°µĶų±¬ĮĻapp

°µĶų±¬ĮĻapp Magazine Seeing is Believing

°µĶų±¬ĮĻapp staff member Lori Call makes her first trip with potterā€™s clay and discovers a different dimension of community

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For eight years, Lori Call has sensed something intangible about °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp, something difficult to describe. As director of foundation and corporate relations, she must find words and stories that express the collegeā€™s character to potential donors. ā€œItā€™s hard to put your finger on it,ā€ she says. ā€œItā€™s just one of those things you know when you see it.

Over time, Lori has gotten to know professors and students. ā€œIā€™ve come to appreciate their intelligence, competence and scholarship as well as their character, compassion and sense of mission in life,ā€ she says.

Lori also witnessed °µĶų±¬ĮĻappā€™s impact when she participated in Potterā€™s Clay in March. For more than 30 years, students have planned and directed this week-long ministry in Ensenada, Mexico.

Her experience began on the drive down with Ed Wyche, father of womenā€™s soccer alumna Jane Wyche ā€™07. ā€œThere must be something in the water at °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp,ā€ Ed said. ā€œThereā€™s not a °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp student Iā€™ve ever met who didnā€™t totally impress me.ā€ A faithful fan, Ed attended every one of Janeā€™s soccer games. For the last few years, he has worked on a Potterā€™s Clay construction team with Dan Ribbens ā€™77 (right), the womenā€™s assistant soccer coach and a master contractor. Dan draws site plans and equipment lists for all of Potterā€™s Clay, and he welcomes students to his home when they need a place to stay.

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Evan Engle ā€™09 went out of his way to welcome Lori and Kati Buehler, associate director of planned giving. A resident assistant in Clark Halls, Evan has worked with first-year students there who lost their rooms and possessions in the Tea Fire.

Evan co-led a construction team, and Lori got to see him handle another difficult situation. The contractor on his team suffered a serious injury, and Evan guided students as they decided whether or not to continue the project. To encourage the pastor of the church under construction ā€” who had already suffered a fire and other problems ā€” the students returned the next day for prayer and worship with the congregation.

Lori arrived at her construction site and was impressed to see leader Maddie Deegan ā€™10 greet Elsa and Fernando and their six children in fluent Spanish. Maddie and co-leader Caleb Bagdanov ā€™12 established a close relationship with this family, for whom the team built a two-story house, (above) during previous visits to Ensenada.

About 30 building contractors and medical and dental professionals join hundreds of students for Potterā€™s Clay each year, donating time, expertise and supplies. ā€œThey were completely devoted to sharing their gifts and passions, putting their own professional practices on hold to mentor students and help strangers,ā€ Lori says.

Lori learned that many students didnā€™t know fellow team members, noting ā€œBy the end of the week, it was clear they had grown to respect and care for each other.ā€

ā€œIs it community that makes °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp so special?ā€ she asks. ā€œWhatever it is, itā€™s there. Itā€™s real. Itā€™s unique. It extends beyond the campus. It draws people in and causes them to reach out to others. You just know it when you see it.ā€

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