spotlight layout - Methodist Home for Children
Transcription
spotlight layout - Methodist Home for Children
Spotlight METHODIST HOME FOR CHILDREN mended dreams S P R I N G 1 9 9 9 O N T H E FA M I LY Spotlight on the Family™ In This Issue Published semiannually by the Methodist Home for Children Board of Directors Barbara Allen Wes Brown David Brownlee Bob Butler Rick Clayton Bill Creech Don Curtis Marion Edwards Brian Gentle Billy Griffin Blanna Harriss Lloyd Hackley Jeanette Hyde Lulu Jolliff Sarah Jordan Bill Laupus Jimmy Locklear Connie Maynard David Miller Mary Ann Minnick Michael Morgan Bruce Petteway Merle Richey Mike Safley Demming Smith Jane Smith Bill Spencer Bill Stewart Mary Townes Cissie Wellons Bryce Younts PA G E 2 OUR PEOPLE Memories from Methodist Home for Children Alumni. Planning is under way for our centennial reunion. Our staff and Board continue to develop plans for the Child and Family Enrichment Center. PA G E 6 OUR SERVICES The Methodist Home for Children opens a home for youth with drug- and alcohol-related addictions. Cindy Howery shares her inspiring success story. PA G E 8 OUR SUPPORT We prepare for a variety of centennial related events. “A Winter’s Tale” is a wonderful success and we thank and recognize those who continue to support our important mission in a variety of ways. PA G E 1 2 OUR PRODUCTS With the introduction of our new logo, we also introduce a variety of MHC merchandise. We hope you will surround yourself with our new products. OUR MISSION To add or change your address on our mailing list, to order reprints of stories or additional copies of this issue, call MHC’s Advancement Office at 919.833.2834 or toll free at 888.305.4321 For more information on our services please visit our web site at www.mhfc.org In service to God, our mission is to build upon the social, physical, emotional, and spiritual strengths of children, youth, and families and to affirm their worth. on the cover Our centennial portrait Mended Dreams, by artist Lisette DeWinne, features five children who represent different eras in our 100 year history. 1 President Mike Safley and some of the children who benefit from your support of the Methodist Home for Children. PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE We Have Reason to Celebrate Birthdays are important. We look forward every year to gathering relatives and friends to celebrate the day we were born. We reminisce about what we have accomplished in life, reflect on what gives us meaning and purpose, and look to the future. Some of us stopped formal celebrations years ago for fear we might burn down the house before the fire department could arrive to put out all the candles. We have a birthday to celebrate: This year, the Methodist Home for Children is 100 years old! It’s a year to shout for joy and to tell the story of all the lives of children, youth, and families who have been touched by the Methodist Orphanage and the Methodist Home for Children. MHC has dedicated itself to salvaging, saving, challenging, encouraging, motivating, and healing. For this and many other reasons we sing with enthusiasm, “Happy birthday, Methodist Home For Children!” Throughout our 100-year history, MHC has kept a close watch over children, youth, and families in order to meet their many needs. I wish I could say the Methodist Home for Children will not be needed in the 21st century, but reality tells us otherwise. There is more need for services for children, youth, and families than ever before. We are blessed with a hardworking board of directors and a dedicated staff, all of whom help us clarify our focus so we can best meet North Carolina’s challenging and growing human service needs. We have worked hard this year to position MHC to face the challenges of serving children and families well into the next century. By January of 2000, we intend to operate in four regions in eastern North Carolina, developing critically-needed services the communities have identified. During the course of our centennial year you will notice a new image—and a new logo—designed to more clearly communicate our mission. Pray for us during this year of administrative transition. When the new millennium begins, the Methodist Home for Children will be touching hearts and mending dreams in many new areas. Any child or family in need is a reason to keep on working hard. Please remember how much we need your help to be successful. As we celebrate our birthday, keep close to your heart our mission to serve children, youth, and families. In service to God, Michael Safley MHC President/CEO SPOTLIGHT ON THE FAMILY SPRING 1999 2 OUR PEOPLE Fond Memories of the Blessing—and the Cursing It was the somber opinion of the Rev. Albert Sydney Barnes, superintendent of the Methodist Orphanage in Raleigh when I was growing up there a half-century ago, that it was a constant touchand-go question as to whether we children could be saved from the yawning jaws of eternal hell. Given our inherent wickedness—especially we boys—it was clear that only hard work, regimen, discipline, robust food, and heavy doses of cod-liver oil and religion had even the slightest chance of giving us the strength to fend off the subtle snares and inducements of a scheming Satan. There were 300 of us young sinners there, children of the great Depression, nearly all with at least one parent dead, who had been given over to the keep of the Methodist Church. We needed constant inoculation against our sinful proclivities, and this was accomplished with daily chapel, nightly prayers, Sunday school, church, Sunday evening services, grace at meals, and at least two summer weeks of menacing nightly exhortations by visiting revivalists. The