Faith and Civic Response to Climate Change

In the wake of the worst recession since the Great Depression and through the din of climate-gate and right wing media, there is a tendency to overlook just how deep and wide is public support for doing something about global warming.

All of the relevant scientific, governmental and business organizations have made it clear they accept the conclusions of the IPCC that man made climate change is serious and must be dealt with by dramatically reduced use of fossil fuels and more enlightened land use practices. While ExxonMobil and Shell Oil had already gotten on board, the American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG) itself at first urged further research on whether the warming was man made (anthropogenic), but now even the AAPG seems to have thrown in the towel.

These higher level organizations have the serious responsibility and the wherewithal to understand and respond to the science, but what about organizations a tier or more beneath? Here I take a look at the positions taken by religious and civic groups, with particular focus on the Presbyterian Church and the Rotary Club. Continue reading “Faith and Civic Response to Climate Change” »

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This post was submitted by Bishop Dansby.

Then & Now: 1872 Rockingham Crime Reporting

Any visitor from another world checking the TV Guide might wonder at Americans apparent fascination with crime and the criminal mind. In one week’s listing TV watchers have an offering of good guys and girls vs. the bad on endless different one-hour shows. Among them are 48 Hours, NCIS, Law & Order, CSI: NY, Criminal Minds, The Evidence, The First 48, Without a Trace, Conviction, and Cold Case Files: Special Victims Unit—which runs four entirely different shows on Saturday nights.

But this is no new fascination. Continue reading “Then & Now: 1872 Rockingham Crime Reporting” »

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Buy Your Downtown

The Laughing Dog is one of many locally-owned downtown businesses.

I grew up in Harrisonburg in the 60′s and 70′s. At that time there were no malls, cell-phones, Internet, remotes, gangs etc. It was a small town. JMU was for the most part a women’s college. The Cloverleaf shopping center “was” the mall!

Once, at the same time, these stores all existed downtown. They were profitable because the community had no where else to go. They were/are the Virginia theater, the State theater, Grants, McCroys, Woolworth, Klines, Glens, Alfred Neys, Joseph Neys, Charles Fauls, Leggits, Charles Mathias, Jack Collins shoes, A & N, the Arcade, Novelty News, Warrens Cut-Rate, Salts barber-shop, L & S diner, Jesse’s, Va. Ham, Downtown Grill, Julius’s, George’s, Peoples Drug, Hostetters, Western Auto, Schewels, Denton’s, Grand Piano, Advance, Hawkins Hardware, Sears, Sherwin-Williams, Cato’s, and a Singer sewing machine store.

The question remains, what happened? Continue reading “Buy Your Downtown” »

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This post was submitted by Jim Purcell.

Then & Now: Founding Fathers Risk Life, Build a Nation

Signing of the Declaration of Independence

Poll any audience today to all what they’d risk life for and easy answers roll off tongues—family, God, country.  But then widen the sacrifice:  what would you also risk your family, your bank account, your home for—not just yourself.  That answer is harder and few, very few, ever answer they would risk all for an idea, a theory.

Yet this is the question members of the Continental Congress answered on July 4, 1776, when they voted to make Jefferson’s final draft—after their revisions and input—the official Declaration of Independence.  They wouldn’t sign until August 2 after all 13 colonies had approved it, but on July 4, they sent the text to printer John Dunlap.  He typeset and ran 200 copies or “broadsides”—about the size of a sheet of newspaper and those broadsides were then carried by messengers on horseback to Continue reading “Then & Now: Founding Fathers Risk Life, Build a Nation” »

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Go Skateboarding Culture!


Harrisonburg skateboarders recently celebrated Go Skateboarding Day - and "it was awesome".

Go Skateboarding Day is a national holiday, but unless you ride a skateboard on at least some of the other 364 days of the year, chances are you didn’t know that. Maybe, despite all the fliers posted around downtown, you didn’t know we celebrated it here in Harrisonburg. Well we did celebrate it at The Artful Dodger, and it was awesome.

