July 2008 - People of Praise
Transcription
July 2008 - People of Praise
Vine & Branches July 2008 $3.00 THE PEOPLE OF PRAISE • “CHRIST IN YOU, THE HOPE OF GLORY.” Remember the Tempest: Trinity School Wins Virginia Lacrosse Title r e b em m e R t s e p m e T e th By Bill Crimmins and Sean Connolly Sudden Life www.sportspageva.com, the premier site for high school athletes Senior captain Luke Hlavin stick checks an opponent in the state championship game against Blue Ridge. 2 With just over four minutes left to play in the semifinal of this year’s Division III lacrosse tournament, Scott Niklason (northern Virginia) signaled for a timeout. His Trinity School Tempest squad was down 8-5 to Seton School—the defending state champs, the tournament’s top seed and, more to the point, the team that had blasted the Tempest out of last year’s tournament. “You guys are down by three goals,” Scott intoned, staring into the sweat-soaked, eyeblack-smeared faces of his players. “You’ve been a scoring machine before. You can be one again.” The Tempest responded, rising up to score three times in less than three minutes, sending the game into sudden death overtime. Lacrosse periods begin with a faceoff: two players with long-handled sticks pointed toward the ground stand opposite each other, waiting for a whistle before scrambling for the ball. When the whistle screamed to start overtime play, Seton’s player scooped up the ball out from under John Mysliwiec’s nose, then headed down the field on a fast break, looking to score. Sprinting after him, Mysliwiec drew close. He raised his stick A Steep Climb to the Top Of the 12 schools in Division III of the Virginia Association of Independent Schools, Trinity School at Meadow View, with just over 100 students enrolled in high school, is easily the tiniest. Their schedule includes schools with 15 times as many students, schools with lacrosse traditions older than TSMV itself. The Meadow View program began humbly eight years ago, as an after-school clinic. There were no games, just skills training and conditioning led by Scott, a novice coach who hadn’t even played the game. (He was and still is a humane letters teacher and the dean of boys.) His son Brendan Niklason, a senior captain who played goalie for the team, was a fifth-grader then and can remember suiting up for practice along with other grammar school students who eventually became Tempest players. Though the players were young and inexperienced, the game was an instant hit at Meadow View. Boys were attracted to lacrosse’s challenges and its hard-hitting aspects. Body checking and stick checking (hitting an opponent with your stick) are both legal when they’re aimed at a ballcarrying player. Students honed their skills by practicing with tennis balls before school. They installed big bins Perfect Shot Photos, LLC for their sticks in the school’s locker rooms and met for pick-up games on weekends. Participation was widespread. One year nearly every boy in the school played on the team, and this year, 37 of 57 boys participated. In the early years the Tempest battled local junior-varsity squads and lost far more games than they won. Then, two years ago, the coaching staff decided to up the ante and play tougher teams. During that long, hard season, the Tempest achieved a seemingly unimpressive 3-10 record, but they did so while taking on many larger Division I schools. On the strength of their schedule, Coach Niklason and his players felt they should have been invited to play in the Division III state tournament that year, but the invitation never came. The team only grew hungrier, practicing hard in the off-season. They wore t-shirts with their new motto, “We will not be denied,” and they weren’t. After putting together a 10-3 record, they received a tournament bid . . . only to lose in the semifinals to Seton. The Last Battle In 2008, the Tempest played 14 games on the road while posting an 11 and 4 record. After their comefrom-behind victory against Seton in the state semis, their season came to a close on a sunny, blustery spring day in Charlottesville, Virginia. Their final nemesis was the Barons of Blue Ridge School—with about twice as many students as Meadow View and a size and weight advantage at many positions. But the Tempest was ready. They jumped out to an early 5-0 lead, www.sportspageva.com, the premier site for high school athletes and hammered it against his opponent’s stick, jarring the ball. Mysliwiec scooped it up, then hustled downfield, passing it off to a teammate. A few passes later sophomore Michael Cassell caught it as he cut toward Seton’s goal. He fired off a slow-moving bounce shot that hit ground just in front of the goal, catching the eyes of fans and players alike, who watched awestruck as it bounced in seeming slow motion past the goalie and into the back of the net. The Trinity School lacrosse team had won the biggest game in their eight-year-history. They were headed to the state championship game. Top: Senior Thomas Daniels. Above: Sophomore Michael Cassell (left) body checks his opponent. 