THE PIONEERS

THE PIONEERS


We are the Pioneers because we were the first. We started school in tents due to the steel strike in 1955. We were the only class - all freshmen, then in the following years, always the upperclassmen. Because we were such a small class, we all knew one another. We chose the school colors, uniform, and wrote our alma matter. We published the first yearbook and named it "Esprit" for our sense of spirit. And we were the first class to celebrate a 50th reunion - still the Pioneers. How wonderful to reminisce and reconnect with one another!

50TH REUNION

50TH REUNION

PHS 50 YEAR SCHOLARSHIP FUND

PHS 50-YEAR CLUB SCHOLARSHIP FUND


Following our 50-year class reunion in March 2009, the class of '59 gifted Providence High School with a special scholarship fund to be used for financially-needy students. This fund is called: PHS 50-Year Club Scholarship Fund. This fund will last in perpetuity as long as we, and other classes as they reach the 50-year anniversary of their graduations, continue to contribute to it. If you are able and willing to contribute to our alma mater, will you please designate "PHS 50-Year Scholarship Fund" as the payee on your check or credit card gift. With our assistance the scholarship will go on forever -- and the Class of 1959 will always be remembered.


Monday, December 28, 2009

Greetings from Suzanne Sorrell Silbertasch

Dear Teachers and Classmates: How was your Christmas ? I hope that it was great ??? Sending you many hugs and good fortune in the coming years !!!!
Simon and Suzanne Sorrell Silbertasch

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Merry Christmas & Happy New Year from Carol Ann

Our family from Unalakleet, Alaska is spending the Christmas holidays with us here in Anchorage. We will be in California with ALL our kids and grandkids in January for our first grandchild's wedding and my dad's 100th birthday. An exciting month. We have been busy since our reunion in March - lots of travel - all family related. We took an Alaskan Cruise with Peter's sister and our brother-in-law to celebrate Peter's 70th birthday; it was grand!
I wish you all a very happy 12 days of Christmas and many blessings in 2010. CarolAnn



Thursday, December 24, 2009

FROM SUZANNE SORRELL SILBERTASCH

Dear Classmates : So very sorry that I was unable to see you at the reunion because I had to have bottom surgery the day before. My only claim to fame is that I completed 8 Marathons and my husband Si completed 14. In addition to them, we have won many races such as 5K and 10K's but only because there were very few people left in our age group to complete them!! If you possible can run or walk any, please do so : I can assure you that they will be an experience that you will never forget !!!!!! May God bless all of you now and throughout eternity,
Suzanne Sorrell Silbertasch

Monday, April 13, 2009

Sr. Alexis


This photo was taken on Sister's 80th birthday, November 19, 2007
I don't think she's changed a bit !!

Monday, March 30, 2009

Patsy Golob Decker


In the fall of 1959 I attended Valley College. This experience lasted only a year and a half due to a tonsillectomy. I left school sans tonsils, but with a fiancĂ©, Fred. I then worked for a title insurance company, and we were married in February 1962. We moved to San Diego where Fred was working and daughter Kathleen was born the following December. In January 1963 we moved to Burbank when Fred began working for Lockheed. In June of that year he was transferred to the U. S. Navy base at Moffett Field south of San Francisco. In December it was on to Jacksonville, Florida for a year then back home to Sherman Oaks for daughter Molly’s birth in January 1965. When she was two weeks old, Fred received more traveling papers, this time to South East Asia. I was a single mom for 8 months until he returned home.
We bought our first home in late 1965 in Granada Hills. Our daughter Michelle was born in April 1966, and we made a vow to stay put. Our son Andy was born in May 1969 and I was happy to be a stay-at-home mom. During this time I belonged to a guild that supported Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles. Fred and I were blessed with active, healthy children and I wanted to contribute by helping others.
In June of 1977 Lockheed had us “on the road again” and this time to Montreal, Canada for three years. So much for a vow to stay put. ”Itchy feet” struck again and in 1980 we were transferred to Derbyshire, England for a two year stay. During our stay we were able to travel extensively in Europe. Our experiences in both Canada and England were very rewarding for the six of us.
We returned home to live in Ventura, CA with interesting accents and a desire to embrace all things American.
With our daughters in various colleges and our son preparing for the same, I decided to back-up my enthusiasm for higher education by enrolling in UCSB, graduating in 1989 with a BA in English. (Ironic it has taken me this long to write this Blog!)
I helped Fred with a book he was writing about his Great-Great Grandfather’s regiment during the Civil War. We were thrilled when “Yates Phalanx” was published in 1994.
Fred took early retirement from Lockheed in 1995 after 33 years. After a short period of being “at leisure” he went to work for a small aerospace company in Fullerton.
By this time the drive from Ventura was too much and we moved to Glendale. In 2003 we bought a townhouse in Monrovia where we again “vowed to stay put!”
We are blessed with happily married children with wonderful spouses and 8 terrific grandchildren. I guess our daughters caught our “itchy” feet and it has given us more travel time to Seattle, WA, Holland, MI and Richmond, VA. Our son decided to stay put and he and his family live in La Canada Flintridge.
Since 1998 I am back in the volunteering mode. This time with a guild that supports the USC University Hospital and the Keck School of Medicine. We raise funds for scholarships for graduating medical students. We also enjoy tailgating at USC football games (especially the past six years!)
It was wonderful to see my classmates at the Reunion and to hear about their lives and families. The PHS experience taught me to live my life to the fullest and to strive to be whatever I wanted to be.
Fred and I have watched the DVD several times and it is fabulous! It evoked many wonderful memories…and the music was great. Thank you, Devi. And thank you to the Reunion Committee for a wonderful weekend in March.
Fondly,