The day began with the first day of Skate Camp at Westover Skate Park. From 9am til noon the owners of Wonder Skate Shop graciously volunteered their time to teach kids from 6-14 years old how to skate. Then, from 1pm until 5pm, Wonder Skate hosted a cookout in front of their store. They fed a ton of hungry skaters, parents and people just interested in the event. Continue reading “Go Skateboarding Culture!” »

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This post was submitted by Paul Somers.

Give Me “Liberty” or Give Me…?

Since our arrival on these shores, we Americans have been obsessed with the idea of “liberty.” Some of the earliest European settlers came here to enjoy their newly found freedom from the 17th Century pluralistic society that was evolving in their mother country. They came to practice a more disciplined brand of religion, a legalistic brand that did not place a high priority on individual liberty.

But as the colonies evolved and the Age of Enlightenment swept the soon-to-be nation, the concept of liberty was re-examined in the context of political and economic matters. Liberty became a more inclusive term that extended to so-called Continue reading “Give Me “Liberty” or Give Me…?” »

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This post was submitted by David Rood.

Vengeance Is Mine, Hopeth The Pilk

Part II in a series by local writer Andrew Jenner about the South Africa 2010 World Cup and the meaning of life in Harrisonburg, Virginia (read Part I).

John Pilk says the Dutch are due.

For 36 years, John Pilk has been waiting on revenge.

Ever since that July day in 1974, when Pilk watched his beloved Dutch soccer team, the Oranje, lose 2-1 to West Germany in the World Cup final, Pilk has been hoping for another chance.

After the game ended, Pilk stepped out on his porch in The Hague and wept. He sounds as if he might weep again, telling the story, because Pilk is madly Continue reading “Vengeance Is Mine, Hopeth The Pilk” »

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This post was submitted by Andrew Jenner.

Alternative Health: Home Birth

Many women want choices for safe and affordable healthcare during pregnancy, and yet the options seem to be decreasing as the rate of birth by Caesarean section increases across the United States. Here in the Valley, Stonewall Jackson Hospital in Lexington, and also Bedford Memorial Hospital, will close their birthing centers. Yet, The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report a rise in the number of home births, with a 5% increase between 2005 and 2006. Women who want to give birth at home are turning to midwives for assistance. In the Shenandoah Valley, some are turning to Misty Ward, a certified professional midwife.

Ward is the director of the Harrisonburg chapter of Birth Matters, a supportive community for women who want to give birth at home. She is also the founder and Continue reading “Alternative Health: Home Birth” »

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This post was submitted by Tracey Brown.

Denise Kanter’s Talent and Vision

Denise Kanter is a local artist and graduate from JMU; her medium is oil and her show is up at The Artful Dodger. To say it is a fine display of talent and vision only leaves me wanting to say more, but I do so with trepidation. I’ll try and explain.

Denise’s stylized oil paintings depict people or beautifully abstracted realities, and sometimes they depict both on the same canvas. Many of her figure paintings in fact seem to be emerging out of some abstract world or emotion. Stirring our curiosity with such subject matter, she further draws us in by the precise execution of her own unique style. Continue reading “Denise Kanter’s Talent and Vision” »

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This post was submitted by Paul Somers.

Then and Now: Coming of Age in the Best of Times

I turned 13 in 1943, a year of world chaos and personal up-heaval. The world was at war, my family on the move. My dad had joined the navy and after he returned from battles in the Pacific, new orders shifted him about stateside. I attended three junior high and three high schools. Yet it was a wonderful time to enter my teens. And even today I’m still grateful for the innocence and idealism that marked my generation. They forged me—and many others—a confidence to face any future and to look forward to it.

Today, however, I sense an opposite outlook on life—too many youthful cynics, too many who don’t dare to dream. And so too many won’t risk Continue reading “Then and Now: Coming of Age in the Best of Times” »

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This post was submitted by Nancy Bondurant Jones.

