From the Director
Summer 2007 Issue

It is a drop-dead beautiful day, and I just enjoyed a yummy lunch at Millsaps alum Jeff Good’s newest venture, Sal & Mookie’s New York Pizza and Ice Cream Joint. The pizza was awfully good.

What’s lingering in my mind, though, is the idea of Jeff as a kind of role model for our current Millsaps students. As many of you know and my lunch today reminded me, Jeff is a successful entrepreneur. He’s also a swell guy who is generously committed to greater goods than his own bank account or family. Too often, I think, we assume that only ministers, teachers, or social workers have work worthy of being described as a vocation or calling. But aren’t we each “called” in some sense?

The Faith & Work Initiative engages students in an exploration of vocation (from vocare, voice or call) in two distinct but related directions. First, we help students discern and explore their own voice--their distinctive gifts and skills, their particular set of interests, curiosities, and aptitudes. Second, we challenge students to listen for the call of the world in their lives: What needs, wounds, or healing possibilities in the wider world call out to them and summon them for response? A vocation, says Frederick Buechner, is the place where your deep gladness meets the world's deep needs. The trick, of course, is finding those places where personal passion and common good come together--where, to use theological language, faith meets work. For our students, role models are a key to developing habits for good living and working.

This newsletter acknowledges with gratitude some of the dozens of men and women who have been role models for our students. You are ministers, social workers, doctors, lawyers, educators, writers, artists, and even pizza makers! This newsletter also articulates experiences and places where faith and work have come together for our students in powerful, life-changing ways. It features student and faculty voices, a mobile tomato garden (no kidding!), and an incredibly exciting new project at Millsaps known as 1 Campus, 1 Community. Enjoy, and let us hear from you.

In Community,


Contents
         
 

Up Close & Personal: Jessica Hoffpauir

Students Win Fellowships
 
1 Campus, 1 Community Mentors Make the Difference
 
Open Those Gates! Back to the Delta
  From Classroom to Community Parting Reflections
         
Up Close & Personal: Jessica Hoffpauir, Student

As an undergraduate, sitting across a small table from the Bishops of the Episcopal and Methodist churches, the Vicar of the Catholic church, a representative from the lieutenant governor’s office, and a state senator while they discuss the needs of children across the state is a pretty overwhelming experience. This is just one of the many fascinating conversations I was a part of through my Lilly Internship with Catholic Charities in the fall of 2006. Read More...

1 Campus, 1 Community

By Phalia McCorkle, special to the Northeast Ledger November 15, 2006

Millsaps College is preparing its students and faculty to become long-term providers of service in the community surrounding the college's Jackson campus.

Students, faculty and staff recently launched "1 Campus, 1 Community," a multiyear initiative that will streamline and reinvigorate the college's historic commitment to serving its neighbors. The focus of the initiative will be the K-12 education community and the school's immediate neighbors in the North Midtown community.
Read More...

Open Those Gates!

The sun was shining, a gentle breeze was blowing, and the West Street gates—locked for decades and a painful symbol of exclusion—were thrown open to welcome some 200 members of the North Midtown neighborhood onto the Millsaps campus. Joined by an equal number of Millsaps students, faculty, staff, alumni, and children, the celebration of the first Millsaps-North Midtown Block Party was a smashing success. Read More...

From Classroom to Community

Since its inception the Faith & Work Initiative has helped Millsaps faculty develop and implement service-learning projects for their academic courses. These projects deepen student engagement with course materials while helping them connect their classroom learning and intellectual skills with needs and challenges in the local community. Read about five such projects below...

Katrina, the Red Cross, and Millsaps Computer Science Students

With so many evacuees coming to shelters in the metropolitan Jackson area in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, locating them had become chaotic. Workers could track them only manually, fumbling through hundreds of handwritten cards. When classes were resumed after Katrina, Dr. Don Schwartz, chair of the computer science department, created a service-learning course in advanced database. "Students designed and implemented a web-based application for organizing and managing the information about the volunteers," Schwartz said. Read More...

