Life after college
I want to take the beginning of the column to thank those who worked on our 50th Reunion committee: Darlene Eiford Burhenn, Jackie Deakyne Cowan, M.Ed. ’79, Harriet Lowry Doherty, Randy Dove, Andy Keefer, Bill Thomas, and Donna Herbst Watson. Thank you all for your time and talents! Thank you also to Jen Pawlo-Johnstone and Kathleen Green from the college for all of their help and guidance.
Roy Angleberger, M.Ed. ’78 and Barb Anderson Angleberger, M.Ed. ’77 continue to stay busy in retirement. He is the go-to person for his 92-year-old mom, taking her to appointments, etc., as needed. He works out at the YMCA almost daily, plays racquetball once or twice a week, and golfs as much as his back will allow. Barb is still teaching courses for Frederick Community College in the ILR division for adults over 55. The classes are noncredit, so no papers or exams to grade or meetings to attend! She also serves on the county’s Senior Services Advisory Board. The board’s goal is to advocate for services that will enhance the lives of older adults and help them to live in place for as long as possible. Barb and Roy’s greatest pleasure though, is being with their grandkids, Kaitlyn, 9, and Jack, 6. Weekends consist primarily of going from one athletic event to another. Kaitlyn plays field hockey and basketball, and Jack’s favorites are baseball and basketball. The Anglebergers are so blessed to have them in the area and watch them grow up, which they are doing far too quickly! Barb and Roy celebrated their 50th anniversary in July with a trip to Hawaii.
Ron Baldwin is living in Snow Hill on Maryland’s Eastern Shore now after losing his wife of 44 years Jeanette Hardy Baldwin on Oct. 2, 2020, at their home in Monkton, Maryland. Jeanette had worked in administration at Ashland Preschool Center from 1989 to 2018 while raising their two daughters. A longtime member of the Ashland Presbyterian Church, Jeanette was an elder and choir/praise team member. Ron and Jeanette have two daughters, Julia Taylor of Breckenridge, Colorado, and Laura Scharle of Ocean Pines, Maryland. Ron and Jeanette both loved spending time with Laura’s son, Patrick Thomas Scharle, 8, who brought great joy to Jeanette over her last four years. Jeanette had always loved walking and hiking in the Gunpowder State Park and enjoyed hiking with her daughters when visiting them. Wildflowers were a source of joy for her throughout her life.
Bob Barrowcliff and his wife, Susan, live in Bluffton, South Carolina. They moved there in 2015 when they both retired. Bluffton is the last town you go through before going over the bridge to Hilton Head, South Carolina. They really enjoy the area and the weather. The Barrowcliffs live in a community called Hampton Lake. Bob and Susan enjoy traveling, getting together with friends and neighbors for games, playing tennis and pickleball, and visiting with their children.
Bev and Larry “the Cheese” Bocchese traveled to Italy for two weeks in October 2023 and had a fantastic time.
After a long and rewarding career with Bank of America, working in commercial real estate banking (lending), Darlene Eiford Burhenn retired. After raising their family, working, and doing extensive volunteer work, she and her husband, Richard, continue to enjoy living in Lilburn, Georgia, in the Atlanta metro area. With retirement came sitting down, learning how to turn on the TV, as well as pursuing some long-sidelined interests (including sewing and fiber arts). Darlene is still doing as much volunteer work as time allows. This includes answering a crisis phone line for Lutheran Disaster Response to help people who have experienced a disaster connect with resources. This is not unlike work that she did at the bank. Keeping up with her dear college friends, including Sharon Wood Schaeffer, Toni Carson Hiteshew, Carol Dragich Hiteshew, and Sue Rudrow Carlson ’76, is a favorite pastime, as well as fondly remembering the late Linda Sixx Shields. Darlene says that truer friends could not be found.
Joe Carter ’73 and Mary Connor Carter, M.S. ’92 retired to Seven Lakes, North Carolina, in 2008. But since the beginning of COVID-19, they have dealt with the mass migration of people leaving cities and many northern states and moving nearby, building large homes. So, after over 15 years of lake living, the Carters decided to move to the Village of Pinehurst, just 20 minutes down the road. They sold and bought a home in a month. They live 10 minutes from all the places they go to play! They can ride bikes to tennis, the pool, and other club activities. Joe stays busy being involved with their church leadership and running a men’s Bible study. He also plays golf several times a week. Mary is still playing tennis almost every day, and for the past eight years, she has been a pickleball player. Daughter Kate and Mary played in Kate’s first pickleball tournament together last summer in Westminster and won first place!
