October 2014 - Mennonite Collegiate Institute
Transcription
October 2014 - Mennonite Collegiate Institute
Table of Contents CrossRoads Page 4: MCI Life Flows On Page 5: Blues News Page 6: Blues Sports Page 7: Christian Life Retreat Page 8: We Are Already Loved Page 10: Art Page 11: Reunion News Page 15: Alumni News & Updates Page 19: MCI 125 on the cover: Grade 12 students Diana Muela, Sara-Helene Heide, Kim Ginter, and Meagan Schlorff at the Christian Life Retreat. Photo taken by Toby Wiens (staff). CrossRoads thanks Rebeca Giesbrecht for her work in capturing excellent photos. 2 CrossRoads To receive CrossRoads electronically, simply email your request to [email protected]. CrossRoads 3 CrossRoads CrossRoads From the Principal’s Desk n O s w o l F e MCI Lif By Darryl Loewen Robert Wadsworth Lowry’s hymn, “How Can I Keep From Singing,” may be as well-known by the familiar first line, “My life flows on in endless song,” as by the rhetorical question posed in its title. At first glimpse, this great hymn evokes a sense of lament at the great struggle of Christian faithfulness in this world. However, to linger longer is to discover that it is more suitably an anthem of certainty about the Christ that, “…makes fresh my heart.” As I reflect on 125 years in the life of MCI, I am inclined to paraphrase the end of the song: “…A fountain ever springing; All things are MCI’s since it is his – How can we keep from singing?” cycle of arrival of new and returning students, the uncertainty of first-year Stookies who wonder from where will come their first new friend, warm evening soccer games turning to cool autumn volleyball road trips, musical auditions (Have you heard? This year’s show is Disney’s Beauty & the Beast.), the first Bio, Chem, and Pre-Cal tests. This fountain also seems to be ever-springing. MCI also hears the “hail of a new creation” this fall. Recent years have seen the arrival of a new demographic of alumni kids-- these born and raised in the Pacific Rim. There are a few such alumni kids this year, including one from Hong Kong whose mother and father both are Stookies of the 1980s. By the time you read this issue a new receptionist will be in place on campus. From November 3rd, the friendly voice receiving your calls & emails belongs to Lori Franz. Welcome her when next you call. committee is working toward a series of enjoyable events to mark this exciting milestone in school life. Details will be forthcoming, but we can all look forward to recreational activities (perhaps a golf tournament) and entertainment (think comedy-illusion after an outdoor feast) on Saturday. All Alumni Reunion: Saturday, June 6, 2015 The tradition of decade reunions of MCI classes is well established. This coming spring MCI invites EVERY CLASS to join a reunion on campus in conjunction with MCI 125. It will all be right here for you on Saturday-- tent, food, entertainment, reminiscing. Then stick around for a Sängerfest to remember on Sunday. Really, how can we keep from singing? Let’s all gather at MCI on June 6 & 7, 2015. MCI life flows on this fall, in ways familiar “since first I learned to love As I reported in the spring edition it.” This flow of life ripples with the Crossroads, a MCI 125 planning eCrossRoads Readers: Click on these advertisements to visit our supporters’ websites. Hurrah for & Thanks to These Local Businesses who Support CrossRoads & MCI! 4 CrossRoads CrossRoads Blues News With the start of the new school year, we welcome four new staff to the MCI community. Kevin Giesbrecht is serving as Athletics Director as well as teaching courses in Phys Ed and Biology. Meghan Funk (‘07) joined the teaching staff as an educational assistant. Matthew Fransen (Kevin, Meghan, and Matthew pictured to the right) and Kaitlin Reimer joined the residence staff as deans. We welcome these new staff and eagerly look forward to the new energy, gifts, and passions they will each bring to the MCI community. This year, MCI’s student body totals 132 students from all over Manitoba and the world. We welcomed 46 new students into our student body, including students from Paraguay, Mexico, Hong Kong, Rwanda, and China. Already our student body is creating a unique community that we hope will encourage all our students and staff to continue to grow and develop into the people of faith God has lovingly called us to be. The new social committee heads, Shaelyn Fehr and Laura Woelk, led the school in our first social event for the year-- the Get Acquainted Social. They kicked the year off right with a fun-filled evening of games and activities. Through this event, students got a chance to begin building friendships and connections that the social committee hopes to continue to foster throughout the year. Student leaders arrived early to campus in September and engaged in two days of leadership training and preparation for the school year ahead. Included in this group of student leaders were the new resident assistants (RAs). Resident assistants are chosen through an application and interview process in the spring. The RAs have already been called upon to welcome the new students into the residence and to lead activities that help connect students within their mod. RAs this year are: Rebeca Giesbrecht, Lily Zhou, and Meagan Schlorff (pictured below) and Zach Tiessen, Adam Harms, Johnny Zhou, and Myles Tiessen (pictured above). 