daily regimen was unvarying: wake-up bell at 6:00 AM, breakfast at 6:30, school at 7:00, chapel at 10:00, lunch at 12:00, school at 1:00 PM, sports practice at 4:30, dinner at 6:00, study hall at 7:30, to bed at 9:30. The hard work ingredient was performed before, during, and after these other activities. The girls cooked, cleaned, waited tables, did laundry, worked in the infirmary, and took care of their dormitories and the administration building. The boys raked leaves, hauled coal, stoked furnaces, scrubbed floors, cleaned toilets, METHODIST HOME FOR CHILDREN cleared trees, and worked a 200-acre track farm that lay three miles out Caraleigh Road abutting Carolina Pines Country Club. We grew tomatoes, corn, cabbage, beans, potatoes, and other vegetables, and we milked 40 cows. The farm made the orphanage mostly self-sufficient. A classroom of attentive students was a typical scene in Karl Flemming’s day. Being a “milk boy” on the farm was far and away the most unpopular job in the orphanage, much worse than plowing with the profound non-cooperation of our nine recalcitrant mules, digging up stumps, trimming mosquito-ridden ditch banks, plucking corn in the bitterness of winter, raking and hauling wet leaves, hoeing weeds all day in the corn fields, picking beans in the blazing sun, or even butchering and “dressing” hogs on cold winter days. Beginning at age 14, everyone had to take his two-year turn being a “milk boy.” This job meant arising at 3:30 AM, riding in the open back of a big Dodge truck—a bitter experience in winter—to the farm, herding the cows through wet grass to the fly-specked barn, washing their bags with warm water, and milking them by hand. This was repeated in the afternoon, every day, holidays included, and it did not liberate one from other farm work. And the worst part of this worst job— even worse than being kicked and swatted in the face with wet tails—was dealing with the prodigious avalanche of manure which these despised creatures produced. Cows are arguably the stupidest of animals, even dumber than chickens, but in our resentful minds, they maliciously waited to relieve themselves until they got into the barn. Afterward, their immense issuances had to be shoveled into a wheelbarrow and hauled outside the barn to what grew and grew into a sort of manure mountain until late winter when it was hauled to the fields and spread. The custom for choosing from among the milk boys who was to be saddled with the unfortunate chore of “taking up crap” ran back to a time before anyone remembered, perhaps back to when the orphanage was founded at the turn of the century. This hateful job was simply rotated, one day after another, among the eight milk boys. Just when I had reached the milk-boy age, we got a new farm boss, a Mr. Pierce. He was a tall, rather prim, but well-meaning and decent Puritan who wore steel rimmed spectacles. He spoke in a clipped, high-pitched voice and had quite a combustible temper. What set off his anger more than any other malefaction was our use of profanity. This was unfortunate for his daily serenity, 3 Karl Flemming (#33) participated in sports at the Home. All children were encouraged to be involved in a sport. for “cussing” was as universal a habit—and almost an art form in its imaginative sweep—among us tough, swaggering boys as was that other illicit badge of manhood, smoking cigarettes. Shocked by the extensiveness of our profane vocabularies and our jubilant use of them, Mr. Pierce became almost apoplectic with righteous rage. His jaw tightened, his face turned red, his eyes flashed, and he would yell, “All right you boys, cut it out!” Cursing was obviously, in Mr. Pierce’s gloomy view, one of those sins that set you, perhaps irretrievably, on the slippery downward slope toward the fiery furnaces of hell. His angry warning, to his chagrin, had absolutely no effect on our raw language. So one day, at rope’s end, he said, “All right, the next boy I catch cussing will have to take up crap for a week.” This was a threat, to be sure, with teeth in it. But a habit so proudly practiced and so deeply ingrained was not easily broken, and within 24 hours, I was caught redhanded, tried, found guilty, and sentenced on the spot. Which provoked a whoop of laughter from my indicted co-conspirators. They gathered in the barn and kidded me unmercifully as I loaded and reloaded the noxious wheelbarrow. As the hateful day went by, however, I bore my sentence with stoic heroism, and was near its end, ready for parole, when Mr. Pierce caught me again. And the next week he caught me again. And then again. And again. This dirty cycle continued unbroken, in fact, for 17 weeks, by which time I had rebelled inside, like Paul Newman in “Hud,” and had begun to wear my sentence with defiant pride. And in the eyes of my fellows, I became a hero. How many wheelbarrow loads, how many tons I hauled from this Stygian stable I do not know. But as the manure mountain grew outside the barn door, in my rebellious and un-redemptive criminal brain it became an encrusted monument to noble boys everywhere who were oppressed by joyless and narrow-minded grown-ups. During Karl’s tenure at the Orphanage, the Main Building was the dominating feature of campus. For his part, Mr. Pierce was by and by a beaten man. He finally just gave up and without saying a word went back to the rotation system. From thence forward, he just looked at me with a mixture of pity and disgust. The sheer magnitude and incurability of my criminality was obviously too far beyond his knowledge of crime and punishment. And he surrendered me to my fate. To what I am sure was his astonishment, I left the orphanage, escaped my criminal