Rob Carter and his wife, Carolyn, have been married for 49 years. Their children have given them three grandchildren, who the Carters see often. Rob has been working for the last 2½ years part time as pastor emeritus at Trinity United Methodist Church in Prince Frederick, Maryland, serving as a member of the staff to support and help the pastor. It’s been good for Rob to continue using the skills he’d used for 40 years.
Wayne Cassell and Nancy Fishpaugh Cassell have been doing some short road trips. One trip was to Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks in September 2023. It had been more than a few years since they had visited. This time it was Vrbo and hotels instead of camping. Wayne has resumed facilitating classes at OLLI (Osher Lifelong Learning Institute) now that there are more in-person classes. He taught introduction to American mah-jongg classes, a Russian history class, and a class on Chernobyl. Both of them are taking classes both in person and via Zoom in a variety of subjects. They play mah-jongg weekly, one or two days depending on their schedule. Wayne also helped a friend teach some mah-jongg classes at the local recreation center. Wayne continues with his model-building hobby, and Nancy has two groups that she walks with weekly, weather permitting, trying to stay active mentally and physically.
In May 2023, Bruce Cowan ’79, M.S. ’02 and Jackie Deakyne Cowan, M.Ed. ’79 sold their Westminster, Maryland, home and made Rehoboth, Delaware, their primary residence. When they are not enjoying beach life, they stay in an in-law apartment at their daughter and son-in-law’s in Mount Airy, Maryland. It’s the best of both worlds for Jackie and Bruce. They’re able to spend lots of time with family and friends in Carroll County; Oxford, Pennsylvania; and southern Delaware. They have four grandchildren ages 4 to 15 and have loved each stage of development. The Cowans have been blessed with good health and have been able to travel to Alaska, Western Canada on the Rocky Mountaineer train, Arizona, and Florida since their move. Unfortunately, plans for a Mediterranean cruise made two years ago overlapped with the 50th Reunion dinner. The good news is they got home in time for Sunday’s brunch and remembrance ceremony. This thought from Jackie echoes the sentiment of so many of our classmates: “My overwhelming emotion upon this 50th anniversary of our graduation is one of gratitude. Grateful for the excellent education I received from professors who cared about their students, grateful for the cherished friends and all the memories we made together. I had a fantastic time ‘growing up’ on the Hill. Carpe diem.”
Mike Deener can’t believe it’s been 50 years since graduating from Western Maryland College! He has only returned to the Hill once since graduation. It seems he was always working during Homecoming, so he was very much looking forward to seeing old acquaintances at our Reunion, if for no other reason than to see who is left standing! Mike and his wife, Annette Witt Deener ’75, were married in Baker Chapel in 1975, and they both have wonderful memories of time with friends and colleagues from those bygone years. Annette and Mike retired from all occupations except their small farm. They grow and sell flowers and produce. Annette served 36 years in the Army and Army National Guard and retired as a brigadier general. She outranks Mike both in the Army and at home. Mike retired from Frederick County (Maryland) Public Schools and also retired from the Army with 30 years of service as a colonel. He retired from his third career as a training consultant with the National Guard Bureau. Annette and Mike spend lots of quality time with their three grandchildren. The kids love coming to the farm to play and swim and really like sleepovers and Grammy’s cooking and treats.
Anne Stubblefield Dill and her husband are blessed to be happy and healthy, enjoying retirement in central North Carolina, visiting the kids and grandkids as often as their schedules allow.
Effective Dec. 31, 2021, Harriet Lowry Doherty sold her financial planning practice to her successors and retired. It was bittersweet after 27 years of building relationships with clients, but the timing was perfect for her. She says that retirement is more enjoyable every day and their grandchildren bring unending joy to their world!
Don Ehman, (or Drama Don!) writes: “As I look back on our 50th, I can’t help but think of the faculty of the Dramatic Arts Department: Bill Tribby ’56, Tim Weinfeld, Max Dixon, and Christian Wittwer and the guidance and encouragement they provided. Their tough love and the friendship of my WMC Alumni Hall compatriots made it possible for me to graduate.”
