YALE UNIVERSITY
DIVINITY SCHOOL
Q Source
April 5 -9, 2004
The Q Source is published weekly under the auspices of the office of the
Dean of Students. Notices of events and
concerns of the community are included. All submissions must be signed and
include a contact phone number or e-mail address. Free classified ads are also printed for
members of the YDS community; these must be kept as short as possible. The Q
Source is now available online at http://www.yale.edu/divinity/Stu.QSource.html All submissions must be e-mailed to faith.green@yale.edu. All
submissions must be in by 5:00 p.m. Friday.
No exceptions to deadlines will be
made!! The right to edit is reserved. --Faith E.
Green, Editor
From the Editor
Please see the Q Source in Print for
the following:
Quad Activities Schedule
ISM Events List
Final Exam Schedule
Thanks - Faith
From Dean Bartlett
GRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS
APRIL 19th
deadline
Plan on applying for graduate fellowships?
The deadlines are fast approaching … the faculty awards three graduate
fellowships (the Day, Hooker, and Dwight Fellowships) to those members of the
graduating class who have completed at least two years of residency at Yale
Divinity School, have acquired such proficiency in theological studies as best
to qualify them for doctoral work, and who have been admitted to a doctoral
program in this country or elsewhere. The grants have varied in size from
one thousand to thirty-five hundred dollars. Applications are available in
Dean Bartlett’s Office, Seabury first floor, and should be returned to Dean
Bartlett
FROM THE REGISTRAR: PRE-REGISTRATION FOR FALL semester will be held Monday, April 12 through Friday,
April 16 in the Common Room from 9:00 am
to 4:00 pm. Please stop by to pick up your registration materials.
To
those students who are not graduating this year, please let the Registrar's
office know if you do not intend to register for next semester.
YDS Worship
Opportunities
MARQUAND CHAPEL SERVICES,
4/5-4/9
Please join us for the
following services at 10:30 a.m. (except where otherwise noted):
Monday, April 5: Professor David Bartlett will preach, as we
welcome prospective students on visitation day.
Tuesday, April 6: the "Parish Worship: Planning and Presiding"
class will lead this service of the Word.
Wednesday, April 7: the Lenten sung morning prayer service of plainchant
continues, to be followed by a presentation by the fourth candidate for Lecturer
in the Practice of Sacred Music, Patrick Evans.
Thursday, April 8: the chapel ministry team will a Maundy Thursday worship
service.
Friday, April 9 at 11:15 p.m.: the Marquand Chapel Choir presents
a special service of music and meditation for Good Friday, singing Schutz's
"Seven Last Words." (Please note the unusual starting time!)
Monday Vespers
The
Lutheran and Episcopal students lead sung Vespers every Monday evening at 4:30
in the Henri Nowen prayer chapel in the basement of the library. You are
invited to join us. The service lasts about half an hour. To get to
the prayer chapel, take the elevator downstairs and follow the signs. It
is a lovely way to end the day.
Thursday Night Compline
We will
continue to keep the office of Compline on Thursday nights at 9:00 p.m.
in the Henri Nouwen Prayer Chapel on the ground floor of the library. In the
season of Lent we will follow the Lutheran Book of Worship. The service
lasts approximately twenty minutes, but we often linger in fellowship and talk
of our common life. All are welcome!
Come, magnify the Lord with us!
Friday Matins and None Hour
All are welcome to join the Catholic prayer group on Fridays at 4:00 p.m. in
the Henri Nouwen Prayer Chapel on the ground floor of the library. The breviary
for our group is "The Liturgy of the Hours According to the Roman Rite”,
which consists of 4-volumes to cover the entire liturgical year. We meet
for about half an hour or so for the Office of Readings (Matins) and the
Afternoon Hour (None), and then often head over to Friday Fellowship
afterwards. Please join us for hymns, prayers, psalms, other biblical
passages, and holy writings from our Christian forbears as we proceed on our
Lenten journey together.
