Grove City College
class notes 1960
KEEP IN TOUCH! We want to keep in touch with you electronically! If you have an email address, or have recently changed your address or work information, make changes through
alumni.gcc.edu/update.
Have exciting news? Submit a class note for the magazine and for viewing online at
alumni.gcc.edu/classnote.
Remember to let the alumni office know that you are having a “Grover Gathering!” We’d love to send you some fun “stuff” for your event. Email alumni@gcc.edu for more information.
38 | w w w. g c c.e d u t h e G ēD UNK
Dr. Lorraine Duvall related her experiences during the second wave of the feminist movement for The Pioneer Histories Project of the Veteran Feminists of America, stories told by and about those who were on the front lines of the battle for equality; her interview is included at veteranfeministsofamerica.org. Duvall’s most recent book is Finding a Woman’s Place: The Story of a 1970s Feminist Collective in the Adirondacks. Her memoir and her second book, In Praise of Quiet Waters: Finding Solitude and Adventures in the Wild Adirondacks, are both award winners. She retired in 2000 after a 40-year career in computers and is a resident of Keene, N.Y.
1967 Henry Danielson published the third book in his Island People trilogy. Island People: The Greek Isles and the Amazing Middle East, finds Henry and his wife, Julie, on an Eastern Mediterranean yacht rally. Henry and Julie winter in Florida and summer in Western New York, still sailing and enjoying life.
1969 Dr. William Paquette, retired professor of history, published two books, Fields of Learning: Allegany County, New York’s OneRoom Schools (2020) and Abel Root, Sr. of Bolivar, N.Y., and His Descendants (2021). Dr. Paquette successfully applied to have Wellsville, N.Y.,’s legendary “Pink
LASTING FRIENDSHIPS |
Bob Yates ’59, left, hosted a few friends at his Naples, Fla., condo in February. Joining him are, from left, Ellie (Trevitt ’59) Smith, Marlene (Otto ’59) Morrell, and John Werren ’58.
House” added to the New York State Register of Historic Sites and to the National Register of Historic Sites.
1975 Tom Sankey was honored by the Howard County (Md.) Arts Council with the “Legacy in the Arts” award. Sankey, a high school math teacher, has directed over 115 plays and musicals at his high school and in the community during the past 40 years.
1978 Linda (Moore) Armacost earned the C.J. Shanaberger Award for Lifetime Achievement from the Emergency Medical Services Association of Colorado and the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment in 2018 in recognition for her work managing the EMT and other programs for SCL Health/Lutheran Medical Center. She was
commended as “a strong and stable source of quality and commitment to EMS education.”
1979 Dr. Kathryn Jackson was elected to the National Academy of Engineering, the highest honor achievable for an engineer, for “contributions to management of large-scale power system technology, and harmonization of engineering solutions with public policy.” Jackson serves on five corporate boards in the U.S. and internationally and advises Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Pittsburgh engineering schools.
1983 Mark Podvia retired as university librarian at the West Virginia University College of Law Library. He was a law librarian for 34 years, having previously served as Bedford County (Pa.) law librarian, and as associate law librarian at the Penn