5 CrossRoads CrossRoads Blues Sports Barely a day into the school year, MCI soccer got started with a new season. The boys team was coached by Lester Schellenberg while the girls team was coached by Kevin Giesbrecht. Both teams struggled to secure the win in games though both also demonstrated significant improvement throughout the season and consistently played with determination and energy. This year MCI will have three volleyball teams competing in zone games. Junior varsity girls are being coached by Carianne Peters and Meghan Funk. Varsity girls are under the direction of Amanda Reynolds and varsity boys are coached by Toby Wiens. All three teams have already proven to be hard-working teams. Visit the MCI website for updated scores. The MCI cross country team competed in the zone meet on October 7. In the grade 7 and 8 boys 3000 meters, James Bergen placed 30th. In the varsity boys 5000 meters, Ryan Penner placed 36th and Adam Harms placed 17th. In the varsity girls 3000 meters, Amelia Pahl placed 18th, Sarah Bergen placed 16th, Daria Hildebrand placed 13th, and Chantel Thiessen placed 1st. 6 CrossRoads CrossRoads Christian Life Retreat MCI students in grades 9-12 and staff travelled to Red Rock Bible Camp in the Whiteshell Provincial Park for the annual Christian Life Retreat. The three-day retreat was a chance for students and staff to grow relationships with each other, within each ourselves, and with the loving God who created it all. kayaking, canoeing, and the polar bear swim made for a memorable and fun retreat for everyone. All students in grades 9 to 12 attended the retreat at Red Rock while the students in grades 7 and 8 took over the MCI campus for an on-campus class retreat. This year Christian Life Committee heads Meagan Schlorff and Kirsten Friesen led the activities of the retreat. At Red Rock, speakers Cullen Klassen and David Thiessen led students and staff in sessions that encouraged everyone to explore the question, “Who are we?” Through their sharing and interactive activities they looked at who we are in Christ and who we are as children of God. Session topics included: ‘We are Known,’ We are Connected,’ ‘We are Community,’ and ‘We are Sent.’ In addition to sessions, students and staff had lots of time to build community and connection through playing, laughing, eating, and exploring together. The annual staff vs students football game, hiking, games, and water activities including interested in advertising with CrossRoads? Call or Email: (204) 327-5891 [email protected] Keep up-to-date with MCI happenings such as the Christian Life Retreat and other adventures by liking MCI on Facebook. 7 CrossRoads CrossRoads We are Already Loved People feel love in countless ways. For some, the feeling of love and belonging is a physical space – the house you have lived in since you were born, for example. The creaks in the steps, the smell of laundry detergent, the upright piano that has rested against the same wall for ten years. These seemingly mundane characteristics create a place of familiarity, a place that has experienced love. Objects and small imperfections remind us of times during which we have felt love. The church is also a place where love exists. Tied into this love is a sense of mission; our call to be a “light to the nations,” as Abram and Sarah were commissioned to do in Genesis 12. The church body is like Israel in that we, too, are called to bless others. God calls us to serve the world. This sense of mission is what brings us together. As we carry out this mission, we become a loving community. For me, the love of God is most present when I work or act in a way that blesses others. I feel God especially loves me in and because of the working I’m doing. But does the love of God follow directly from serving others? Sometimes I feel this is the case, and when I use my time studying on my own or watching Netflix in solitude, I feel selfish, as though God’s love is less available to me. Old Testament theologian 8 CrossRoads RWL Moberly sheds a hopeful light Twenty-year-old Bonhoeffer and I on my