Patsy

POSTED BY PATSY GOLOB DECKER

Monday, March 9, 2009

Noel Wagener Ruberti


Hi, Everyone!
In the fall of 1955, fellow graduates from St. Robert Bellarmine Grade School, Marcia Adams, Mary Baedeker, Beverly Hoeschen & I found ourselves attending this new ALL GIRLS high school called Providence High. What unique experiences we had. After all, not many students can say that in their Freshman year they attended classes in tents. I remember lunch in the park nearby, Sister Alexis flying down the hill to coach softball on a makeshift ball field, chorus with Sister Cecilia Marie and building our dream homes in the Christian Living class. There was something challenging about being the first class for the ensuing years. Weren’t we lucky to have the wonderful teachers that influenced our lives and the great friendships that we made and still have today. Graduation at Burbank’s Starlight Bowl was a wonderful culmination of those years.
After graduation from PHS, knowing that teaching was not for me but that I WAS good in Math, I started work in the accounting department of a Brokerage firm in Los Angeles. (Many thanks to Maureen Coleman Simons mom). The ensuing years found me advancing in positions with different Brokerage firms.
Leisure time found me traveling, singing in the choir at St. Charles and active in the adult youth group at St. Finbar’s Parish. In 1964, a friend in the group introduced me to Donald Ruberti. We were married on May 16, 1968.
Don was a Public Health Advisor for the Centers for Disease Control /STD Prevention based in Los Angeles. Transfers with CDC found us in Sacramento, Ca; back to Los Angeles; then on to Hartford, Ct; Tucson, Ariz; Des Moines, Ia and finally to Atlanta, Ga. He retired from CDC after 42 years.
During that time we had three girls, Dawn Marie, Christi and Melanie. I too became a stay at home Mom and loved every minute of it. I volunteered at schools, attended sporting events, band, and concerts. Dawn is now an Optician in Asheville, NC. Christi , after graduating from Georgia Tech, married Eric Sikes and is the mother of three beautiful girls. Eric is in the Air Force and is currently assigned to the Pentagon. They live in Manassas, Va. Melanie graduated from the University of Georgia and is an anchor, reporter and weatherperson for WTOC-TV in Savannah, Ga.
In 1988, I decided that I needed to get back in the work force. Hoping my math skills were not too rusty, I found a position at C & S National Bank (now Bank of America). Who knew that Bank of America would find it’s way to Atlanta, Georgia. I retired as an Administrative Assistant to a Market Manager in Premier Banking after 19 years.
In 1988, Don & I built a new home in Newnan, Ga. It is in a golf /tennis community and no, we don’t play, but it is fun living here. We always have projects in progress. We enjoy reading, going on long walks and having fun with our Granddaughters.
Thanks to all who put this blog together. What a wonderful way to keep in touch with our classmates.
Although I cannot be there in person, know that I will be with you in spirit.
My very best to all of you.
Noel
email: ruberti@numail.org

POSTED BY NOEL WAGENER RUBERTI

Virginia Keefer Pullen



















After graduating from PHS I worked for Airotary Supply Co. as a secretary- receptionist. I became engaged at Christmas of 1959 to Tom Pullen. Tom and I were married the following July in my former hometown of Metropolis, IL. My very good friend and classmate Joyce Speeter Sfetku was my Maid of Honor. We will be married 49 years this July. The years go by too quickly!!!
We lived in Champaign, IL for a couple of years while Tom was finishing school at the University of Illinois. He took a job in Houston, Texas where our son, Mike, was born in 1963.
We enjoyed and liked Houston but Tom’s father took seriously ill, so we moved back to Metropolis to help run the family business. We operated a Thoroughbred horse farm which was fortunate to have bred the 1970 Kentucky Derby winner, Dust Commander. Unfortunately, we sold the mare and colt before he ever raced. Our daughter, Lynda, was born in Paducah, Kentucky in 1964.
In 1975, Tom decided to leave the farm and go into banking. He became President of the City National Bank of Metropolis. I worked for the Water and Light department when the kids got older. We are now retired and enjoying what we want to do. Much of our lives revolve around the kids and grandchildren. We are a very close family. Our son, Mike, lives in Metropolis. He and his wife Lisa have three children – two girls and a boy. The oldest girl is graduating from the University of Mississippi this May and their boy is a sophomore at Ole Miss while the youngest daughter is a sophomore in the local high school. Our daughter, Lynda, lives in Jefferson City, Missouri, so we travel there a lot to be with them. Lynda and her husband Joe have three children – two girls and one boy. Their son is graduating from Helius high school and plans to attend Purdue starting this fall. The oldest daughter is a sophomore at Helius while the youngest is in the fifth grade. We are very proud that all of the family are active practicing Catholics.
I was a stay at home mom. Between car pooling, PTA, home room mother and all the sports the kids were involved in, I led a very busy and fulfilling life. I kept three of the grandchildren until school age. I took some college courses for my own enjoyment. My hobbies are gardening, crocheting, quilt making, decorative art, reading and best of all - my six grandchildren. I do volunteer work for the Red Cross Blood Mobile, Shawnee Development Council, and St. Rose the church where Tom and I were married.
I have enjoyed reading the blogs of my fellow classmates. What an amazing life you have had. We should be very proud of the class of 1959!!!!
A special thank you goes to Devi Savitt Bellows for reuniting Joyce Speeter Sfetku and me. Thank you to the reunion committee for all the hard work you have put into this reunion. I am also very thankful for the catholic education I received at PHS.
I know that some of you have had very special remembrances of our teachers and I have a few to add. I remember Sister Cecelia Mary during piano class - I thought she was going to crack her wand on my hands at times. Lol She scared me!! Once I was practicing my music during class and I was so sleepy that I kept playing the same song over and over. Well, Sister jerked open the door to the music room and said “ Virginia, would you play another song.” Needless to say that woke me up!! Sister Esther was my favorite teacher. The thing I remember the most about her was her smile and sunny disposition. I remember in Foods class we would hurry to get there so we could make French fries to eat in class.
For those who are going to make the reunion, I will miss not getting to be with you. Have fun and enjoy one another.