tendencies and went on to have a successful career as a journalist for Newsweek magazine and CBS News, and to help raise four fine sons. I am sorry to say— for it is not an attractive habit in an adult or a child—that though I eventually gave up my smoking, I still use “bad” language. Looking back, though, as I prepare to return to Raleigh for the annual Easter reunion of the orphanage, I see a remarkable and perhaps unparalleled record of producing good citizens. Of all the hundreds and hundreds of boys and girls who were raised in the strict, hard-working confines of the Methodist church’s rules and the orphanage’s code of ethics, I have heard of only one who ever went to prison. Except for him, poor fellow, the orphanage’s graduates all left and became useful, contributing, law-abiding members of society—all proud of the way they grew up. In today’s allegedly more sophisticated and sensitive world, bureaucratic restrictions likely would prevent an institution from functioning like the Methodist Orphanage did when I was growing up. And that’s a pity, because it was a system that worked. It did what it set out to do: provide a healthy, stable home for homeless children, and train them to be good citizens and good people. Karl Flemming is a former correspondent for Newsweek and CBS. This article is reprinted from the News & Observer. SPOTLIGHT ON THE FAMILY SPRING 1999 4 OUR PEOPLE “I consider it a blessing Alumni Lynn Corson looks back on life at the Methodist Home “My two sisters, brother, mother and I moved here from Canada,” says Lynn Corson, recalling the challenges of her early home life. “My mother did not speak English. It must have been very hard for her, and for our betterment the Methodist Home for Children took us in.” Lynn Corson (center) learned lessons at the Methodist Home that are still a part of her and her family’s life. So began a new life for Lynn—one that would take her from kindergarten to the twelfth grade, through adjustments, new faces and places, and challenging responsibilities. She would see her siblings and never live with them. She would see her mother only during visits and on holidays. Slowly, Lynn would learn to make the most of her situation. She would grow up. “Seeing my sisters and brother but not being able to live with them and be around them all the time was an incredible challenge,” she says. “I was the baby and all I wanted, in a world that was new around me, was to be with the ones I loved and trusted.” METHODIST HOME FOR CHILDREN One of her favorite—and painful—memories is of playing with her two sisters at the pool. They held her, tossed her back and forth, and surrounded her with love. Then the time would invariably come: they were sent to their separate cottages. “I remember the heartache as I was pulled from their arms,” she says. “Sometimes I thought it would have been better not to see my family at all than to go through that separation all over again. It was very tough.” During Lynn’s early years at MHC, the organization underwent a period in which cottages and Teaching-Parents were used to create more of a family-like environment. Residents took their meals in the individual cottages instead of the main cafeteria as the focus shifted away from the institutional settings of the past. “There was a lot of change in the home,” she says. “Several Teaching-Parents came and went. Kids would come and go, too. People flowed in and out of my life all the time.” to have spent time within the Home’s embrace.” Lynn Corson Faced with these challenges and shifting sands, Lynn found stability in Juanita Clemmons, a Teaching-Parent. “She practiced commitment,” Lynn says. “She genuinely cared about us kids and it showed in all that she did. She was the first person at the Home I saw that in. Because of her sacrifice and love I started being able to learn and to appreciate my surroundings a little more. She was, and still is, very special to me. We keep in touch today and treasure our friendship.” Lynn’s early teen years brought their own challenges. She was embarrassed to get on the school bus, feeling all eyes upon her. “I was a ‘Home kid’ and no matter how hard I tried to fit in, things just didn’t seem the same for me,” she says. She beat back her insecurities as she took on new responsibilities, such as grocery shopping for her entire cottage. In the process, she gained confidence, and learned time management skills that serve her well today. Lynn values family above all else. “I will fight like a tiger to ensure our unity and relationships,” she says. “I put all that I am into our time together.” Lynn says she would not be the person she is today without the care she received at the Methodist Home for Children. “Although it was not the childhood one would wish for, I consider it a blessing to have spent time within the home’s embrace,” she says. Lynn and her husband Steven live in Ft. Worth, Texas, with their children, Stephanie (10) and Ben (7). Lynn works in out-patient rehabilitation as a licensed physical therapist assistant. 