2/22 Monday: Slow Flow (Live Music) w/ Megan Dooley & Delilah DeWylde at Funky Buddah Yoga Hothouse- Experience Slow Flow with a live lyrical twist! Come flow with harmonizing duo, Megan Dooley & Delilah DeWylde on Monday, February 22nd at 7:30pm. Slow Flow is a hot yoga & Power Vinyasa marriage made in heaven. Enjoy 25 minutes of heated Power flow, followed by 30 minutes of deep holding all while listening to live music! 12330 James St. Suite B080, Holland; 7:30 pm – 8:45 pm; Free for Members, $20 Drop-In , $10 Student/Senior/Military with valid ID.
2/23 Tuesday: Hope College Art Exhibit – Katie Wynne: Work Day- From Katie Wynne’s website: My work relies on the reciprocal relationship between human and object. Through the residual energy of their making, objects gain their presence. They sit unassumingly, offering you their structure and their skin. The marks of experience, of external forces, have shifted and scarred them. Through these objects we can read the rise and fall of the human drama, both grand and foolish. 160 East 12th St, Holland; 10am-5pm; Free.
2/24 Wednesday: Hope College Theatre Department presents “Miss Julie” at DeWitt Theatre- “Miss Julie” is set on Midsummer’s Eve on the estate of a Count in Sweden. The young woman of the title is drawn to a senior servant, a valet named Jean, who is particularly well-traveled, well-mannered and well-read. The action takes place in the kitchen of Miss Julie’s father’s manor, where Jean’s fiancée, a servant named Christine, cooks and sometimes sleeps while Jean and Miss Julie talk. On this night the relationship between Miss Julie and Jean escalates rapidly to feelings of love and is subsequently consummated. Over the course of the play Miss Julie and Jean battle until Jean convinces her that the only way to escape her predicament is to commit suicide. 141 East 12th Street, Holland; 7:30pm; Adult $10, Senior, Hope Faculty & Staff $7, Hope Students & 13-18 year olds $5, Children 12 and under FREE.
2/25 Thursday: Hope College Critical Issues Symposium: Engaging the Middle East, Understanding Contemporary Changes at Dimnent Memorial Chapel- or nearly 30 years the Critical Issues Symposium (CIS) has been an integral part of the Hope College academic landscape. A committee of faculty, staff, and students, in consultation with the president, selects one topic to focus on each year. The symposium explores a single topic in-depth through a variety of presentations led by experts from both beyond campus and within the Hope community. The program will include two keynote addresses, a series of short talks, and two blocks of concurrent focus sessions and department-sponsored presentations. 277 College Ave., Holland; 7:00 p.m; Free.
2/26 Friday: Book Sale at The Holland Rescue Mission Gateway Center- Huge Book Sale Supporting The Holland Rescue Mission’s New Gateway Center. 661 E. 24th St, Holland; 9 AM-3 PM; Free.
2/27 Saturday: Holland Gun & Knife Show at the Holland Civic Center- Holland’s Original Gun and Knife show! Celebrating 31 years of outstanding shows. Exhibitors from nearby and across the state. A family activity. Door prize drawing open to all that attend. Food available on site. Organized by Promotions Unlimited Inc. 150 West Eighth Street, Holland; 9am-3pm; $5
2/28 Sunday: Free @ 3 Concert Series- First Reformed Church was founded in 1847 when immigrants from the Netherlands built a log church in what is now Pilgrim Home Cemetery. The present building on the corner of 26th and State streets was built in 1962 and houses a thriving musical congregation. The sanctuary boasts a beautiful Mason & Hamlin grand piano which is used in many of the Free @ 3 concerts. It is also the home to a three manual, 39 rank, 1962 Casavant pipe organ. Perfomance by New Faces & Sounds-J. Adam Briggs, saxophone; Genevieve Beaulieu, bassoon; Sarah Bast, piano. 630 State Street, Holland; 3pm; Free.