dilemma: share an appreciation for the fusion “Even if…love brings with it of work and life. a call to serve, that service is Like Bonhoeffer in Barcelona, I a corollary [or consequence] found that the four months I spent to being loved, not the core at camp were valuable mix of work of being loved. So too, the and life, prompting me to put my Israelites are loved for relational skills to practice and also themselves, prior to any recognize my limitations. impact for good that they My limitations were, in fact, what may have on others.” I noticed most during my initial Moberly is saying that God’s love directing stint. I suppose the first comes first. We are already loved. limitation was my inexperience with God loved Abram and Sarah before the camp world. This was only my they were sent to establish a blessed second year of staffing at camp, and nation. God loved us when we were two years ago was my first summer created and loves us in our current counseling. The learning curve from circumstances. In knowing we are two years ago as a counselor to this already loved, it is easier to see what summer as a director was steep. the Kingdom of God looks like, and My goals as director, however, what kinds of things we need to do were more important than the to make the kingdom more real. sheer learning curve. I didn’t have While helping my dad move his spirituality figured out yet, but I classroom, I was drawn to a hefty was expected to define my beliefs piece of literature from the many before sharing them with others. As on dad’s shelf. It was a biography a director still a little wet behind of German theologian Dietrich the ears, this was my hope for the Bonhoeffer. Since then I’ve made summer. myself somewhat of a Bonhoeffer Halfway through my directing buff. I see something of myself career, Camp Pastor Elisa Barkman in twenty-year-old Dietrich’s very shared a verse that encouraged first pastoring stint in Barcelona. me. She opened her morning staff Just as the Breslau native felt a call devotion with an Invitation to the to leave his home to work for the Lord’s Table, used in the Anglican church, I made the trek out to camp tradition. She did naot employ this Assiniboia and Moose Lake this text for communion per se, but summer to be a Program Director. recited it to invite groggy-eyed staff CrossRoads members to a deeper faith: “This is the table, not of the Church, but of God. It is to be made ready for those who love God and who want to love God more. So, come, you who have much faith and you who have little, you who have been here often and you who have not been for a long time, you who have tried to follow and you who have failed. Come, not because I invite you: it is God, and it is God’s will that you who want God should meet God here.” God invites us into community, and if we accept that invitation. It is God’s will that we will experience God. Even if we do not actively seek God, God’s love is ready for us. We are already loved. My second limitation – of which there are many more than what I have chosen to include – was a persisting self-consciousness. It took nearly the entire summer to become comfortable as a director. I did not feel right telling staffers who have been at camp for five years what to do and when to do it. I was just the new guy. I had to give When I hear this invitation to the Lord’s Table, I feel loved. It is an assuring text that God’s love is already in place for you. For those with little faith, for those who have failed to follow. God’s love is there. a session for the under 18-year-old staff – most of whom had worked at camp longer than I! Every decision I made was a process of self-doubt. Everything I said regarding the program seemed wrong, and leading groups in prayer and worship felt foreign. What did I know about God? Had I experienced God? What did my prayers even mean, and what did they accomplish? Fortunately, we are already loved. And without a doubt, there is an innate love within the grounds and buildings of each of our camps. Remember the house? The creaky steps, the laundry detergent, the piano against the wall? Camp is like a home, and has been loved and contains love when its walls are filled with people. My selfconsciousness was unwarranted – the love of God and the love of campers and staff alike informed every inch of camp property. The fact that I was already loved took a long time to realize. But directing at Moose Lake, I learned that other people could immediately feel something profound at camp. During a week of camp for Adults with Disabilities, I met a woman who shaped my summer. I first saw her doing a puzzle. I sat down with her and we puzzled as a pair. As is customary and effective at Adults with Disabilities