5 Plans for Child and Family Enrichment Center Progress FOOD LION COMMUNITY WAY The Methodist Home for Children is moving forward with the development of its new Child and Family Enrichment Center. “This center has long been a dream for us,” says MHC President Mike Safley. “We are committed to preventing problems and to providing early intervention. The Center will serve as the cornerstone of MHC’s continued expansion into the area of early childhood development.” Located on Glenwood Avenue in Raleigh, the Center will feature extended hours, crisis and drop-in care, and after-school care. As an inclusive child care facility, the Center will provide day care services for approximately 160 children from all walks of life. Special attention will be given to children with unique economic, emotional, and physical needs. Outreach will be one of the center’s major focus areas. In addition to direct care, the center will serve as a resource and training facility for parents, child care workers, and others interested in the development and well-being of children. While receiving training and support in the best practices for early childhood development care providers can observe the provision of quality care directly. The Center will also serve as the base for child care development teams, which will work in partnership with local churches and communities to establish quality programs and services for children across North Carolina. For more information about the Center, contact MHC Child Care Consultant Margaret Anne Biddle at 919.828.0345 or toll-free at 888.305.4321. ilies by shopping your local Food Lion DAYS ARE HERE AGAIN Help support the Methodist Home for Children’s work with children and famduring March 22–24. Pick up a special shopping voucher from MHC’s Advancement Office or from any local United Methodist Women’s group member. Present this voucher at the register when you pay and Food Lion will donate 5% of your total bill to the Methodist Home for Children. It’s easy and costs you nothing more than your regular grocery bill—and it’s for a great cause. To receive a voucher or for more information about this special program please call Jennifer Cooper at 919.833.2834 ext. 29. Alumni To Celebrate Centennial Reunion For alumni and former residents of the Methodist Orphanage/Methodist Home for Children, remembering the past 100 years is about remembering their own lives—the ways in which they were personally touched by this grand organization. “The planning committee is finalizing plans for our Easter Reunion on April 2–4, 1999. As usual we will have lots of reminiscing, hugs and good stories to tell. We hope to see everyone there,” says Billy Griffin, Alumni Association President. Weekend activities include a golf tournament, tour of Raleigh, dinner and dance, church service, and business meeting. A picnic and Easter egg hunt at the Borden Building in Fletcher Park will cap off the weekend on Sunday afternoon. For reservations or information, contact Billy Griffin at 919.362.6670. A Special Call for Young Alumni If you lived or worked at the Methodist Home for Children from 1960–1980, a special group of tables is being reserved for you and your fam- his recurring Fred Fletcher in y. the Easter Bunn reunion role as ily at the Alumni Reunion picnic on Sunday, April 4, 1999. Come join in the fun, and fellowship. Your children and grandchildren can bring along their Easter baskets for the annual Easter egg hunt. SPOTLIGHT ON THE FAMILY SPRING 1999 6 OUR SERVICES Substance Abuse Program is Mending Dreams Cindy Howery knows what it means to take each day one step at a time. Her family and a support network of friends encourage her. She has regained the ability to choose for herself a better life to live. This was not always the case. In the arms of the angel, far away from here, from this dark, cold hotel room and the endlessness that you feel. You are pulled from the Cindy’s troubles began at the tender age of 11 when she started drinking. At 15, she dropped out of school, well on her way to a life dependent on alcohol. After five DWIs, many weekends in jail away from her family, house arrest, treatment programs, and time served in prison, she hit bottom. “I finally said, ‘God, I can’t do it. I can’t take it any longer. I need help and I lay all this down before you.’ That’s when my journey to recovery began,” she says. Today, Mike Herring, a MHC Substance Abuse Specialist and counselor in the Bridges Program, is part of Cindy’s support team. “Mike has been a huge help in my recovery,” Cindy says. “He blends guidance and support with friendship. He once gave me his card and told me to call him whenever I needed a ride, someone to talk to, or anything at all. Having that card gave me a sense of security and helped me establish an entire list of people to be my support network. Mike understands the confusion of recovery, and because of that he is able to help me understand too.” Preparation and opportunity play critical roles in recovery. As Mike explains, “substance-affected persons want the opportunity to improve, but often lose focus or give up when they fail to meet their goals. So they must learn to set shortterm goals. With a daily discipline of preparation, they are ready and able to make the most of opportunities which arise.” Cindy learned how to set attainable METHODIST HOME FOR CHILDREN goals and how to handle the difficult situations in life. “When you are a recovering alcoholic, your goal is to stay clean, but that is not specific enough,” she says. “You must force yourself to lay out objectives, set parameters, and know your limits.” For Cindy, the finish line is not as important as the steps needed to get there. “Mike has pushed me to look even closer at the plans I have laid out,” she says. “I have to focus on the now and not get caught up in alcoholic dreams of tomorrow.” So Cindy takes it one step—and one day—at a time. She knows a slip could wipe out years of hard work and determination. “I have been sober for 21 months,” she says proudly. “But if I make poor choices regarding alcohol, I can set myself back 19 years. My decisions affect more than myself. I have come too far and learned so much.” She has learned that giving back is part of her own recovery. Cindy sponsors others involved in recovery programs and serves as part of their support network. She supports