The Hydrofracking Challenge

The good news is that there is valuable, comparatively clean natural gas in the eastern U.S. The bad news is that the process for getting it is so new, so complex and so dangerous that states which have drilled first and then scrambled to regulate later have found themselves overmatched by a highly industrialized process which turns out to be highly hazardous.

Field and Stream magazine says drilling has exploded so suddenly Continue reading “The Hydrofracking Challenge” »

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This post was submitted by Ruth Stoltzfus Jost.

USA v England: Remembrance Of So Many Things Past

Part I in a series about the South Africa 2010 World Cup and the meaning of life in Harrisonburg, Virginia.

By Andrew Jenner

The older I get, the more time I seem to spend remembering – the World Cup no exception. I was seven when Roger Milla led Cameroon to the quarterfinals of the 1990 tournament in Italy. My family lived in Africa then, when Milla captivated the continent. The neighborhood kids and I spent most of the summer imitating the corner-flag hip-shake jig he danced after he scored the decisive goal against Colombia in the second round.

In ’94, I followed the US team with the religious devotion of a sixth-grader who fully expected to Continue reading “USA v England: Remembrance Of So Many Things Past” »

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This post was submitted by Andrew Jenner.

Brandy Somers’ Cut Paper Art

One of the great things about Harrisonburg is the uncommon proliferation of high quality local art work that is easy for people from all walks of life to not only appreciate, but engage with. Local art seems to have been a staple and common place thing in Harrisonburg for some time now. With the First Fridays Downtown going strong for several years now, Harrisonburg’s, and the Valley’s natural beauty is matched by the creations of Harrisonburg’s local artists.

Brandy Somers Artwork at Yellow Button in downtown Harrisonburg

One especially extraordinary show of local art and talent is Brandy Somers’ art show on display at The Yellow Button (at the corner of Bruce and Main St.). Somers’ cut paper creations are colorful displays of common insects such as flies, ladybugs, praying mantises and even a couple spiders, which are technically arachnids.

Somers, an area high school art teacher, said the following about why she chooses this peculiar medium, “I like the challenge of making something look real with only paper. Since I’m an organized person, I like that it’s broken down into several tedious steps. I like that I can do it at home when the kids are sleeping because it allows me to do something I love while still being a good mommy. I love the clean, almost print-like quality it has.”

While her approach is mostly representational, she substitutes the uninspiring colors of the bugs she depicts with wonderfully bright, engaging colors that pop. Some of her bugs are also divided up into panels; the praying mantis is split across three equal sized panels for example. There is a dynamism created by the aesthetic color choices and division of space in her pieces that makes these ordinary insects very unique and interesting.

Brandy Somers' Artwork at Yellow Button

Art does not always have to be something that alienates people or has an unapproachable feel. As Somers’ show at The Yellow Button illustrates it can be quite the opposite: inclusive, inspiring, fun and engaging. Art also need not be unaffordable, and fortunately for Harrisonburg, and especially patrons of The Yellow Button, Somers’ beautiful bugs are actually surprisingly cheap. Original art can range a great deal in price, but rest assured if you fall in love with one of her bugs, it will likely cost under a hundred dollars to take it home.

So if you have not seen this show of bugs yet, you should take a stroll through Downtown Harrisonburg and stop in The Yellow Button before the end of May. You may also be interested in knowing Somers has upcoming shows of more cut paper creations, not bugs but animals, at The Turtles Back in June and Clementine Café in August.

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This post was submitted by Paul Somers.

Elliott Downs: Prolific and Awesome

Elliott Downs is definitely one of the most talented, authentic and original artists calling Harrisonburg his home.  He graduated from Harrisonburg High School after taking as many art classes as he could under Jauana Brooks, also a highly talented local artists.
The immediacy of his style has earned him quite a bit of notoriety for being only 23 years old. It seems like everyone in town owns one of his stenciled records, if not one of his larger pieces of art. He’s done work for Gone Magazine, Skatan Worshipers, has owned his own screen printing business, has had several sold out art shows and has a documentary about him, this is quite a feat for an artist living and working in Harrisonburg. Why is he so successful, you might wonder, well I know the answer to that. Continue reading “Elliott Downs: Prolific and Awesome” »

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This post was submitted by Paul Somers.