weeks, I made piles of less-than-funny jokes, prompting this woman to comment: “I don’t know about you, Mike.” We joked and we puzzled. As supper approached, this woman said to me with complete self-possession that she was blessed to be at camp, everyone was kind to her, and she wanted to return next year. (Continued on Page 10) 9 CrossRoads CrossRoads Later that week she shared about her childhood, and it made sense to me why kindness felt so real to her at camp. The abuse that this woman grew up with left me speechless. She was a child with disabilities, and people exploited her vulnerability. At the end of the week before people got on the bus to go home, she stood up and said thank you to everybody for treating her with kindness, and being there to support her. Her experiences that week were the opposite of the mistreatment she’d dealt with in her life. It will stand as the most real word of thanks I’ve ever been blessed to hear. She made God’s love real through her gratitude. We made God’s love real, I hope, through our openness to her humanity. God commissioned Abram and Sarah to be a blessing to the nations, but God did not leave them resourceless. They were already loved, and were able to share the blessing of that divine affection. We are already loved, and that is a blessing. This is my prayer: that your knowledge of God’s love may abound more and more, so that you may be able to discern how best to serve others by sharing the fruit of righteousness that comes through Jesus Christ – to the glory and praise of God. Amen. Written by Michael Wiebe (‘11) and presented at Altona Mennonite Church Photo taken for an assignment Digital Photography Class taught by Toby Wiens in September 2014 We invite MCI Alumni to submit original works of art for publication in CrossRoads. Photos of visual art should be submitted in JPEG or PNG formats. Written works should be 200 words or less, if possible. Art can be submitted via email to [email protected]. 10 CrossRoads CrossRoads Reunion News Class of 1944 It was Monday, July 21, 2014. It was time to remember. 1944 was a momentous year for the world. June 6 was D Day, the beginning of the end of WWII. June 9 was graduation day at MCI Gretna for 33 young people-a momentous day in our lives. Many parents had sacrified much financially to give their child an education there. It is now 70 years later. Of the 12 remaining graduates, five (two with their spouses) gathered at the Nor Villa Inn for lunch and reminiscing including much laughter, but also a note of sadness for those that are no more and for those that couldn’t attend. The difference in the world of “then” and “now” kicked in forcibly when pictures, taken while eating, were brought to us before the day was over! The Class of 1944 Above, Back Row: Ella Klassen Neufeld, Jacob Kroeker, Helen Peters We also recalled that one month’s cost of board and room then ($13.00) was Redekopp Front Row: Helen Koop Johnson, Mary Peters Fehr what we were paying for our lunch today. Leaving the Nor Villa, we gathered at my apartment for more sharing, again much laughter, and giving God the glory for His leading us thus far. The hours ticked by fast. It was time for faspa and time to say good-bye. We all felt that this would probably be our last MCI graduation reunion. With hugs and more hugs and blessings for each, the leave-taking began. Moments later, quick prayers were said for misplaced keys and a missing hearing-aid, both of which turned up soon thereafter. “Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget none of His benefits.” Psalm The Class of 1949 Above: Helga Wiebe, Trudy Heinrichs, John Bock, Helen Schulz, 103:2 Alice Dueck Submitted by Helen Peters Redekopp 11 CrossRoads CrossRoads Class of 1949 (Photo on page 11) The “Flagship MCI-’49” made a brief stop at its original home on June 1, 2014. The welcoming crowd that had gathered to hear the MCI students, “Saengerfest,” welcomed our group in several ways. A feeling of belonging to a growing international family warmed our hearts. Just 65 years ago, we were on stage singing, “Das Lied von der Glocke,” in a large tent that accommodated the crowds of friends of the MCI. Today the bright lights and comfortable seats at Buhler Hall almost lulled us seniors to sleep in the afternoon session! After a day of music and handshakes, hugs, and visits throughout intermissions, we gathered our crew of the Flagship MCI-’49 for a delicious supper and private reunion. There were so many memories of our student years that caught us laughing and sharing. We also sang a number of German favourite songs from our MCI days. A question was raised: “Do you remember a particular item from our MCI experience that influenced your lifestyle