Baltimore Sun

Dianne Ganz Scheper

The Bolton Hill resident was a former coordinato­r and teacher in Johns Hopkins’ Master of Liberal Arts program

- By Frederick N. Rasmussen

Dr. Dianne Ganz Scheper, a scholar and author who was the former program coordinato­r and a teacher in the Johns Hopkins University’s Master of Liberal Arts program, died Feb. 19 of cancer at her Bolton Hill home. She was 82.

“When you were with Dianne, she made you feel as if you were the most important person in the world,” said Melissa Hilbish, who was director of the Master of Liberal Arts program at Hopkins from 2000 to 2017.

“She was able to bring the best out of everyone she was around. She was a joyful person and everything she did came from the heart, and the students adored her. She was just a warm, bright light and a phenomenal person.”

The former Dianne Sheffer, the daughter of Robert Sheffer, a church musician, and his wife, Geraldine Schmucker Sheffer, an educator and homemaker, was born and raised in Watsontown, Pennsylvan­ia, where she graduated from high school.

After graduating from high school in Watsontown, she earned a bachelor’s degree in English literature in 1959 from Gettysburg College, where she had been a magna cum laude graduate and a member of Phi Beta Kappa.

In 1969, she obtained a master’s degree in English literature from the University of Maryland, College Park, with honors, and received a master’s degree in liberal arts on the history of ideas from Johns Hopkins, with honors, in 1979.

Professor Scheper earned a third master’s degree in 1984 in religious studies from the Catholic University of America, where she also obtained a Ph.D. in religious studies in 1998.

From 1971 until 2002, when she retired, she was director of the honors program at Montgomery Community College in Rockville, where she was a founder of the award-winning Montgomery Scholars Program.

In 2007, Professor Scheper returned to work when she began teaching in the master of liberal arts program at Johns Hopkins, where she had an additional job as its program coordinato­r from 2010 to 2015. She also was a lecturer in the Odyssey and Osher programs at Hopkins.

Earlier, she had been an adjunct professor at the Community College of Baltimore County where she taught from 2003 to 2010 in the adult humanities program, which had been establishe­d by her husband, Dr. George L. Scheper, whom she married in 1988. “She often said that teaching in the adult humanities program, represente­d in effect, another graduate education, as she engaged in nuanced book discussion­s with a community of highly educated, sophistica­ted, and humanistic­ally-minded people,” Dr. Scheper wrote in a biographic­al profile of his wife.

After Professor Scheper retired in 2010 from CCCB because of her increased responsibi­lities at Hopkins as coordinato­r master of the liberal arts program, many of her former students from the class continued to meet with her in a monthly book club, her husband said.

Her motto, her husband said, was “Glady learn. Gladly teach.”

“She saw every educationa­l situation as an opportunit­y to build community and commitment to humanistic and environmen­tal values,” her husband wrote.

Professor Scheper’s interdisci­plinary courses ranged widely through the humanities, some of which included titles such as “The Family in World Literature,” “Literature and the Healing Arts,” “The Internatio­nal Short Story,” “Place and Vision in Contempora­ry World Literature,” “Makers of Modern Drama” and “Nature and the American Imaginatio­n.”

In a letter to Professor Scheper, a former Hopkins student, Rita L. Walters, who is vice president for developmen­t and alumni relations at Union Theologica­l Seminary in New York, wrote: “You are simply responsibl­e for my graduate education at Hopkins. Your brilliance at unpacking literature and bringing it to life for this daughter of the red-clay South and the concrete-jungle was beyond the call of duty. But you did so, while allowing me the grace to discover language, and poetry and without apology make it my own.”

She was a prolific contributo­r of essays and reviews to a variety of humanistic journals, some of which included Belles Lettres: A Review of Books by Women, and Women’s Studies Quarterly.

In 2016, Professor Scheper began participat­ing in former Vice President Al Gore’s Climate Reality Corps and brought that perspectiv­e to a variety of institutio­nal and religious establishm­ents. She composed a Lenten meditation in 2019 that she titled “40 Days: 40 Ways/A Guide to a Green Lent,” which was published by the Franciscan Action Network, which has now been linked to a “creation-care” archive of the Global Catholic Climate Movement and the Vatican Library, her husband said.

Professor Scheper had also been active with the nonprofit Maryland Food and Water Watch and for two decades has been a core member of the Baltimore Shambala meditation group and its social and environmen­tal justice outreach programs.

Professor Scheper and her husband shared a love for the outdoors and enjoyed visiting national parks and forests in the United States. They took summer walking tours in Europe that had been arranged by Sherpa, a British company that prepared the maps required for the undertakin­g. Those weeklong trips consisted of daily 10- to 15-mile walks that ended at bed-and-breakfasts, where their luggage had been shipped ahead.

Because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, plans for a memorial service are incomplete.

In addition to her husband of 23 years, she is survived by a son, Brian Ganz of Purcellvil­le, Virginia; a daughter, Dr. Nicole Ganz of Kensington; a stepson, David Scheper of Luthervill­e; a stepdaught­er, Dr. Jeanne Scheper of Irvine, California; a sister, Suzanne Liggett of Berryville, Virginia; and four grandchild­ren. An earlier marriage to Paul Ganz ended in divorce.

Thank you for Tatyana Turner’s article on the Baltimore Animal Rescue and Care Shelter (“Baltimore animal shelter volunteer finds meaning giving special care to dogs,” March 1). Having recently adopted a dog from BARCS, I want to give credit to Matthew Fazzino, assistant director, for the work he did on my behalf, patiently meeting with me three different times until he found what he was sure was the right dog for me. And it was indeed.

The article rightly focuses on Steven Washington’s volunteer work, but I want to acknowledg­e the work of the management and the vets as well. My dog had received a kidney stone operation before I got her, a procedure that would have cost hundreds of dollars at a private veterinari­an. BARCS deserves great credit for its care of animals.

Washington will not have cheerleade­rs for the first time since the NFL’s longest-running cheerleadi­ng team was founded in 1962, with a coed dance team taking its place. The move is part of the organizati­on’s rebranding effort and not related to a confidenti­al settlement reached with members of the 2008 and 2010 cheerleadi­ng teams. Former Laker Girl manager Petra Pope was hired Wednesday as an adviser to use her three-plus decades of NBA experience to revamp the group. “I’ve been asked to create a more modern entertainm­ent team that is inclusive and diverse,” Pope said in a phone interview. “We just want to follow that mode of being more modern and a more modern franchise.” The “First Ladies of Football” program was put on pause after last season unrelated to allegation­s of team employees making inappropri­ate videos from calendar photo shoots of previous members in prior years. Pope said she’s convinced owner Dan Snyder and wife Tanya “are committed to bringing this team to a more modern level.” Snyder vowed last summer to change the culture of the team in light of allegation­s of workplace sexual harassment made by former employees.

 ??  ?? Dr. Dianne Ganz Scheper was a prolific contributo­r of essays and reviews to a variety of humanistic journals.
Dr. Dianne Ganz Scheper was a prolific contributo­r of essays and reviews to a variety of humanistic journals.

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