The Price of Politics

When a friend of mine informed me that he would no longer shop at Wal-Mart because he believed the store was guilty of stocking books with only one political point of view, my immediate reaction was to support his decision. But after a few hours of mulling over his position and trying to confirm the allegation, I realized that this is not such a simple black and white issue.

My search came up with only a few instances of Wal-Mart banning anything. One was a book by Jon Stewart, but only because of what they deemed to be an offensive picture on its cover. Another was an accusation that Wal-Mart had banned Christmas.

“A Catholic advocacy group has launched a national boycott against Wal-Mart, claiming the world’s number one retailer has in effect ‘banned’ Christmas, while promoting other seasonal holidays such as Hanukkah and Kwanzaa. But Wal-Mart tells WorldNetDaily it has ‘absolutely not’ banned Christmas, but is just trying to serve all our customers for the holiday season.’”  (source: WorldNetDaily.com)

There was also an article about how Wal-Mart stopped carrying magazines such as Hustler and others due to customer complaints but I could not find anything about limiting its stock of books based on politics.

So, I went to the Wal-Mart website. I was surprised to find many titles from both the Right and the Left, including Nancy Pelosi’s, Know Your Power, and Barack Obama’s, A Change We Can Believe In. This is not to imply that store managers who may choose not to stock a narrower selection of books based on their geographical demographics and local market do not exist. The corollary question is: how do we react to retailers who limit our choice of reading materials?

In a free and open market, retailers are the sole arbiters of what is placed on the shelves of their stores. Customers are the sole arbiters of what and where they choose to buy. For instance, a few years ago, I chose to cancel my subscription to a particular local newspaper because I objected to their mindless editorials and lack of journalistic integrity. At that time, there was not much in the way of competition for the newspaper but I felt that TV news and rumors were about as satisfying and valid as what I had been reading. The commercial book market is quite different. There are so many outlets for books, both in stores and online, that I do not feel deprived of options by one or even several retailer’s stock choices.

I am well aware that the Wal-Mart business model is considered by many to be destructive to Main Street, USA. Because they deal in enormous volume, they can cut prices far below those of traditional mom and pop retail stores. The trend for the past few decades has been moving toward big box stores for low-end customers and boutique shops that cater to the more affluent. We can nostalgically pine for the old days of butcher shops and haberdashers but the hard reality is that blue-collar working folks are going to spend their limited funds where they can get the best value. I should at this point acknowledge that my wife and I shop regularly at Wal-Mart, primarily because we live on my retirement and her teacher’s salary. We would very much prefer to patronize local vendors but the money we save shopping cheap allows us to donate to our favorite charities. Such is the dilemma many folks like us face.

There is one more consideration that I thought was worth mentioning. For the sake of argument, let’s assume Wal-Mart is guilty of selling only books that adhere to their owner’s political views. Would or should we consider a retailer who values profit over their political convictions to be a better citizen? Can we disagree with an individual’s point of view and still give him our business? If you still shop at a local boutique shop, do you know the proprietor’s politics? Should that matter?

David Rood

I never thought I would ever be in a position to defend Wal-Mart and I hope this does not come off as an apology for the corporation. However, they are part of the mix of our modern system of commerce. Though we may not like them very much, they do fit the model of American Capitalism, which is to win customers through competition in an open market. I would not fault anyone who, after considering all of the above, chooses to boycott Wal-Mart. Neither would I fault anyone who continues to shop there. How we allow our political views to affect our buying behavior is a decision each of us needs to make without recrimination or condescension from others.

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This post was submitted by David Rood.

