Sunday, June 21, 2009

Back at home


Stephanie’s mother, Nancy, sent us some pictures over the weekend. Below is a picture of Stephanie’s longlost (and unknown) stepbrother, Scott (the Saipan anthropologist), who visited – along with stepsister Vikki and her friend Loren – visited two weekends ago (when we were in Mt. Vernon, earlier) in Ohio to visit with Bobby, whose health is going up and down. Below is a picture of Scott (who we’ve never met) visiting Bobby, during a lighter moment.

I also got to look at – two weeks later – my Aunt Sandy’s detailed notes about Grandpa Beck’s Riverside hospital emergency room visit. Grandpa was supposed to go to his regular doctor, Dr. Wilson in Westerville, to follow up. Grandpa fainted, had some heart problems, continued eye deterioration, and a fungal infection in his lung that – in principle – should be biopsied and even removed – but neither procedure was recommended at his age (95).

My mother also got some information back from her doctors this week. The decogram (or whatever) she had gotten showed she had osteoporosis and also some spine fractures – apparently like what she and we had read about with “Dowager’s hump” – bent spine. She is to follow up with another scan and doctors and physical therapists shortly.

-- Perry

West Louisville choir

Click below to watch and listen to a bit of the West Louisville Girls' Choir's first number at the Louisville Asset Building Coalition's post-tax season celebration.


Think it over

Click above to watch and listen to a few snippets of the West Louisville Girls Choir's rendition of "Think It Over."

Celebration


Usually twice a year - before and after tax season - (at the United Way headquarters, a former TV station office just blocks from the Presbyterian Community Center) I go to a celebration with the Louisville Asset Building Coalition - that sponors a dozen Volunteer Tax Assistance sites around town - including the one I volunteer at at the Presbyterian Community Center. Mayor Abramson usually stops by, and he did so this time early and briefly, sharing the microphone with Eric Seto, the LABC director. Below, Maylyn, of the Internal Revenue Service, honors Eurana and her Portland Promise Center, a site that passed a quality review. During the past time Decembers, Eurana has trained me.


Eric always lands top-notch entertainment for us. Before Eric and the mayor came on, the West Louisville Girls' Choir performed (see later blog entries). As things wound up, the West Louisville Boys' Choir (modeled after the Harlem Boys Choir - and all African-American unlike the Girls's Choir) performed. The PowerPoint continued to roll in the background. I got a nice T-shirt with that design on the front.


The director of the boys' choir spoke with us.



And the choir sang.



I only saw Charles from the Presbyterian Community Center, until Tenida (camera-shy - angling out of the picture behind Charles) brought me my certificate.



I did manage to catch a picture of Tenida, our volunteer site coordinator, a little later.



I snuck out early - missing the cake - with my T-shirt, certificate, and (new this year) a letter from the mayor - to make it to the dinner with Stephanie, Sarah, and Dean. I was a little relieved there was much less food at the reception/celebration this year (really only cake and a few snacks) - budget cuts? - because I knew I had more to eat at home. Ironically, I've been asked by a couple in our church to help them this week with their taxes (long after the tax season is over). It won't be as easy if I'm not able to use our software. I don' t think they will owe any taxes, in which case they won't owe any penalties.
-- Perry

Over for dinner


We rarely have anyone for dinner (except for during the past three Octobers of Danish exchange students). But this past week we unexpectedly had two groups of people over for dinner. On Tuesday Vincent's prom date from last year, Jessi (pictured below), was visiting the area and stopped by our house and had dinner of chicken and other yummy items (pictured above) Stephanie made in lieu of going to Weight Watchers meeting from me. Vincent had been over to her family's house for dinner several days before.



Thursday we had planned to go to see KY Shakespeare Festival's performance of "Macbeth" in Old Louisville's Central Park with our friend Saran and her new friend Dean, who had once worked at the Presbyterian Center and who had started coming to Crescent Hill church. But a terrible rainstorm struck Louisville early Thursday afternoon, and we decided it might be too wet for the play so we shifted our pre-play picnic dinner to our house and Stephanie cooked some more. A salad/chicken/Latino dish (below) found favor with Sarah (also below) .


We enjoyed getting to know Dean (below) a little better.



Stephanie (below) enjoyed hosting a real little dinner party.