her eldest daughter’s efforts in working with an Alateen group in the Goldsboro area, which helps young people whose parents or other family members abuse alcohol or other substances. After earning her G.E.D, Cindy enrolled in college. Now in her third semester, she holds a 3.5 G.P.A. and has been awarded full financial assistance for her undergraduate work. She is majoring in human services technology and plans to become a wreckage of your silent revelry, you’re in the arms of the angel, may you find some comfort here. from “Arms of the Angel” by Sarah McLachlan substance abuse counselor in a rehabilitation treatment facility. Cindy focuses on the positive. She enjoys and appreciates the little things in life. “The song Arms of the Angel serves as a source of encouragement to me,” she says. “I hear God speak to me through it and I feel revived and safe. It’s my song.” Cindy and her husband Darren live in Goldsboro with their three daughters: Brooke, Meghan, and Emily. The Bridges Program connects the recovering addict with community support, participation in self-help groups and the development of skills necessary to address problems instead of turning to drugs and/or alcohol to avoid them. For more information on the Bridges Program or any of our Substance Abuse Services contact Fleetwood at 919.735.3028. Tom 7 ATTENTION GOLFERS! Put these dates on your calendar. All proceeds from these events benefit the Methodist Home for Children. May 24, 1999 2nd Annual Methodist Home for Children Classic Bradford Creek Golf Club Greenville, NC Sponsored by St. James United Home for Substance-Affected Youth Opens in March Methodist Youth, Tarboro, NC June 4, 1999 4th Annual Buffalo Open Wildwood Green Golf Club Responding to a growing crisis among young people in and around Durham County, the Methodist Home for Children has adapted its Durham area residential youth home to serve children confronting drug- and alcohol-related addictions. “The impact of substance abuse continues to erode the lives of our youth and families,” says Tom Fleetwood, MHC’s Director of Substance Abuse Services. “We must find “We want to bring this residential style program into the Durham area. There is such a need for this type of resource—currently the Triangle area has none.” Armeneous Dobson, Program Director new resources and creative programs to give our youth the opportunity to grow successfully into adulthood.” Recent studies show a rise in substance abuse in local schools and that a growing number of incarcerated youth have substance issues. Services for these young people are difficult to identify, and residential care is noticeably absent. According to the North Carolina Alcohol and Drug Council, Durham County needs a minimum of 50 residential beds for adolescent substance abusers. Currently, the county has none. Led by Program Director Armeneous Dobson, the home will provide short-term residential care for young males, ages 11–15, with identified substance abuse issues. MHC’s existing six-bed group home in Durham will provide a family-like setting for these youth while they are in care. The program will help the young people examine their problems and encourage them to turn their lives around and become involved in creative, productive endeavors. Churches and community organizations will provide many activities for the residents. The young men will be paired with positive adult mentors, and will participate in drug counseling and support groups, recreational opportunities, restitution, and work experiences. Parents and other family members will play an active role in the youth’s recovery plan and will work with staff to ensure an after-care plan that will help the young men sustain their successes beyond their time in the youth home. Raleigh, NC Sponsored by Buffalo’s Café in Raleigh, NC November 11, 1999 3rd Annual Andy Kanas Memorial Golf Tournament Riverwood Golf Club, Clayton, NC Sponsored by Methodist Orphanage/Methodist Home for Children Alumni Association. Call MHC’s Advancement Office at 919.833.2834 or toll-free at 888.305.4321 for details on each of these exciting events. Visit us on the Internet If you would like to find out more information about services provided by the Methodist Home for Children, please visit our web site. www.mhfc.org SPOTLIGHT ON THE FAMILY SPRING 1999 8 OUR SUPPORT CENTENNIAL SPONSOR A special thanks to: Capitol Broadcasting Company, Inc. (In honor of Fred Fletcher) Thank you to our other supporters: Barbara and Luke Allen Andy’s Pizza Austin Foods BB&T Butler Clinical Recruitment Sally and Bob Butler Cable Frame House Captive Air Systems Carolina Builders The Curtis Foundation Delta Air Lines The Embassy Suites Ernst & Young Fred Fletcher Fred Smith Company (In honor of Fred and Eudell Smith) Gingiss Formalwear Golden Corral Dr. Lloyd V. Hackley Becky Johnson Sarah and Bob Jordan Jordan Lumber Company KPMG Peat Marwick Long Memorial UMC (Nancy Cole) Connie and James Maynard Mutual Distributing Company Mutual of America Quail Ridge Books Sarah Reeves RPG Industries, Inc. Rex Healthcare Rich Products, Corp. Wanda and Louis Safley Members of Edenton Street UMC Wachovia Bank of NC Hope and Mike Ward Wedge Capital Management, LLP Cissie and Allen Wellons Allen Weiss Williams, Overman, Pierce & Company, LLP Witzleben & Associates York Properties Zubigraphics 1999 Special Olympics World Games METHODIST HOME FOR CHILDREN Celebrating 100 Years of Service The Methodist Home for Children and the thousands of alumni, volunteers, and staff members who have been a part of this enormous family over the past hundred years have wonderful reasons to celebrate. The huge tapestry of personal achievements, organizational