Coop Reaches Goal! Celebration on Friday

FOOD CO-OP ACHIEVES GOAL OF $600,000
FOR MEMBER-LOAN CAMPAIGN

PUBLIC CELEBRATION SCHEDULED FOR FRIDAY

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 19, 2010

HARRISONBURG, VA – The Friendly City Food Cooperative announced that it has reached a major milestone in its effort to open a community-owned grocery store in downtown Harrisonburg. On Tuesday, May 17, members of the food co-op passed their goal to raise $600,000 by May 20. This significant accomplishment keeps the co-op on track to begin design and build out of the store.

Owners and supporters of the food co-op invite everyone to celebrate with them this Friday, May 21, from 7:30-9:30 p.m. at the Blue Nile. The final amount raised by the loan campaign will be announced at 8:30 p.m.

The loan campaign had raised only $370,000 when the co-op signed a lease for the building last month. The lease carried a contingency that required the co-op to raise sufficient capital by May 20 to move ahead. With the successful completion of the member-loan campaign, the food co-op now plans to move ahead with final store design and renovations. In addition, candidates for general manager are already being interviewed.

Over the last year, more than 160 member-households loaned the co-op startup money to open and operate the store. The average loan amount was $3,750. As of Tuesday, the food co-op has sold 960 membership shares. “This is a great indicator of our potential for success,” said Ben Sandel, president of the food co-op’s board of directors. “Getting this far shows the community really wants the co-op to come into existence.”

While the Friendly City Food Co-op met its $600,000 loan-campaign goal on Tuesday, additional loans continue to come in from members. “More loans are needed to offset future cash needs,” said Sam Nickels, chair of the member-loan campaign. “The more we raise now, the stronger position we’ll be in as the store builds a foothold in the community.”
The entire community is invited to the Loan Campaign Celebration to share in the excitement, enjoy live music, food, and celebrate the four years of planning, the countless volunteer hours and the many generous loans that made this announcement possible.

###

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Springfest vs. Volunteerism

Aired May 7, 2010
“CIVIC SOAPBOX” (WMRA-FM): Springfest vs. Volunteerism
By Mike Grundmann

When the Springfest riot broke out in Harrisonburg on April 10, the opposite was going on across town, and JMU students were at the center of both. Dozens of students were helping with the annual Blacks Run cleanup, where almost 3 tons of trash were collected.

Not only that, 35 members of the JMU swim club anticipated the Springfest garbage mess and helped the city do its cleanup the next day.

There’s been plenty of shame-on-you within the campus confines after Springfest: not just from the president but a professor who wrote a scalding letter to the student newspaper, The Breeze, and at least two students who wrote confessional pieces. Dozens of readers added their comments. The Breeze also probed for causes in a piece on mob psychology.

The following week, a group of students spontaneously formed and started planning how it can help patch relations with the city and volunteer where needed. It’s talking with city leaders so its efforts can be meaningful.

I’m the Breeze faculty adviser, so pardon me if I cite a few stories just from this semester, which prove the altruism permeating the student body. After the Haitian earthquake, a group struggled desperately to reach its $30,000 fundraising goal. A 25-hour basketball game raised money for orphans in Mozambique as well as the local Boys and Girls Clubs (one organizer played for 18 hours). An airplane-pulling contest raised money for a city mediation center. The women’s lacrosse team served a Sunday meal at the Salvation Army. The annual Relay for Life, a cancer-benefit walk that’s an overnighter, drew about 2,000 people and raised more than $150,000. One student in 2008 invented a new type of concrete mixer that will raise the standard of living in a Ugandan village.

Using examples from my own journalism classes this semester, one student spent spring break helping the homeless in Nashville, and another helped build a shelter for homeless teen girls in Belize.

It’s not just volunteerism that JMU students contribute. The university is also a lab for the kinds of technology that will save the world. An electric motorcycle that students built has set a speed record. Students are also designing bicycles that disabled people can ride. Others are experimenting with nanotechnology, which will produce eventual wonders in medicine, manufacturing and space travel. There’s a lab with printers, quote-unquote, that make 3-D objects; the prediction is that we’ll all have such printers at home in 10 years. And, from the president on down, there’s a major push to minimize waste in energy and materials. JMU just won a governor’s award for that.

