Tue, 23 May 2006 Elinor Hamilton is a 12th generation Quaker, descending from some of the earliest Friends in America, in Virginia. She is interviewed, along with her daughter, Sarah Hamilton Maines, by the High School First Day Class of Live Oak Friends Meeting on May 8, 2005. We learn of the line of ancestors - the Pierponts, Chews and Kings - and their participation in the anti-slavery movement. Comments[0] |
Mon, 22 May 2006 Dailey Burnham Terrell was born in Port Arthur, TX before moving to Landsdown, Pennsylvania as a young child. He was raised a Methodist. he began attending Quaker Meeting while at college at Swarthmore. In 1942 he went to Mexico with AFSC. The High School First Day Class at Live Oak Friends Meeting interviews Burnham on May 1, 2005. Comments[0] |
Thu, 4 August 2005 Chris was born in Cedar Rapids, IA. He did his undergraduate work at Earlham College. This interview was conducted by the High School First Day Class of Live Oak Friends Meeting on May 22, 2005. Comments[2] |
Sun, 24 July 2005 Our guest in this interview is Peterson Toscano. Peterson's spiritual experiences as an adolescent led to his association with Christians who encouraged him to deny and change his attraction to other males. He is the author and performer of the one-man comedy, "Doin' Time in the Homo No Mo Halfway House--How I Survived the Ex-Gay Movement!" He is a member of Hartford Friends Meeting in West Hartford, Connecticut.You can learn more about him and his performance on his website: http://www.homonomo.com Or check out his blog: http://a_musing.blogspot.com/ Comments[3] |
Wed, 4 May 2005 I did not make this recording. This is simply a pointer to to the website of Beyond Intractability, where I discovered it. Elise Boulding, 82 years old at the time of this recording in 2003, talks about her peacemaking work, networking and imaging the future workshops. Elise and her husband Kenneth who died in the mid-1990's, are two Quakers whose major contributions to the world included much on conflict resolution and peacemaking. Link to Elise Boulding Category: general -- posted at: 5:43 PM Comments[2] |
Tue, 29 March 2005 Adrien Niyongabo, an African Quaker from Burundi who survived the genocide, is now working at the grassroots level in the villages and displaced person camps to bring his Hutu and Tutsi countrymen and women back together. Hear his talk from March 28, 2005, on the Texas Southern University Campus in Houston, Texas.Mr. Niyongabo is the African Coordinator for Trauma Healing and Nonviolence Training for the African Great Lakes Initiative (AGLI) of Friends' Peace Teams. In Part 1 Mr. Niyongabo talks about the colonial roots of the conflict, the division of Hutu and Tutsi, and the cycle of violence up to 1993. Comments[0] |
Tue, 29 March 2005 In this, Part II, Niyongabo talks about the efforts to reconcile and heal his country. Comments[1] |
Tue, 29 March 2005 Here is Part 3: Questions and Answers, including the concluding words from his talk. When asked why he would turn to European culture, Quakers, for solutions rather than African culture he answered: "I would not really be afraid to say that looking at the Quaker principles and knowing what my culture is, I would say that my ancestors were Quakers." Comments[0] |
Sun, 27 March 2005 Albert Munn, a long-time member of Live Oak Friends Meeting in Houston, Texas, is interviewed by the High School First Day class on October 3, 2004. Albert shares some of his experiences growing up in Vancouver, British Columbia, and Seattle, Washington, education, military service, life as a Catholic monk and becoming a Quaker.Comments[0] |
Wed, 23 March 2005 Joan Thompson Libby was an early member of Live Oak Friends Meetings, in Houston, Texas. She is interviewed by the High School First Day class on October 17, 2004. Comments[0] |

Elinor Hamilton is a 12th generation Quaker, descending from some of the earliest Friends in America, in Virginia. She is interviewed, along with her daughter, Sarah Hamilton Maines, by the High School First Day Class of Live Oak Friends Meeting on May 8, 2005.
Dailey Burnham Terrell was born in Port Arthur, TX before moving to Landsdown, Pennsylvania as a young child. He was raised a Methodist. he began attending Quaker Meeting while at college at Swarthmore. In 1942 he went to Mexico with AFSC. The High School First Day Class at Live Oak Friends Meeting interviews Burnham on May 1, 2005.
Chris was born in Cedar Rapids, IA. He did his undergraduate work at Earlham College.
Our guest in this interview is Peterson Toscano. Peterson's spiritual experiences as an adolescent led to his association with Christians who encouraged him to deny and change his attraction to other males. He is the author and performer of the one-man comedy, "Doin' Time in the Homo No Mo Halfway House--How I Survived the Ex-Gay Movement!" He is a member of Hartford Friends Meeting in West Hartford, Connecticut.
Adrien Niyongabo, an African Quaker from Burundi who survived the genocide, is now working at the grassroots level in the villages and displaced person camps to bring his Hutu and Tutsi countrymen and women back together. Hear his talk from March 28, 2005, on the Texas Southern University Campus in Houston, Texas.
Albert Munn, a long-time member of Live Oak Friends Meeting in Houston, Texas, is interviewed by the High School First Day class on October 3, 2004. Albert shares some of his experiences growing up in Vancouver, British Columbia, and Seattle, Washington, education, military service, life as a Catholic monk and becoming a Quaker.