Diploma Frames
The YDS Bookstore is now taking orders for the official
Yale Divinity School Diploma frame. Actually, this year we are offering
two frame choices: The Regency Gold is a solid wood molding with
rich mahogany furniture finish and an inner gold lip. The Gallery
is a hardwood molding with high gloss cherry lacquer finish and a gold inner
lip. Both feature navy colored museum quality matting, gold embossed with
the University seal and "Yale Divinity School" in script.
Either frame is a great bargain at $115 (that's only $97.75 with your
membership discount!). Some stock available now, more to come by
Commencement - OR - have your frame shipped to wherever you're
going to be next! Check out the display frames, and all the details, in
the Bookstore!
Postage Stamps Now in Bookstore
You
asked, we answered! The YDS Bookstore now (well actually, once again)
carries postage stamps (yay!!!!). Sold in books of 20 U.S. first class
stamps for $7.40. (Sorry, but your discount does not apply.) Please
continue to let us know how else we can help you!
UPCOMING EVENTS
Come share in our Ghana Journey
On Tues April 6th from 12:00-1:30 in the Common
Room the Ghana Travel Seminar will be sharing our experiences in West
Africa with the YDS Community. Come hear about our adventures and
learnings, there will be photographs, reflections, and a slide show.
We offer this as a gesture of thanks for the many ways that the community
supported the travel seminar.
Candidate for Ministerial Practice and Theology Position
Speaks
You are cordially invited to
attend the lecture by Thomas E. Frank, the fourth candidate for the
Ministerial Practice and Theology senior faculty search position. He will
present his public lecture, entitled "Changing Places: A
Practical Theology of Church Leadership," on Tuesday, April 6 from
12:30-1:30 p.m. in Niebuhr Lecture Hall, N123. You are also
welcome to attend the coffee hour held in the Common Room after Chapel to meet
Professor Frank.
Postdoc & Visiting Scholar Welcome
Reception
April 7th from 5:00
to 6:30pm in the Anlyan Center Foyer, 300 Cedar Street.
OISS
welcomes newly-arrived postdoctoral fellows and visiting scholars with a short
orientation program and reception. Meet your colleagues from around the world,
gather helpful information about Yale and New Haven, and join Yale staff for
snacks and refreshments. All postdocs and scholars are welcome and encouraged
to attend. Feel free to include your spouse, partner and/or and family as
well..
Please
e-mail
elisabeth.kennedy@yale.edu>elisabeth.kennedy@yale.edu
if you know
you
will be coming.
Elisabeth
Mead Kennedy, Assistant Director - Advisor
Yale
University, Office of International Students & Scholars
246
Church Street, Ste. 201
New
Haven, CT 06510
Tel:
(203) 432-2305 Direct: (203) 436-1549 Fax: (203) 432-7166
URL:
http://www.oiss.yale.edu/
Office
Hours: 8:30am - 5:00pm Monday, Wednesday - Friday, 10:00am - 5:00pm
Tuesday
International
Lecture on HIV-AIDS
HIV-AIDS In Africa
April 8, 4:00 PM, Niebuhr Hall
Reception to follow in Common Room
Speakers:
Dr. Anne Nasimiyu-Wasike, Kenyatta University,
Kenya: "HIV/AIDS and African
Women" Dr. Anne Nasimiyu-Wasike is
a Kenyan and belongs to a Ugandan Religious
Institute of the Little Sisters of St. Francis of Assisi. She has been a Lecturer at Kenyatta University in the
Department of Religious Studies since 1987. Her areas are Theology of
Inculturation and African Women's Theology. Currently, she is a Research Affiliate
at the Center for Interdisciplinary Research in AIDS, working with Yale Divinity School and the
Epidemiology and Public Health School.