I’m continually impressed by how many of my students list activity or office-holding positions on campus, the vast majority of them service-oriented.

Did some of these same students also attend Springfest? Yes. Did they throw bottles? I don’t know, but I doubt it.

I’m not saying all this because I’m the booster type. I’m a journalist by training, and you know how skeptical we can be. I’m doing this because the Springfest riot really surprised me, and I wanted you to know why I was surprised.

Mike Grundmann is a journalism professor at JMU and advisor to the student newspaper, The Breeze.

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This post was submitted by Mike Grundmann.

Horse trading starts after UK Elections

As one of the most extraordinary General Elections in living memory comes to a close, the United Kingdom has woken to the news of the first hung parliament since 1974. Neither of the three major parties managed to secure the required 326 parliamentary seats to afford a controlling  majority. Negotiations are now underway to instigate a governmental structure that will hopefully allow the handling of the current fiscal crisis the UK faces.

Despite winning the popular vote and the most number of seats (307 versus Labours 250), David Cameron’s Conservative Party are now faced with the opportunity of forming a coalition with Nick Clegg’s Liberal Democrats Party.

Clegg set the election ablaze, with excellent performances during the countries first ever televised Prime Ministerial debates. Sadly for Clegg, his party failed to convert the tidal wave of excitement into votes and came in third place to Labour with 57 seats.

With low approval ratings, a swollen deficit, and a European wide economic crisis, Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s ruling Labour Party suffered dramatic losses in various seats around the country. This election was seen by many as a vote on the PM’s popularity. Brown is left now playing a waiting game as the various back room negotiations commence.

This election has seen a jump in voter turnout averaging 65% with many polling stations reporting participation rates exceeding 70%. Despite the predicted increase in number of votes cast, polling stations in Liverpool, Hull and Chester run out of voting slips for a time, and hundreds were unable to cast their vote as polling stations struggled to cope with the late evening surge of voters. Many were left angry and bewildered that their vote was not counted. The Electoral Commission has already indicated that there will be a thorough investigation into any wrong doing.

Our cousin across the pond has a busy weekend ahead. The civil service has been called in to assist with negotiations, utilizing lessons learned from both the Welsh Assembly and Scottish Parliament. Cameron may well have to offer up  positions within a Conservative cabinet to the Liberal Democrats, to secure power within the House of Commons and oust Brown from office. Something former Conservative PM John Major described as “a price worth paying”.

With a looming financial crisis, the UK’s political leaders can ill afford to be complacent in the establishment of a stable government. The London FTSE 250 (more of a domestic indicator rather than the internationally biased FTSE100) index of shares reacted badly to today’s results loosing over 4%, and the the Pound ended the day at a year low against the Dollar. With any luck, before the markets open again on Monday, we shall see results from this weekends horse trading and the UK will be ready to tackle it’s most pressing issues.

Author James Carter is from the United Kingdom and lives in Harrisonburg with his family.

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Alternative Health: One Mother Balances Through Belly Dance

Healing is the tendency of any system to return to equilibrium when equilibrium is disturbed. — Andrew Weil

In 2005, Rose Shenk was a happy, fulfilled stay-at-home mother of four boys living in Charlottesville. But her equilibrium was about to be disturbed. That spring, her husband was diagnosed with bi-polar disorder. Soon after, he was killed in a head-on car collision. Her father, whom she also relied on, died a week later from injuries sustained after being hit by a truck in Kenya. Shenk attended two funerals in two consecutive weekends: One for her husband and the next for her father.

“It was so painful,” she said. “I had to do what was best for my sons. I had to remain grounded.”

Shenk began to heal her grief using the traditional methods of journaling and talking to a therapist. But she needed another method. “I became super self aware of the extraordinary circumstances that were happening to me. I needed to get out of my head and find a physical outlet.”