PHOTOS: #1 me & my daughter & granddaughter, #2 Lynda & family at Thanksgiving, #3 Mike & his family at last Thanksgiving, #4 Tom & family in Hawaii

Virginia Keefer Pullen
Married July 21, 1960
Children—2 –Mike and Lynda
Grandchildren—6—Ages 11 to 22
Two granddogs

POSTED BY VIRGINIA KEEFER PULLEN

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Judy Hernandez Hatfield

Dear PHS Class of 1959:
I hope some of you will remember me …
After graduating from Providence, I worked for a few years with the idea I wanted to travel and work overseas. I booked passage on a German ship, the “T.S. Bremen” flagship of the North German Lloyd. I had no idea what work I would be doing or where I’d be living, but the adventure began.
Leaving New York Harbor on a beautiful spring day in 1962, my journey started by sailing for eleven days crossing the Atlantic Ocean. I met many wonderful and kind people who when hearing of my tale offered me positions of everything from care attendant to working in a bakery. I met a student who suggested I get my work papers and visa, which I did. She invited me to her home. After a few months, my mother contacted me and wanted me to come home immediately, because of the possible conflict with Cuba and the Bay of Pigs Invasion had begun and there was talk of war. I said “No, I’m staying - I’ll be fine!” I obtained work at a German hospital in Siegburg West Germany. This hospital, Stat Krankenhaus, was run by an order of Franciscan nuns. I worked in the Kinderstation- Children’s Department, where I scrubbed floors, brought up meal trays, emptied bed pans and helped the nurses. It was hard work, but very fulfilling. Sister Alexis took me under her wing so to speak. She also informed me of the pending conflict between Cuba and the U.S. and asked if I wanted to go home. I told her “No, I felt safe here.”
She had been a nun in the states for many years, so I learned German from her and the children, and they in turn learned English from me. I roomed with a nurse at an apartment near the hospital and had many experiences there. I made many friends and participated in holiday celebrations.
With a roof over my head, a job and food in my stomach life was good. I traveled via train all over Germany. After a period of time I wanted to move on in my travels. I next went to another hospital in Frankfurt-Katerinan Krakenhaus with a referral from Sister Alexis. This was also run by an order of the Franciscan nuns. Believe me when I say the Germans are very hard working and industrious people. After being here for a while I then went on to Luzanne Switzerland and France. In Paris I had a room at a small hotel – The Hotel Duminy, then on to Italy, Capri, Florence, the Amafali Coast, Pompeii, Rome, Venice, and the Vatican. I met lots of people from all over the world. This was all done when the book “Europe on $5.00 a Day” was extremely popular (I doubt it’s that price now). I ended up staying in Europe for almost two years.
I returned home to Burbank in early 1964. I enrolled in business school and got a job offer with a government agency. While thinking this job offer over, I was introduced to the man who would become the love of my life. A slender guy with flaming red hair named George Hatfield, swept me off my feet. We met in May 1964 and were married on December 12, 1964 in St. Finbars Church. We wasted no time starting our family, our son George Jr. arrived in November 1965, daughter Debra in 1967 and daughter Jessica 1969. We first started our family in Simi Valley in the late 1960’s, moving to Ventura in the early 1970’s and then on to Westcliffe Colorado (where our home was located in the Sangre De Cristo Mountains at the 8,600 ft. elevation level), Ft. Smith Arkansas and back to our home base of California by the 1980’s. We traveled the United States extensively on family vacations in our motor home when our kids were young. I was fortunate enough to be able to be a stay-at-home mom during much of this time. I eventually went back to work in various clerical capacities. George and I were married for almost 41 years; I was his primary caregiver for the last seven years of his life. His brave battle ended on October 29, 2005.
I’m a busy grandmother to six grandchildren, three boys and three girls ranging in age from 8 to 14 years.
I look forward to seeing everyone at the reunion!
-Judy Hernandez Hatfield