Tiina Liiv Ets and her husband, Agu, decided to downsize and move to a smaller place three years ago, right in the thick of COVID-19. To say it was an adventure with unexpected twists and turns is an understatement, but fate directed them to little old Brunswick, Maryland, 20 minutes from Frederick, and they’re very happy in their townhouse, which is half the size of their previous home. They also spend quite a bit of time in their apartment in Tallinn, Estonia, although they haven’t yet achieved the 50% USA-50% Estonia time they had been planning for. The Ets are blessed with four wonderful grandchildren, Anton and Lia in Estonia, and Kristjan and Eevi in Canada. So, if grandma wants to see them, grandma has to travel! The whole family spent Christmas 2022 in Rome, Italy, where their Estonia-based daughter Marika had a diplomatic posting for four years. Summer of 2023 saw trips to both Estonia and Canada. In Estonia, for the fifth time, Tiina attended the annual international Craft Camp, where makers from all over the world come together to learn Estonian handicrafts. The classes, as well as the participants — from Sweden, Finland, the United States, Canada, Germany, Switzerland, and Japan — are fascinating. Their whole family is hoping to spend Christmas 2024 in Estonia. It’s dark and cold, but truly beautiful during the holiday season. Although retired, Tiina still takes on translation work, usually brief texts, often medical/scientific in nature — it helps that she was a Biology major at WMC! Interpreting work took a hit with COVID-19. Now, clients are continuing to prefer remote interpreting, which Tiina doesn’t like at all. To date, she has translated seven books; the last one, “The War After the War: Armed Resistance Behind the Iron Curtain” by Mart Laar, was published at the end of 2023.
Glenn Fell and his wife, Missy, split their time between Delray Beach, Florida, and Hanover, Pennsylvania. However, Missy now spends most of the time in Hanover helping their daughter with their two grandkids. The Fells have three grandkids in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, that they enjoy time with when they are down south. Glenn still volunteers at a golf course in Florida during the winter and in Hanover during the summer, one shift a week, so he gets free golf wherever he happens to be at the time! When not golfing, he plays pickleball. The Fells enjoyed a very nice trip through Ireland, Scotland, and England in 2023.
Sandy Johnson Hartsock celebrated her 71st birthday by taking possession of keys to an apartment at Oak Crest Senior Living Community in Parkville, Maryland. Her mother was one of the original residents in her building and Sandy said a lot has changed since then. Susan Ward Jones, joined by a mutual high school friend, has joined Sandy for lunch in one of Oak Crest’s many restaurants. Her boys and their families are all doing well. She enjoys seeing all the grandchildren, ages 5 to 21, when they can fit her into their busy schedules. Last year, Sandy took her experience from leading the Middle River Baptist Church’s GriefShare program for the past four years to start a new group at Fork Christian Church in Kingsville, Maryland. She spends two nights a week devoted to the rewarding experience of assisting others in their grief journeys. She has also become very active in Fork Christian’s small prayer group and special activities.
Sadly, Toni Carson Hiteshew’s husband, Richard, died in October 2023. Toni and Richard were married for 49 years and met while she was a student at WMC. The love of her good friends from WMC Jody Barker Gillespie, Sharon Wood Schaeffer, the late Linda Sixx Shields, Darlene Eiford Burhenn, and Carol Dragich Hiteshew has helped her cope. Toni has been retired for a while. She kept busy caring for Richard in the last year, but she also has continued her love of teaching language by helping with an ESL program at a local church. She has been taking philosophy classes through Osher, too. She plans to teach a French class at the local senior center in the spring. Taking care of her home, gardens, and pool in Catonsville also keeps her on her toes.
