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christ college lives PDF

200 Pages·2017·2.35 MB·English
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CHRIST COLLEGE LIVES: FAITH AND WORK, LOVE AND LIFE FREDRICK BARTON ‘70, EDITOR CHAIR, CHRIST COLLEGE NATIONAL COUNCIL Christ College Lives: Faith and Work, Love and Life Introductory Remarks: CC Homecoming Celebration Saturday, September 30, 2017, 5:30 pm Fredrick Barton ‘70 I find it fitting to be stepping in front of this audience after being introduced by Dean Margaret Franson. It was she, after all, who assigned me the task of standing here at this moment. And that is fitting, too, because, as everyone who graduated from Christ College since 1991 knows first hand, Dean Franson is the engine that pulls the C.C. train. Our esteemed deans may have provided the broad vision, but Margaret Franson supervised the details. And this Golden Anniversary celebration of our founding, like so much about Christ College, has been a Margaret Franson project. I stand here now as one of her details. I frankly don’t recall whose idea it was as part of our anniversary celebration to solicit short biographies from our alumni. But once the idea was agreed to, Margaret volunteered me to edit the submissions into a compendium, which I hope you have had the chance to peruse or will take the chance to read through once the final edition is available. My own reading of these biographies has proven an exquisite pleasure. We C.C. alums have been up to some stuff the last half century, and our compendium is a forthright indication of outstanding individual achievement indicative of amazing programmatic success. I am incredibly pleased to have my own biography nestled among all of these others. I am confident every grad who reads the compendium will come away feeling proud. As my wife Joyce will affirm, over and over again as I made my first read through, I paused to exclaim, “Wow, I went through the same program as this person. And that person. And the next person. And the person after that.” To paraphrase Queen, “We have, we have, rocked it.” Our compendium includes approximately 400 biographies, and though I am not a trained pollster, I think this current number represents a more than adequate representative sample of what Christ College graduates have been doing since they collected their diplomas. Examining the list of entries yields a 1 number of observations. First of all, though we are not everywhere, we are certainly all over the place. In addition to our fellow alums living and working abroad in Albania, Australia, Canada, Costa Rica, Germany, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Switzerland, Taiwan and the United Kingdom, we are residing in Washington, D.C., and forty of the fifty states. A little fewer than fifty percent of us reside in the Midwest while slightly over half of us settled elsewhere across the U.S. and abroad. Together, about twenty-five percent of our alums live along the east and west coasts. Where we need more settlement is in the South. In my own state of Louisiana I am joined by only two other alums, and I can testify this makes Christ College reading group discussions very short. But whether plentiful or few, we are a force to be reckoned with wherever we land. And that’s because, we are pursuing lives of such distinction. Our presence in the professions is astonishing. Our life-long devotion to education is a salient feature of what we have been up to. Among our respondents, seventy-one of us are college professors and thirty-six of us are secondary or elementary teachers. And while that group ministers to the mind, other groups take care of body and soul: twenty-three of us are doctors, twenty-three more of us are pastors, and eight of us are deaconesses. Handling our legal matters are our forty-six attorneys. Making stuff work are our twenty-one engineers. We are founding our own companies and playing leadership roles in various businesses. We are producing art, making films, writing novels and composing books of poetry. And, man, are we making music. Commandeering our professoriate, we could clearly open our own small university, offering courses in almost every discipline in the Liberal Arts and Sciences and in Business, Engineering and Nursing as well. Our Christ College Alumni University would be especially strong in English with ten professors and Theology with nine. Our medical professors and law professors could offer graduate professional education. We have academic leaders ready to helm our university with experienced higher education administrators in academic counseling, financial aid, fund raising, alumni coordination, human resources, and public relations. We have veteran deans and provosts, too; we even have our own university president. 2 Heck, we could start our own town to house our own university. We’ll need schools, and we’ve got the teachers for them and two headmasters to lead them. We’ll want churches, and we have clergy in abundance. If we build our homes, schools and office buildings from scratch, we have architects to design them and construction engineers to erect them. We have accountants to prepare our tax returns and keep our finances in order, bankers to make sure our money is secure, and curators to plan the exhibitions at our museum, including work by our own artists. Our doctors and nurses will staff our hospital and clinics, and their work will be coordinated by the sizeable cadre of us who hold health care managerial positions. Our newspaper will be staffed by our contingent of journalists and editors and laid out by our graphic designers. Our libraries, which will contain the work of our many, many authors, will be overseen by our half dozen librarians. We have a pharmacist to run our drug store and physical therapists to assist with our aches and pains. We have actors for our theater, game designers for our home entertainment centers and web