As good as the salad and other parts of the dinner were, the TWO desserts - an apple dish (below) that was much better than it looks (really - no mayonnaise) . . .




. . . and a blueberry dish that several folks (including Vincent - who was sleeping - but ended up having a lot of it - some variants of "murdered Smurfs" - unfamiliar with Smurfs, I was clueless).



Since the weather forecasts had turned out to be wrong and the violent storms had ended by early afternoon - and not returned - I had been pushing us to still go to "Macbeth." But - by the time we finished some of the two desserts - it was already 8:30, and the play had already started. We ended up going on a long walk with the dog - probably longer than 1 1/2 miles - we went though four municipalities (not counting Metro Louisville-Jefferson County). The walk took us down St. Matthews Avenue, across Napanee into Druid Hills, and back on busy Chenoweth Lane, where the estate between Napanee and Leland had a tree downed by the storm that jutted out into the sidewalk. (The storm had knocked the electricity out at a couple of my colleagues' houses.)

It was a great walk, after a big meal. It was supposed to be warm that night, but the storms had cooled things down a little. It started to get dark as we finished. Sarah was gung ho about seeing "Macbeth" the next week. But - as we checked upon returning - the play - like "StrangersExtranjeras" - would finish its run during the weekend coming up - and she and Dean would not be able to see it. It also meant we would have to see it sans them the next night . . .
-- Perry

Taste test


Louisville has been a key United Parcel Service hub and HQ to a whisky distilling company and Kentucky Fried Chicken for several years. A few years ago KFC joined with the restaurant chains that Pepsi formerly owned (Pizza Hut, Taco Bell, Long John Silvers, A&W) and formed Yum! Brands still located in the old KFC complex. Soon after I moved to Louisville, my colleague Ida got me on a list to do taste tests in the Yum! research lab, usually of chicken. When called, you're asked a bunch of questions to see if you qualify. Vincent - now 18 and eligible in principle - recently failed because he was honest and said he hadn't eaten at KFC for ages. I originally went partly with an eye to seeing market research in action - including taking a version of a Web survey in the lab - when I was just becoming familiar with Web surveys. For a standard taste test, you now get paid $20 and get a free lunch. To get there and back and do the test it takes a little more than an hour. Stephanie has also done a two-hour focus group - for which she got paid more - and so both she and I have been part of Yum! rolling out healthier, non-fried food at Long John Silver's and KFC. Several weeks ago - at the start of the summer, when I don't need to come home to walk the dog every day - I taste tested some KFC grilled chicken and barbecue. This was an easier taste test to square with Weight Watchers - though I have taste tested salads for KFC. Usually, you're given two to four different prototypes of something, asked to rate each sample on a bunch of criteria, and then also asked in the end which you prefer and why. It's supposed to be pretty secret. So - pictured above is the outside of the back end of the HQ where the research lab is located - and below is the waiting room. I figured it was too risky to take a picture of the actual lab, where we each walk to a bar where we get samples from the kitchen and then each return to our computer to eat and start answering questions. Many people don't eat that much of the food but I usually eat most of it (a little less if it's REALLY not good for me).

-- Perry


Hello and goodbye


I've participated in half a dozen events in the past month at the Presbyerian Center that have marked personal transitions of some sort or another. A month ago the Mid-KY Presbytery's racial ethnic task force - considering adopting a new name - bid adieu to Stephany Jackson, who has convened us - and welcomed Raafat Girgis, who will convene us. Bill (above), who's just replaced Vincent's former teachers's father, Doug, at Louisville's 2nd Presbyterian Church, attended the meeting, as did Tony (a former World Mission manager who staffs the presbytery's Latino outreach effort) (below).



Stephany (below) - who will be continuing to work with the denomination's Spiritual Formation effort from Maryland - but will no longer be leading a Presbyterian church in Louisville also - led a little more than half of the meeting.



Sally (above and below) had helped organize our presbytery-wide event with Presbyterian Women in late March.



Sarah (below), daughter of Crescent Hill church member Debby and a colleague of Raafat, will be helping us out.



Presbytery Executive Betty Meadows joined us for this meeting. Her colleague Peggy Owens sometimes joins us.



