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Alumni Profiles:

Mlungisi Sisulu * Craig Morford * Pete Hoekstra *
Terri Lynn Land * Scott Carpenter * Rev. Eugene Sutton

Class of 2006 * Class of 2005 * Class of 2004 * Class of 2003

Class of 2007*

Many Hope College graduates have gone on to great success in the world of government or politics. Though most of them studied political science while at Hope, other graduates discovered their passion and calling later in life. Here are a few of their stories:


Mlungisi Sisulu
Class of 1998
former South African diplomat

In 1999, a year after graduating from Hope with a degree in political science, Mlungisi joined the Department of Foreign Affairs in South Africa. He began his work as the First Secretary in the South African Embassy in Prague, Czech Republic. In 2005, he started his work as the First Secretary in the South African Embassy in Khartoum, Sudan, where it is believed that he contracted the cerebral malaria that led to his untimely death. While at Hope, Mlungisi was involved in Model UN, and Inquiring Minds, as well as International Education activities. He was named to the Dean's List for eight consecutive semesters.

Of his death, Minister of Foreign Affairs Dlamini Zuma states "During his tenure in the department of Foreign Affairs, Mlungisi served the department and indeed the country with diligence, professionalism, loyalty and great dedication. Accordingly the death of Mlungisi Sisulu leaves the Department of Foreign Affairs and indeed our country poorer in our efforts to consolidate the African agenda."

Mlungisi is also the grandson of Walter and Albertina Sisulu, leaders of the anti-apartheid African National Congress and mentor to Nelson Mandela.


Craig Morford
Class of 1981
Acting Deputy Attorney General

On July 18 2007, Craig Morford was named by President Bush to serve as the Acting Deputy Attorney General, the second-highest position in the U.S. Department of Justice. Morford's appointment was the latest honor in his 20-year career as a U.S. attorney. He has gained recognition for successfully prosecuting both mob bosses and corrupt public officials, including the conviction of Rep. James Traficant in 2002 on bribery charges.

Morford was an economics major, a member of the Cosmopolitan fraternity at Hope, a participant in the Washington Honors Semester, and after graduation attended Law School at the University of Valparaiso. He first got his start as a trial attorney with the IRS, then worked for the Department of Justice's Organized Crime Strike Force from 1987-1990. He spent the next 16 years with the U.S. attorney's office in Cleveland.

After his distinguished handling of the Traficant case in Ohio, Morford was asked in 2004 to lead the internal investigation of a mismanaged terrorism case in Detroit. Ultimately, Morford recommended that the case be dismissed, a difficult choice for which he was praised by then Deputy Attorney General James Comey as "smart, careful, fair, decent and funny. He cares passionately about achieving justice, which is more than just winning. He is one of the good guys, and the people of the United States are lucky to have him as one of their lawyers" (quoted in the Detroit News on Wednesday March 9, 2005).

Morford was noted by his then boss, U.S. Attorney Greg White in Cleveland, as someone who can be counted on "to do the right thing." While maintaining his career, Craig has remained active in his church, and leads a strong family life. He was also instrumental in government outreach efforts to the American Muslim community after 9/11 and the USA PATRIOT Act. His appointment to the high rank of Acting Deputy Attorney General provides yet another set of challenging circumstances, but this simple philosophy of doing the right thing will get him through it all.


Pete Hoekstra
Class of 1975
United States Representative

Though a member of Congress for over 15 years and a possible candidate for governor of Michigan in 2010, Pete Hoekstra can never run for President. This Hope College graduate was born in the Netherlands and came to America with his family at the age of three. This makes him one of the few members of Congress that were born outside of the United States, and thus ineligible to be President.

Nonetheless, Hoekstra has enjoyed remarkable success since graduating Hope in 1975 with a political science degree. He first earned his M.B.A. from the University of Michigan, and worked at Herman Miller as a marketing executive for 25 years. In 1992, Hoekstra challenged longtime Congressman Guy Vander Jagt (a fellow Hope alum) in the Republican primary, and won on a grassroots campaign.

Since being elected, Hoekstra has primarily served on the Education and Transportation committees. In 2004, he was named Chairman of the House Select Committee on Intelligence, an influential position in this time of the war on terror that has taken him around the globe and to Iraq several times.

Hoekstra has appeared on numerous television shows such as "Meet the Press", CBS Evening News, and NBC’s "Dateline"; and also has written pieces published in The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, and The Washington Times. However, he still finds time to regularly visit his alma mater to speak to classes and deliver speeches. Many Hope students have served on his campaigns and worked as interns in either his Holland or Washington, D.C. offices.


