts that offer a period feel.
The college is adding two parking lots. Already-
extant is the former bank lot on 10th Street between Central
and College avenues. The college will complete a lot on
13th Street east of the railroad tracks this fall.
Two major property acquisitions will facilitate
future campus development. Hope has purchased the Western
Foundry property on Fairbanks Avenue south of Eighth Street,
part of the site acquisition for the DeVos Fieldhouse. The
community portion of the effort to raise funds for the
fieldhouse was announced at the site on Tuesday, July 9.
Hope has also purchased Lincoln School, located on
Columbia Avenue between 10th and 11th Streets, with the site
destined to house the Martha Miller Center for the
departments of communication and modern and classical
languages. The college hopes to start construction on the
center in the spring.
In addition to the work at Hope, neighboring
Western Theological Seminary is engaged in a major
construction project of its own. The seminary broke ground
this summer on a new wing being added to the north side of
its main building, near Dimnent Chapel.
The opening convocation for the coming school
year, the college's 141st academic year, will be held on
Sunday, Aug. 25, at 2 p.m. in Dimnent Memorial Chapel.
The public is invited, and admission is free.
MacTV will carry the convocation live on local cable.
The convocation address will be delivered by
author and attorney Dean L. Overman, a 1965 Hope graduate
now living in Washington, D.C., who will present "Spera in
Deo" (the college's motto, "Hope in God").
Overman is a senior partner at Winston & Strawn,
an 840-attorney national law firm that represents banks and
multi-national corporations. He was partner-in-charge of the
firm's Washington, D.C., office from 1978 to 1986, and
worked with his partner in the firm, former Vice President
Walter Mondale, on a variety of domestic and international
matters.
Prior to joining Winston & Strawn, he served in
the Ford White House, first as a White House Fellow for Vice
President Nelson Rockefeller, and then as associate director
for policy review. The White House Fellows program provides
a year-long opportunity to participate in government at the
highest levels; 11-19 men and women each year work full-time
as a special assistant to a cabinet member or senior
presidential advisor. He was previously a partner in the law
firm of D'Ancona, Pflaum, Wyatt & Riskind.
Overman's publications reflect his range of
interests, and include "A Case Against Accident and Self-
Organization," an interdisciplinary book on logic, molecular
biology and particle astrophysics which argues that
scientific reasoning supports belief that intelligence lies
behind creation of the universe. He is author of a book on
effective writing style for business and the profession, and
co-author of a book on financial valuation of an acquisition
candidate.
He is author of a theological/physics article on
Stephen Hawking's no boundary proposal, published by
"Princeton Theological Review." He is also author or co-
author of chapters in five law books and six law review
articles on banking, commercial, corporate, tax and
securities law, one selected by "Corporate Counsel's Annual"
and "Corporate Practice Commentator" as one of the 10 best
corporate law reviews.
Overman's additional professional activities
include speaking on authentic religious pluralism at the
conference "The World After September 11: The Political,
Economic, Military and Spiritual Challenge," held at Windsor
Castle in England earlier this year. During 1999-2000, he
was a Templeton Scholar at Oxford University. He has also
been a visiting scholar and officer of Harvard University,
an adjunct fellow with the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, and an adjunct professor at the
University of Virginia Law School. He co-authored the plan
that led to creation of the nationwide "Communities in
Schools Inc.," which now serves more than 2,500,000 students
from lower socio-economic backgrounds.
He graduated from Hope with a psychology major,
with additional emphasis in literature and philosophy. He
was class president, co-founded Young Life Leadership at the
college, co-captained the men's varsity basketball team and
was a member of the golf team. He completed his law degree
at the Boalt Hall School of Law at the University of
California, Berkeley, and also attended Princeton
Theological Seminary and the University of California and
University of Chicago Graduate Schools of Business.
Residence halls for Hope's new students will open
on Friday, Aug. 23, at 10 a.m. Orientation events will
begin that evening and will continue through Monday, Aug.
26.
Returning students are not to arrive on campus
before noon on Sunday, Aug. 25. Classes will begin on
Tuesday, Aug. 27, at 8 a.m.
-30-