Dr. Dorothy N. Ucheaga, University of Calabar,
Nigeria: "Anatomy of Female
Powerlessness and HIV/AIDS Prevention in Sub-Saharan Africa: Need for Paradigm
Shift" Dr. Dorothy N. Ucheaga
is a Lecturer in the Department of Religious Studies and Philosophy at the
University of Calabar in Nigeria. Currently, she is a research affiliate at
Yale University with the Center for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS in
collaboration with Yale Divinity School and Public Health to do a comparative
study of the responses of seven religious institutions to HIV/AIDS
prevention/care in Cross River State, Nigeria. This event is co-sponsored by the Yale
University REsearch Affiliate Program and YDS Women's Initiative
Announcing the Robert M. Litowitz Lecture 2004
Sponsored
by the Program in Ethics, Politics and Economics
Revisioning Christianity: The
Discovery of the Secret Gospel of Thomas presented by Elaine Pagels,
Harrington Spear Paine Foundation Professor of Religion at Princeton University
on Thursday, April 8 at 4:00-5:30 in at Rosenfeld Hall, 109 Grove
Street
A reception will follow the lecture.
Review for Professor
Lana Scwebel
I am a student representative on the Review Committee for Prof.
Schwebel. If you have worked with Dr. Schwebel, please send comments to my
e-mail address at: jessica.grimes@yale.edu. Please send your comments by
Friday, April 9th. Thank you!
2004 Robert Foster
Cherry Award Lectures of Baylor University
Honoring
Great Teachers
- Harry S. Stout, Jonathan Edwards Professor of American Religious
History "Baptized in Blood: A Moral History of the Civil War"
and
Nicholas
P. Wolterstorff,
Noah Porter Professor (Emeritus) of Philosophical Theology"Memorial Art
and the Lincoln Image"
Tuesday,
April 13, 2004
7:30
PM in the Common Room
Reception
Following.
Free Food______Free Food______Lots of Books
The YDS community is cordially invited to
the Annual YDS Book Party, celebrating publications by (and in honor of)
thirteen of our faculty and emeriti! Please join us on Tuesday, April 13th
in the Common Room from 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. as we toast works by Harry
Attridge and Margot Fassler, David Bartlett, John Collins, Siobhan
Garrigan, Ronald Rittgers, Lamin Sanneh, Yolanda Smith, Miroslav Volf, Nicholas
Wolterstorff, and in honor of Harry Baker Adams, James Dittes, and Abraham
Malherbe. Books will be available for purchase (and the authors will surely be
delighted to sign your copy) and food, drink, and good cheer will be
plentiful. ALL ARE WELCOME!
Attention
Creative Writers: "Faith &
Fiction: Ten Important Things to Know about Writing
Michael Malone, author of Handling Sin and The Last Noel, among other novels, will be holding an
informal conversation with YDS students on Thursday, April 15, from 12:15-1:15, in the Jonathan Edwards Dining Room.
(Lunch will be provided.) One of the best-loved storytellers of the
New South, Michael has been called by critics the "American Dickens"
for his diverse canvas of vivid characters, his strong social conscience, and
his laugh-out-loud comedy. His conversation with YDS students is entitled
"Faith & Fiction: Ten Important Things to Know about
Writing," and he looks forward to discussing with students the
intersection of belief and the creative process. If you're interested,
please pick up one of Michael's short stories outside Lana Schwebel's office.
This event is sponsored by the Yale Literature & Spirituality Series;
for questions, please contact lana.schwebel@yale.edu.
Join Michael Malone in the Bookstore!
Thursday, April 15th at 4:00
in the Bookstore Rotunda for a reading. Novelist Michael Malone is the author of ten
works of fiction, two works of non-fiction, at least one play, and many years
of story lines as the Head Writer for television's One Life to Live. .