milestones, and program advances gives us pause to reflect on our rich heritage and cause to celebrate our accomplishments. A single celebration would not adequately recognize such a tremendous landmark. Methodist Home for Children plans a year of activities, parties, and advancement to mark this monumental anniversary. The second annual black-tie event, “A Winter's Tale,” held January 30, launched the centennial. The fundraising gala offered MHC supporters a chance to honor special friends and dance the night away, while raising $75,000. (See article on page 9.) Decades of memories will fill hearts, homes, hotels, and the MHC properties during the annual alumni reunion, scheduled for Easter weekend (April 2–4). Among other activities will be the well-loved Easter egg hunt on the old Orphanage property. Alumni and their families will come home to share the love and hope of Methodist Home for Children, see old friends, and celebrate the future. MHC will continue it’s celebration at the Annual Meeting of the NC Conference of the United Methodist Church on June 9–13, 1999. The five day event will be held at the Cumberland County Civic & Convention Center in Fayetteville. A special MHC program will highlight the Saturday, June 12 session as we reflect on our 100 years of serving children, youth and families. MHC will be an active, visible partner of the biggest sporting event in the world this year as a sponsor of the 1999 Special Olympics World Games. On June 27, as part of the Special Olympics activities, Methodist Home for Children will host its biggest birthday ever with a community birthday celebration. Plan now to join the party! Watch for details as summer approaches. The centennial year will also mark a new beginning for MHC, as we launch the Child and Family Enrichment Center. The center will address the critical needs of children and families for quality, accessible childcare and support. (See article on page 5.) Celebrating the past helps propel us into our second century. Building on tradition while remaining alert to the changing needs of children and families, Methodist Home for Children will continue to demonstrate leadership in the 21st century. EAGLE RECERTIFICATION MAKING A LASTING GIFT The Methodist Home for Children Having an updated will is a good (MHC) has received its recertifica- way to ensure that your wishes are tion from the EAGLE Program. MHC carried out after you are gone. received the EAGLE designation for Have you considered including quality in Christian Health Care as the work of MHC in your estate outlined in the Association Program: planning? Please contact MHC’s Educational Assessment Guidelines Advancement Office for more and Leading Toward Excellence. information. 919-833.2834. 9 A Warm Winter’s Tale The unseasonably warm weather disappeared from memory during “A Winter's Tale,” MHC's second annual black-tie fundraising gala held on January 30. As 430 MHC friends and supporters entered Cary's Embassy Suites Hotel ballroom, they were greeted by the haunting beauty of a winter garden. There they enjoyed exquisite food, an array of special moments and recognition, and dancing to a live band, The Headliners, late into the winter night. Emcee Charlie Gaddy, award-winning journalist and long-time WRAL news anchor, introduced dignitaries and honorees. Honorary Chairman, Dr. LeRoy T. Walker, inspired everyone present as he shared special moments from his life and careers. Both gentlemen signed copies of Mr. Gaddy's recent biography of Dr. Walker, An Olympic Journey, and graciously donated the proceeds from the evening's sales to the Methodist Home for Children. Guests responded enthusiastically as the specially commissioned centennial Honorary Chair, Dr. LeRoy T. Walker presented a Guardian Angel award to long-time supporter Fred Fletcher. portrait, Mended Dreams, was unveiled. The work, created by internationally recognized artist Lisette DeWinne, features five children who represent different eras in MHC's hundred-year history. The portrait will hang in MHC's headquarters off Glenwood Avenue. Limited edition prints— signed and numbered by the artist—were a hot commodity during “A Winter's Tale” and all proceeds benefited MHC. A few signed and numbered prints remain. (see our merchandise on page 12.) Several individuals and organizations were inducted into the Guardian Angel Society for their lifetime commitment to Methodist Home for Children. Established in 1997, the society recognizes those who have demonstrated a significant commitment-through gifts of service and supportto meeting the diverse needs of MHC's children and families. Each year, two individuals or groups are designated as Honorary Guardian Angels in recognition of their service and commitment to children in their local communities, across North Carolina, our nation, or in the world outside MHC's service area. This year, North Carolina Governor and Mrs. James B. Hunt and a program entitled Prison MATCH of North Carolina received the distinction. Gov. and Mrs. Hunt were honored for their lifetime commitment to North Carolina's children, particularly through their commitment to early childhood development and K-12 education. Prison MATCH was recognized for its groundbreaking family support work with the children of women in prison. “A Winter's Tale” was a delightful evening for all. Many thanks to Chairperson Becky Johnson and her diligent committee for their outstanding work on this very special event. MHC President Mike Safley presents a Guardian Angel to Jeanne Rouse. Jeanne accepted the award on behalf of the NC Conference United Methodist Women. She is currently the president of the organization. MHC Guardian Angel Society This year's