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October 14, 2025, Adrian, Michigan – Although holidays occur annually, we are not in the same relationship with them from year to year. This workshop for writers of all levels of experience explores our anticipation of holidays and our holiday memories, noting how each affects the other.
The workshop is from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. Saturday, November 29, 2025, at Weber Retreat and Conference Center. Join in writing, sharing your work, listening to the writing of other participants, and giving and receiving feedback.
The workshop is facilitated by Adrian Dominican Sister Tarianne DeYonker, OP, a certified Amherst Writers and Artists Facilitator.
The cost is $35. Registration is required. Visit www.webercenter.org and click on “programs,” call 517-266-4000, or email [email protected]. Limited scholarships are available.
Weber Center is on the campus of the Adrian Dominican Sisters Motherhouse, Adrian, Michigan. On East Siena Heights Drive, turn into the driveway between Adrian Rea Literacy Center and the solar panel-covered carport. Follow the signs to Weber Center. For information, call the Weber Center at 517-266-4000.
October 8, 2025, Tucson, Arizona – Sisters Charlotte Anne Swift, OP, and Lois Paha, OP, were honored on September 12, 2025, by the Diocese of Tucson, Arizona, during the Cornerstone Gala of the diocese’s Catholic Foundation for their many years of service to the people of the diocese.
“From the beginning, it was overwhelming,” said Sister Charlotte Anne, who ministered a total of 56 years in the Diocese of Tucson – six in her early years of ministry and 50 years when she returned to the diocese. “I don’t feel worthy of it myself,” she said. “We come here and we do our jobs. I kept telling myself that it was all the Sisters over the years” who were being honored. In her remarks, Sister Charlotte Anne noted that 150 Adrian Dominican Sisters have served in the Diocese of Tucson since 1910.
While they were humble in accepting the recognition, both Sisters appreciated the gala organized by the Foundation and the support they received from the 835 people who attended – including Adrian Dominican Sisters Mary Jean Williams, OP, Kathleen “Katie” McGrail, OP, Peg Albert, OP, and Corinne Sanders, OP. “It was a most memorable evening.”
Sister Charlotte Anne’s ministry – on the day of her first profession of vows – was as a teacher at Loretto School in Douglas, Arizona. After serving in California and other parts of Arizona, she returned to the diocese in 1975 to serve as the Principal of Santa Cruz School in Tucson until 1986, and for 15 years as Executive Director of a Project YES (Youth Enrichment and Support).
Since then, Sister Charlotte Anne has served as administrative assistant to Bishop Gerald F. Kicanas, continuing to serve him even after Bishop Edward J. Weisenburger became the Bishop of Tucson in 2017. Now that Bishop Weisenburger has been installed as the Archbishop of Detroit in March 2025, Bishop Kicanas oversees the Diocese of Tucson until a new bishop is appointed. “I asked for part-time” for Bishop Emeritus Kicanas, Sister Charlotte said, “but now it’s more than that because he’s no longer part-time.”
Sister Lois began her remarks by being grateful for the Sisters who came before us. She came to minister in the Diocese of Tucson in 2005 to serve as the Director of Formation. “The main program was for the formation of permanent deacons and lay ecclesial ministers,” she said. When the current cohort graduates in June 2026, she said, the program will have trained 121 permanent deacons and 80 lay ministers.
Sister Lois also works with the wives of the deacon candidates. “When I did my doctoral work, I created a curriculum for the formation of the deacons’ wives to walk and talk with them about what will change in their lives once their husbands said yes to the bishop – how they would be public figures,” she said.
Sister Lois came to the Diocese of Tucson with backgrounds in formation, liturgy, and the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA). By 2009, she said, she was named Director of Pastoral Services, Formation, and Liturgy. Among the highlights of her ministry in Tucson was hosting the Southwest Liturgical Conference Study Week in 2008 and 2020.
Both Sister Charlotte Anne and Sister Lois reflected on their benefits and learnings from their ministries in the diocese. “Coming back here, I felt I was coming home to the Hispanic community because it has been part of my early years in Douglas,” she said. “I appreciate the Hispanic culture and the way they live and the family orientation, and I have many good friends here,” she said. “It’s easy to feel part of this community.”
Sister Charlotte Anne also appreciates the connection she has with many of the people in the diocese. “I do some counseling and help in whatever way I can,” she said. “You’re with the people and you hear what’s going on with them and you do what you can.”
Sister Lois said she has also learned from her work with many of the cultures in the Diocese of Tucson. In her formation with prospective deacons and lay ecclesial ministers, “I’ve learned to listen to their stories first before pushing them further in terms of preparation for ministry. I’ve learned the differences their culture plays and how they learned their faith from their ancestors – their grandparents and the elders in their family.”
Read more about Sisters Lois and Charlotte Anne here and watch a tribute video below.
Caption for above feature photo: Attending the 2025 Cornerstone Gala hosted by the Catholic Foundation of the Diocese of Tucson are, from left, Denis Fitzgibbons, Catholic Foundation Board President; Bishop Gerald Kicanas of Tucson; Sister Lois Paha, OP; Donal Drayne, Gala Chair; Sister Charlotte Anne Swift, OP; and Elizabeth Bollinger, Catholic Foundation Executive Director.
Photo Courtesy of the Catholic Foundation of the Diocese of Tucson