POSTED BY JUDY HERNANDEZ HATFIELD

Sharon Young Galindo


After graduation, I went to work for Bank of America, No. Hollywood. I started in the back room and worked my way to the teller line after a couple of years. In 1962, I won a trip to Europe for 6 weeks and that was the beginning of my love for traveling. My sister and I went and saw as much as we could, even going into East Germany and East Berlin. After returning, I went back to work for B of A and worked another 2 years and went back again to Europe. Coming back, I again went to work for the bank. For the next 20 years, I worked on and off for B of A. In 1970, I married a customer of the bank. However, it was a mistake from the beginning. In the meantime, my mother died and my father was alone, so I moved in with him , so it worked for us both. I traveled again, this time to Mexico and on returning, I decided to study Spanish in night school. My teacher was Mexican and after my being flunked 5 semesters, we got married!. He was a school teacher and taught Spanish to 9th graders.
In 1976, our son was born and 1977 saw a daughter come. We traveled a lot by motor-home down into Mexico and up to Canada with 2 small kids. It was such a great experience. As the kids went to school, I volunteered. At this time, I was a stay-at-home mom. I was instrumental in getting our parish school to start a kindergarten and my daughter was in the first class. I volunteered in the school office and then went on to be on the Parent Teacher Board as Treasurer. In 1986, my husband and I and kids flew to Sweden and purchased a car and drove it throughout the European continent for 3 months while summer vacation was on. For the next several years, traveling was through our trusty motor-home. Back and forth to Mexico, Canada and a lot of Northern California. Our children continued in school and after their graduations, they went on to University. My son to Colorado State to study Natural Resources and Forestry. My daughter, Nursing. In 2000, we all went again traveling to England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland. Then in 2002, my husband of 27 years, passed away of heart disease. I continued to travel and lived in Ireland for a time. After coming back, I was offered a job working as church secretary for St. Bernardine of Siena Parish. Over the years I have made many friends, mostly priests, at St. B, and I feel blessed to call them my friends. I retired in 2006 and have continued traveling. Because of this love of mine, I have purchased a house in Tuscany, Italy and go there as much as possible. I also do volunteer work for L.A. Animal Services. I love to work in the yard, to read, and do painting and small repairs.. my husband taught me well.
The experience and education from Providence has been with me all these years and I thank those wonderful teachers for being who they were!

POSTED BY SHARON YOUNG GALINDO

Marjorie Traxel Strachan

In August of 1959 I entered the Sisters of Charity of Providence. After a few short weeks I was surprised to find myself in collage! The program of Sister Formation, that my great aunt had started, was already active with us. (My Aunt was the Mother General of the Sisters of Mercy.)
I went through five years of collage (at Seattle University) before going out to teach. I did my practice teaching as well as my first year of teaching at St. Michael school in Olympia, Washington. The following year I went to Portland, Oregon training in and teaching Montessori.
During my first year of teaching I contacted my Great Aunt and told her I did not think I belonged in the order and was praying about it. Later Sister Rose Amata helped my to leave the order.
1966 found me back in the world of dating and teaching. Teaching one year First Grade at St. Francis Xavier in Burbank and then going to Santa Monica Montessori School. Then different years of Montessori and public school followed by great years of teaching at a Catholic school in Highland Park. Taught twenty-five years at St. Ignatius enriched my life as I began teaching children of former students.
In 1968 I met Tom Strachan We dated a year - married in 1969. Tom owned his own Mattress company called Made Well Mattress Company.
We were unable to have children but enjoyed taking my students places as well as had three live with us for a summer. We have done a lot of traveling Our favorite places are Russia, Portia Rico and Australia. We have an active correspondence with our friends in Australia and have had them visit us three times.
For the past eight years I have been very active in my church. Five years ago my Pastor approached me and asked me to be prayer leader. I've taught on prayer, started an intercessory prayer group (meets every Friday night). I am group leader of an intercessory group formerly called Lydia now ASK international. For five years I wrote a monthly news letter called Prayer Walker.
Though physically challenged I am active in writing and besides the Intercessory Prayer enjoy Red Hats. Have had one publication.

POSTED BY MARJORIE TRAXEL STRACHAN

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Ann Lewis Wright




I graduated in June of '59 with an engagement ring from Bucky Wright. We were married in May of '60. Charles Jr. was born in '61, William and Christine (twins] in '63 and Catherine in '64.
'60-'66 I worked in computers for Dept. of Water and Power, promoted to programmer and quit, (not my style).
Then followed 10 years of custom knitting. I made many outfits from "hot pants" to a complete wedding dress and many party dresses both knit and crocheted. The knitting part was done on a knitting machine as i can't knit a stitch with needles. During these days I also painted with oils (mostly seascapes), sold many and won several prizes.
1980 I started in stained glass. I spent 1 year with Shutters Inc. to learn the business; then 10 years with a partner Lori Crane (still one of my best friends). More years crafting leaded glass on my own and with my daughter Cathy as partner.
In 2000 we moved to Atascadero on the Central Coast and built a real Victorian house with the help of Cuesta College Building Technology class which my daughter Cathy was taking at the time.
Along with leaded glass I started custom vintage jewelry with my daughter-in-law Paige and my daughter Chris. Lots of fun! We use vintage pieces and add pearls, crystals and vintage beads. We have a large clientele from New York, Texas and California.
All my children and "9" grandchildren live in or near Atascadero and we're very close. Charles (Duke) my oldest son followed his dad into law enforcement. Will became a physician, He specializes in interventional radiology at Marian Hospital in Santa Maria. Chris followed Devi to work at American Airlines and Cathy is an artist.
I'm involved with the Historical Society, sit on the board and am curator of the museum, following in my fathers footsteps. My great uncle founded Atascadero, University City in ST. Louis and Palos Verdes in So. California.
Devi and I have remained best friends since high school and share a crazy intertwined life. We've been on some great trips and always keep in touch.
My family has many artists in it both past and present. I seem to be happiest when I'm making something, from the trim on our house to a beautiful necklace or leaded window. Our house has 73 leaded glass windows.
Buck and I will be married 50 years next year. I can honestly say " It seems like only yesterday!"