3 Perfect Shot Photos, LLC www.sportspageva.com, the premier site for high school athletes Lacrosse Quick Facts: Senior Justin Lokke (left) prepares for a faceoff. Senior goalie Brendan Niklason made 15 saves in the state championship game, earning him the MVP award for the state tournament. though not without paying a price. Early in the first quarter, a hard shot hammered John Mysliwiec in the head, and the Tempest’s face-off man had to leave the field with a possible concussion. Blue Ridge came fighting back, cutting the lead to 5-3. Play seesawed through the first three quarters, and with eight minutes left to play the Tempest was clinging to a two-goal, 11-9 lead. A few minutes later, Brendan began moving away from the goal to chase down a wide shot, but before he could get to it, the shot ricocheted off a Tempest defenseman into the net, bringing the game to within one. With 53 seconds on the clock, Blue Ridge had the ball and all the momentum. A Baron midfielder weaved his way through the Tempest defense, giving him a one-on-one showdown with the goalie. He pulled back for a shot, aiming just over Brendan’s head, but Niklason deftly raised his stick and deflected the ball wide. Sideline 110 yards 35 yards Wing Area 20 yards Attack/Defensive Area D A D M M A D A D M M G Goal D A Wing Area Penalty Box Sideline A Attackman D Defenseman G Goalie SportSpectator.com 4 M Midfielder Endline G Midfield Line Attack/Defensive Area A M M 60 yards Endline D A The game: Lacrosse is a fullcontact sport of Native American origins, played with a baseballsized hard rubber ball and sticks that range from 40 to 72 inches in length. Teams attempt to score goals by using their sticks to carry, pass and, eventually, shoot the ball into a six-foot-tall by six-foot-wide goal, guarded by a goalie. On defense, teams can intercept passes, and players can use their sticks and their bodies to jostle the ball from opposing players. The field: Regulation size is 110 feet long by 60 feet wide. Positions: Each team fields ten players: three defensemen, three midfielders, three attackmen and one goalie. Defensemen and attackmen can only play in their respective halves of the field, while midfielders can move anywhere on the field. The sticks: Lacrosse sticks involve shafts of varying lengths and a head that holds loose netting used for scooping, carrying, passing and shooting the ball. Attackmen use sticks with shorter shafts (40’’) so they can shoot and pass rapidly, while defenders employ longer shafts to extend their reach. Background: Lacrosse is the oldest known North American sport. It began as a game used to train warriors and resolve conflicts. Games sometimes lasted for several days and could involve as many as 1,000 players per team on fields ranging from one to 15 miles long. In 1536, Jesuit martyr Jean de Brebeuf was the first European to document the game. French pioneers adopted it in the 19th century, followed by colleges and high schools in Canada and the US. Today, Lacrosse is one of the fastestgrowing team sports in the US and the fastest-growing sport in US high schools. Sources: US Lacrosse, Wikipedia After a Tempest foul and a Blue Ridge timeout, the Barons got to bring the ball in for a final attack, with just 13 seconds left. A Blue Ridge player caught a pass just 18 yards from the goal. He raised his stick to shoot, but John Mysliwiec—back in the game again, hacked at his opponent’s stick just as the ball was flying out of it. The ball lost momentum and it arced softly, and harmlessly, toward the goal. Tempest defenseman John Buonforte caught it and slung it toward midfield as the clock ticked 3, 2 and, finally, 1. Helmets and sticks flew into the air and the Tempest bench cleared as the players and their coaches rushed onto the field. Champs “Scott and the boys started with nothing and built Trinity into the best Division III team in the state,” says Meadow View head of school Andrew Zwerneman. “They pulled off a remarkable feat.” Indeed, a school with only 100 high-school students, whose lacrosse program is less than a decade old, a school whose coach teaches humanities courses and serves as the dean