inductees are: Fred Fletcher—Raleigh Dr. Lee H. Sanders—Raleigh Lisette DeWinne—California Rev. Edward C. Elliott—Raleigh L. Merritt Jones—Raleigh Louise Peterson—Fayetteville Nan Willis—Wanchese Rev. Geraldine Dysart Ingram—Cary Monk Family—Farmville NC Conference United Methodist Women Felton Tilley—Raleigh This year's honorary inductees are: Governor and Mrs. James B. Hunt Prison MATCH of North Carolina SPOTLIGHT ON THE FAMILY SPRING 1999 10 O U R S U P P O R T FAITH OF A CHILD We receive support from all ages from A Vision Becomes a Reality across our Conference. At Marvin UMC in Fayetteville, the children give their pennies to the Methodist Home for Children. “The children are so excited when I call them down for Children’s Time on Sunday morning. They enjoy using their money like adults, where it can do the most good,” says Rev. Curtis Mull Jr., pastor at Marvin UMC. Last year Marvin UMC began their Children for Children Ministry. The kids learn that one penny may not be able to do much, but several pennies together can do a lot. “We hope that this way when our children are adults they will not forget the lessons they learned while giving a penny to help someone in need,” added Mull. We thank Marvin UMC and their young people in joining us to help those in need. All of our support together can, and will make a difference. Pastor Curtis Mull with young members of his congregation. METHODIST HOME FOR CHILDREN April Hicks, whose husband Wayne is pastor of St. Joseph's United Methodist Church in Fremont, had a vision. What she envisioned was a mentor program that would give young people a resource for spiritual growth, opportunities to ask questions about faith, and a place in which to develop positive relationships outside the home. When she met Jim and Heather Pronko, Teaching-Parents in the Fremont Youth Home, her vision found a home. “I went to visit Jim and Heather with some Teaching parents, Jim and Heather chocolate chip cookies and fell in love with Pronko, devote themselves to the them and the work they were doing,” she says. “As a former middle school teacher, I boys at the Fremont Youth Home. have been around a lot of programs designed to benefit youth which fall short of their goal. At the Methodist Home for Children, kids have security, positive reinforcement, excellent role models, and opportunities to learn from mistakes, all while being surrounded with love. I was excited to finally witness a program I knew would work.” April and Wayne shared the vision of a mentor program with the Pronkos, and a partnership was born-a partnership which Jim Pronko compares with a favorite sweater. “You put it on and it just feels right,” he says. “Heather and I had wanted to start a mentor program, but we weren't sure how to get started. When St. Joseph's approached us, we jumped at the chance to try it.” The partnership has benefited not only the young people of Fremont Youth Home, but also the members of St. Joseph's. “When you go beyond yourself and meet a need out of love, you cannot measure the blessing,” says Wayne. “Working with Jim, Heather, and the boys has created a revival here. Adults debate with one another over who will pay for the youth when we have fundraiser dinners!” Wayne Hicks, Pastor of St. Joseph’s “The boys see the benefits of being United Methodist Church in Fremont, served and of serving others,” Heather says. and his wife April. “They want to go to church every time they have an opportunity. They carry a sense of appreciation and pride in finding ways to help those who have helped them. The mentor program is laying groundwork that will benefit these young people for a lifetime.” 11 Pine Valley UMC and MHC Join Forces Imagine Wilmington in your mind's eye: sand, surf, salt air, and gentle breezes fill your thoughts. Now you can add a newand equally satisfying-image: a partnership between Methodist Home for Children and Pine Valley United Methodist Church. Pine Valley and MHC have united to help children, youth, and families in and around Wilmington. Pine Valley's support is nothing short of inspirational, according to MHC Foster Care Consultant Ranette Fischer, who helps coordinate efforts with Pine Valley. “The people at Pine Valley UMC go above and beyond the call of duty,” she says. “They treat our kids with compassion and affirm their worth and dignity." Pine Valley UMC has supported MHC in many ways. For example, as the number of children needing gifts at the Foster Care Christmas parties has increased each year, so has Pine Valley's giving. In fact, Ranette says she had the happy task of adding more names to the church's angel tree last year: Pine Valley ran out of names within the first week and called to find more children who needed gifts. Church volunteers also made time to wrap more than 150 presents for last year's Christmas party. This year, Pine Valley will host the Christmas party, including food, facilities, gifts and all. The church's giving doesn't end at Christmas. Pine Valley provided Bibles to all the young people in care in the Wilmington area. During the summer, the church opens its doors for youth to play basketball and enjoy pizza. Some MHC youth even play on the church's softball and basketball teams. And not only do they invite MHC to use their facilities for foster parent training, they also help provide child care during the training. The relationship between MHC and Pine Valley cuts both ways. Kristen Bednarczyk, Pine Valley's director of children's ministries, recalls coming up short on child care volunteers just days before an adult workshop at the church. “We Kristin Bednarczyk (left) and Jeanne Scott (right) are an inportant part of the Pine Valley and MHC