POSTED BY ANN WRIGHT LEWIS

Monday, March 2, 2009

Maureen Coleman Simons


I am so thankful to Sister Esther and Sister Maria Therese for encouraging me to continue my education. After graduation from PHS I attended Immaculate Heart College. I graduated with a history major in 1963. I worked at a couple of Brokerage firms during that time. After graduation I worked for Security Pacific Bank in the Trust Department.
I then worked as an Administrative Assistant for one of the top producers at s regional brokerage firm
I met my husband, John in 1968. We were married later that year and immediately started our family. Denny (1969), Chris 1970) Matt (1971) Laura (1973) Kelly (1975) Tricia (1977) Sean (1985). I thank John for making it possible for me to be an at home mom.
We lived in Torrance and then Redondo Beach. We spent many years volunteering at the grammar school and then High School. Our children were very involved in soccer and little league. We were at the various fields every weekend. We are very proud to be able to say that all seven of our children have graduated from Catholic Universities
.In 1991 a priest friend asked me to help him with the accounting at his parish. I was there for 7 years. It was great because my youngest son was at the adjoining school.
Our children have blessed us with 8 beautiful grandchildren. The oldest is five and the youngest is 5 months. We have so much fun with these amazing children. I know the best times are yet to come.
In 2000 John and I moved to Carlsbad. John immediately became involved with Rotary, Chamber of Commerce and Knights of Columbus. I was invited by my neighbor to attend a fund raiser. I walked into a room of 400 women and thought I didn’t know anyone. Then I saw one lady that I did know. It was Barbara Dunn. Barbara at that time was the President of the Assistance League of North Coast (A philanthropic organization that helps underprivileged children). I was strongly encouraged to join. Barbara has become a great friend and mentor. Being a member of the great organization has become a big part of my life. I also spend time at my parish as a Funeral minister, Eucharistic Minister and Lector.
As a further connection to PHS one of my good friends from IHC married Vic Belfiore who was our softball coach. Pat Reagan who was a year behind also attended IHC and married the brother of one of my other IHC friends.
I want to thank the committee who have worked so hard to put this reunion together. I am looking forward to seeing all of you there.

