Tuesday, July 14, 2015

The Terlingua MOON 
Vol. 26, No. 28 
July 14, 2015 
By MaeWestern

"To those devoid of imagination a blank place on the map is a useless waste; to others, the most valuable part." --- Aldo Leopold


Remembering Father Mel
Missionary, poet, and novelist, The Reverend Melvin W. LaFollette of Redford, TX passed away July 4. Funeral services will be July 23 at 10 am at Santa Inez in the Terlingua Ghost Town. Padre Mel served the Episcopal Diocese of the Rio Grande in the Big Bend since 1984  and was a community organizer and social activist for residents of both sides of the border. He was 85. A lengthy obituary follows at the end of this Moon (next pgs).

School Board meeting Friday
Terlingua CSD School Board meeting is at 7:30 AM Friday morning at Big Bend High School.  They sure do appreciate community participation.  Come show your support.

Espresso ... y Poco Mas
Located at La Posada Milagro in the Ghostown
Noemi and Glenda are back to work :) :) !!!
Serving the best coffee and breakfast!! 
Open Daily 7:30-2pm
WIFI available 

Fresh local eggs!
The Paisano Farm Stand on Hwy 118 has fresh, brown eggs for sale from our free-range flock. Boxes are in a cooler marked ‘EGGS’ and you can pay at the honor box if no one is at the All Energies workshop. Please follow our Facebook page (www.facebook.com/PaisanoFarmStand) to be notified when the eggs have been restocked.

All Energies
All Energies is here to help you with all your alternative energy questions. Solar power, wind power, geothermal & solar thermal systems are our specialty. Give us a call at 371-2950 or email Casey@allenergies.net for more info.

Terlingua Tool Rentals
Jimmy Taylor, owner 371-2621, Call or come by to find your construction needs.

One Day at a Time
AA is not affiliated with any religious organization but is grateful to the Big Bend  Church (north of the post office) for allowing us to meet there. Thursdays, at 7:30 p.m. (Closed Discussion). Anyone who has a desire to stop drinking or remain sober is welcome. Literature is available in our local library. Carpooling may be available to Alpine AA (Wednesdays) and Al-Anon (Thursdays) meetings. Contact phone numbers are posted on the church doors.

CALL FOR VISUAL ARTISTS
Announcing the 2nd Annual Tolbert-Fowler Chili Cook-off Artfest, to be held on Saturday, Nov. 7, during the cook-off behind the Terlingua Store.  Artists may show and sell any original artwork except jewelry (due to a prior contract). You may request the guidelines and information about getting a booth with one of these methods:
 Visit the Terlingua Visual Arts Facebook page: Join that page to keep posted of new information and other arts news in the area. Email Mary Paloma Diesel at: spottedslinky55@gmail.com.

Call to request the guidelines and booth information: Mary at 432-371-2999; Dani at 405-795-3905;  Molly at 707-294-4303.  Space will be limited, and local area artists will be given preference. The deadline for requesting a booth is Saturday, August 15.

Sophie needs a forever home
SOPHIE was featured in the Terlingua Moon three months ago but the timing wasn’t right, since she is still available for adoption. She remains perhaps the sweetest, softest and gentlest gal there. SOPHIE is a mostly white 3-year-old lab/heeler mix with floppy ears and soulful brown eyes. She is very intimidated at the shelter but opens up much more when out of that scene. She wants nothing more than a leisurely life in a real home with lots of love. SOPHIE will reward her owner with devotion and a very special bond. SOPHIE is good with other dogs and will gain confidence away from the shelter. She loves to take walks and is happy to keep it mellow. AAS is open M-F from 10am to 6pm (closed 1-2pm), located on the east side of Alpine on Old Marathon Road. SOPHIE (and all the dogs at AAS) is on Petfinder at: https://www.petfinder.com/petdetail/31701709
For more info, email heatherthemule@gmail.com
UPDATE ON ROCKY (featured in last week’s Moon): Rocky was adopted to a family in Terlingua on Friday and is doing well. This is great for Rocky but also for the Shelter which had a dog in every available kennel.

Water & Septic Grant
Study Butte Water Supply Corporation is applying for a grant through Brewster County.  If awarded, the grant will provide first time water and septic to person(s) who own, have a contract for deed, or a lifelong lease on property within our service area.  If you are interested in receiving a water membership and/or septic, with all fees and installation paid for through this grant, please contact Study Butte Water Supply Corporation at 432.371.2933.

