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’31 Marguerite Lindley Wilgus lives in Anacoco, La. ’38 Cecil Cheney reports that his wife of 63 years, Alwilda, passed away last year. He lives in Rio Rancho, N.M., with his newly adopted rescue dog, Banjo. ’44 Barbara Mason Wilson is now a widow, and lives in Greenport, N.Y. ’47 Albert Ferguson is a retired vascular surgeon living in Surprise, Ariz. ’48 Max Morath performed “Ragtime and Again,” a tour of ragtime’s heyday (1890-1920s) at The York Theatre Company in New York City in March. ’51 Don Bates lives in Colorado Springs, where he recently celebrated the 45th anniversary of Don Bates Insurance. • Dorothy Rawlings Nelson, who passed away in 1998, and her husband, Richard, spent a lifetime collecting Native American art. The University of Minnesota in Duluth exhibited their collection and it is now ready to travel to other museums around the country. ’52 Dick Stacy and his wife, Meezie Webb Stacy ’39, are members of the board of directors of the Ute Indian Museum in Montrose, Colo., where Meezie also served as its secretary. Dick is also the current treasurer of the Montrose AARP Chapter #1402, and they both deliver Meals-on-Wheels one week every month when they are in town. They are enjoying retirement in “the beautiful western-slope area of Colorado.” ’53 Rosemary Levno retired in 1995 after serving as a school administrator in both Arizona and Alaska. She lives in Anchorage, where she is recovering from a car accident. She would love to hear from friends and can be contacted at P.O. Box 10-3599, Anchorage, AK 99510. • Walt Stone is professor emeritus of psychiatry at the University of Cincinnati. He now lives in Mill Valley, Calif., where he is a clinical professor at the University of California in San Francisco. ’54 50th Reunion, Oct. 8-10, 2004!Dolores Staskal Hicks was honored by the Salvation Army and Crestmont College for her service to the community. She lives in Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif. ’55 Jim Eldredge is C.E.O. of National Leasing and Investment Corporation in Clive, Iowa. • Carol Witwer Worth retired seven years ago from a nonprofit agency and now spends her time traveling and volunteering in other areas. She and her husband, Bill, are also very active in their local Sertoma Club. ’58 Peter Gazzola and his wife, Nilma, spend the winters in Mesa, Ariz., and the rest of the year in Mount Hope, Ont. Peter is a retired vice principal and continues to look forward to the CC golf tournaments in Arizona with Bill Hay and the rest of the 1958 NCAA hockey team. ’59 Margaret Ann Day Counts is semi-retired as a licensed marriage and family therapist. She lives in Gettysburg, Penn., where she has her own art studio and has painted two official portraits of the Pennsylvania state treasurer. • Robin Reid is the new alumni events leader for the San Diego, Calif. metro area. ’60 Emylou Cutter lives in Geneva, Ill., where she is retired from teaching. ’61 David Lillie reports that he is moving to Ireland, where he will be living for several months. • John Trotter retired in December after 18 years as a clinical lab technician at Memorial Hospital in Carthage, Ill. ’62 Toni Larson received the Association for the Study of Higher Education’s Dissertation of the Year Award. She lives in Denver, where she is executive director of Independent Higher Education of Colorado. • Lorna Bates Pashovich is enjoying retirement, spending time traveling, painting, and visiting her two grown children. She lives in Oro Valley, Ariz., but spends the summer at her home in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. ’63 Bob Fredregill, who was a classmate for a couple of years and has been a contributor to the college, was inducted into the Colorado Restaurant Hall of Fame in February. He was cited for his industry leadership, civic involvement, and generosity with scholarship monies to future restaurant managers/owners. He lives in Pueblo. • Normand Laurence is president of Nogisca, Inc., and lives in Ste. Therese, Quebec. • Kathie Bruce Murphy, Susie Covode, Kathryn Berthrong Durham, Isabel Williams Shanahan, Marty Breternitz Talton, and Heather Kirk Thomas met in February in Oaxaca, Mexico, for a week of touring, drinking margaritas, and reconnecting. • Alice Parsons Petrich is retired from Weldwood, Inc., and is living in Federal Way, Wash. • Ruth Richardson Richards is a marketing and development specialist for the Legal Aid Services of Oklahoma. She lives in