He has been hailed for his complex characters, for stories both "tearfully
joyful" and "hilariously credible", and for his compassionate
and intelligent writing. An extraordinary storyteller, his novels are
rich with questions of Faith, Love, and Justice. He has taught at Penn,
Swarthmore, and Yale, including a stint as visiting professor at YDS
(perceptive local readers may see similarities between people and places in New
Haven and those in his early novel Dingley Falls). Following the
reading, Michael will be signing copies of his books (available for sale in the
Bookstore). A reception will follow. ALL ARE WELCOME!
Sponsored by the Institute of Sacred Music and the Student Book Supply, this is
the last in this year's Yale Literature and Spirituality Series.
Who Wants a PhD?
Interested in applying for
Ph.D. programs next year or in the not too distant future? Want to learn the
tricks of the trade early? Want expert
general advice to plan your approach?
A panel discussion on this topic will be held on Tuesday, April 20 from 4-5 p.m. in
Latourette Hall. Save the date! Panelists include:
Jeremy Hultin (Ph.D. Yale)
Lana Schwebel (Ph.D. Penn)
Martha Moore-Keish (Ph.D. Emory)
Michael Peppard (Ph.D. candidate, Yale, YDS grad)
Invitation from the Berkeley
and the Lutheran Studies program
Tuesday, April 20, at Berkeley
Center, St. Ronan Street
5:00 pm Berkeley
and the Lutheran Studies program are presenting talks by the former
presiding bishop of the Lutheran Church, H. George Anderson, and Professor
Robert Wright of the Episcopal Church on "Lutheran/Episcopal Relations
Today." This presentation at
5:00 pm will be followed by a joint Eucharist at 6:30 pm (Carolyn Sharp,
preaching) and a reception at 7:30
Pan African Women's Pot Luck Fellowship
Friday, April 23, at 6:30
p.m. at
232 Opening Hill Rd. Branford, CT 06405. Please RSVP to Dr. Yolanda Smith by Thursday, April 22 by phone (203) 436-4818 or by email
Hear Ronald
Thiemann
Ronald F. Thiemann,
Professor of Theology and of Religion & Society at Harvard Divinity School,
will deliver an address on Sunday, April 25th, at 2 p.m., in the Niebuhr
Lecture Hall, Yale Divinity School, 409 Prospect Street, New Haven. His
address is entitled “Can Lutherans be Effective Public Intellectuals?” Prof. Thiemann served as Dean of Harvard
Divinity School from 1986 until 1998. He was Director of the School’s
Center for the Study of Values in Public Life and is a Faculty Fellow at the
John F. Kennedy School’s Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations. The event is made possible by a grant from
St. John’s Lutheran Church in Stamford, CT. It is free and open to the
public, and will be followed by a reception.
For more information, contact Paul F. Stuehrenberg at (203) 432-5292, or
email paul.Stuehrenberg@yale.edu.
The Student Book Supply announces a Special Book Promotion
In
conjunction with our annual Spring Sale (April 26th through 30th) the Student Book Supply and Continuum International are
running a special book promotion. Designed to promote the new
"T&T Clark International" imprint, we are offering discounts from
20% to 50% on 70 titles: new and "classic" items of interest to the
Divinity School community from T&T Clark, Continuum, Trinity Press Intl,
and Sheffield Academic Press. To take advantage of this sale, pick up an
order form in the Bookstore, fill it out, and return it by April 16th.
Books will arrive in May (we are also happy to ship your books to wherever
you'll be next!). Please remember this is a time-limited offer!!!
MUSIC OF THE SEA: New Haven Chorale Spring Concert
The
New Haven Chorale teams up with the chorus and orchestra of the Hartt School of
Music to bring you an amazing concert featuring Vaughan Williams' majestic
choral "Sea Symphony" and Debussy's "La Mer". 180
voices! A musical experience not to be missed! 8:00 pm, May 1, Woolsey Hall, FREE
ADMISSION FOR STUDENTS. (For professors and other people with money, $20;
$35 for preferred seating; $15 for seniors.) See Grace Burson (grace.burson@yale.edu,
772-2722) for tickets or just show up. For those who live in the Hartford
area, this concert will also be presented April 29 at the Belding Theatre.