team. called Ranette Fischer, and within 24 hours, she had rounded up 17 volunteers,” she says. “Some came from as far away as Raleigh. She was our guardian angel that day.” The church's director of ministries agrees. “Methodist Home for Children is so humble in asking for support. It is our pleasure to help out,” Jeanne Scott says. “They always thank us and show appreciation for our assistance. We know it can be very challenging to work with children. We want to do whatever we can to help the staff best serve their young clients.” SCOUT’S HONOR DOUBLE OR TRIPLE YOUR GIFTS Scott Butson, a fifteen year old Eagle Do you or a member of your family Scout, planned and directed a twelve work for a company that has a match- hour tennis tournament marathon to ing gifts program for its employees? If benefit the Methodist Home for so, your donations to the Methodist Children. The tournament was played Home for Children could be matched on the court Scott resurfaced for his one to one, two to one, or in some Eagle Project. The August event took cases, three to one by your employer. place in Conway, NC and raised over Ask your company’s human resources $350. We salute Scott and troop 125 or community relations representatives for their time and energy. about matching gifts. SPOTLIGHT ON THE FAMILY SPRING 1999 12 O U R P R O D U C T S Show Your Support for the Methodist Home for Children Be checking our web-site for new products that will allow you to show your support of the Methodist Home for Children (www.mhfc.org). Please call Bryan Harris at 919.833.2834 if you have any questions about our merchandise or the ordering process. Allow 4–6 weeks for delivery. Commemorate MHC’s 100 years of service with your own copy of our Centennial Portrait, “Mended Dreams” by artist Lisette DeWinne. Each is signed and numbered by the artist. Wrap up and stay warm with a sturdy MHC sweatshirt. Durable polyester cotton blend. Available in ash gray with screen-printed color logo on chest and back. Sizes M–XXL. Sweatshirt $20.00 Mended Dreams Print $100.00 Titled “Jesus Loves Me,” this compellation by David Witt, organist at Edenton Street UMC, captures all things bright and beautiful. 60 minutes of instrumental arrangements for children and adults. Compact Disc $16.00 Tape $12.00 Great around the clubhouse or your own house. 100% cotton Cross Creek Polo in white with color logo embroidered on chest. Sizes M–XXL. Polo Shirt $25.00 Show your true colors and support for MHC with these 100% preshrunk cotton tees. Available in purple or burgundy with white logo screen-printed on chest and back. Sizes M–XXL. Color T-shirt $12.00 METHODIST HOME FOR CHILDREN 13 TO PLACE YOUR ORDER fill out this form and send it, with payment in full or credit card information, to: Methodist Home for Children attn: Bryan Harris 1041 Washington Street Raleigh, NC 27605 Top off your support of MHC with a stylish hat. Adjustable cloth strap allows for a comfortable, custom fit. One size fits all. Available in khaki. NAME SHIPPING ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP DAYTIME PHONE NUMBER WITH AREA CODE METHOD OF PAYMENT (CIRCLE) Hat $15.00 CHECK ENCLOSED MASTERCARD VISA NAME AS IT APPEARS ON CARD SIGNATURE OF CARD HOLDER CREDIT CARD NUMBER EXPIRATION DATE White T-shirt $12.00 $ $ $ SHIPPING & HANDLING 6% TAX (NC RESIDENTS ONLY) TOTAL ENCLOSED OR TO BE CHARGED $ $4.95 $6.95 $8.95 $10.95 ITEM Wear the new MHC logo with pride. 100% preshrunk cotton available in white with small color logo on chest and large logo on back. Sizes M–XXL. $10.00–$25.00 $25.01–$50.00 $50.01–$100.00 $100.00+ SIZE COLOR QUANTITY Travel Mug $12.00 SHIPPING CHARGES (MINIMUM ORDER OF $10.00) SUBTOTAL ITEM TOTAL Ceramic Mug $5.00 PLEASE PLACE A MINIMUM ORDER OF $10.00 ITEM PRICE Enjoy your favorite beverage on the road with a MHC travel mug. Made of durable stainless steel, it will stand up to the riggers of everyday use. 14oz. capacity. Something to warm your heart—a hot beverage in a MHC mug. Ceramic, 15 oz. mug with over-sized handle. White mug with purple logo. SPOTLIGHT ON THE FAMILY SPRING 1999 Spotlight on the Family ™ NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION US POSTAGE Methodist Home for Children 1041 Washington Street PO Box 10917 Raleigh, North Carolina 27605-0917 www.mhfc.org PAID LYNCHBURG, VA PERMIT NO. 161 address correction requested We try to be prudent with our mailing to avoid duplication. However, sometimes duplications do occur. Should your household receive more than one copy of a mailing, please pass the duplicate to a friend and let us know so we may correct our records. save the date mark your calendar for these important dates March 22–24, 1999 Food Lion Community Way Days (see page 5) April 2–4, 1999 Methodist Orphanage/Methodist Home for Children Alumni Reunion (see page 5) May 24, 1999 2nd Annual Methodist Home for Children Golf Classic (see page 7) June 4, 1999 METHODIST 4th Annual Buffalo Open Golf Tournament (see page 7) HOME FOR CHILDREN June 9–13, 1999 Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church, NC Conference June 26– July 4, 1999 We introduce our new logo. The hearts are not perfect and each is as different and unique as those we serve. Our colors are warm and caring, the way we approach helping others. As the needs of children, youth and families have changed, we have changed as well. Although our look is new, our caring hearts remain the same. Special Olympics World Games June 27, 1999 Methodist Home for Children’s 100th Birthday Party (more details to come this summer) September 11, 1999 Methodist Orphanage/Methodist Home for Children Alumni Picnic November 11, 1999 3rd Annual Andy Kanas Memorial Golf Tournament (see page 7)