Terri Lynn Land
Class of 1981
Michigan Secretary of State

As Michigan Secretary of State, Terri Lynn Land is responsible for most of the day-to-day interaction that citizens have with their government. Since being elected to her position in 2002, Secretary Land has focused on providing quality customer service for those seeking to renew their Michigan vehicle registrations or driver's licenses, to name a few of the services that her office provides.

Land graduated from Hope College in 1981 with a degree in political science, a choice that had already been made in her mind after extensive political involvement back in high school (she was one of the youngest attendees at Michigan's 1978 Republican state convention). To this day, Land notes that opportunities such as the Hope Republicans and campaign internships were crucial in molding her to what she has become today.

Land's career path began with the Allegan, Ottawa, and Kent County Republican organizations, respectively. From 1992 until 2000, she served as Kent County Clerk, overseeing a period of great changes in Michigan's 4th largest county.

In her present statewide role, Land has re-organized the branch office structure, expanded Internet and ATM-style service options, and implemented new voting systems to ensure that elections are accessible for people with disabilities. In recognition of her work, she was named as one of Government Technology magazine's "Top 25 Doers, Dreamers and Drivers" for 2005. Land has also been mentioned by some as a possible candidate for governor of Michigan in 2010.


J. Scott Carpenter
Class of 1987
Deputy Assistant Secretary to
U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs

In his October 2005 presentation at the dedication of the Martha Miller Center, Scott Carpenter compared his life's journeys to those of Bilbo and Frodo Baggins, saying that his travels have "taken me far from
my own comfort zone to worlds far away
and dangerous, where I’ve found myself in
strange and wonderful places."

To illustrate, Carpenter told the story of being one of only three Americans who met with former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein immediately after he was captured. At the time, he was working for the Coalition Provisional Authority, helping to smooth the transition to Iraqi self-governance. He also assisted in the drafting of the interim Iraqi constitution, and the formation of the Iraqi Governing Council and the first post-Saddam cabinet.

Carpenter's experiences before working in Iraq were just as significant. While a student at Hope, he participated in the Washington Honors Semester, which he identifies as an important influence upon his future. Carpenter graduated in 1987 with triple majors in political science, French, and history. He then served as a teacher first in China, where he witnessed the 1989 student-led democracy protests in Tiananmen Square, and later in Hungary.

Returning to the United States, Carpenter worked for a time in Congress as a press secretary and legislative aide before earning advanced degrees in economics and European studies from Johns Hopkins University. In the mid-1990s, he traveled with the International Republican Institute to help organize the first fully democratic elections in Bulgaria after the end of the Cold War.

Now, Carpenter works for the Department of State overseeing several initiatives that aim to promote democracy in the Middle East. It's an enormous task that he relishes, and one that may lead him to more yet-unkown places. As Carpenter said, "God has launched me like an arrow that has no idea of what the target is – and that is completely okay with me.”


Rev. Eugene Sutton
Class of 1976
Bishop,
Episcopal Archdiocese of Maryland

Canon Pastor,
Washington National Cathedral

In March of 2008, Rev. Eugene Sutton was elected as the 14th bishop of Maryland, the first African-American to lead the diocese in its 227-year history.

Sutton graduated from Hope with a composite degree in international relations, although it wasn't long before he knew that he was called to work in the ministry.

As the designated pastor of prayer and pilgrimage at the National Cathedral, America's "National House of Prayer", Rev. Sutton has had the opportunity to meet with and guide many of our national leaders in their spiritual walks. After 9/11, he worked with the White House to organize the national prayer service that was seen across the world.

Rev. Sutton's work in the ministry has seen him serve Episcopal churches in New Jersey and Washington, D.C., pastor the Covenant Community Reformed Church in Muskegon Heights, and teach on the faculty of several seminaries across the country. In addition, he has authored several publications, organized many conferences and seminars, led pilgrimages to Rome, South Africa, and France, and fulfilled numerous speaking engagements, including Hope's 2003 Baccalaureate address. Rev. Sutton views all of his professional experiences as equally significant because they have all served to help people.

Among the thousands of graduates of Hope's political science program, Rev. Sutton's career path has been unique, but he gives much credit to his college experience:

"Hope College prepared me well for a variety of jobs in teaching, administration, and the pastoral ministry. A liberal arts education exposes you to many areas of inquiry. It enables you to hold knowledgeable conversations with a wide range of people, and that has been extremely helpful in my preaching.