COOL THINGS TO DO
Worship at
Battle Chapel
Maundy
Thursday/Holy Thursday April 8, 7:30 pm, Battell Chapel
Tenebrae (Shadows) Service
After a liturgy of
reflection and repentance, we share communion in small groups, sitting around
the table. Ten scriptural stories of Jesus' last hours are read, interspersed
with solo meditations for violin, viola, cello, and french horn. The
light is gradually extinguished until at the end, we leave in shadows of
silence.
Good Friday, April 9, 12:30-1:30 pm, Battell Chapel
This is a traditional liturgy, centered around Christ's crucifixion and
death. The Rev. Joseph Britton, Dean of the Berkeley Divinity School at
Yale, will preach, lifting up his reflections upon this event.
Good Friday, April 9, 2:00 pm, Battell Chapel
Stations of the Cross
Beginning in Battell Chapel, there will be a Stations of the Cross service
that weaves a path through parts of Yale and New Haven, while recalling Jesus'
way to the Cross. We will make ten stops to share scripture, liturgy, and
music, beginning and ending in Battell Chapel.
Easter Morning Sunrise Service, 6:30 am, East Rock Summit
Easter Sunday Service, 11am, Battell Chapel
To celebrate the
resurrection of Jesus, we bring back the Alleluia "retired" during
Lent, beginning our worship with Thompson's Alleluia and ending with
Handel's Hallelujah Chorus. The Rev. David Bartlett, Academic
Dean, Yale Divinity School, will preach and communion will be served.
Former Vice
President Al Gore to Discuss 'The Climate Emergency'
Former
Vice President Al Gore will discuss "The Climate Emergency" on
Tuesday, April 13, at 4 p.m. in Battell Chapel. In recent speeches, Gore has said
that to avert an environmental catastrophe, the world must reduce emissions of
greenhouse gases from smokestacks and tailpipes that contribute to global
warming. Otherwise, he warns, forests will vanish and polar ice caps will
eventually disappear as atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide rise.
The lecture is
sponsored by the Yale School of Forestry &
Environmental Studies and the seminar on Politics and the Environment
in the 2004 Election Cycle, and is free
and open to the Yale community. For more
information, contact the Dean's Office at 432-5109 or fesdeansoffice@yale.edu.
Cappella Romana to perform
MUSIC FOR THE FALL OF CONSTANTINOPLE
FREE at The Metropolitan Museum of Art,
Yale and Princeton Universities
This program will be presented at
the Metropolitan Museum of Art on April 18, at Yale University on April 16, and
Princeton University on April 19. Cappella Music Director Alexander Lingas will
conduct both concerts. Dr. Lingas is a Fellow of Oxford University's European
Humanities Research Centre and Assistant Professor of Music History at Arizona
State University, and a member of Princeton's Institute for Advanced Study. All concerts are free of charge,
underwritten generously by The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Hellenic
Studies Departments of Yale and Princeton Universities
NEW HAVEN: Friday, 16 April 2004, 7:00pm
Dwight Chapel, Yale University Presented by Yale Hellenic Studies
Information: (203) 432-3423
Poetry Reading
Thursday, April 15, at 7:30 p.m. - Please join us in
celebrating National Poetry Month at an hour long poetry reading held at ALL
Gallery in New Haven. The evening will
feature work by Dianne Bilyak, Brett Foster, Macky McCleary, and Lauren
Shapiro. The reading will take place on Thursday, April 15, at 7:30 p.m. Light
refreshments will be served following the event. The gallery is located at the corner of State
and Edwards Street. Parking is available on the street or in a nearby lot. This
event is free and open to the public. Please visit the website at
www.allgallery.org for more info.