of boys, a school where students do particle physics homework after prac- tice, a school with a tough and gritty group of young men, juniors and seniors, some of whom have been playing for the Tempest since their grammar school days, these underdogs can now call themselves the state champs. Maybe St. Paul felt something similar to this year’s lacrosse squad when he wrote, “I do not run aimlessly. I do not box as one beating the air. I pummel my body and subdue it . . . so that I myself will not be disqualified for the prize.” In other words, “We will not be denied.” n Perfect Shot Photos, LLC Back Row: Assistant Coach Jason Parr, John Buonforte, Assistant Coach John O’Beirne, Joe Ridenour, Daniel Ballou, John Mysliwiec, Vincent McNichol, Chris Cornett, Robert Kress, Rafael Gil-Figueroa, Parke May, Kevin Flannery, Justin Young, Brendan Niklason, John Piescik, Andrew DeCelle, Cole Seiberlich, Andrew Herrera, Assistant Coach Paul Sjoberg, Head Coach Scott Niklason. Middle Row: Michael Willieme, Gjon Kadeli, Michael Cassell, Nathaniel Hlavin, Josh Kelly, Thomas Daniels, Michael Rooney, Justin Lokke, Peter Kadeli, Stephen Quinn, Luke Hlavin. Front Row: Stephen Lokke, Danny DelBianco, Jose GilFigueroa, Beau Lovdahl, Chris Wagner, David Magill, Ben Redgrave, David Rice, Robert Forbes. (Not pictured: Chris Walker.) Perfect Shot Photos, LLC 5 COMMON LIFE SIGHTINGS By Chris Meehan Tony Fraga Things are looking up for Dave. His cancer has stopped spreading— it’s in “holy abeyance,” Frank declares. Dave is walking with a cane now and can drive the car. “I’m in great shape for the shape I’m in,” Dave says. “I owe it all to the Lord and his provision.” CAMPING TOGETHER What’s a little fun in the sun (or, for that matter, in the backwoods) without some brothers and sisters to share it with? The Mertz family knows the answer. For more than 10 years Ed and Janice and a rotating cast of Servant Branch families have enjoyed summer vacations together, venturing to the Black Hills, Colorado Springs, Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, and this year to nearby Wisconsin. In June a group of families camped near Appleton on Lake Winnebago, venturing back into civilization to join brothers and sisters at a branch barbecue. They like to travel in a caravan Dave and Kathy Temeles with their daughter Jessica (left) HOLY ABEYANCE It’s been a long journey for Dave Temeles, with deteriorating vertebrae, diabetes, kidney cancer, plus the side effects of aggressive radiation and chemotherapy—four years of trials for Dave and his wife Kathy. “I got through them,” he says, “with the Lord’s help and the tremendous support of the People of Praise. It’s been amazing to see how my family, my doctors, my head and men’s group and the entire northern Virginia branch rallied to meet my every need.” Dave points to a steady stream of prayers, hugs, visits, cards and encouraging words, as well as many larger-than-life acts of service: There were the branch’s days of prayer for Dave, organized by his long-time friend and head, Frank Bassett. “Pray for a miracle!,” Frank 6 exhorted everyone. There was the transportation battalion, five men who took turns, two at a time, ferrying Dave and Kathy to medical appointments while Dave was confined to a wheelchair. There was the renovation crew organized by Dave Temeles, Jr., brothers who cleaned, repaired and repainted the Temeleses’ split-level home, readying it to be sold. Sisters in the branch helped Kathy and daughter Melissa sort through 36 years of attic accumulations, packing up the important things while preparing everything else for a garage sale. Action division members did landscaping work, just like they’ve done every year since Dave’s first surgery. During the two-and-a-half-week renovation period, Frank and Carolyn Bassett opened up the lower level of their house to Dave and Kathy. Carolyn fixed Dave’s favorite foods for their nightly meals together, and Dave, in spite of a loss of appetite, began eating normally again. Frank spent some time talking and praying with Dave. Servant Branch members enjoyed a hike in High Cliff State Park southeast of Appleton in June. Photo courtesy of Geriann Raway Editor’s note: In this article, we depart from our usual Holy Spirit sightings to bring you some interesting examples of common life from around the community. of cars, campers and motor homes, pausing for common meals along the way. “On one trip it was like a Chinese fire drill at every rest stop. We’d pull up with a car full of girls but drive off with a car full of boys,” Monica Laust remembers. Daily activities are structured