ESR Reports Vol. V, No. 2

   
Viola A. Braxton: In Grateful Memory
The Ministry of a Braxton Scholar: A Taste of Sarah Peterson’s Writing
People & Places: News and Reflections from Faculty
Stephanie Ford on “ESR As a Resource Beyond the Classroom”
Lonnie Valentine on Bayard Rustin and Martin Luther King, Jr.
Stephanie Crumley-Effinger on Challenge and Growth Among Faculty and Students
Nowadays: Extended Online Alumni/ae News
The Ministry of Writing Colloquium: Linda Mann’s Report
 

Nowadays: Extended Alumni/ae News

Stan Banker, pastor of Indianapolis First Friends Meeting and ESR alum (M.Div., 1976), is leading two 8-day tours to Costa Rica in March and June of this year. Part of the trip includes visits to the Monteverde Friends Meeting and School, the United Nations' University of Peace, community development projects, and the many natural sights of the country.

Victoria Burke (M.Div., 2000) has been working for over a year at Hospice of Dayton as a home care chaplain. Victoria writes, "The other day I had a 'through the back of the wardrobe' experience here in Dayton when I drove along a winding red brick road surrounded by magical wintry scenery -- and all right here in the heart of Dayton, truly a gem of a city. I love my work and appreciate Dayton more each day."

Peter Ford (attended 1964-1967) is Director of Pastoral Care at Winchester Medical Center in Winchester, Virginia. He was recently granted the Certificate in Thanatology: Death, Dying and Bereavement by the Association for Death Education and Counseling (ADEC). ADEC is the national interdisciplinary credentialing body for thanatology. It certifies persons providing care, counseling and education to the dying, their families, and caregivers.

Lawrence Garvey (M.Min., 1981) recently retired as Senior Pastor of The Cornerstone Community Church of Alexandria, Indiana. Upon his retirement he was named Pastor Emeritus of the church. Larry and Donna are now living in North Augusta, South Carolina where she is painting and he is writing. Their e-mail address is lagarvey@comcast.net.

Judy Guerry (M.Div., 1998) is working as a counselor in Hope Place domestic violence shelter in Huntsville, AL. She currently serves as clerk of Huntsville Area Friends Meeting and as a member of the Ministry and Nurture Committee for the Southern Appalachian Yearly Meeting and Association (SAYMA). As part of the SAYMA M&N Committee, Judy helped with worship sharing and other aspects of SAYMA's annual gathering in 2003. Judy and her partner, Charlotte Shea, enjoyed travels last fall in Ireland, Scotland and England, especially Cornwall, where they stayed with f/Friends and attended meeting for worship. Judy and Charlotte sing in the Huntsville Feminist Chorus. "We sing fine songs from all over the world that help both of us to be re-freshed," says Judy.

Thomas Jeavons (MA, 1978), General Secretary of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting, was one of the speakers for the November 2003 conference of the Pew Roundtable on Religion and Social Welfare Policy, held in Washington, D.C. Thom serves as a consulting scholar for the SUNY Albany / Rockefeller Institute of Government, which runs this project to research and analyze the background and direction of religious organizations' involvement in social service activities. The project also offers insights into the development of policy on government involvement with "faith-based organizations."

Marylouise (Mainhart) Lambert (attended 1977-79) writes, "I'm enjoying having our adult children, Theresa (23) and Gerald (26), my mother (94), my sister and, of course, my husband, Marc, all on the home island of Alameda [in the San Francisco Bay]. I continue to work full time as a sign language interpreter in a local community college. It's work that I love, in programs that so empower the students I work with.

I became alternate clerk of the John Woolman School Alumni Association a few months before the School suspended classes. In the two years since then I've attended almost all of the Board meetings. We alumni are deeply concerned for the future of our School as well as preserving its past. I recently made a website related to one of our projects: http://www.geocities.com/jwswombats/. I'm thrilled with the students who have applied to come for the opening in January 2004 of the new Woolman Semester Program. The board and staff have been steadfast in their desire to again serve teens and have worked with amazing care on all aspects of preparing this program. I'm also thrilled that one of the teachers they have hired is an Earlhamite!

