July 3, 2006
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• Lyon chaplain attends higher education ministry summit • Lyon College Bookstore turns the page on upgrades
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.Literary ‘stars’
shine at Lyon College |
Lyon
College chaplain attends Higher Education Ministry Summit
At the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)’s second Higher Education Ministry Summit,
held recently in Birmingham, Ala., the Rev. Nancy McSpadden, Lyon College
chaplain, found some “Space for Grace.”
The summit, held June 12-14 at the Birmingham Radisson Hotel and nearby South
Highland Presbyterian Church just before the beginning of the 217th General
Assembly, used “Space for Grace” as it theme, and focused on finding ways to
integrate faith into careers and lives.
Tracks for students, chaplains and campus-ministerial staff, congregations and
governing bodies gave collegiate ministry staff, college students, presbytery,
synod personnel and others with duties related to higher education ministry, a
chance to learn from each other.
“The group will focus on how to help make academic communities a ‘Space For
Grace’ that appreciates the connections between faith and knowledge, service and
learning, vocational discernment and building a resume,” said the Rev. Bob
Turner, the PCUSA’s associate for collegiate ministries, in preparation for the
event.
Summit 2 workshops provided students and practitioners theoretical and practical
models for college-ministry programs. Throughout the event, there were formal
and informal opportunities for networking with others in similar ministry
settings.
“What we’re hoping to do is to learn to help current students and the people who
work with students understand how they can incorporate their faith into their
vocational choice and how not to take a vacation from church but to know it’s
there,” Turner said.
Among the keynote speakers were participants in the 1961 Freedom Rides, a group
of men and women of all ages, black and white, who boarded buses, trains and
airplanes in Philadelphia and elsewhere along the East Coast, then headed to the
Deep South to test the 1960 Supreme Court ruling outlawing segregation in
interstate public facilities. After hearing the Freedom Riders speak, the group
visited the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute where an exhibit of photographs
taken of the Freedom Rides in 1961 recently opened.
“To see the amazing and heart-wrenching photographs of the indignities and the
dangers these heroes endured, standing beside the subjects of the pictures 45
years later is something I will never forget,” said the Rev. Nancy McSpadden.
“The young men and women were 19 and 20 years old in 1961 – college age – and
they jeopardized their very lives for the cause of equality and civil rights. We
saw their pictures, heard their stories, and thanked God for the risk they were
willing to take. ‘Inspired’ doesn’t even begin to express how they made me
feel.”
More than 130 people turned out for the first summit, which was held before the
PCUSA’s 216th Assembly in 2004.
That event in Richmond, Va., gave rise to the Presbyterian Association for
Collegiate and Higher Education Ministries (PACHEM)which represents people
involved in PCUSA higher education ministries. Rev. McSpadden won a term as the
Presbyterian College Chaplain’s Association representative to the PACHEM
executive board.
The event was conceived in response to reports approved by General Assemblies in
2001 and 2003 calling for stronger relationships between the church and related
schools, colleges and universities, and for a new mission strategy for campus
ministry.
PACHEM’s board members are among the planning team members for Summit 2, along
with the Presbyterian Student Strategy Team (PSST), the staff of the PCUSA
collegiate ministries office, and the Association for Presbyterian Colleges and
Universities. Lyon College student Ben Thielemier serves on the PSST.
Turner said nearly 700 PCUSA congregations are involved in ministries to college
students, and there are more than 600 collegiate ministries on or near the
campuses they serve.
Attending the summit from Lyon were students Watson Neal, Mikael Summers and
Thielemier. After the conclusion of the summit, the students and Rev. McSpadden
attended the opening sessions of the PCUSA General Assembly for the election of
the GA Moderator and for worship.
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| The Rev. Joan Gray, moderator of the event, addresses the 217th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)’s second Higher Education Ministry Summit in Birmingham, Ala. |
Lyon College
Bookstore turns the page on upgrades
The Lyon College Bookstore has written a new chapter for itself with a series of improvements designed to make the store more comfortable and inviting.
Morgan Presley (below), who graduated Lyon College in May with a degree in biology and is working at the bookstore throughout the summer, said the biggest and most visible change is in how the store is organized.
“We’re
making it look more like a real bookstore instead of just a place to buy some
textbooks,” she said. “It’s roomier and more comfortable. It’s cozier and feels
more like home.”
Sandy Michel, the store’s manager, has been planning the project for a long time, Presley said. Jennifer Pitts serves as the store’s assistant manager.
“Sandy’s been wanting to do this for five years,” she said. “It was her vision and my work. She told me where to put stuff and I did it.”
Along with a more spacious layout, the store now features a new soft drink refrigerator, end tables, and soon a new sofa will be added to create a comfortable reading area, Presley said.
In addition to books, the store also sells clothing items such as sweaters, sweatshirts, T-shirts, hoodies and pullovers, hats, caps and even kilts.
The also cerates custom personalized gift bags for Lyon students or faculty/staff members. Just tell the staff what to include in the gift bag, or give them a price range, and they’ll pick out the perfect treats and accessories.
A wide range of insignia items from mouse pads to coffee mugs, license plates to lapel pins is also available at the store.
The Lyon College Bookstore is open 8:30 a.m. – 5 p.m., Monday through Friday (until noon on Fridays during the summer) and on Saturdays during special events.
For
more information, contact the store’s staff at 698-4231.
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