Complete obituary for Father Mel:
The Rev. Melvin Walker La Follette was born In Evansville, Indiana, on September 7, 1930. He lived all of childhood in Ridgeville, Indiana. His father, Melvin Lester La Follette, was an electrician for the local telephone company who lost his job during the Great Depression. Because of this, his mother, Genevieve Farr La Follette, found employment as the first grade teacher at the Grant County Elementary School. For many years, her guidance shaped young Melvin. 
     
After graduating high school in 1948, he then served his summers in the U.S. Forestry Service. He became frustrated with his mother when she refused to grant him permission to join an elite band of men known as the smoke jumpers. He had to compromise with her and remain part of the ground crew. He assisted in the Mann Gulch Montana fire of 1948 where 13 smoke jumpers suffered a terrible tragedy. He reconciled with mother shortly after that event.
The same year he was accepted to Purdue University until the Korean War broke out, and he enlisted in the U.S. Navy and served as a member of the medical corps. He served in a recovery ward for men wounded overseas. 

After leaving the Navy, he received a Bachelor of Arts Degree from the University of Washington. He then returned to graduate school where he attended the University of Iowa’s Writing Project. He received a Master’s Degree in Literature and Creative Writing. It was there that he was instructed by the poet John Berryman, who became an important influence in his decision to become a professional writer.
     
To support his writing, he accepted a position at the University of British Columbia. There he was sought out by Dylan Thomas, a fellow poet, to be his guide in the Columbian Rockies. La Follette continued writing short stories and poems that appeared in Poetry Magazine, the Beloit Poetry Review. Dame Marianne Moore encouraged his modernist style, although some critics disliked his adherence to formal styles like the sonnet and the ballad, but he himself considered his work surrealistic because most of his poetry had deeper dreamlike imagery mingled with adherence to traditional writing styles. He believed that poets should not abandon tradition just for the sake of modernity.
       
In 1957, he accepted a teaching position at the Oregon State University. It was there that he courted and married Alice Louise Simpson in 1958, with whom he shared 26 years of marriage.
     
He then moved to San Jose, California, where he continued writing poetry and co-founded a small short-lived publishing company, The Spensarian Press. 
     
While an instructor at San Jose State University, he attended The University of California doctoral program. There he had a close personal friendship with fellow poet Allen Ginsburg. He enjoyed listening to beatnik poetry on occasion, but La Follette preferred a formal style of verse for his own writing. He was also dismayed by the abuse of drugs that was passed off as part of the creative process. For this he penned Elegy To A Beatnik, a precautionary poem in free verse.
   
In 1962, his son Stephen was born. At that same time, he felt a tremendous calling from God to do more for his fellow man. After being examined and accepted by a committee led by Bishop James Pike, he left the University of California without receiving his doctorate, vacated his seat at San Jose State University and moved his growing family to New Haven, Connecticut.  
     
To support himself during seminary, he taught undergraduate courses at Yale and also worked as a hotel clerk. He also continued writing poetry and prose, although the majority of his time was spent studying in seminary. While at seminary, a second child Joseph was born in 1964.
     
After being ordained a deacon in 1966 and later a priest in 1967, he was assigned as a curate at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church in Auburn, New York. His duties included a prison ministry and chaplaincy at the local hospital.
   
During most of his adult life, he was a member of the civil rights movement and worked to end discrimination against minorities. He joined in many anti-war and civil rights marches in Washington, D.C., while still a seminarian. 
     
He then returned to California where he accepted a position as associate rector of St. Francis Episcopal Church in San Jose. While participating in his duties, he came across ancient manuscript that had an intriguing story of a heroic enchanted wolf. He decided to write an adaptation, which he worked on whenever his creative juices were flowing.
In 1971, he accepted the challenge of turning a storefront mission into a full-fledged church. He became the Vicar of St. Patrick’s Episcopal Church in Santa Rosa, California.  Unfortunately, this position was plagued with obstacles, but despite these he was true to his word and secured land and financing for the growing parish.
   
He tried to include an Hispanic congregation and seriously learned Spanish to start a ministry. Unfortunately, his diocesan leadership didn’t see eye to eye with him. He then considered a position in Ecuador, but he could not convince Alice to leave the United States. Meanwhile, after years of reworking his manuscript, he found to his dismay that his literary agent could not get any publishers interested in his unique manuscript. He was offered many writing jobs, but he was an artist and turned them down.
   
At the same time, he had a falling out with his bishop and left active ministry in 1978, but not before finalizing plans to build the church.
   
Being a talented educator, he secured a dream job at Chapman University as a PACE Professor for the U.S. Navy. While instructing sailors aboard ship, he travelled the Pacific and Indian oceans. Although he was not active duty he was awarded an expeditionary medal for his work on the USS Midway during the Iran Hostage Crisis. He recounted that Iranian fighter planes tested the ship’s defenses, and at one point a rescue operation failed when it was shot down over Iran. 
         