While in a Charlottesville pizzeria, Shenk found a flyer for a belly dancing class held on Monday nights when the children were visiting with their paternal family. She was afraid to attend and considered not going. “When I went, I found that it was lots of single moms and women in their 40′s and 50′s. I wasn’t the the only widow,” she said. “I was stepping out of what I was comfortable with and realized that I can do it. It was feminine, beautiful, strengthening — and you didn’t need a partner.”

“My first teacher taught belly dance from a New Age, mystical point of view, stressing the sacred energy of the feminine. It was foreign to me but it stretched me,” she said. “Emotions, the body and sexuality are all part of the dance and those are part of a whole and balanced person. It didn’t fully connect with my Christian faith, but I could understand the attempt to balance yourself. Also, at this time, I did not have a sexual partnership. Belly dance was a sensual experience that was not damaging for me or anyone else.”

Shenk said that the basic belly dance stance is a lot like the martial art “horse stance”: feet apart, knees bent. “There is a lot of balance in that position. You are flexible. To be flexible and balanced allows you to do a lot in life that you did not know you were capable of. I am surprised at my own resilience.”

Shenk has been studying belly dancing for four years and teaching for a year and a half. “It took me about three years to get back my equilibrium,” she said.

Author Tracey Brown is a Harrisonburg resident and a Massage Therapist at the Beauty Spa, Harrisonburg, VA.

“There is a student in my class experiencing the slow death of her husband from cancer. We performed a dance at church on Good Friday. We used the imagery of healing in the dance. This was expressed through candles that showed light in darkness. We also used veils in the dance to express the things within death that are hidden from us. For me it was a prayer and an expression of sisterhood and community.”

Shenk now lives in Harrisonburg, and recently re-married. “It’s amazing how much we can bear,” she says of her experience. “You can get hit so hard like I was that summer. And you can still be okay, happy, survive–and sometimes even help carry other people.”

Shenk will be teaching a five-week fitness belly dance class at EMU beginning Tuesday, May 11. For more information contact the Fitness Center at (540) 432-4341, or email fitnesscenter@emu.edu.

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This post was submitted by Tracey Brown.

Then and Now: JMU Presidents’ Controversies

“Spring Fest 1010” that took place off-campus but was hosted by James Madison University students led to police battles that headlined newsprint with each step into blame or fame heralding the school’s response. And the school newspaper’s invasion by a team of the local Commonwealth Attorney heightened the public outcry.

Students protesting in Wilson Hall and being arrested, circa 1970, before Dr. Ronald Carrier became the school's president. (Courtesy of JMU Special Collections, Carrier Library)

Since the school’s inception just over a century ago as an academy for young women, the five successive school presidents have each had visions of accomplishment and always faced the media chopping block. Any time something major and/or colorful went wrong, newspapers quickly front-paged the story.

For example, first president Julian Burruss felt, “The development of a strong, noble and womanly character is of first importance….” His rules were stringent but media ignored any small discrepancies such as one girl placed on a quarter’s probation for attending a dance downtown without permission, knowing she couldn’t get permission. Ditto when another was suspended for rudeness to a teacher.

But on certain matters Burruss could not hold the newspapers in check.  Banner headlines in the Harrisonburg paper for February 15, 1913, reported “PRETTY SCHOOL GIRL ELOPES FROM NORMAL.” Immediately below in smaller caps ran “MISS LILLIAN CAMPBELL, LEAVES DORMITORY BY MEANS OF IMPROVISED ROPE, JOINS LOVER AND HASTENS TO BE MARRIED—STUDENT BODY SHOCKED.”

The faculty was more shocked and faced a dilemma since no specific rule banned elopement!  Deliberating from afternoon until after midnight, the faculty finally voted to expel the young lady from school for “leaving without permission.” The groom’s sister was asked to withdraw as well and the other roommate suspended for a year. The story made the Washington Post and newspapers around the state—yet the school didn’t lose face on this one.

And so it goes, both problems and kudos make the news. Yet president Burruss made few errors and when offered the presidency of Virginia Technical Institute, he couldn’t refuse the step up to his alma mater. Newspapers applauded his success.