POSTED BY MAUREEN COLEMAN SIMONS

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Phyllis Weber Wright






Attending Providence High School was a wonderful, life-enriching
experience for me.It was not only a place of learning, but a place where
camaraderie, caring faculty and students, and laughter enriched my life.
My love of music was enhanced by four years of chorus with Sister
Cecilia Mary, and I've never stopped singing. The journalistic and
writing skills I acquired under Sister Esther's tutelage have served me
well in my personal life, and also when I was teaching composition, or
writing my own newsletter or articles for other newsletters.
I wish I would have expressed more gratitude to these teachers and the
many others who had an influence on my life. I do want to thank all of
you, though, for being a part of my life then, even if you were a small
part. I look back fondly on all of you, and look forward to seeing many
of you at our reunion.
After high school I was one of the six California girls who headed up
north to Seattle to join the Sisters of Providence Community. This is a
wonderful Community of women who do so much good for others, and I was
happy to be a part of it. I was saddened when Caryl Harvey and then
Carol Lex left, but I did go on to make my first vows. I received the
name Sister Veronica Rose, a name I had requested.
One day when I was probably in my junior year of college, my Sister
Superior called me into her office. One of the sisters teaching in
Seattle wanted to go back to school and they wanted me to replace her
for the rest of the school year. A few days later I was sitting in a
classroom watching Sister Amideus teaching her 4/5 combination class. At
lunch we talked a little about the class, and then she went off to sign
up for classes and I walked into MY class of 35 fourth and fifth
graders! Talk about being thrown to the lions! Fortunately, my ability
to ad lib,thanks in part to my Schiemelgruber experience, and being able
to read faster than the kids got me through those five months. That
summer I took classes at Seattle U.and learned something about teaching.
This certainly wasn't the ideal way to get into teaching, but Holy
Family School was a wonderful school for my first experience. To top it
off, who should happen to be the part-time housekeeper and cook at the
convent there but Sister Esther's mother! Mrs. Frawley was a truly
lovely woman and I enjoyed talking with her, sometimes even about Sister
Esther. I also taught two of Sister's nieces. I taught for 3 1/2
years at Holy Family and then for one year at St. Michael's in Olympia.
In 4 1/2 years of teaching I managed to teach grades 3,4,5,6,7,8!
During my last couple of years of teaching I came to realize that what I
loved most was teaching children, working with them, and wanting
children of my own. (Boy, raising your own children is sure different
from teaching other people's children!) So, in August of 1967 I left the
Community and flew back to LA.
Dear Carol met me at the airport and I stayed at her house for a couple
of weeks. Her mother drove me to job interviews and helped me find my
first apartment. My family had move to Medford, Oregon, so the Lex
family took me under their wing. I ended up teaching in the LA School
District in the city of Baldwin Park. It was ok there but I knew I
didn't want to be stuck in that area. There were few good teaching
positions open in the late 1960s, so when a friend suggested moving to
the San Francisco area I was ready to pack.
Nancy and I and another friend got an apartment together in San Jose and
Nancy and I ended up teaching across the street from each other in
Milpitas, a city just north of San Jose. I taught for 18 years there and
totally loved it. I did a fair amount of traveling, and engaged in many
social activities with the numerous singles clubs that abounded in the
Bay Area. I even took ballroom dancing lessons at Fred Astair Studios. I
always loved watching Fred and Ginger dance, so I danced a lot there and
won some dancing trophies. Now I love watching "Dancing With the Stars."
It was at one of these singles clubs that I finally met Larry, my Mr. Right.
We were married on June 28,1981, in San Mateo County Park. We arrived at
the scene via a horse-drawn carriage previously owned by Queen Victoria.
Carol was my Matron of Honor and Larry's Best Man was a friend he grew
up with on Long Island. The weather was beautiful and everything was
about as perfect as one could hope. This was great since our honeymoon
was a disaster! We went to the Amazon Jungle for our "romantic trip."
Larry's other honeymoon idea was to cross the Sahara on camels!
The jungle truly is beautiful beyond expectation! One day Larry and
several other people decided to machete a trail out in the jungle.
I opted out on that adventure. Larry had a great time swinging on vines
like Tarzan. Unfortunately, as he was swinging across a ravine, the vine
came apart and he tumbled 20 feet to the ground. He crashed against the
aerial roots of a tree and landed on an Amazonian ant hill. He broke
eleven ribs, sprained his ankle, and had more than 50 ant bites. Now we
know why Tarzan screams! The rest of this story is equally exciting and
lengthly. Anyway,the honeymoon pictures end with Larry in a wheelchair
and me pushing him out of the San Francisco Airport.
Our life has been pretty busy and exciting, but nothing beats our
honeymoon for excitement. We have continued to travel, build our own
house, and adopt two children. Our first adoption was an independent
adoption using an adoption attorney. I wrote our adoption search letter
on our flight back from the South Pacific and sent out more than two
thousand of these letters. After five leads fell through we finally
found Margaret. She lived with us the last ten weeks of her pregnancy
and gave birth to Michael right in our house. That was another very
exciting event! After several years we traveled to Bulgaria and adopted
a five-year old girl named Mila. Adopting internationally was a grueling
event, especially in the early 1990s.
Once the children entered school, I also began teaching again, but in
their classrooms. I worked mainly in the art and reading programs, but
also became soccer mom, football mom, track and field mom, basketball
mom, and debate mom. When Michael was in high school I spent endless
weekends judging debate tournaments. Michael was in several children's
musical productions, and I joined him in "Oliver" when the director
needed some parents to sing the adult roles. I enjoyed all of this and
am thankful I was able to be home with my children.
Now our children are in their early twenties, live in apartments nearby,
and are working and going to school. Larry and I are supposedly retired,
but there is nothing really retiring about our lives. We are busy
catching up on projects that were shelved when much attention was
devoted to Mila and her medical needs. I am singing with Masterworks
Chorale, taking ballroom dancing lessons with Larry, gardening,
scrapbooking and being active in my Woman's Club. For seven years I was
a Creative Memories consultant and taught classes on scrapbooking, so I
have many friends with whom to socialize while we work on our family
albums. For fourteen summers now I have organized our neighborhood
garage sale and the ensuing block party. It is our neighborhood's big
social event each year. I love to read and have accumulated more books
than I will ever be able to read, and more good books just keep coming
out! I started doing some tutoring last year and we are exploring a
couple of possible money-making options since the economy is so fragile.
My life has certainly not been a boring one, and I truly do not
understand how some people can be bored when there are so many rewarding
and exciting adventures to pursue.I think a busy person is a happy and
healthy person. May we all enjoy many happy and healthy retirement
years. I am so looking forward to seeing many of you soon.

Photos: Our wedding in the Woods June 1981, December 1993 in Sophia, Bulgaria, finalizing Mila's adoption, Taking dancing lessons, but not ready for "Dancing With the Stars".

POSTED BY PHYLLIS WEBER WRIGHT

Friday, February 27, 2009

Judy Heinemann Bartoletti




I came to PHS from St. Finbar. I remember the tents and the cute young guy that brought us water every day. I also remember us choosing the school color from a green sweater that I wore. I was at PHS for my freshman and sophomore years, then I went to and graduated from Burbank High School. At BHS I met my future husband, Lucian Bartoletti. He was a year ahead of me. We dated on and off and finally got serious around 1961. We married in 1963, bought a house in Burbank (which we still live in) and had 3 sons – Evan (1966), Aron (1968), and Danon (1970). We have two amazing daughters-in-law, one grandson, and another on the way in June.
After high school I worked at the Telephone Co. for a year in payroll. Then I worked at Lockheed for five years in accounting at the Skunk Works. I quit work in 1966 to be a stay-at-home mom - and loved it.
I stayed busy with volunteering at school and all the sports and activities of three boys.
Our family loves camping, boating, and waterskiing. One of my favorite things is our 6 a.m. ski ride on Lake Shasta with my boys every summer. Life truly doesn’t get any better than that !! (the sunrise, the quiet, the flat water, with mom and her boys doing what they love most.)
Physical fitness has always been important to me. I do weight training and Spinning classes. For my 60th birthday my sons and daughter-in-law gave me a skydiving gift. It was FABULOUS.
Lucian is a member of the Road Kings classic car club. We have a beautiful 1957 Chevy Belair which we enjoy taking to car events. We also travel in our motor home as much as possible.
I am so excited to be attending your reunion. Because I don’t have a yearbook, I am having trouble remembering faces with your names. I hope some of you remember me.
I have had a quiet life compared to some of you, but it has been happy and I am blessed with such a close and loving family.