loosely. One day this year, the group split into thirds, with one group touring Green Bay’s Lambeau Field (home of the Packers football team), another riding bikes and a remnant relaxing back at camp. The families share cooking duties and other chores, and Monica says that distributing the chores adds up to less work than a normal family campout. “It’s a golden opportunity to escape from the busyness of daily life and reconnect with good friends,” adds Ed. “I have many fond memories of hanging around with other kids on those trips,” notes 18-year-old camping veteran Nick Raway. “Especially the time we camped in the Porcupine Mountains and played on the large rocks on the shore of Lake Superior. I also enjoy my friends’ parents. Mr. Laust has a great sense of humor and Mr. Mertz knows a lot of interesting facts and has stories to share when we visit historical sites—things the tour guides don’t normally tell you.” Monica looks back fondly at the group’s trip to Colorado Springs. “Three families stayed in John and Katherine Brophy’s empty house while they were away on vacation. Chris Raway took a picture of our pile of 50 pairs of boots, sandals and shoes by the front door!” “The Raway family is spoiled by the richness of community vacations,” says Geriann Raway. “We really would find it hard to do vacation any other way.” THE VILLAGE Tracy Scriba Above: When the Harrises’ washing machine broke, Mary Beth and her daughter Claire carried their wash to Lisa Tychsen’s nearby townhouse in the village. Below: Evening prayer in the village. From left: Genevieve Kane, Julia Fraga, Maria Kane, Eileen Pizer, Mary Beth Harris, Matt Harris, Mae Cheung, Lisa Tychsen. Tracy Scriba It’s becoming a familiar site in the northern Virginia neighborhood of Trail Run: people moving back and forth between townhomes, their arms full of soup, turkeys, laundry, coolers, tables and even babies. Branch members have lived in the neighborhood’s townhomes and houses for years, but about a year ago they decided to pray, eat and celebrate together more, and to invite their neighbors to come along. They began with meals together and have added morning prayer 7 Jim Hinkle on Thursdays, evening prayer on Sundays, as well as picnics and barbeques that often draw 20-30 guests. But, as Tony Fraga points out, life in “the village” (as residents call this micro-community effort), means more than just scheduled activities and big events. “This is about sharing the nitty-gritty parts of life—like mopping up flooded basements, or sharing the cost of a big grill. One evening, one of the single women arrived home late from work not having eaten. She stopped by our townhouse to say hello, and my wife Nadia fixed her something to eat while they both shared about their days.” Villagers have had neighbors join them for prayer and meals, and they’ve prayed over sick neighbors with back pain, and even a brain tumor. Neighbors have responded by coming to branch men’s and women’s nights and other village gatherings. “Planning things together was not always easy in the beginning. It Branch members from Biloxi, Mobile and New Orleans gather at the home of Walter and Julia Drey in Mobile. Jim Hinkle required a lot of conversation and a lot of work,” says Nadia. “But now our events are easier to organize. Everyone chips in and we’re able to pull things off spontaneously, whether it’s an impromptu Lord’s Day meal or a picnic in the park.” GULF COAST GATHERINGS From left: Loyd and Regina Fortenberry (Biloxi), Geraldine Cameron (Biloxi), Mary Hinkle (Biloxi) and Diane Evans (New Orleans) chat and eat at a gathering in Mobile. 8 Common life can happen within branches or between branches. After Hurricane Katrina, the community’s board of governors asked the Biloxi, Mobile and New Orleans branches to work at putting more of their branch life in common. (Katrina had a big impact on the Biloxi branch, where it reduced numbers and scattered members.) Leaders from all three branches decided to designate weekends for visiting one another. Biloxi and Mo- ENTERTAINING NEIGHBORS Keith and Stephanie Justen had three unexpected guests at their Indianstyle Lord’s Day meal in North Portland this May—and that was on top of 11 expected dinner guests and three more coming for dessert. “We began the evening with hors d’oeuvres in our driveway, so we could interact with anybody who happened to pass by our house,” Keith explains. “Because of our citybuilding efforts, we want the People of Praise to be very visible in our neighborhood.” Soon after the hors d’oeuvres started, a young couple walked by pushing a stroller. Keith struck up a