Ripe for Learning: Millsaps Mobile ‘Maters

Students in Professor Michelle Acuff’s Advanced Studio Art course created an intriguing public art project this past spring. Read More...

Making It Real

by Dr. Laura Franey

Service-learning has been a great addition to Introduction to Women's and Gender Studies, a class I teach every spring to a diverse cross-section of students ranging from freshmen to seniors and representing nearly every major. Read More...

Teaching to Learn

In the fall and spring semesters of 2006 and 2007, students in Professor Robert Kahn’s Spanish classes had the opportunity to share their skills in Spanish with elementary school students at Saint Richard’s Elementary School in Jackson. Read More...

I Can Learn!

On Thursday, April 26, students from Dr. Don Schwartz’s Software Engineering class traveled to St. Richard Catholic School in northeast Jackson to install and test I Can Learn!, which the Millsaps class designed specifically for pre-K students at St. Richard. Read More...

Students Win Fellowships

Fund for Theological Education
by Chris Spear

Today’s college culture is not one notable for its patience.

Students today are always on the run, always going somewhere, always doing something – we’re known for our energy drinks, instant messaging, power naps. We’re often so busy, we don’t have the time to eat, much less sit back and reflect leisurely on our lives. There is a reason 30-second microwavable macaroni and cheese is popular among college students.

So my attendance at the Fund for Theological Education’s Conference on Ministry this summer was quite a switch. It was a sudden change of pace, a forced slowdown in the middle of a very busy summer. And yet, somehow, by the end of the time I didn’t yet want to return to Millsaps. The Fund had put on an outstanding conference, no question, but I couldn’t quite fit it into the big picture yet. There was something I still needed to consider, a conclusion I couldn’t quite articulate. Only in retrospect, remembering both the social and the personal revelations of the week, did I understand the lessons of quiet patience God had been conveying through my time at the FTE conference. Read More...

Mentors Make The Difference

Committed mentors can make a world of difference in the lives of young people. Professionals who are willing to mentor students provide a critical bridge between academic preparation and meaningful work. The Lilly Interns and Fellows programs continue to be blessed by professionals in a wide variety of fields who take the time to welcome students into their workplaces and help them begin to sketch out the contours of a meaningful life. The Faith & Work Initiative would like to thank these excellent professionals who served as mentors in 2006 & 2007. Read More...

Back to the Delta
After a one year hiatus due to Hurricane Katrina relief and recovery, a group of Millsaps students returned to the Mississippi Delta for a spring break service trip. “Delta Delivery” is an annual trip that was started in 2002 by a student (Katie Hardy ’03) who picked up a magazine in her dentist’s office and found an article about the Mississippi Delta. It convinced her that mission opportunities are available right here at home and she organized a trip that included a delivery of basic necessities for people in the Delta. The name “Delta Delivery” stuck and the trip has become an annual spring break trek. Read More...
Parting Reflections

Dazed, but not Confused – Parting Reflections by Graduating Senior Chris Spear
Reprinted with permission from the Purple & White (Millsaps College student newspaper)

Perhaps, Mr. or Ms. Typical Millsaps Student, you feel like you’ve finally gotten the hang of this whole life-at-college thing. You’ve thought about your major and considered some ideas for career possibilities, you know precisely where to locate ice cream in the Caf’, and you’ve picked out the perfect spot in the Bowl for lounging like an indolent tabby in the late-afternoon sun.

Yes, it’s taken you quite a while, but you’ve finally nailed it. Read More...

Other Links
  • To contact the Millsaps Faith & Work Initiative, click here.
  • To visit the Faith & Work Initiative web site, click here.
  • For information about Millsaps campus events, click here.
  • To view current and past issues of the Millsaps Magazine, click here.
  • Want to order Millsaps apparel or gifts? Visit the online bookstore or
    call the bookstore at 601-974-1230.
 


Faith & Work Initiative
1701 North State Street
Jackson, MS 39210-0001
601-974-1470

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