designers to improve our websites. We’ll have a beautiful park in our town, which will be overseen by our park ranger. Baseball will be played in our park, and for that we will need a licensed umpire. Thank goodness we’ve got one. We’ve got a basketball referee for our community gym, too, and another experienced ref for soccer matches. When one of our churches needs a new pipe organ, we have just the person to build it. We won’t have crime problems, of course, and we have an F.B.I. agent to make sure it stays that way. We will enjoy great agreement about the shared life in our town, but we will need democratically elected officials, and our two campaign managers will handle the mutually respectful candidates for each position. Should we ever need advocacy to nations abroad, our two foreign service officers will represent our interests. With so little or no conflict to resolve, I am not sure what our three judges will do, but I am confident they will preside over their courts with great wisdom and honor. We won’t have mental or social problems, so our several psychologists and social workers will commute to other towns to do their good work in the service of others, something we are quite good at. But with all these accomplished people doing important work in so many areas, I admit to being envious of one particular group of our alums: and that’s those of us who identify themselves as 3 consultants. I have never been able to grasp what exactly it is that consultants do, but I gather they are well paid to do it and infrequently if ever have to live with the consequences of their recommendations. They often travel and stay in very nice hotels which, along with their first-class meals, they put on expense accounts. One can’t help liking that. Emmy-winning actor and Oscar nominee Don Cheadle, who starred as consultant-firm chief executive Marty Kaan on the television comedy House of Lies, defined consulting as “a business that allows you to come into someone else’s company where you requisition the C.E.O.’s watch and then charge him a lot of money to tell him the time.” Good work if you can arrange it, and eight of our number have. Good for them. They won’t be able to spend much time in our town, but their taxes will help support our university, schools, libraries and park. If any of our consultants are in attendance tonight, please see me afterwards; I could use some consulting on how I can get into your line of work. Most of our alums have done and are doing good work, and many of them, very many actually, are doing well, while doing their good work. But I want to quote one of our number I look forward to knowing in our town who describes his post Christ College life with typical and becoming modesty. From what I can tell, this individual is having a career that is no doubt widely envied in his community. But he understates his accomplishments and writes about himself that he “doesn’t view his job as a ticket to fame or fortune but truly loves what he does and looks forward to work every day.” I think he speaks for the lucky many among our number, and I am sure you will agree with me that it doesn’t get any better than that. As a last requirement of our town, we have among our fellow alums, one who provides a particularly valuable service. Is my old friend Fritz Wehrenberg in attendance tonight? (It’s a Saturday night, so he is probably at work.) Fritz graduated from Valpo and Christ College in 1971, attended the Lutheran School of Theology in Chicago and spent thirty-eight years as a parish pastor and a campus chaplain before retiring in 2013. He was restless in retirement, however, and eager to find work, he says, that would allow him to remain involved with the spirit. So today he serves his community in Ames, 4 Iowa, as the part-time manager of Cyclone Liquors. And I think many of us can acknowledge the value of Fritz’s current work. It goes without saying, of course, that life is not restricted to work. And even though Christ College alums are incredibly distinguished professionally, they also live richly rounded lives. They obviously make extensive time for romance since most that submitted their biographies included reports therein about their marriages. To a really remarkable degree, Christ College graduates marry each other. About twenty percent of those who submitted their bios. And with or without C.C. spouses, our graduates bear children in whom they evince immense pride, often rushing through the details of their own careers in order to list the accomplishments of their daughters and sons, many of whom they proudly note followed Mom or Dad or often both to study in Christ College. We are an active lot. Graduate after graduate reported on their dedication to running and cycling, among other physical activities that included skiing, sailing, swimming, tennis and softball. Of particular note to this observer was the number of our alums who are dedicated practitioners of Ultimate Frisbee, three of whom coach the sport and one who operates a business selling Ultimate Frisbee practice and game gear. Back in my day we thought the Frisbee would soon go the way of the Hula Hoop. Another investment chance missed. First Frisbee and then Microsoft. No wonder at my advanced age I am still teaching. Among non-physical activities, reading (often in connection with a Christ College reading group) and travel were each mentioned in scores of bio submissions. We are also a faithful lot. I have already mentioned how many of us are clergy. In addition very, very many of our lay grads are active in their churches as congregational officers, elders, vestryman and deacons. And I think maybe a majority of us sing in our church choirs. So with all the talented singers among our number, I am glad we have so many pastors a nd therefore so many churches in our town. We need the multiple choir lofts to provide enough seats for all those eager to lift their voices in song. And I mention