conversation, and 15 minutes later he gave the couple some water and invited them to stay for the Lord’s Day meal. The couple said they were planning to go home and make pizza— Photo courtesy of Stephanie Justen L to R, Keith Justen, Abigail Justen, Hannah Caneff, Bridget, Stephanie, Peter, Caleigh Justen. then they stayed talking for 30 more minutes. “By then it was 7:30 p.m. and dinner was waiting. Even our dessert guests had arrived,” Keith says. “So we invited them one more time to dinner. We explained that we would be singing songs and sharing Lord’s Day prayers before the meal.” The couple talked it over and came. He is a nonpracticing Jew. She is agnostic. “We started our Lord’s Day by singing “This Is the Day” because we thought it would be easy for the couple to learn. When it came time to share our blessings they didn’t miss a beat and seemed very comfortable with all that was happening.” At the end of the evening all the guests said their goodbyes. “Steph and I felt like we had the beginnings of a friendship with these neighbors,” Keith says. That Monday, the Justens called and invited the couple to a Lord’s Day meal the next week. “They agreed, and again, we shared songs, food, prayers and blessings and had a wonderful time.” Now the Justens are waiting to work out a time when they can go over to the couple’s house for a meal. Mike Stapp bile branch members have attended New Orleans branch meetings, and in December a dozen New Orleans branch members and a Mobile couple traveled to Mississippi for a Lord’s Day meal at Loyd and Regina Fortenberry’s home. (It’s about 150 miles from Mobile to New Orleans, and 90 miles from Biloxi to New Orleans.) This June, Biloxi branch members and about 60 people from New Orleans met at the Dreys’ home on Dog River (near Mobile Bay) for an afternoon picnic and boat rides. “The hour drive to New Orleans is nothing compared to the benefits of getting together with other branches,” says Mary Mozingo (Biloxi). “Those visits bring us hope.” “The Lord is bringing good out of all this,” adds Mike Coney, New Orleans principal branch coordinator. “Everyone agrees the extra effort to get together is worth it. Katrina didn’t have the last word at all!” Stephanie and Abigail Justen “I am not sure where this friendship may go or what the Lord may be doing,” Keith says, but the People of Praise is a little better known among the Justens’ North Portland neighbors. n 9 Simple Technologies for Sharing Lives Tess (front), Vivian and Emma Barrett (South Bend) use Skype, a free video conferencing service, to connect with their grandparents Mike and Linda Coney in the New Orleans branch. By V&B Staff Writers T hese days every newspaper has its technology section, and the release of a new cell phone can come with messianic overtones— as in, June, 2007, when some commentators heralded Apple’s iPhone as “the Jesus phone.” The age of cell phones, laptops, blogs, Facebook, GPS maps in cars, the age of gadgets and the Internet, is both here and here to stay. But this technological age doesn’t have to be complicated. In this article, we take a look at three simple technologies that community members are using to share their lives with friends, family members and brothers and sisters in many different places. Video Conferencing Two Christmases ago, Mike and Linda Coney (New Orleans) decided they wanted to see their grandchildren more often. So they gave their grandchildren’s families a present— web cameras. When South Bend sisters Emma, Vivian and Tess Barrett called Linda in New Orleans on a recent Sunday evening, the three little girls didn’t have to hand a phone back and forth. All three of them could cheerfully chime in together, cuddled in front of their home computer and web cam. What’s more, they could grin and wave and chuckle at Linda, who could see all their smiles and squirms on her computer monitor in New Orleans. Web cameras are small machines about the width of a hand. They perch on top of a computer monitor, where they can spot the face of the person (or persons) seated in front of them. A web cam works together with a broadband Internet connection and a free software program called Skype to transmit and receive sounds and video images. Linda isn’t a computer geek, but she says Skype and her web cam were “fairly easy” to set up. The Co- Gretchen Rolland neys use them regularly to watch little ones grow up a thousand miles away—or even half a world away. When Linda and her daughter Megan Edwards traveled to Guatemala to bring home Megan’s adopted son, Joseph, they used a web cam and a laptop to show Joseph to his new Dad, David, who