Jean “Jeanie” Scott Holloway says it is hard to believe it has been 50 years since we graduated, but even harder to believe that Earl and she will have been married for 50 years in August. Jean finally retired from SERCAP (Southeast Rural Community Assistance Project) in September 2023. She plans to do some contract work for them starting this year — mostly water and wastewater rate studies — but she says it’s good to finally have some time to do what she has been putting off. So far, that’s consisted of cleaning out cabinets and closets and a lot of reading. She’s joined a book club that meets monthly at a little wine bar — the wine being a good motivator — in her hometown of Snow Hill, Maryland, plus she’s been reading a lot on her own. Earl and Jean plan some serious camping trips in 2024, and bought a new-to-them fifth wheel RV this past summer that they’re looking forward to using. Tennessee, Texas, and a visit to the Truman Library in Missouri are on the bucket list. Jean caught up with Charlotte Lent in summer 2023. Charlotte comes down every year to participate on Jean’s team for the American Cancer Society Relay for Life. Charlotte retired a couple of years ago and seems to be staying busy. She’s helped Jean’s team raise a lot of money for the cause and is a real asset to the team. Jean ran into Dave Downes ’72 and Lenny Swift Downes ’73 at a Christmas show in Pocomoke City, Maryland, in December 2023, and they took a few minutes at intermission to catch up and exchange email addresses. Dave expressed interest in Jean’s water rate study experience. She had worked with Dave some years ago when he was the consulting engineer for the Town of Berlin’s electric department and Jean was the town administrator. They discovered in conversation that they have the same wedding anniversary right down to the same time of the ceremonies! The Holloways’ life is full of baseball and softball games and dance and music recitals! Jean says all that and some volunteer work that she hadn’t had time for before is keeping her going and, she hopes, will prevent stagnation in the proverbial rocking chair.
Ed Humphreys has been enjoying watching his eldest grandson starting to wrestle. He had a short season at his school and liked it enough to join a club team. Watching him win a few and lose a few brings back memories for Ed. Jan and Ed are enjoying retirement but both would prefer cooler summers and warmer winters so they could get outside more often.
Lynne Hulse Javier’s chorus of 106 women went up against the best in the world in Louisville, Kentucky, in fall 2023. Out of a worldwide base of 500 choruses, they placed third! Vinnie and Lynne have had fun sailing with Bill McCormick ’73 and Monika van der Berg McCormick '73 on their boat in Annapolis, Maryland. They’ve also gotten together with Linda Loock Schmidt ’75 and Larry Schmidt ’75. Vinnie went on the Phi Delt golf trip in March. The group plays for almost a week in Scottsdale, Arizona, and has been going on this trip for over 25 years. After a long break, the Javiers have reconnected with Steve Vaughan ’76 and Karen Fitzgerald Vaughan ’78. Now that Steve has sold his dental practice, the Vaughans have more time to play! Last spring, Lynne and Vinnie visited with Tom Trezise ’75 and Kathy Hamilton Trezise ’76 at their lovely Florida home. Tom has just published a book, “Former Things Forgotten,” which is available on Amazon.
Sandy Schindler Jensen and her husband, Chip, had a rough year in 2023. Chip was fighting cancer and Sandy had neck and shoulder surgeries. Outcomes for both were good, so they are enjoying 2024! Two grandchildren keep them hopping and their son is getting married in December. They’ll be traveling to Jackson Hole, Wyoming, to ski; Vancouver, British Columbia, to fish for salmon; and taking a lot of trips to Michigan for lake time and wedding planning.
Dottie Hitchcock Keene finally retired at age 70! Her implementation manager contracts were still fun and rewarding to do. She needed to keep busy and work through a lot of grieving, for the loss of her husband in 2021 and the loss of her older sister and mother in 2023, as well as 12 additional family members — aunts, uncles, and in-laws — in between. It has been a difficult time for Dottie. She decided to go places and see things while her health and energy were still good. Trips to the Maine beach with her son and daughter and their families have been wonderful, and the four grandchildren keep her smiling. There have also been special trips to Greece, Japan, California, and even Westminster, Maryland. She sailed down the Nile River and saw the sights of Egypt in 2024 before our Reunion!
Dennis Kirkwood says life is still good in retirement and so far, he can keep up with running his farm, volunteering at church and other venues, traveling to see the world and all the creatures that call it home — especially the birds. With his trip in November 2022 to Antarctica, Dennis has now visited all seven continents, and he has seen over 4,000 species of birds, which is not even close to half. His roommate Phil Ciborowski joined him June 2023 for a road trip through Montana and North Dakota. Phil is now retired from his orthodontics practice and enjoying his grandson. Dennis has three grandsons and one granddaughter he gets to see often, which makes him very happy!
All Ian MacFawn wrote was that he and Cathy Jenkins MacFawn are still alive!
