Retiring faculty and chaplain influenced thousands of students

From left, Paul Kostyu, John Gatz, Lynette Carpenter, Tom Burns, and Amy McClure outside their reception at the Ross Museum.

As baby boomers are beginning to swell the ranks of retirees across the nation, an unusually large number of faculty, along with a prominent staff member, retired at the end of the 2018-19 academic year.

Eight fulltime faculty ended long and distinguished careers in May, each receiving the Adam Poe Medal in recognition of their dedicated service to their students and their profession. And in July, Chaplain Jon Powers retired after three decades as the head – and heart – of religious life at OWU.

Retiring faculty included:

Jon Powers dressed as Reverend Adam Poe.

Also retiring this year was Tom Burns, part-time professor of English and former director of Perkins Observatory. Embracing the idea of the liberal arts, Burns’ career included work as a writing teacher, columnist, and astronomer.

Finally, Chaplain Jon Powers retired at the end of July. Since he joined OWU in 1988, Powers has spearheaded and supported much positive change, including the formation of interfaith mission teams, the creation of the Office of Community Service Learning, and the development of the Columbus Initiative, which pairs Ohio Wesleyan student-tutors with children at Linden STEM Academy in Columbus.


Return to the Fall 2019 OWU Magazine