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HomeMy WebLinkAboutGrider, SylviaTo her colleagues and peers around the world, Sylvia Grider is known as an expert on spontaneous shrines through her studies of public responses to such events as Princess Diana's death, the Columbine shootings, the Oklahoma. City bombing and the TAIVIU bonfire collapse. But her beguuvngs in the small Texas Panhandle town of Pampa -where she since has been honored in the school district's "Harvester Hall of Fame" -shaped Sylvia into the educator and mentor she has been to hundreds of students while on the faculty at Texas A&M. Sylvia joined the TAMU faculty in 1976 and taught in the Departments of English, History, and Anthropology until her retirement in December, 2006. She has been president of the American and Texas folklore societies, and a director on the Humanities Texas board. Among her many publications, two stand out: "Texas Women Writers: A Tradition of Their Own" and "Let's Hear It: Stories by Texas Women," both co-edited with her good friend, Lou Rodenberger. She also has used her academic prowess as archivist of histori- cal documents for St. Andrew's Episcopal Church in Bryan. Her avocation is rescuing box turtles and numuing them for release in the wild. Sylvia credits several women as being her role models in teaching her that there are "no limits-a woman can achieve whatever she desires."Those include the late "Toffy" Osborne, her Girl Scout leader in Pampa; the late Gardner Osbom, who took the young faculty member "under her wing;" and the late Marge Hillier, who demonstrated with great wit how a woman could succeed in business. She also credits Bryan native Catherine Chatham as modeling how to become more oneself in advancing years. Her 85-year- old turtle, three-legged Stubby, also has been a role model of wisdom and patience, Sylvia says. Through her keen, observing eyes, Sylvia has passed these lessons to students, young colleagues and friends in the community. It is not on a list of committees where Sylvia will be found but rather in one-on-0ne or small group gatherings where people share their hopes and concerns with her listening ear, her caring heart and her patient soul. While Sylvia's work in anthropology has been widely received in aca- demia, it is her more subtle, behind-the-scene gestures as a role model that no doubt will be her legacy. Sylvia Grider