Louise Mattocks McCrorie and Gary McCrorie are both now retired from full-time jobs. Gary works part time during elections for Mecklenburg County as a precinct worker. Louise has expanded to work multiple part-time gigs as a house manager, for Blumenthal Arts, Queens University, and the Charlotte Master Chorale. She really enjoys when they have all the fifth grade students in the public school system come over four days to hear the Charlotte Symphony. It is very fun to experience all the innovative ways Blumenthal brings creativity to Charlotte, North Carolina, including immersive experiences and festivals along with Broadway and concerts. Gary continues to go back and forth a couple of times a year to take care of his amazing mother, who is 102 and in Asbury Home in Gaithersburg, Maryland! The McCrories’ two huskies, Dakota the old and Katara the young, keep them active. Actually, Dakota belongs to their son, Kyle, who is a software programmer for Camelot Software in Pineville, North Carolina. He and Gary have a “Rents Nite Out” about six times a year to have dinner and a show at the Blumenthal.
Wayne McWilliams and his wife, Janice Crews McWilliams ’77, are doing well, and he is enjoying retirement from his urology practice in Hagerstown, Maryland. Their summers are still spent in Hagerstown, where he regularly catches up with Gary Wright ’73 on the golf course. The McWilliamses officially became snowbirds a few years ago and spend all of the winter months in their house in Naples, Florida.
Paul and Cathy Nelson Price are settled in what they hope is their final nest in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. They’re in semi-retirement (never total), and enjoying time with their daughter, son-in-law, and grandson, as well as reconnecting with Cathy’s Iowa cousins. They keep United Airlines solvent with frequent trips to California to visit their son, daughter-in-law, two granddaughters, and grandson. The Prices have been blessed with four grandchildren in three years, including twins! Paul still consults on international environmental risk management issues, and Cathy still writes, currently a play.
In 2020, after a bit of phased retirement from 36 years of teaching at Stevenson University, Chip Rouse was ready to fully retire when she was recruited by the athletics department to take on a newly created position as an athletics academic coach for the more than 700 NCAA student-athletes. It’s not a full-time job, and it’s one that she has come to absolutely love. She has traveled with some of the teams and worked closely with student-athletes who may need extra help in study skills or time management. She managed to sneak in a spring break trip in 2022 with her sisters to the Grand Canyon and has planned a trip this year through the northern loop of Ireland with them. She runs into Linda Loock Schmidt ’75 and Larry Schmidt ’75, since they live in Chip’s neighborhood, and gets together with the other Blanche Ward ladies as well from time to time.
Sharon Wood Schaeffer is busier than ever after retiring from 43 years of teaching high school art. She visits her mom, Annette McMahan Wood ’49, weekly. Annette and other WMC alums live in Homewood Retirement Community in Hanover, Pennsylvania. Sharon regularly gets together with Toni Carson Hiteshew, Sue Rudrow Carlson ’76, and Carol Dragich Hiteshew. Now that they all are retired, they have switched from dinners together to lunches. They often FaceTime with Darlene Eiford Burhenn. Friends of Sharon’s late husband, Frank Schaeffer ’73, have held a memorial 5K walk/run each October for the past three years at Wakefield Valley in Westminster, Maryland. This past year, some of Frank’s WMC track buddies participated. Sharon enjoyed catching up with Jim Zucco ’73, Bill McCormick '73, and Steve Vaughan ’76 and hearing tales of their time together on the Hill. Sharon creates exhibits, demonstrates, and teaches hand-woven basketry to interested people of all ages. Each summer, she participates in Common Ground on the Hill on McDaniel’s campus teaching basketry. She is active in the Central PA Basket Weavers Guild and is currently serving as president. You can check out her baskets on Instagram @swschae or visit her blog at http://swschaefferbaskets.blogspot.com.
Sadly, after Sharon had sent her information above, she sent the following update in February: “My former roommate Linda Sixx Shields passed away last night. She courageously fought cancer and made the most of this past year.” Carol Dragich Hiteshew posted the following on Instagram: “50+ years ago, we met at Western Maryland College. After graduation, we continued to see each other regularly. Each month, we would meet at one of our homes. That person provided a home-cooked meal, trying new recipes as we learned to cook, and then we would work on a craft as we shared our life’s experiences, supporting each other in good and difficult times. We affectionately called it craft night. We still meet monthly. The meals continue, the support continues, the love continues but we don’t do much crafting anymore. Today, we lost our dear friend and ‘sister’ Linda. We thank God for her being part of our lives as it was so much better with her in it. We were blessed to know her.”