In the 1983, he left his teaching job at Chapman University to be closer to his elderly father in Roswell, New Mexico, while he finalized his divorce to his wife, Alice. She finally had had enough of his absenteeism and when he offered to once again settle down, she recanted until she discovered it meant moving to the Philippines.
     
While in Roswell he began attending St. Stephen’s, he began to rediscover his love of the ministry. The people of that parish gave him encouragement to seek another position in the Episcopal Church.
   
Soon after he took a job at University of Texas at El Paso and began helping out in the Hispanic Ministry at the Pro-Cathedral of St. Clement. He was offered the opportunity to fill in for his friend Father William Muniz. 
   
For Father Mel, the community that he served, the distances he had to travel, and the tremendous obstacles that he faced were all fair game. 
     
In 1984, he was installed as the Reverend Canon of the Trans Pecos. With that he became the circuit-riding priest of the Rio Grande. He enjoyed serving at St. Paul’s in Marfa, St. James in Alpine, and he especially enjoyed the parish of Saint Jude’s in Terlingua Ranch. He felt at home whether in an air conditioned parish hall or a tiny chapel crammed with sweating but happy people waving their paperback Prayer Books to keep cool. 
   
He also worked with the Diocese of Northern Mexico and provided opportunities to seminarians from Monterey to assist in Vacation Bible School. He held VBS in Ojinaga, Palomas, Lajitas and Boquillas Del Carmen.
     
Every Christmas he provided a fiesta for the children of each and every parish, which included gift bags of fresh fruits and nuts, toys, household goods, clothing and a piñata hand stuffed by himself. When his white truck came down the road during Christmas time, there was a dash to the mission. He would get home early in the morning and then do it again.
   
For a while he even rode a horse to some out of the way places, although he preferred riding in a rowboat. He had a growing ministry that had the rhythm of a living poem.
 
Starting in 1985, he compiled a collection of poems titled, Tales From The Indian Ocean about life on a ship during the Iran Conflict. Once again, he encountered friends lost under tragic circumstances and sought to preserve a part of their memory in poems.
   
In 1988, he purchased a small travel agency in Presidio. He hoped to grow the business into a pathway for active retirement. But to his dismay, the way people book vacations was rapidly changing. 

In 1990, Texas A&M named him rural minister of the year. He was interviewed in many news articles and was the subject of two episodes of the Texas Country Reporter. 
     
In 1992, he tried to expand his role to rural development and helped a group of local farmers try to make a dairy goat cooperative. Father Mel was completely heartbroken when young shepherd Esequiel Hernandez was shot by U.S. Marines while tending goats. He traveled to Washington, D.C. one last time to demand Justice.
     
In 1998, weakness from the early stages of heart disease and arthritis prevented him from a more active role, so the cooperative was dissolved.
 
He retired to his trailer on a small tract of land. Some of his hobbies included poultry husbandry, bird-watching and horticulture. He continued to travel throughout the Caribbean in a small sailboat and second class train in South America.

He continued part time in the ministry mainly serving the chapel of St. Mary and St Joseph in Lajitas, Texas.
   
In later years he spent a significant amount of time writing an historical novel set in the era of the Republic of Texas. He insisted on finishing his book with a feverish pace because he knew he had congestive heart disease. Just weeks after finishing his manuscript, he called the paramedics when he no longer could tolerate his untreated condition.
     
He passed away on July 4th, 2015, in Odessa Texas of heart failure. He is survived by his brother James (Ruth), sons Stephen and Joseph (Erica), and seven grandchildren, Christopher, Christin, Jacob, Jason, Josiah, Leila and Leslie.
A funeral service for Canon LaFollette will be held at 10 a.m., July 23 at the Church of Santa Inez in the Terlingua Ghostown. The church is located on top of the hill behind the Terlingua porch in the Ghostown. 

Memorial contribution may be made to San Miguel Arcangel Episcopal Church, 907 Adams Ave., Odessa, TX  79761, The Rev. Alberto Moreno, Vicar. Fr. Alberto tended Fr. Mel in his last days and San Miguel Arcangel is a mission church where many of Fr. Mel’s former church members from the border now worship.


THERE WILL BE NO PAPER DISTRIBUTION OF THIS MOON.  PLEASE PRINT AND GIVE TO NEIGHBORS. 

Have some news you want included in the Moon? Send your submissions to the Terlingua Moon by Monday noon to be included in that week’s edition. Email to terlinguamoon@gmail.com. Next week’s Moon by La Catrina!

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