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Rosalie Rivenbark - Way Vice President - Leading the Emergency Cutbacks From the Frontline |
Staff housing for Way
staff families normally consists of crowded double wide trailers on Way
grounds. Two families per trailer is normal. Children from the two families are
often mixed in the same bedroom.
The families will often
share bathrooms, have a communal kitchen and dining area, and have a communal
style living room.
Housing for Singles and
Couples with no children is located in the Founders Hall dormitory. This
building currently houses almost one hundred and seventy people. Rooms here are
very small. This building (a dormitory) was designed for Way Corps in training
but now serves as permanent housing for these staff.
Rooms in Founders Hall
are not equipped with running water (communal bathrooms are used), or
telephones (non-private hallway telephones are the only telephones that most
Way staff have access to) or cable tv (by comparison, Way trustees have
satellite tv).
It is normal for a couple
with no children to live in a room that measures about 10 foot wide by about 18
foot long (approx). The room will have painted brick walls, inexpensive carpet,
and institutional style furniture (metal student desks etc.). These rooms are
home to the staff person for the duration of his or her assignment - frequently
five years or more.
The rooms afford little
privacy for married couples and as stated earlier, have no bathroom / shower
facilities. It is common to overhear couples trying to enjoy some intimacy in
their room while one might be making a telephone call from the phone on the
wall outside their room.
Private conversations are
virtually impossible for the average staff person at The Way. Most rooms have
inadequate sound proofing and most offices and work areas are shared. This
obviously helps keep people in check as they cannot freely speak for fear of being
discovered.
These rooms typically
have two closets, one which can be used for clothing and one which many
people use to house their toaster ovens, microwaves and mini refrigerators.
Way staffers learn to
adapt to these spartan settings by installing shelving units in their closets
to turn them into pseudo-pantries, and it is quite common for people to prop
their beds up on concrete blocks or five gallon buckets so as to provide more
room for storage under the bed.
A very small storage
space is provided for each staff person in either the Wierwille Barn or in the
Way Farm III barn. Neither of these buildings are climate controlled and so
personal belongings are often irreparably damaged. Bats, skunks, raccoons are
also to blame for damage done to personal belongings as these buildings are not
sealed off from the elements. Water leaks from rain and snow are a regularly
occurring event, also leading to damage of personal belongings.
The Way Farm III barn
will shortly be sold as a part of the "emergency" at The Way and so
the remaining storage at Wierwille Barn will become even more crowded.
The housing dilemma for
the staffers will only be made worse soon when The Way sells many of its
off-grounds properties in New Knoxville, Ohio. The staff living in these
properties will be moved back on grounds and housing will be found for them
there.
Currently they are
attempting to sell as many as eight of their properties. Among them the Way
Farm III at Botkins Road,
the Kipp farm (birthplace and family farm to Dorothea Wierwille), the
"Airport House" which is home to Vice President Emeritus Don
Wierwille.
In a move that further
demonstrates that the Wierwille family are no longer in power at The Way, Don
and Wanda Wierwille will be moving back in with Mrs. Dorothea Wierwille at the
home of the founder of The Way, Victor Paul Wierwille.
Many Way staff are very
unhappy with their housing that they have been assigned to. The Way Trustees
have reminded the staff that they are on a "fast" of sorts.
They are to be thankful for their housing.
Rosalie Rivenbark at a
recent Founders Hall staff meeting reminded the staff that they lived in a
beautiful building with many privileges. She then delivered the polite threat,
that certain of those privileges would be revoked if the staff didn't take
proper care of the building.
It seems that some staff
had left on a stove burner accidentally on a couple of occasions, and some
unknown individual had defaced a bathroom stall with the famous
"F--k" word.
Staff were threatened
with the withholding of their cooking privileges if things didn't get back on
track.
Way Trustees by
comparison live in luxury.
- Craig
Martindale lives in a multi-million dollar log home set in the patrolled
seclusion of the Way Woods. The home has been carefully removed using (digital
technology) from the recent Way publication - Pictorial Display Book - which is
a photographic tour of the grounds of The Way International.
Martindale's home was
built by Ed Hobbs of Grand Lake Log Homes (builder of the Family Commons
building in Camp Gunnison).
A visit to the Grand Lake Log homes
web site quickly shows the type of home that Martindale lives in. Camp Gunnison
is also displayed at the Grand Lake Log Home site.
Martindale had a private
office built in 1996 - 1997.
This office is used by
him alone. His secretary uses an office in the O.S.C. building. This one man,
one user office adjoins his home (where he has another office).
It is widely believed
that this office building cost The Way International slightly under
$2,000.000.00.
The Martindales had
promised all the staff at The Way International a tour of this building upon
completion but this never came to pass.
Some staff speculated
that they were embarrassed to show the building due to its excessive luxury.
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Rosalie
Rivenbark lives a short distance from the grounds of The Way International. She
lives at:
Her home is a beautiful three bedroom home, complete with its own private swimming pool.
Rosalie lives in the main
section of the home on her own, but until recently allowed two Corps ladies Sharon Crowther and Janet Myracle, to live in her one
bedroom basement. In unconfirmed reports, Janet and Sharon who recently
(1999-2000) moved away from the New Knoxville area on a Way Corps assignment,
have now ended their involvement with TWI and are now living in Florida.
Although Way staffers
have been asked to cut back on large purchases, Rosalie purchased an expensive
new sailing boat in March 1999. She will use it to sail on Lake St. Mary's.
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As the
newest Trustee at The Way, John Reynolds lives in a single wide trailer. The
trailer underwent extensive refinishing work prior to the arrival of the
Reynolds. However, it is clear that John Reynolds does not enjoy the lifestyle
that his fellow Trustees enjoy.
John has impressed many
people at The Way with his demeanor and his "what's good for the goose is
good for the gander" mentality.
John is the only Trustee
who is to be seen standing in nightly food line at The Way.
The other Trustees have meals prepared for them
by their private in-home staffs.
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