later?” Several items were named: Mr. Schaefer’s Mennonite History classes, our MCI dress codes, when we were naughty as teenagers, and more! Before we knew it the fog horn of our Flagship alerted us to pack up and leave. Our enjoyable stay was closed with prayer, committing our travels in life to the guidance and care of God. A reminder to all ‘49 Grads that in 2019 a renewed call may come to have another reunion. If you find yourself in a wheelchair, get a friend to assist you. Friends of our class are welcome! Submitted by Jacob Siemens 12 CrossRoads The Class of 1954 Above, Back Row: David Penner, Jake Froese, Peter Neudorf, Ben Stobbe, Abe Friesen Middle Row: Ruth Bock, Myrna Loewen, Hedy Martens, Margaret Suderman, Helen Reimer, Marie Zacharias Front Row: Katharine Martens, Marianne Mann, Anna Exley, MaryAnne Zacharias Class of 1954 At our 50th Reunion, some of us discussed the possibility of meeting for lunch occasionally when out of town Stookies come to Winnipeg. Since that discussion, there have been from 5 to 11 Stookies and some of their husbands, meeting twice a year, in spring and fall to enjoy lunch and fellowship with each other. It was at our gathering this spring, that Marianne (Dyck) Mann, brought up the topic that 60 years is an important milestone and we should think seriously about organizing a 60th Reunion. Katherine (Klassen) Martens and Myrna (Goossen) Loewen volunteered to assist her, so the date for the reunion was set for August 27, 2014. On Wednesday, August 27, we met at the Oak Ridge Point Condo Party Room in Winnipeg.The celebration was very well attended with 15 graduates and 11 spouses. The evening began with reacquainting with one another, as several graduates were unable to attend the 50th Reunion. While the Sam’s Place caterers were getting organized, we got seated around tastefully decorated tables. Marianne had chosen purple flowers and serviettes, as she remembered those were our grad colours 60 years ago! Katherine got everyonearound each table involved with an MCI trivia game. To my knowledge, I don’t think we determined from where the term ‘stookie’ originated. After a delicious sit-down-dinner, we gathered around the fireplace in the beautiful facility and listened to what the graduates had to share. This was a good time to reflect on how fortunate we all are to enjoy good health and be able to join in this fellowship! A topic that came up for discussion was whether or not we should plan for a 65th Reunion! On display, was a tribute to the graduates and teachers that have passed on. Submitted by Myrna (Goossen) Loewen CrossRoads you to the organizing committee for initiating this memorable anniversary celebration. Submitted by Esther Anne and Terrance Klassen Class of 1984 The Class of 1964 Class of 1964 and had a lengthy time of sharing of experiences. Ron Loeppky led a short tribute to two graduates, Marilyn Dueck (Heinrichs) and Lester Butts who had passed away during the last 50 years and Sieg Toews blessed us with a meditation and hymn singing. We enjoyed our time of reminiscing, renewing acquaintances and sharing the fellowship of our former classmates. Thank- Thirty Years! How time flies when you’re having fun! The class of 1984 got together on Sept 21, 2014, at MCI to visit and reminisce. A great time was had talking about the highlights of everyones’ lives for the last thirty years. We shared how many children we each had and what they are doing and what we, as alumni, are doing. We met in the library, were served coffee and cookies, and then went on a tour of the school. We hung out by our class picture for a while, talking about the classmates that couldn’t make it, and sharing what we knew about them. We went on a tour of Buhler Hall and then made our way to the kitchen where we were served an excellent meal. To end the evening, we hung out on the old girls res floor outside (which is now a skateboard park) and chatted. It was great to see the alumni of 1984 who could make it. Submitted by Brian Borne On June 28, 2014 twenty-nine MCI graduates of 1964 celebrated their 50th anniversary with a reunion at St. John’s College in Winnipeg, Manitoba. A self-appointed organizing committee led by Harold Penner began work earlier in the year to set a date, prepare a mailing list, and organize a day of reminiscing, sharing and good food. Several weeks before the event we were encouraged to write biographies and distribute them to our former classmates so that we could become familiar with what had transpired in each of our lives during the past fifty years. The reunion began mid-afternoon with a stand-up reception of hors d’oeuvres and punch. This allowed us to introduce ourselves, renew acquaintances, and to visit