ALL 5 EDWARDS STREET NEW HAVEN CONNECTICUT
Classifieds
BTFO Coordinators 2004
The planning and leadership of the Before the Fall Orientation (BTFO) for new
and entering students is served by two student coordinators, selected at this
time each year for service through the
summer and early fall. The Coordinators offer their service to the
Divinity School and the entering class of new students as organizers of the entire BTFO program, scheduled this year
for August 24th to 27th. The work of BTFO Coordinator is a paid position,
offering $3,000 in total income for the entire project. The hours are
flexible and the schedule is variable over the course of the project, but the
Co-Coordinators should anticipate some work now before the summer
officially begins; work on campus throughout the summer break (mostly
part-time but sometimes full-time, with time for vacations); work
throughout the BTFO program itself; and some follow-up work after
the new semester begins. If you are interested in serving as a
BTFO Coordinator for 2004, > please indicate your interest to me by the end
of the day on Wednesday.
Bookstore Jobs Open for ’04-‘05
Looking
for the best job on campus? The Bookstore is now interviewing student applicants
for the positions of Sales Clerk, Receving Clerk, Shipping Clerk, and
Communication Coordinator for next academic year. Sales, Receiving, and
Shipping positions are all 10-15 hours/week; Communications position is paid by
the event or project, hours flexible. All positions receive great
bookstore benefits. The ideal candidate for any of these positions is
responsible and enthusiastic, loves books, enjoys meeting the needs of
customers, has good attention to detail, and shares our commitment to the
mission of the Student Book Supply. Previous retail or administrative
experience is a plus. To apply, or for more information, stop in to the
Bookstore or call us at 432-6101.
CLC Coordinators 2004-2005
The
Community Life Committee (CLC) is served by two student Coordinators, selected
at this time each year for service the following year. The Coordinators
offer their service to the Divinity School community either as a work-study job
(at 15 hours/week) or a supervised ministry position (under the guidelines of
the Office of Supervised Ministries). The Coordinators are responsible
for giving leadership to the work of the CLC committee of faculty, students,
and staff, and for organizing a few key events of the school calendar (the
Christmas Party, Spring Fling dance, and All-School Conference). If you are interested in serving as a CLC
Coordinator for 2004-2005, please indicate your interest to me by the end of
the day on Monday, April 5th. A simple email message will suffice for
indicating your interest. Interviews will be held for those interested
persons next week (after Monday) by a committee of students, faculty, and
staff. If you are interested in receiving
more information about the work of the Coordinators, please feel free to
contact me, or to contact the current CLC Coordinators, Erika Jones and Ray
Ward. Thank you. Dale Peterson, Dean of Students.
Wanted Dog
Sitter
Wanted: responsible,
reliable, dog-loving person or couple to house & dog sit during 2004-2005
school year. Experience not necessary -- caring deeply about dogs is.
We live less than a mile from the Divinity School, in Hamden, in a large,
comfortable house with two dogs: an 8 year old Brittany and a 2 year old
Cavalier King Charles spaniel. We hope to travel for about 3 weeks this
coming fall, and for 6 weeks from mid-January to end Feb, 2005 -- followed by a
couple of weeks home -- then another week or so in March. We have a small
fenced-in dog run behind the house, but in addition to letting dogs in and out,
we'd like someone to walk them several times a day -- at least one longish one
if the weather's good. We prefer to hire students because they have more
time to spend at home with the dogs, who aren't used to being left alone for
long stretches of time. If you are interested, please call Barbara or Rob at
203-773-0799. (If no
response within a short time, you can try me at our country house in New
York: 518-325-4777.)
Learning
Experience with Pay!