POSTED BY JUDY HEINEMANN BARTOLETTI

Sunday, February 22, 2009

An interview with Margaret Sullivan Yarrow Sfreddo

Margaret (Peggy) married a few years after high school, and was an unusual stay at home mom, being a Foster Parent. She has three sons: Joseph, John and Christopher Yarrow. Two are adopted and one is a natural son. After 14 years, her marriage ended in divorce. The following years included a move to Syracuse, New York (where she was born) and a career as a manager in Fundraising for several non-profit organizations.
One particular trip was to change her life. While attending a conference at Chico CA, she met Joe Sfreddo. A romance ensued...she moved to Carson City Nv...Joe followed......In the mid 80's she and Joe married, and Peggy had found her soul mate. She has been widowed for two and one half years. Peggy continued working until eight years ago when she lost her eyesight. She used to introduce Joe as her "seeing eye husband".
Recently, she got a new family member, Tigger, a golden labrador, her seeing eye dog. She and Tigger are very busy volunteering daily @ the local elementary school where she is a Foster Grandparent to eight children, tutoring them and others one on one in reading and math. She is also very active as a CCD teacher and eucharistic minister @ her local parish. She misses her husband, but cheerfully says this part of her life must also be a part of God's plan. She hopes to come to the reunion with her escort, Tigger.

POSTED BY THE REUNION COMMITTEE

Carol Warren Thornton




I think this blog is such a great idea. Carol Ann (“my very best friend in the whole wide world”) talked me into posting this; so here goes.

I married Dick Powers in 1962. We had a daughter Pam, who has grown into a wonderful mother, wife, daughter and friend. She has three beautiful daughters who are the joys of my life. Dick and I divorced in 1966. I dated several men and met and married Ed Thornton, my soul mate in 1978. In 1987 Juan Flores joined our family after being deserted by his mother. With lots of love and caring he went from a D student with issues to an A student. He graduated from UCLA with a double major and is now a teacher and Head Wrestling Coach at Rio Mesa High School. We are proud to have his as our Son.
Ed and I recently celebrated our 30th Anniversary in Paris, very romantic. We are very happy and live in Camarillo. I work as an Office Administrator for a real estate company and while the market is down I thoroughly love working. Ed is retired but manages to keep busy. He is a genius at repairing things. He can even repair antique clocks. I’ll tell you, he still rings my chimes. I enjoy gardening, working out, yoga and taking various classes that I enjoy. I am an active member of The Ventura County Dog Fanciers Association. We are the proud owners of two Welsh Pembroke Corgis. Our passion is sailing, which we do as much as possible. I am really excited about coming to the reunion and seeing all of you.

POSTED BY CAROL WARREN THORNTON

Frances Ackart Dudley

Greetings From Ventura ! 50 years later most people call me Fran or.....Grandma.
I have been married to my husband and best friend Don for 46 years and we have lived in Ventura 44 of those years. We have 4 married daughters, who with their husbands are raising our SEVENTEEN grandchildren. Can you believe it....11 boys and 6 girls.
I became a licensed x-ray technician right after High School, continuing part time for many years.
Special "D" Electric was our family business with Don the Electrical Contractor and I was the office manager. We also purchased a small retail shop in Camarillo ..."Special T's"... which I ran full time while our daughters were in college. We are very blest to be fully retired now from all that work . We have time to enjoy each other and have fun with our family.
My Faith has served me well. . Providence was an important part of my spiritual development. I started teaching CCD while I was a senior with Sr. Esther at St. Finbar's and I have been in Religious Education ever since. Now I prefer Adult Education but I am trying to cut back so I have more free time.
I started working at St. John's Hospital Pastoral Care Department as a Minister to the sick and dying after I survived a coma due to Legionaries Disease. I no longer work at St. John's, but I have brought Our Lord in Holy Communion to the sick in my parish since 1975. One of my many blessings.
Now I strive to enjoy every day as much as I can. I play games with my 17 grand children as much as we can. I am a regular at concerts, parades and you name it school programs. I have been to more volleyball, basketball, football and soccer games than I can count.....but I love it !
I am trying to have more time for things I enjoy. I am an avid seamstress. I teach sewing at the local Boys and Girls Club. Last Summer I went to Sew Journers Camp for girls on Lake Michigan in Wisconsin with my grand daughter. She was a camper and I was a counselor and sewing teacher. What Fun !
You might remember I did Anne Frank when I was a senior at Providence. Three years ago I rediscovered that part of myself and I became a storyteller. I just love doing it. I am part of an interdenominational group The Women's Spiritual Repertory Company. We study Women of the Bible and present them dramatically in the first person in full authentic costumes. We go when invited mainly for women's groups, schools, & churches .
God has blessed me with so much and I am most grateful. Now I try to take the time to enjoy and cherish every person he brings into my life. I am thankful for Providence, the education I received, the teachers and Sisters who taught us and all of you who shared those years with me. I look forward to seeing your smiling faces in March. Fran Dudley :o)

POSTED BY FRAN ACKART DUDLEY

Monday, February 16, 2009

Florence Weigand Blanchard

Florence’s Life in the Counterculture (Chapter One)


In high school I prayed that I would not be called to be a nun. I wasn’t. Instead I was called to be a political activist, a writer, and back-to-the-lander.