Rick Spink continues to keep his heart healthy getting exercise, playing disc golf with Bob Noland, although he’s limited somewhat by a bothersome knee — countless diving plays at sports over the years have taken their unfortunate toll. He played bridge for the first time in many years during a visit with Bill Fries in July 2023, performing capably after a bit of study. They also attended an outdoor concert featuring fellow Gamma Bete, Bruzz Truitt ’76, near Bill’s Eastern Shore home. Bruzz’s band is The Bonedaddys. Also present were Vernon Mummert ’75 and Ray Land. Rick continues competing with Bill and Gary Appel’s oldest brother Tom on chess.com; Rick’s record is still unblemished!
After more than 30 years practicing obstetrics and gynecology, Laura Stephenson retired in 2019. While Laura and Joe still live in central Pennsylvania, she has spent the past four summers in Montana not far from Glacier National Park. She’s even become a Montana Master Naturalist! Laura can’t get enough of hiking in those mountains, though this summer she was a little late heading west since she and her sister were on a three-week trip to Ireland and Scotland.
Bill Thomas and Linda McHale Thomas ’75 still reside in Westminster, Maryland, as official “townies” just a couple of miles from the college. Of their eight children, three graduated from WMC. At last count, Bill and Linda have 10 grandchildren. Bill is still a full-time pastor and has been at his current church, Hereford Faith & Life Church in Monkton, Maryland, for the past 12 years. He also serves as a leadership coach with the UMC Mid-Atlantic Foundation. Mandatory retirement is set for July 2025, so Linda’s started the countdown while Bill has begun the search for a Walmart that needs a greeter! Linda’s still quilting and loves every moment with the grandchildren (and still praying for a place at the beach). Among many highlights since the last report, the older kids chipped in and sent Bill and Linda for a two-week trip to Ireland in October 2023 with Linda’s two sisters and their husbands.
Dave Volrath writes “It is hard to believe that 50 years have passed since we crossed the WMC graduation stage. While our life experiences and families have been varied and different, we still carry pieces of who we were that day.” It also marks 50 years in education for Dave, as he continues to assist the leadership of challenging school communities in northern California and West Texas. Patty Eyre Volrath ’75 and Dave are delighted their youngest son has moved back to Maryland, so they get to share time with both boys’ families and their five grandkids. They are blessed with good health and the continued ability to travel regularly, exercise daily, and enjoy the beach, golfing, scuba, dinner out, and the occasional adult beverage. Last fall, Dave spent a day on the Hill with Gamma Beta Chi (GBX) alums from 1970-76. He is planning to hook up with many GBXs and Phi Alpha Mus who live on the Eastern Shore in August. The Volraths’ newest family member is a pointer pup who keeps them busy and on their toes. Their daily walks provide opportunities to reflect upon past friends and experiences and recall anecdotes from their four years at WMC.
Bobby Watson ’73 and Donna Herbst Watson never expected to return to this area to live in retirement, but after not seeing family for too long a time due to COVID-19 fears in 2020, they decided to leave Florida and come back to be near familiar things and people. Now, they’re able to watch their granddaughter grow up, and they still play golf as often as possible. The Watsons get together every six weeks with a group of college friends for dinner, a highlight especially during the cold months, which they still haven’t gotten used to. In October, they will take a Viking River Cruise down the Rhine to celebrate 50 years of marriage.
Ann Swope Williams’ entire adult life has centered on her family. Her husband, Donald, passed away on June 2, 2023, after a courageous battle against cancer. Ann is retired and a cancer survivor. Together, they raised five wonderful children and she enjoys her grandchildren and great-grandchildren. She feels blessed to have her family.
As for me, I continue to work for my dentist, Dr. Paul Jay Shires, but at a new location. I can’t believe I “retired” from Verizon after 30 years and am now coming up on 21 years working in a dental practice. Rick Wright’s ’77 and my son, Drew, has bought the Lutherville Music School after teaching guitar, bass, drums, keyboard, and vocals for more than 10 years. I’m excited for his journey. I am grateful, as many wrote earlier, for our time at WMC. We were blessed to have incredible professors who gave us an extraordinary, priceless, liberal arts education. I am also grateful for the amazing friends I have as a result of that time on the Hill. I have been fortunate to be your class reporter for the past 50 years; I’ve enjoyed every minute and appreciate your appreciation!
Katherine Blazek Wright1974 Class ReporterKbwright1974@comcast.net