Raafat - who leads the effort to develop multiethnic and multicultural Presbyterian churches - was all smiles as he shared with us a video from Chicago's Second City performing company.



A couple of weeks later folks gathered on the 3rd floor to bid adieu to Vanessa Hawkins, who's worshiped often at our church and is one of a series of people who've worked with the denominations Racial Ethnic and Women's Ministries unit to have departed recently - some more or less voluntarily, some involuntarily. Vanessa is going to Ph.D. theology grad school in Berkeley. It seems like she's been around for a while, but she's actually been working with majority African American congregations for about three years, two years less than I've been around the Center.




Crescent Hill's Hunter Farrell, World Mission's leader, and Curtis Kearns, who was once Vanessa's supervisor's supervisor and is now my supervisor's supervisor, (b0th below) helped bid Vanessa adieu.



I missed some of the festivities when it looked like it was going to take too long.



A big to-do in the Atrium helped us bid adieu to four Office of the General Assembly staffers, including Evelyn Hwang (more on her later) and Joan Richardson, who I'd worked with some in Toastmasters and in a committee review. Evelyn, Joan, and a third woman had worked for he church for many, many years, and were taking voluntary retirement packages.


Gradye Parsons, the Presbyterian church's stated clerk and leader of the Office of the General Assembly - a former client - helped lead the good-byes.


This past Monday in Research Services we celebrated one birthday (of Ida) and the return of Becki, who'd been out on medical leave for several weeks (but whom I didn't get a picture of). Christy helped us celebrate.


So did Joelle (with the birthday person, Ida, in the background).


And Jack and Hilary.



Later this week Asian American Center staff celebrated the 48 years of service to the denomination - including work with presbyteries overseeing the progress of candidates for the ministry - by Evelyn. I'd worked some with Evelyn and colleagues in a study of challenges that Asian American, African American, Latino, and other candidates were facing becoming ordained as ministers and connecting with calls as pastors.



Eric Hoey and the Evangelism and Church Growth ministry area helped provide Asian food, including boat loads (almost literally) of sushi.



Unzu and Phil (like Evelyn - a Chinese American with roots in the metro NYC area) enjoyed the food and company.



So did David, a Korean American who took my old 2nd floor office and has worked with leaders of my father's old Korean American congregation in Torrance.



Eric (below, right) and other colleagues enjoyed the food too.



Lydia (below), who took the place of Bridgett and Noelle, is the latest Asian American to join the staff at the Center.



Below are two Korean American staff (Sun Bai and Hyo Jin) who work with Korean American congregations (in Hyo Jin's case - among others) in the (shrinking) racial ethnic congregational support staff. They have supplied me with databases for past surveys.



Ida - who's worked with Evelyn since the denominational staff's arrival in Louisville in the mid-1980s - sat immediately to Evelyn's left.



The staff gave Evelyn a plaque to honor her for her service and celebrate her collegiality. (As with other recent retirees, it became clear listening to people talk about Evelyn that she'd worked hard over the years to nurture aspiring Asian American (and other ethnic minority) pastors and church leaders.



Jung Ju - who's worked for two publishing wings of the denomination - sat to Evelyn's right.



Also to Evelyn's right was Jieun Kim, wife of the relatively new pastor of the Louisville Korean Presbyterian church (where he works with our friend Sarah) who also works with congregations and candidates for pastoral calls trying to connect with each other. I remember her because she helped try to get me on a list of Korean American staff and figured out my Korean given name and how to spell it correctly in English (Seungdo) and Korean.



Valerie - of mixed African American and Japanese American heritage - and Phil and Evelyn posed as the event was winding down.



This Friday - partly a group I've been working with as clients - the team of staff working on Environmental stewardship issues - celebrated the start of work of Katie Holmes - formerly with the disaster relief office - whose sole responsiblity is going to be working on environmental issues (an area that the national staff quit working on for a while - and a work area I know from glancing at the comments written in to a survey is still somewhat controversial).



Bill, Katie's now supervisor, who used to work on environmental issues for the denomination, introduced her. Carol, Bill's spouse, helped pick out and prepare the bagels.


Happy transitions, Stephany, Raafat, Vanessa, Ida, Becki, Evelyn, Lydia, Bridgett, Noelle, Joan, Shirley, Lesley, and Katie!
-- Perry