a short time before having a delicious buffet meal in the dining room of the College. For dessert, we The Class of 1984 Above, Back Row: Andrea Bergen, Marge (Funk) Driedger, Cheryl gathered in the reception hall where Janzen, Edie (Wiebe) Pankratz, Ericka (Dyck) Rempel Front Row: Brad Friesen, Jeff we also posed for a group picture Kathler, Greg Carman, Louis Quasso, Bernie Hildebrand, Dave Rempel, Brian Borne 13 CrossRoads CrossRoads The Class of 1989 Above Back Row: Monica (Penner) Poettcker; Ernie Thiessen; Lionel Ens; James Friesen; Chris Dale; Scott Fehr Front Row: Susie (Rempel) Bunka; Melanie (Tiessen) Kehler; Jackie (Froese) Ens; Naomi (Engbrecht) Klassen; Jodi (Warkentin) Friesen; Charlotte (Reimer) Mortensen; Brenda (Sawatzky) Smith; Carla (Zacharias) Loewen; Fiona (McCallum) Plett; Verna Martens; Peter Ens Class of 1989 On August 16th, 18 of the 1989 MCI grads gathered to celebrate 25 years since we received our grade 12 diplomas and embarked in a new chapter in our lives. MCI Stookies came from as far as Alberta and Churchill to reminisce of MCI shenanigans and catch up on our diverse life journeys over the past 25 years. There was lots of informal visiting, meeting of spouses, good laughs, and stories shared. Interestingly, one of us is already a grandparent, while another had a baby just a week prior to the reunion. Others have kids currently attending MCI. We enjoyed a catered pork dinner and were hosted by Barry and Melanie (Tiessen) Kehler in their beautiful backyard in Winnipeg. A big thank you to Jodi, Fiona, and Jackie for being a part of the planning team and to Melanie for spearheading, organizing, and hosting this great opportunity to reconnect with old friends! Submitted by Carla (Zacharias) Loewen 14 CrossRoads Gather Your Class at MCI 125 As the planning committee for the MCI 125 celebration is hard at work putting together a weekend of entertainment, connecting, reminiscing, and sharing, they are eager for MCI’s graduating classes to have a chance to re-connect specifically with their fellow classmates through class reunions. All day Saturday, June 6, 2015, class reunions will be happening all over the MCI campus along with other activities. Whether your class wants to have a meal together, play games, just visit over coffee and cookies, or attend one of the 125 events together, the weekend of MCI 125 will offer many opportunities to gather together to reminisce and to build new memories. Don’t miss this chance to reconnect with old friends and remember the glory days, the ridiculous shenanigans,the concerts and travelling, and the fun-filled mischief that was your MCI experience. Anyone is welcome to step forward to be the host of their class reunion. Contact MCI today to get the conversation started! We can help you be in contact with your classmates, brainstorm ideas, and get the word out. CrossRoads Alumni News and Updates births Zahara Jayne Baro-Wiens was born to Samantha Wiens (‘97) and Reynaldo Baro Baro on April 30, 2014. Zahara was welcomed by older brothers, Rio and Muracco. Kylie Jane Higgins was born to Hedy Parker Cole was born to Amanda Friesen (‘99) and Jared Higgins on (Klassen) Giesbrecht (‘99) and May 8, 2014. Dustin Giesbrecht on November 19, 2013. Parker was welcomed by big brothers, Hunter and Carter. The Giesbrecht family recently moved from Winnipeg to Altona, MB. Did you know that if you send us your email address we can send you CrossRoads electronically? Did you know that now e-CrossRoads contains all kinds of great links to information, pictures, and video? Zander Pete Friesen Wiebe, Myelle Nora Friesen Wiebe, and Tasha Jess Friesen Wiebe were born to Tom Wiebe (‘97) and Loretta Friesen of Mitchell, MB, on June 4, 2014. The triplets were welcomed by older brother, Paxton. 15 CrossRoads CrossRoads weddings & celebrations Jessica Spanjer (‘09) married Martin Raupers in Hedy Friesen (‘99) and Jared Higgins were married on Newdale, MB, on July 12, 2014. October 19, 2013. Ryan Pauls (‘09), son of Alvina and Ernie Pauls of Morden, married Tara Bergen on July 26, 2014. Herbert Brandt (‘43) celebrated 63 years of marriage to his wife, Anne, on September 1, 2014. The Lord gave him over 40 years of ministry as pastor. Life has been wonderful, even in retirement. Herbert and Anne live in Delta, British Columbia. 