Kimberly D. Schmidt Archives - EMU News /now/news/tag/kimberly-d-schmidt/ News from the ݮ community. Thu, 10 Nov 2016 15:50:53 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Washington Community Scholars’ Center opens door to D.C. employment /now/news/2014/washington-community-scholars-center-proves-good-springboard-to-d-c-employment/ Fri, 05 Sep 2014 17:39:50 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=21440 Stephen Quenzer was always intrigued by the idea of living in a “big city.” So right after earning his bachelor’s degree in computer science in May, the Visalia, California native spent the summer on his cross-cultural experience at the .

What he discovered in those 10 weeks as an intern surprised him – and prepared him make the commitment to begin his career in Washington D.C.

“I finished the WCSC program on Friday and started my new job on Monday,” Quenzer said, shortly after an evening commute to his newly rented apartment in the Northwest neighborhood of Petworth. “I thought WCSC would be a great experience of living in a big city for two and a half months. I couldn’t imagine doing it for a long period of time, and I was never expecting to stay.”

Now director of technology at , Quenzer manages the outsourced development of the D.C.-based start-up company, which offers personalized online programs that teach consumers how to improve their financial situation.

In an odd twist, Quenzer’s new job isn’t a result of his summer internship with , working on the Christian publication’s website. Instead it was the result of networking opportunities provided by WCSC alumnus Joel Murray ‘14 and the program’s former associate director, Sheldon C. Good.

WCSC internships regularly lead to offers of full-time employment, according to program director .

This was the case for Murray, a business administration major who had interned the previous semester with FELA. After graduating in May, Murray accepted full-time employment with the company. He then contacted Quenzer about doing freelance web design and consulting.

“I came in several times throughout the summer and got to know the company better,” Quenzer said. “And it turned out they needed someone with my skills.”

Quenzer had some real concerns, however. “Ninety percent of start-ups fail, so there was a real risk for me to take out an annual lease on an apartment in Washington D.C. without some assurance of financial stability,” he said.

Discussions with Good, who was a friend of the company’s founder, allayed his concerns.

“That was really helpful,” Quenzer said. “The connections I had through WCSC, and the networking opportunities, really helped me make that decision and feel it was a good one.”

Quenzer also feels more comfortable in Washington D.C. than he ever imagined, thanks to the immersive, cross-cultural experience of living in WCSC’s intentional community as an independent, working adult.

“Organizing house jobs, sharing money to buy food, learning how to get along with people from different backgrounds – all of that was a really valuable experience,” Quenzer said. “Some have lived in a city before and some haven’t, and everyone is in a different place in their lives and you have to exist together. You get the total experience of working full-time, taking public transportation, enjoying what the city has to offer. It really gave me an idea of what it would be like.”

“We are proud of Stephen’s accomplishments,” Schmidt said. “He will join many former students who, through the WCSC, have come to the city, found good work, and are now making valuable contributions to our local neighborhoods.”

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‘Love God With Entire Being,’ EMU President Exhorts /now/news/2004/love-god-with-entire-being-emu-president-exhorts/ Wed, 01 Sep 2004 04:00:00 +0000 http://www.emu.edu/blog/news/?p=702  Brian Martin Burkholder leads prayer, commissioning cross-cultural group
Brian Martin Burkholder, EMU campus pastor, leads in prayer for the EMU cross-cultural group who will spend fall semester in a cross- cultural seminar in Europe, primarily Italy and Switzerland.
Photo by Jim Bishop

On one occasion, when asked which commandments in the scriptures were most important, Christ responded, “Love God with your heart, mind, soul and strength, and love your neighbor as yourself.”

On Wednesday morning Sept. 1, the first day of the fall semester classes at ݮ, President Loren E. Swartzendruber outlined what this might mean for the campus community.

“As a Christian university in the Anabaptist tradition, with roots deep in the liberal arts, we intend to love God with heart, mind, soul, and strength,” Swartzendruber told students, faculty and staff in an opening convocation address. “We dare to say that our love for God is expressed holistically. We aim for balance in our approach to faith.

“Someone has suggested that if we love God with only a part of our personalities, we will in turn only receive a part of what God wants to be for us,” Swartzendruber said.

To love God with our whole being, he continued, means “to love with your heart, the center of your emotions; your soul, the essence of one’s spiritual being; your mind, the intellect; and your strength.

“Loving God with our hearts is perhaps the easiest of the four ways Christ identifies to love God,” he said. “It is our culture

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