Tulsa. • Ann Armstrong Scarboro and Susan Wilcox ‘62 have been producing educational videos for Mosaic Media in Boulder, Colo. Their subjects are important Caribbean writers, including Aime Cesaire, Maryse Conde, Raphal Confiant, and Edwidge Danticat. • Jim Scarboro is an attorney at Arnold and Porter in Denver. He recently initiated the Colorado Innocence Project that helps prison inmates. He also studies guitar. • Fred Singleton, in his 11 years of retirement, has started a second career as field director for the Illinois Principals’ Association, started a children’s charity – “Kids Helping Kids” – for the Children’s Hospital of Illinois in Peoria, and is a professional workshop developer. Fred has two daughters and one four-year-old granddaughter. • Julie Wallace retired from teaching in June 2002. She and her husband, Roger, live in Kilauea, Hawaii. ’64 Ed DeGeorge has served as athletic director at Beloit College since 1985 and has also been the head football coach since 1977. He is retiring as athletic director but will continue to direct the college’s football program and the recruiting of student-athletes. He lives in Beloit (Wis.) with his wife, Nancy Parker DeGeorge. ’65 Tom and Mary Lou Meadows Malone live in Trappe, Md., along the beautiful “eastern shore” of Maryland, with their two children and four grandchildren nearby. Tom is director of Ocean.US, the national office for integrated and sustained ocean observations, which was created by the National Oceanographic Partnership Program. Mary Lou is chair of computer information technology at Chesapeake College. They would love to hear from classmates. ’66 Sally Lentz Palmer was the first preacher chosen from Wyoming to offer a sermon at the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C. She was chosen by her peers because of her excellence in higher education as well as her ecumenical commitment. She lives in Laramie, where she is the minister at St. Paul’s United Church of Christ. • Terry Winograd was inducted into the Computer-Human Interaction Academy at a ceremony in Vienna, Austria, in April. The academy is an honorary group of individuals who have made substantial contributions to the field of human-computer interaction and are considered leaders in the field. Terry is a professor of computer science at Stanford University, where he founded and directs the program in human-computer interaction and is considered a pioneer in cognitive science. ’67 Ralph Dalla Betta is chief technology officer and vice president of technology at Catalytica Energy Systems. He was awarded the 2004 Excellence in Catalysis Award by the Catalysis Society of Metropolitan New York. The award, which is sponsored by ExxonMobil Research and Engineering Company, recognizes Ralph’s contributions and outstanding achievements over the past 30 years, including his discovery and development of catalytic combustion technology. • Andrew Love lives in Englewood, Colo., where he is the special assistant to the Combatant Commander at Norad/Northcom for National Guard matters and liaison to the chief.
Careful observers of Time Magazine’s coverage of the Democratic primary race will have noticed that Dave Burnett’s photos are front and center – including the cover photo of John Kerry on the February issue. ’69 35th Cluster Reunion, Oct. 8-10, 2004!Beverly Lowe Goodrich is a pastoral assistant at the Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church in Grand Junction, Colo. • Alexander Lagerborg is president and C.E.O. of Across America Real Estate Development in Denver. • Suzanne Hohnstein McMurtry lives in Albuquerque, N.M., with her husband, Wayne. • Carol McKenna Semonsky has her Ph.D., and teaches in the department of modern and classical languages at Georgia State University in Atlanta. • Nicki Steel lives in Wilmington, Vt., where she has returned to math consulting in local elementary schools. She also facilitates meetings for children in the state’s custody and sells her photographs, including photo notecards and her print “Steeples of Vermont.” She adds, “Just so my political science major doesn’t go to waste, I am now in my twelfth year on the local Development Review Board.” • Jane Paolucci Yorker works in the annual giving program department at Washington University in St. Louis, Mo. |
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The Colorado College | 14 East Cache La Poudre Street | Colo Sprgs, CO | 80903 || 719-389-6000
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