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  • A new way to serve

    A new way to serve
    By Ngoc Huynh, Staff writer

    Syracuse Post Standard, NY
    May 11 2004

    Janet Munro, of Cazenovia, is a minority among the thousands of Peace
    Corps volunteers.

    The average age of a Peace Corps volunteer is 28; Munro is 69. Before
    she retired as a teacher at East Syracuse-Minoa High School last year,
    Munro knew she wanted to do more, give something back.

    "I've always known that I will reach the stage of my life where I
    have no responsibility," she said, "and shed my garments and I can
    completely forget about me and help other people."

    This mother of five and grandmother of 13 has been reading about
    Armenia in southwestern Asia, where the Peace Corps stationed her.
    She is scheduled to leave in June. She will be trained for three
    months and then serve for two years.

    Her daughter Nancy Chase, of Manlius, is proud of her mom.

    "This (Peace Corps) will allow her to help people and use her talent,"
    Chase said. "She pushes herself to do a lot and she's an inspiration.

    "We're going to miss her," Chase added. "That's the only hard part
    of the whole thing."

    Munro was an English teacher for 28 years, and she has been selected
    to train Armenian English teachers in methodologies and curriculum
    building.

    She will train for three months in Dilijan, a resort town about 68
    miles from the capital, Yerevan. After her training, Munro does not
    know where in Armenia she will be placed.

    Munro said she does not plan to duplicate her comfortable American
    life in Armenia. She knows bucket baths are common and not all toilets
    are modern.

    Barbara Crossett, Munro's colleague and a former student, said Munro
    has a thirst for knowledge.

    "She's like a walking encyclopedia. She knows a lot about a lot
    of different

    subjects. She's very smart," said Crossett, now an English teacher
    at ES-M High School.

    Crossett's children also had Munro as a teacher.

    Armenia is about the size of Maryland, with a population of about 3
    million. It prides itself on being the first nation to formally adopt
    Christianity, in the early fourth century.

    Munro read that Armenia is about 2,700 years old. She said she is
    looking forward to learning about its culture, history and people.

    Early last month, Munro contacted a Peace Corps volunteer in Armenia
    named Dawn Sheppard for advice and suggestions.

    Sheppard's first e-mail to Munro said, "You are going to love
    Armenia. I have never known friendlier people. They will give you
    all they have which isn't much."

    Munro wanted to know whether shorts - which she wears when she jogs
    four times a week - would be acceptable for a woman her age. "No
    Armenians wear shorts, men or women," came the reply.

    To prepare for her trip, Munro has bought a Swiss army knife, books
    and a sleeping bag for temperatures of minus 20 degrees. Temperatures
    in Armenia are similar to those in New York state, but not all homes
    have modern heating systems.

    "I'm not terribly nervous," Munro said, "but I'm beginning to feel
    separation pain."

    There are 7,533 Peace Corps volunteers, according to Bart Kendrick,
    regional public affairs specialist. He said about 6 percent are over
    age 50. He added that people who participate usually change their
    lives upon returning to the United States.

    Some even seek employment with the Peace Corps, Kendrick said.

    "I think it's one of those kinds of experiences that aren't easily
    erased," Kendrick said.
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