It was the Sixties. I dropped in and out of college, worked at sundry jobs, read the L.A. Free Press, hung out at coffee houses, heard Allen Ginsberg read “Howl,” tutored kids in Watts, joined the anti-war movement, and went to meetings organized by Hopi spiritual elders opposing the government’s policy of terminating American Indian reservations. In 1967 I was at Century City Plaza, standing in the back of a pick-up truck with other war protesters including Muhammad Ali, when the riots broke out.

On a vacation in La Jolla (with PHS classmate Penny Kenck) I met my husband Tom, AWOL from the Marine Corp that weekend with friends. A year later I said I’d marry him -- if he got a job and bought a car. So he did. I found out later that the job paid only on commission and that our ’53 Dodge dropped a linkage on the ground every time we drove it! We lived on Melrose in L.A. and then in Santa Monica a few blocks above the old pier. We started a family and I finished my degree in English Lit. After our second daughter was born, we packed up the green VW bus with the leaky roof and headed for San Francisco where Tom could pursue his M.A. in History.

In San Francisco we lived in a duplex owned by a clairvoyant who gave weekly séances and collected life-size statues of Jesus and Mary in her basement, and later across from Delores Park on Guerrero in a walk-up apartment with a jumbo size American flag on the wall. I wore braids and long skirts, burned jasmine incense, boycotted sugar, saw Janis Joplin at the Fillmore, listened to KPFA, went to concerts at Golden Gate Park, and ate a lot of brown rice.

Ronald Reagan was Governor, and S.I. Heyakawa, President of SFSC. During 1968-69, there was a bitter student strike led by the Black Panthers, and supported by the Third World Liberation Front, Students for a Democratic Society, and others. When I took our girls to the campus day care, armed guards were stationed on the roofs of buildings. Riots also broke out on the Berkeley Campus against the expanding Cambodian war. The American Indian Movement occupied Alcatraz. Rolling Thunder, a Shoshone medicine man from Ruby Valley, Nevada, often stayed with us during this time. On April 24, 1971 at the largest anti-war protest ever on the West coast (156,000), I pushed our daughters in a shopping cart down Mission Street.

In 1972 we moved to Mammoth Lakes in the Sierras. Tom got hired as a carpenter and I ran the cooperative pre-school. We were the only registered members of the Peace and Freedom Party. We bought and remodeled a small fishing cabin, and I had our third child a son. I wrote and published an op-ed article in the L.A. Times, the first of many freelance articles I would write and sell over the years.

It was the start of the back-to-the land movement. I wanted a vegetable garden and the Sierras got snow even in July. Moving is always my idea. So in 1978 we sold our house, rented a U-Haul, loaded the family into the “new” VW bus, and headed out across the west. After a couple of months traveling we bought a few acres on the Big Wood River 20 miles south of Sun Valley, Idaho. From a set of plans in the Mother Earth News, we built a cordwood house. I peeled and skinned logs, hand-mixed cement, and with the kid’s help, did most of the mortar work. I planted a garden. We raised chickens, geese, rabbits, sheep, and a pig or two. I milked goats every morning. We heated our house entirely with wood.

In 1980 tragedy struck. We lost our six year old son James in a drowning accident at a friend’s house. How does a family recover from their worst nightmare? After almost 30 years, I still don’t know. For me, I had other children to care for and a barnyard full of animals. Day by day, inch by inch, they carried me through this dark time.

A few years later I became the Director of the College of Southern Idaho’s Extension Office here and spent the next decade developing and promoting adult education classes. I later served as Executive Director of the Sawtooth Botanical Garden where I administered a sustainable agriculture program, wrote grants, and newsletters. (Thank you, Sister Esther, for nourishing my writing skills which have been crucial to every job I’ve held). I continued writing for other publications and was awarded a five week fellowship to Ragdale writers’ community in 2000. In 1996 I founded the Ezra Pound Association to save the poet’s Hailey birthplace. I organized cultural events with poets like Allen Ginsberg and Lawrence Ferlinghetti who slept and ate at our house. I went to Paris and lobbied to bring the 2Oth International Ezra Pound Conference here.

Today I do research and writing for historic preservation projects around the state. I enjoy reading, walking, cross country skiing, cooking, genealogy, vegetable gardening, making plant medicine, camping with grandchildren, and idling over breakfast with a cup of strong black tea. I participate in the annual Rocky Mountain Poetry Festival and other Idaho writer activities. I confess to owning at least a thousand books. Tom works part time as Bellevue City Administrator, chairs the Idaho State Historical Society, and lectures on Idaho mining history. We remain politically active, especially on environmental issues. I also volunteer with Friends of the Howard Preserve. Summer lives in Tucson, teaches Montessori school, and is the mother of two boys. Jill is a water resource engineer and meditation teacher. She and Jeff live in nearby Smiley Creek.

Two years ago I got nostalgic for a Peace march. On the Internet I found one in San Francisco. I arranged to stay with my friend Marcia in North Beach, and we walked down Market Street with a few thousand others holding signs and banners just like old times. Guess my counterculture days are not over!

Well, I’ve left out a lot. Like the trip to India. But hey, classmates, I better end this -- never ask a writer to write her bio.


POSTED BY FLORENCE WEIGAND BLANCHARD