Apply to be a Resource Assistant at the
Ministry Resource Center. While working with resources and the real
questions of students and leaders of all kinds of congregations you will learn
about the varieties of leaders, congregations and what is produced to resource
them. It will upgrade your resume to know all of this. Ask for an
application for Academic year 2004-2005 employment by coming to the Ministry
Resource Center by contacting Carolyn Hardin Engelhardt, Director at 203-432-5319
Church
Profile and Job Description
In the center of East Barnard village there is a small church, that has served the surrounding area for over 150 years. It is historically a non-denominational church community. In the beginning, different groups, Methodist, Baptists, Universalists, would use the church on a specified week each month, sharing in the upkeep of the building. Today, we come together to worship during the months of June, July, August and again at Christmas Eve. We are looking for a minister, who may be active, retired or a seminary student, who would be responsible for worship services each week. As our children are an important part of our community, we would expect each service to include a children’s sermon. Other duties would include some sort of adult education or regular fellowship. In the past this has been in the form of a book discussion or theme-based potluck suppers. Two or three meetings over the course of the summer would be sufficient. Visiting of church members who are sick, elderly or in need of support would be expected as well. The community could foresee the candidate having time for study or research, or possibly having a part-time job in the area.
Compensation for the three months is $2,500. Help with obtaining housing would be available, and we would hope that the minister or intern would want to live in or close to our community.
For more information or to submit a resume contact:
Heather Leavitt - 4207 Broad Brook Rd. South Royalton, VT 05068, phone 802-763-8780 Heather@leavitts.us
Director of
Childrens Ministries Position Available in Greenwich
I graduated from the
Div School last year and I am leaving my current position to move to the
Washington DC area. I would love to talk to anyone who might be
interested in filling it. During my year here I have had a chance to lead
teacher training sessions, deliver children’s sermons, teach Sunday School
classes, preach, lead liturgy, head a committee, participate in staff meetings
with the other ministers and generally sink
into the life of the
church. This is a great opportunity to explore church ministry for the
not-yet-ordained or for those who are still discerning their calling.
It is a part-time position with a fairly flexible starting date.
Look for a more detailed posting from the church in the next few weeks.
Please e-mail me at <mailto:Dunfee@fpcg.org>Dunfee@fpcg.org
or call me at 203-869-8356 if you have any questions.
YDS Summer
Employment Opportunity
The Divinity School Instructional Technologies Team is looking for a student assistant to work part-time this summer creating web pages for YDS courses. The ideal candidate will have some experience designing and creating web sites and familiarity with Yale’s Classes.edu courseware. This is a great opportunity to integrate technology skills with theological studies and to work with staff and YDS faculty. For more information or an application contact Suzanne.Estelle-Holmer@yale.edu. (telephone 2-6374)
Needed Q Source Editor ’04-05
Student needed to
fill 10 hour a week position - editing,
printing, copying and distributing the Q Source. Basic computer skills, typing skills and
knowledge at MS Word, Excel and adobe acrobat will help. Must be dependable and organized. Flexible Hours. Please contact Faith at faith.green@yale.edu.
Want an air conditioner?
Unit for sale. Only
a year and a half old only $200 or best offer.
email: fegisme@aol.com. Pick up across the street from the div school
MINISTRY RESOURCE CENTER
www.library.yale.edu/div/mrc 432-5319
ministry.resource.center@yale.edu
at
the Circulation Desk in the Library, take a right and a left
Staff available 10-3 weekdays
Still working on Holy Week and Easter
activities? We can help!
Seasonal
liturgical resources
TALKING ABOUT “THE
PASSION OF THE CHRIST”? Check
out our wider selection of video versions of Jesus’ life and ministry.
Or the series of
dramatizations taken from the 15th century mystery plays: The Mysteries is a four-tape
series with two tapes of nativity dramas, one of Doomsday, and one of the
passion.
Mel Gibson’s isn’t the
only film to talk about!
Is VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL
in your future?
Check out the Vacation Bible School
curricula in the Ministry Resource Center.
We’ve got VBS kits from a variety of publishers that you can check out
and show to people in your parish so that the curriculum you want to use can be
ordered in time for your VBS program. Or
use our other resources to augment or create your own program.
The Ministry of Reading
Scripture Aloud, April 14 12:30-1:30 p.m.