However, those same papers only halfheartedly welcomed the new president Samuel P. Duke. Harrisonburg’s Daily News-Record for July 23, 1919, simply stated the Virginia Normal School Board voted “7 to 5 in favor of Prof. Duke.” Clearly disappointed in the choice, the paper didn’t even accord Duke the title of state supervisor or list his many accomplishments. Their newsprint continued to evoke the vast local disappointment that Dr. Sanger, the local popular Valley choice, had not been given the position.

Yet Duke’s presidency ran smoothly—even when his Dean of Women Denise Varner bobbed her hair and numerous students followed this trend so absolutely forbidden in Duke’s rules of conduct. However, newspapers paid no attention as general student behavior toed the line under Duke at the newly named State Teachers College in Harrisonburg. While Duke’s list of restrictions seems ludicrous today, they generally extended ordinary rules enforced at students’ homes.

For 30 years Duke won only public accolades as he guided his faculty and students through the changing world in the Great Depression and World War II. Under his leadership, men were admitted as students for the first time and male athletic teams emerged. (The basketball team dubbed itself the “Madison Dukes” in hope Dr. Duke would fork over funds for basketballs and equipment—which he did.)

In 1949 a massive stroke ended Duke’s presidency. Soon designated President Emeritus, he and his wife were given the refurbished Zirkle House across Main Street (where JMU is now building its nearly-completed performing arts center) to be their home for the final six years of his life. And Gov. William Tuck appointed Dr. Tyler Miller to become Madison’s third president.

However, “The third time’s a charm” did not apply to third president Miller. While his first decade accomplished continuing growth with few changes, his last years were shadowed by the startling disharmony of the ‘60s and ‘70s. For example in 1967-68, student Jay Rainey came on campus wearing “hippie fashion” blue jeans, blanket ponchos, sandals, and flowing hair. Rainey refused to change and Miller refused his admission for next year. That decision drew wide press coverage when support on Raney’s behalf from the American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia won in court and the school had to admit him.

Also, a campus underground organization, Harambee, objected to Miller’s firing of three sympathetic faculty members without apparent reason as they were quickly replaced. In addition, demonstrations on campus led to student arrests. Those events included students marching on campus, a one-night takeover of the administration building, and a later welcome for Vietnam protester and movie star Jane Fonda to appear on campus to encourage students to join the antiwar activists.

Looking back years later, fourth president Dr. Ronald E. Carrier candidly assessed:

Tyler Miller had been a good president, was a very fine man. But the world was changing—dramatically. You’d had the assassination of John F. Kennedy; of Robert Kennedy, of Martin Luther King. You’d had the Berkeley free-speech movement; you’d had Civil Rights issues in Selma, Alabama, and Birmingham. You had the Vietnam War, had just had Cambodia, plus we had Kent State. You had some trouble here which was really minor but turned into more of an issue than it probably should have been.

Dr. Miller was caught in the vortex of a changing world, didn’t really want to go into it but didn’t know how to get out of it. Yet he got out in time before it damaged him personally—no one asked him to quit—and before the institution paid the price.

Newspapers had a field day. And at times presidents #4 and #5 have run the same gauntlets. One example is Carrier’s firing of a physics professor popular with the faculty but yearly unable to attract enough students to the physics program to warrant his continuing. The faculty called for Carrier’s dismissal but the Board of Visitors disagreed. Carrier remained and the school continued to flourish with expanding programs in all academic areas.

And now President Rose responded to Spring Fest by taking immediate action to contact parents school wide with a letter of his assessment and reassurance of responsive actions ahead. No student uprising or parent ire has followed. Both parents and students applaud his timely response and strong leadership. That, however, has not made the off-campus news.

For more detailed description of the events of the first four presidents—Burruss, Duke, Miller, and Carrier, read detailed chapters in Nancy Bondurant-Jones’ book, Rooted On Blue Stone Hill, a history of the school’s first ninety years.

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This post was submitted by Nancy Bondurant Jones.

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