16 CrossRoads Where are you living? What are you up to? What experiences would you like to share with MCI alumni & friends of the school? Email us: [email protected] CrossRoads deaths He cultivated enduring relationships with friends and relatives. He had a generous spirit and contributed significantly to each community where he lived. He loved music and was a marvelous storyteller. George Friesen (‘46) died peacefully, surrounded by family, on May 12, 2014 and went to be with his Lord and Saviour. He is remembered by Louise (nee Wiens), his beloved wife of 65 years, and six children: Lawrence and Carol Friesen of Winnipeg, Irene Friesen of Pinawa, Paul Friesen of Sanford and his fiancé Ann, Phil and Karen Friesen of Crystal City, Grace and Orest Pelech of Lloydminster, David and Alana Friesen of West St. Paul, as well as 15 grandchildren and 24 great-grandchildren. He is survived by his sisters Sara (Peter) Friesen and Annelie (Henry) Enns, his brother Henry (Helen) Friesen, and sistersin-law, Elvira Friesen and Phyllis Friesen. George was predeceased by infant grandson Owen, and two brothers, Wiegand and Vern. George Friesen was born on August 6, 1927 to Gerhard and Sara Friesen of Crystal City. George and Louise farmed at Crystal City (Huron district) for 30 years before moving to Winnipeg where George worked for Choice Books and Lawson & Falle. George was a man of deep faith who touched the lives of many. On August 6, 2014, Karen Rasmussen (‘71) passed away at St. Boniface Hospital at the age of 61 years. Karen is survived by her son Kelly (Tracy); grandson Avery; father Abram Neufeld; sister Enid (Ron) Rasmussen; brother Tim Neufeld. She was predeceased by her mother Aganetha Neufeld. The family would like to thank the Palliative Care Unit staff at St. Boniface Hospital for their care and compassion. John Warkentin (‘50), beloved husband of Erna Warkentin (nee Engbrecht). Dear father of Barbara Graham (Brent), Jocelyn and Greg (Rosa). Cherished grandfather of Liam, Erin, Brynne, Lauren, Scott, John and Alexandra. Passed away peacefully at Joseph Brant Hospital, Burlington, on Sunday, March 30, 2014 at the age of 82. He is survived by his sisters Margaret, Irene, Hedy, Marlies and brothers Peter, Werner and Alfred. John is predeceased by his parents David and Margaretha and his brother David Warkentin. He will be sadly missed by his extended family and friends. John was a professor of chemistry at McMaster University, from 1960 until his retirement in 1996. An avid outdoorsman, he loved canoeing, fishing, camping and hiking Jacob Friesen (‘50), husband of Sara Friesen (nee Bergen) passed away Tuesday, October 7, 2014 at St. Boniface Hospital after a lengthy battle with cancer. Jake was born near Lena, Manitoba on November 29, 1931, the second of 14 children of Isaac and Mary Friesen. Following graduation from the M.C.I., Gretna he found his vocation as a teacher. He graduated from Normal School in 1956, completed his B.Sc. at the University of Manitoba in 1962 and, a few years later, his B.Ed. His 33-year career included three years (Continued on page 18) 17 CrossRoads CrossRoads in one-room country schools, and 30 years in the River East School Division - seven in junior high and 23 at River East Collegiate. Jake married Sara in 1962. Jake was predeceased by newborn twin sons, Robert and Michael. He is survived by his son Kevin (Pam) and their four sons, and his daughter Carla (Glen Martin) and their two daughters. Jake was actively involved in his church, as well as many other types of volunteer service including delivering Meals on Wheels, filling out income tax for persons with lower income, and working at Ten Thousand Villages. He and Sara enjoyed traveling widely. He shared slide presentations on these travels at many seniors’ establishments. Most of all, he took great joy in his family, attending many of their sports activities and dramas. Error: In Ruth Neufeld’s obituary in the June 2014 issue of CrossRoads, an error was printed. Ruth was a student in the year 1945-46, not 1949 as written. Thanks to Jack Neufeld for catching this error. CrossRoads is printed in Canada by FRIESENS FAST PRINT, Altona, MB Managing Editor: Shanda Hochstetler MCI Box 250 Gretna, MB R0G 0V0 204-327-5891 [email protected] www.mciblues.net 18 CrossRoads Upcoming Events @ MCI November 20, 21, 22 7:30pm Cottonwood Community Drama presents Pollyanna (Tickets available online at: www.MCIBlues.net) December 6 MCI Chamber Choir Concert with the Winnipeg Singers December 17 & 18 7:30pm Christmas Concerts December 19 to January 4 Christmas Break March 12, 13, 14 7:30pm MCI presents Disney’s Beauty & the Beast June 5-7 MCI 125th Anniversary Celebration For full event calendars, visit the Buhler Hall and MCI websites. www.buhlerhall.com www.mciblues.net Become a Stookie Sustainer through automated monthly giving & Be Part of the 1,000 Sustainers Visit CanadaHelps.org OR Set up bill payment online through your credit union. CrossRoads 19 CrossRoads CrossRoads Contact MCI Toll Free in Manitoba: 1-877-MCI-BLUE (1-877-624-2583) 20 CrossRoads
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