this choral talent and devotion with particular awe since, when I tried out for my church ch oir as 5 a teenager, I was told by our music director that, while I was welcome to join the group, to wear the robe during worship I would need to agree to be a mouther only. I think it important to note that our works for the common good are not limited to those performed in the sanctuaries of our faiths. Graduates of an honors program that dares to call itself Christ College, we are so very many of us following the example of Jesus by feeding the hungry and housing the poor. Significant numbers of our fello w alums leave Valpo not first to head to graduate school or dive into the work force but instead to spend a year in voluntary service to the needy . When Christ College was young it was common for our graduates to jo in the Peace Corps or serve in V.I.S.T.A. (Volunteers in Service to America) or work as Prince of Peace Volunteers abroad or in America’s struggling inner cities . Young alums still join the Peace Corps or the Lutheran Volunteer Corps or Catholic Charities while throughout our lives many, many of us work for Meals on Wheels, staff food banks and volunteer at congregational food pantries. When disasters strike and people need help, Christ College alums show up to lend a hand : in New Orleans after Katrina, in New Jersey after Sandy, in our own commun ities when refugees from parts of the world torn apart by famine and violence come among us in need of shelter and clothing for a chance to survive. We are educational, legal, medical, scientific and business leaders of the very first rank. But the contrib utions we make when we give of ourselves, as we do so often, are still more impressive than the accomplis hments we list on our dazzling vitas. I was amazed over and over again as I read the listed career achievements of my fellow alums. But I was stirred a t a deeper level yet when I saw what my fellows were up to when no one was keeping professional score. I am proud to be a Christ College graduate but some of my professors will tell you that they remain surprised by that development. Unlike most of our al ums I was an aggravating rather than dependable student. I was frequently late with papers , and I took an embarrassing number of incompletes. I note these flaws because I stand before you as Christ College National Coun cil Chair making up a n incomplete as we celebrate our Golden Anniversary not in the more traditional fiftieth year but in the fifty-first. Those who studied in C.C.’s predecessor Directed Studies Program would say we ar e even 6 older than that. But wherever we date ourselves as having begun, we have been around for more than a half century, and we are still going strong. Like those who came before them, recent C.C. grads are in law school, medical school, business school, engineering and Ph.D. programs, and the seminary. They are studying at Harvard, Berkeley, Chicago, Michigan, and other top-tier universities. They are serving in Americorps, the Lutheran Volunteer Corps and the Young Adults in Global Mission. They are at the blackboard in classrooms of Teach for America. They are in Europe on Fulbright Fellowships. Into our second half century, our tradition of undergraduate scholarly achievement and a devotion to the virtue of service endures. So that’s my report about the state of Christ College at fifty plus. The tradition continues at full force. Christ College is alive and very well – in the classrooms of Mueller Hall and in the offices of our gifted and devoted faculty, in the Freshman Production and in the Debates, in senior seminars and in the discussions our students undertake in the Commons and in their dorm rooms. And as our alumni biographies compendium so clearly illustrates, Christ College lives on after graduation. It lives on in the skills we take away, in a disciplined manner of thinking, in a practiced ability to communicate. It lives on in the work we alums do and the service unto others that we render. It lives on in marriages, in children, in sustained friendships first formed in Valpo snow and warmed thereafter for a lifetime . That’s the message we all know and we al l share. Christ College lives in the lives we lead. As it first did when we were Valpo students, Christ College lives in us. 7 Christ College Alumni Biographies September 2017 INDEX OF: CHRIST COLLEGE LIVES A Compendium of Alumni Biographies 1965 Wilma (Kisro) McCarey – p. 85 Richard Nehring – p. 114 Wes Weinhold – p. 169 1966 Dennis Collins – p. 26 Philip Deters – p. 35 Ginny (Fleck) Adams – p. 44 Mark Gaertner – p . 51 Kenneth Jacobsen – p. 77 Paul Nuechterlein – p. 118 Larry Saler – p. 139 Sharon (Werfelmann) Reichel – p. 171 1967 Laura (Avery) Gundel – p. 4 Ellen (Behl) Trier – p. 8 Paula (Fields) Fogelberg – p. 43 Michael Hron – p. 75 Mark Schwehn – p. 146 Donn Werling – p. 171 James Wiegel – p. 172 1968 Peter Lutze – p. 100 Marcia (Mainland) Rotunda – p. 101 Mel Piehl – p. 129 Marcia (Weller) Weinhold – p. 170 i Christ College Alumni Biographies September 2017 1969 Ellen (Albers) Vance – p. 2 Thomas Hecht – p. 66 Kathryn “Kit” (Hill) LaMar – p. 68 Mark Knoblauch – p. 86 Ken Maurer – p. 104 David Nord – p. 117 Rick Schiming – p. 141 Peter Schmalz – p. 142 David W. Simpson – p. 151 1970 Fredrick Barton – p. 7 Pamela (Carey) Sieving – p. 21 Ruth (Fuchs) Doty – p. 49 Keith Holste – p. 72 Diane Koester – p. 87 David Krause – p. 90 Richard E. Mueller – p. 112 Ronald Neustadt – p. 114 Richard Paul – p. 124 Alan Rider – p. 134 Doug Rogers – p. 138 Robert Scherpelz – p. 141 Paul A. Sieving – p. 150 Sally Wilson – p. 174 1971 Gail (Anderson) Renaldo Ludwig – p. 3 Mark Bremer – p. 16 Kathryn (Franzen) Wood – p. 47 Randy Hackbarth – p. 61 Stephen Hitchcock – p. 69 Judy Hoshek – p. 74 Carol Severino – p. 147 Frederick “Fritz” WehrenBerg III – p. 168 1972 Mark Ilten – p. 76 Janis (Wendt) Risch – p. 170 ii

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