I'd love to hear from old classmates and friends from ESR. A few dear friends in Richmond give me occasional news. During the recent 25th anniversary of the Jonestown suicides, and the slaying of the mayor of SF George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk, I was remembering hearing of these 'hometown' tragedies while raking leaves on the grounds of ESR, and how very far from home I felt then. I often feel very far from ESR now, though my years there and at EC are deeply etched in my heart" Marylouise can be reached at: mlouise007@yahoo.com

Eric (M.Min., 1964) and Deanna (M.Div., 1995) Mayer are in their 9th year at Westtown School in Westtown PA, following a year-long sabbatical to Rome, Italy! Eric homeschooled their three children: Elsa (9), Jonah (7), and Jacob (5) and Deanna worked as the Dean of Students at the international school at St Stephen's. Deanna and Eric write, "What an adventure we had. Now we are back and Eric resumes his role as Chair of Religion. Deanna tutors privately. We brought a special souvenir back with us...baby Peter Alexander was born November 7, 2003. Along with our new puppy, Jersey, that brings our clan to 7! We continue to be grateful for our time and learning at ESR. We are working, each in our own way, to bring love and light to our community and world."

Earl J Prignitz (MA, 1965) writes, "To early members of ESR especially who might remember me I'd like to say that I am now 88 years old and living at FFC with my wife Rosalie. I feel like I am continuing my ministry in 'My Friendly Thoughts' pages that I keep adding to. I now have 77 of them out there somewhere. It gives me something to do and keeps my mind active even though I can't keep my body that way. My address for them is: http://homepageearl.homestead.com/Basic1.html. I also have 'My Home Page' at: http://moreyet.homestead.com/MyHomePage.html. I invite you to take a look any time you have a spare moment. Thanks."

Julie-Ann Silberman-Bunn (M.Div., 1991) writes, "My stepson Ian turned 10 in October and has been off chemo for more than a year. We are learning how to be a family without such close support from the medical community and it feels good! We moved in September. This is my 12th year with the congregation in Kent, Ohio, and this year we have officially made the leap from small to mid-size congregation. The life of the church is as always full of joy and challenge. I would love to hear from ESR friends, I seemed to have lost touch with most of the folks who mattered so much to me during my time at ESR. I have recently begun a women's clergy group in the local area and it reminds me a lot of the small group I was part of during ministry project. I am extremely grateful for the education, welcome and friendship I received at ESR." Julie-Ann's new address is 6193 Cox Ave Ravenna Oh. 44266. Phone: (330) 678-2275

John C. (Jack) Smith (M.A., 1971) writes, "In reading the fall 2003 issue of ESR Reports, under Nowadays, I was disappointed that there was no news of anyone from the earlier era of ESR. And then I realized that I have not sent in anything either and so I have no one to complain except myself." He continues, "Here is my update of my activities. I attended ESR in 1963-4 and received an M.A. in 1970. I came to ESR with degrees in pharmacy and pharmacology, and now have a doctorate in pharmacy, called a Pharm. D. I am the pharmacist member of a clinical team at a clinic in Harrisonburg, Virginia and teach two terms of clinical pharmacology in the graduate program at James Madison University, in the Physician Assistant Program which is at the masters level. My wife Susan and I are nearing our 40th wedding anniversary and are active Conservative Friends, she having served as clerk of Ohio Yearly Meeting for 13 years and I am a recorded minister in that tradition. Our daughter, Rebecca, and her husband, Chad, have five children, and are dairying on the 184-acre farm we ran as a dairy farm for almost 20 years. Our son, Nathan, is a foreman for a house builder in the DC beltway area and our youngest daughter, Sarah, is completing her Ph.D. in ecology at Princeton."

Mike Zipser (M.Div., 2001) says, "As Richmond, Indiana, is on the border to Ohio, so is Kehl, Germany, where I live and work, is on the border to France. When I cross the border to Strasbourg, just opposite to Kehl on the other side of the river Rhine, I plunge into a different culture: people speak French, they have different customs and ways of doing things. This is where I attend my Quaker meeting, which was reborn last year. We are now 12 people with eight different nationalities. Most of the time we speak English, German or French, but we agreed on being silent in Alsatian, a local Germanic dialect that nobody is really able to speak. We meet once a month. The remaining Sundays I attend a Mennonite church in Strasbourg where I finally learned how to speak and understand French. Both ways of worshiping give me strength for my daily life at the school for physically disabled children. I had a clearness committee last fall, seeking discernment on whether I should join a Christian community elsewhere, or stay in this area. With the help of the committee and God's Spirit I decided to stay in my profession, but to move to Strasbourg in order to help the Quaker group grow in numbers and spiritually. In this way and through my small contributions to an organization called Church and Peace I try to implement what I learned at ESR, by engaging myself in my daily life at school, in the peace activities and in my worshiping communities. I have the feeling that there is a new breeze of God's Spirit moving the German Yearly Meeting and our small but vibrant Quaker Silent Worship Group in Strasbourg. There are only about 85 Quakers in the whole of France. I still miss the ESR community a lot, as well as my Quaker meeting in Richmond. However, God is always surprising me with something that I hadn't expected and that helps me look forward and makes my life rich and thankful. Aufwiedersehen und au revoir."