was back home in the US. Internet video conferencing can have other applications, as Tim Wagner (Corvallis) has discovered. “My younger son is a musician and was recently replacing the pick-up heads on his bass guitar. He called me with questions about how to interpret the wiring instructions.” When it became clear that a phone call wasn’t sufficient to communicate all the details, Tim’s son hung a web cam from a light fixture and then used Skype to call Dad. “He laid out everything on his floor, showed me what he was doing, and even held up the instructions so I could read them,” Tim says. “After seeing all of that, we were able to figure out how to wire the pick-ups correctly.” Tim points out that Skype can also be used for plain old longdistance phone calls without the video, including calls overseas. He uses the service to connect with Kevin Ranaghan in South Bend and with his son and daughter-in-law who often travel to Japan. Calls from one computer to another are free, regardless of whether the call is to Portland or Poland. Skype can connect to standard landline and cell phone numbers for a fee. Adds Tim, “For phone calls through Skype, I use a wireless headset, which I really like, because I can walk around the house or sit outside, and still have my hands free to take notes.” Photo Sharing If a picture is worth a thousand words, than there’s a few heavy volumes worth of information about life in the community available on photosharing web sites. Internet sites like Flickr.com and Picasa.com allow users to upload shots to personal galleries. These galleries can be kept private or shared with a few select friends and family members, or thrown open for anyone to see. As with blogs, users can link to their friends’ galleries and post comments on photos. Already there’s a thriving network of more than 80 community members who post and view photos on Flickr, link to one another’s pages and write comments on one another’s photos. Cathy Grill posts pictures of flowers, landscapes and the activities of her missionary household in Allendale (www.flickr.com/photos/ cathygrill). “Two years ago some of us started talking about ways we could be present to community members in other branches,” she explains. “We asked ourselves how we could keep in contact and share what’s going on. How could we continue to build community even when we’re not physically together? I’m not a writer, but I am a photographer. That’s why I chose a Flickr account as opposed to a blog.” A basic Flickr account is free, though it costs $25 a year to post a high volume of photos. Beth Couch (South Bend) says that she didn’t have any trouble getting one started. “Just last week I started putting my pictures up on Flickr,” she says. “It was intimidating for me to think about posting pictures. But it really isn’t as nerve-wracking or scary as I was making it out to be in my head. It isn’t hard.” Beth decided to post her own photos after she realized how much she was benefiting from the snapshots posted by other community members. “I enjoyed seeing what the Lord was doing with so many other people. I see pictures of people in Cathy Grill (Allendale) posted these photos of herself and Allendale neighbor children on her Flickr page, www.flickr.com/photos/cathygrill. For a good list of community members with Flickr accounts, check out Mary Gaffney’s site at www.flickr.com/photos/mcgaffney. 11 Above: Collin Anderson (Servant Branch) took this picture of a beach-goer leaping over a sand dune. It’s on his Flickr page, www.flickr.com/photos/collinanderson. Right: This photo of Eli Shreves with sisters, Naomi (carrying a plate) and Sophia can be found on Mike Stapp’s Flickr page, www.flickr.com/photos/stapp. Minnesota, and it really makes the world a lot smaller and a lot more familiar.” Beth’s pictures include shots of home renovation work, community brothers and sisters who live nearby, and family shots (www.flickr. com/photos/elizabethcouch). Collin Anderson (Servant Branch) has posted more than 5,700 photos on Flickr, but he doesn’t pride himself on that large number, but on the speed with which he posts photos. He can have photos on the Internet in under a minute, first sliding a memory card out of his camera and directly into his computer, then, with two clicks of his mouse, he launches a computer program that automatically posts his most recent photos. Collin’s site has become a goto spot for folks looking for up-tothe-hour reports on happenings in Dinkytown, where Collin lives during the school year, or on happenings wherever else he happens to be traveling (www.flickr.com/photos/ collinanderson). “A friend told me, ‘Collin, when I look at your Flickr photos, I know I’m looking at what you’re doing now, not what you were doing!’” “I try to put my pictures up as fast as I can because that’s what I hope other people will do,” Collin says of his speedy posting. Blogging This April, Nick and Polly Jayjack (northern Virginia) joined the ranks of 50 or so People of Praise members who maintain blogs. A blog is a personal web site comprised of entries called “posts.” Posts are normally displayed in chronological order—the most recent entry appears at the top of the screen. Blogs can be topical, covering sports, politics or technology, or they can be personal, keeping friends updated about a new baby, a trip to Timbuktu or birdwatching finds. Besides written text, blogs can include photos, videos and links to other blogs and web sites. Blogs are also interactive; readers add their own comments to the posts. (Think of these comments as brief letters to the editor.) The Jayjack’s blog (http:// jayjackadoption.wordpress.com) tells the story of their six-week-long trip to the Ukraine to adopt three children. Nick and Polly posted news updates every few days, detailing their arrival in Kiev, where they stayed with Orest and Susan Holovaty, and their travels to an orphanage in Cherkassy, where they first met Anna, Yaroslav and Stanislav (who are now Anna, Warren and Corey Jayjack.) They also posted prayer requests. For example, on May 28 they wrote Gina Massa (South Bend) posted this shot of colored glass blown by artists in Dale Chihuly’s studio on Flickr, www.flickr.com/photos/ginaemassa. Drew (left) and Sam Reinhardt can be seen on their father Jim’s (Servant Branch) Flickr page, www.flickr. com/photos/jwreinhardt. 13 that they needed help getting approval from US Citizenship and Immigration Services to bring their children home. A few hours later Bob Magill and Lee Smith (northern Virginia) noticed the post, and added comments offering to make some phone calls to help out. The calls did help hasten the approval process, something that might not have happened without the blog. Here are more highlights from the People of Praise blogosphere: When 16-year-old Hannah Roth, the daughter of Dave and Lisa Roth (Indianapolis), was hospitalized with a liver tumor, household member Jenny Sergio started a blog (www. caringbridge.org/visit/hannahroth) to keep Hannah’s classmates, relatives and friends updated on her condition. The blog meant that the Roths didn’t have to talk to each of these folks individually . . . which was a big help since Hannah’s blog racked up 58,000 visits. Nick Holovaty (Indianapolis) keeps a photo blog (http://missiossippi.blogspot.com), with shots of funny road signs, gorgeous landscapes and memorable faces from his travels among People of Praise mission sites. He takes all these shots using the camera on his cell phone and then uses his phone to post the photos directly to his blog. Dan Ficker (Servant Branch) posts reviews of new gadgets (sports watches, cell phones), movies (Stardust, Ratatouille) and happenings in the Twin Cities on his blog (www. da-man.com/blog). Molly Seale blogs about her life with the Indianapolis missionaries (http://sealeofred.blogspot.com). Last March, she asked her readers to identify themselves by leaving a comment on one of her posts. Fifty-two people responded, representing five states and two countries. “It’s great to have a window into the life of the People of Praise in Indianapolis,” wrote Pat Clark in Portland. Katy Connor (South Bend) has an eclectic blog (http://larrykatyconnor. blogspot.com) with family updates, prayer requests, Green Bay Packers news and other sports coverage, even a video of a skit from this year’s South Bend branch summer camp. Bill and Carolyn Reinhardt (New Orleans) have a blog (http://bill reinhardt.blogspot.com) with lots of family photos and videos. Less than 24 hours after the birth of their son Peter William this June, they posted a picture of him on their blog, and they have posted many more photos since. These are just a smattering of the online musings of People of Praise members. A full list of community member blogs can be found at http://9of.us/bloglist, or go to www. google.com and search for People of Praise blogs. n For a list of more than 50 blogs maintained by community members, check out http://9of.us/bloglist. So How Do I Get Started? Video Conferencing Bill Reinhardt (New Orleans) has graciously agreed to answer readers’ questions about getting going with video conferencing. He can be reached by e-mail at [email protected]. Before you e-mail, you’ll