"A lot of people have the purposes of education skewed. The purpose of a college education is not to prepare you for a job — jobs come and go. The purpose of a liberal arts education is to prepare you for life, and your life is a much larger subject than your job.”


Below is a partial list of what some recent graduates are doing with their degrees in political science.

2007 graduates

  • John Davisson is doing Teach for America before going to medical school
  • Andrew Filler is going to graduate school at Penn State University where he hopes to get a degree in Landscape Architecture
  • Alisa Hintz is attending John Marshall Law School in Chicago with a focus on public interest law or constitutional law
  • Ryan Lincoln spent the Fall of 2007 interning at the U.S. Embassy in Guatemala and hopes to attend graduate school in pursuit of Latin American Studies or Public Diplomacy
  • Thea Neal is working for the Peace Corps in West Africa
  • Anthony Patrick is working for the Target Corporation in Minneapolis as a Business Analyst
  • Danielle Revers is attending the University of Edinburgh in Scotland to pursue a Master’s Degree in African Studies
  • Mackenzie Smith is teaching middle school English with the Teach for America program in Louisiana
  • Leslie Tableman is attending the University of Oregon in pursuit of a Master’s in Public Administration
  • Jason Weber is working for Holland City Councilman Jay Peters before heading to law school

2006 graduates

  • Matthew Adkins is working in the Bush White House in Washington D.C.

  • Emily Cornell is working as liaison manager to field directors for the Rudy Guiliani presidential campaign

  • Joseph Diekevers teaches high school government in Michigan

  • Lauren Engel is attending law school at Roger Williams Law School

  • James Grandstaff works for the Missouri Democratic party on multiple candidates’ campaigns

  • Sarah Jared is working as a police officer in Grand Rapids and is currently undergoing a background check to work for the Federal Bureau of Investigation

  • Rebecca Marcus teaches high school in Florida

  • Emily Mills is working for the Peace Corps in Africa

  • Elizabeth Otton is attending law school at Michigan State University

  • Kurt Pyle is a doctoral candidate in political science at Michigan State University

  • Kerry Van Laan is working for the Michigan Republican party on several campaigns on the eastern side of the state

  • Kristi Richardson works for U.S. Congressman Peter Hoekstra

  • Abigail van Kempen is attending law school at DePaul University

2005 graduates

  • Olin Alimov is working for the United Nations Tajikistan Office of Peacebuilding

  • Vance Brown is pursuing a degree in humanitarian development administration at the University of Denver. In addition to three quarters of on-campus study, Brown is also spending two years in the Peace Corps

  • Tonzia Buor is a teen program assistant with the Boys and Girls Club in Holland, MI

  • Jamie Campbell is a mentor coordinator for teen girls at the Hope House/Child & Family Services in Alpena, MI

  • Timothy Fry is the Manager of Government Affairs and Policy for the National Rural Health Association in Washington, D.C.

  • Jacob Kain is a consumer services coordinator with Liberty
    Resources in Philadelphia, PA

  • Rebecca Knooihuizen is a intelligence analyst for the U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Diplomatic Security

  • Joshua Wiersma is in law school at Georgetown University

2004 graduates

  • Elinor Douglas is working towards a graduate degree in International Development at the University of Denver. She previously served two years with a nongovernmental organization in El Salvador

  • J.K. Granberg-Michaelson teaches English in China

  • Fatu Kamara is enrolled in a graduate program in international relations at Regent University

  • Emily Robinson is a staffer for a Chicago city alderman

  • Michael Rykman was admitted to a PhD program in political science at the University of Pittsburgh

  • John Vega is the Youth Director at the Hispanic Center of Western Michigan in Grand Rapids

  • Erica Vieglahn is employed by the Republican National Committee

  • Julie Wilcox is the Assistant to the Chief of Staff for Senator Fank Lautenberg (NJ) in his Capitol Hill office

2003 graduates

  • Kurt Koehler is attending the Ave Maria School of Law

  • Jim Plasman is working as an Operations Specialist for the Department of State in Washington, D.C.

  • Rebecca Rasdall is a Staff Assistant for Congressman Dave Camp

  • Sara Steele is working at the White House Office of Media Affairs

  • Harold Steed is a Legal Assistant with the firm of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meacher & Flom LLP in New York

  • Hillary Stone is the On-Site Account Manager and Human Resources Employment Coordinator for Manpower Professional at Perrigo in Allegan, Michigan