need some basic equipment: 1. A web camera Basic web cams for PCs cost between $30 to $75 and can be purchased at consumer electronics stores or on web sites like Amazon.com. Bill recommends the Logitech Quickcam Communicator web cam for use with desktop computers. Most new Mac computers already include a web cam. 2. Skype Skype is available as a free download at www.skype.com. 3. A high-speed Internet connection 14 Blogging Justin Walters (South Bend) is happy to take questions from readers interested in starting blogs. He can be reached at [email protected]. There are also a number of free services to help novice bloggers get started. Check out www. wordpress.com or www.blogger.com for details. Photo Sharing Feel free to contact Patricia Brewer with your questions about photo sharing. Her e-mail address is pbrewer@ peopleofpraise.org. Of course, you’ll need a digital camera or you’ll need to digitize photos taken with an analog camera. (Most photo processing stores offer this service.) Then you’ll need an account with a photo-sharing site like www.flickr.com or www.picasa.com. Happy posting! LifeNotes The LifeNotes page in V&B is the place to spread the word about key events and milestones, new babies, adoptions, college graduations, awards (academic or work-related), major promotions, accomplishments (sports, professional, hobby), retirement or job changes. Send items to Tom Noe at veritas@trinityschools. org. When in doubt, send it in! n Congratulations to Christin Rose (South Bend), who made her final commitment to the Sisterhood on February 10, 2008. Nick and Polly Jayjack with Anna, Warren (middle) and Corey. The Jayjacks tell the story of their children’s recent adoption from the Ukraine on their blog, http://jayjackadoption. wordpress.com. n Congratulations to Jim and Pat Feehly (Osceola, IN), who celebrated 50 years of marriage on July 5. n Congratulations to Whit Au (Kailua, HI), who has been chosen as president-elect of the Acoustical Society of America. n Bill and Carolyn Reinhardt (Metairie, LA) are pleased to announce the Lord’s gift of Peter William on June 29. n Dan and Beth Kabele (Portland) are spreading the news of the birth of Benjamin Joel on May 25. People of Praise Vine & Branches is published monthly by the People of Praise community for its members. Reprint permission must be obtained before use. Please contact Sean Connolly, 107 S. Greenlawn, South Bend, IN 46617; e-mail [email protected] or phone 574-234-5088 or fax 574-236-6633. For subscription information or to purchase additional copies, please contact Gretchen Rolland at [email protected]. All contents © 2008 People of Praise. Editor: Sean Connolly Copy Editor: Tom Noe Business Manager: Gretchen Rolland Design & Layout: Jennifer Kenning, Elizabeth Loughran, Gretchen Rolland Lead Reporter: Chris Meehan Reporting Staff: Catherine Bulger, Bill Crimmins, Claire Holovaty, Susan Holovaty, Debbie Mixell, Gene Stowe Front cover photo: John Mysliwiec, photographed by Patricia Brewer. Back cover photo: Mary Gaffney n Zig and Gale Mazanowski have been assigned from the branch in Indianapolis to the branch in Tampa, effective the first week of August. Executive Office Notes: At an elective assembly on May 13, 2008, Charlie Fraga, Joel Kibler, Kerry Koller and Kevin Ranaghan were elected to six-year terms on the board of governors of the People of Praise. The members whose terms were expiring were Charlie Fraga, Kerry Koller, Phil Monaco, Kevin Ranaghan and Mike Zusi, and we are all thankful to these brothers for their service on our behalf. The other members of the current board are Craig Lent (chair, overall coordinator), Mike Coney, Rich Preuss, Hugh Springer, Sr., and Ralph Whittenburg. New Orleans: Nick Chetta has been appointed to a third three-year term as area coordinator, effective September 13, 2008. Nick has also been granted tenure as a coordinator. Northern Virginia: Lou Gionfriddo has been elected to a third three-year term as area coordinator, effective June 16, 2008. Lou has also been granted tenure as a coordinator. Servant Branch: Dan and Nancy Peterson were released from the covenant of the People of Praise on June 18, 2008. Janet Kroll Indrehus was released from the covenant of the People of Praise on June 30, 2008. South Bend: Rich and Missy DeClerq were released from the covenant of the People of Praise on July 14, 2008. Tampa: Elizabeth Brookman was released from the covenant of the People of Praise on July 8, 2008. 15 “ Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these” (Mt. 19:14). The People of Praise, Inc. 107 South Greenlawn South Bend, IN 46617