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Class NotesCLASS NOTES

Classes of 1967 & 1968

From left, in front, are Barb Lewis Johnson, Liz Cockrell Wilmes, Dena Willmore, Suzanne McKean Chamberlain, Mary Kijeski Ryder, Suzanne Baldwin Lennox, Kathy Santimays Dunn, Jean Ovitz Schick, Nancy Allen Kreuser, Susan Siegel Henshaw, Marcy Christensen, Lucy Brooks Wright, George Gitcho, Susan Nussdorfer Berg, Jill Williams Bishop, Bonnie Binkoff Riley, Dick Todd, Kathy Kroll Todd, Barb Berger Lascody, Linn Clark Woodard, Colleen Durkin Small and Judy Wilkinson Neill. From left in back are Tom Kreuser, Bernie Klippel, Peter Uhrig, Dick Hansen, Richard Brockhaus, Rick Barry, Bill Bohnen, Tom Selsor, Bob Lennox, David Kennicott, Dave Smith, Dick Wilmes, Vicky Porth Tobias, Mary Ulland Perabo, George Perabo, Rick Schroeder, Greg Dunn, John Bishop, Dave Minor, Guy Henshaw, Rosie Madej, Dennis Riley, Linda Jensen Bohnen (hidden), Chris Small, Peter Engelking, Jim Mowrey and Dave Woodard.

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1960s

June 25-27, 2004

40th Reunion, Class of ’64 35th Reunion, Class of ’69

Marian Shaughnessy Glunz ’60 of Frankfort, Ill., was grand marshal of Frankfort’s Fall Festival Parade and will retire in December from the Frankfort Public Library District after almost 20 years as assistant administrator.

Thomas F. Bartelt ’65 of Boulder, Utah, retired after 31 years creating the concept of community television on cable television systems and is now building his dream home high on a mesa with views of the southern Utah Grand Staircase and Escalante National Monument.

Philip M. Chase ’66 of Kailua Oahu, Hawaii, is a librarian at Kahuku Elementary School following 21 years at the secondary level.

Andrew F. Jackson ’67 of Newtown Square, Pa., is head of the estates and trusts department of an accounting firm specializing in deferral of capital gains taxes.

1970s

June 25-27, 2004

30th Reunion, Class of ’74 25th Reunion, Class of ’79

Thomas D. Bachhuber ’71 of Somerville, N.J., is vice president of Directemployers and the National Association for Colleges and Employers.

Christopher D. Newman ’71 of Hoffman Estates, Ill., gave the keynote address at the 2003 annual meeting of the American Association for History and Computing at De Pauw University. He was also a presenter at the 2002 regional meeting of the Community College Humanities Association.

Charles H. Tenney ’71 of Sherborn, Mass., is the operations manager for BrainShift.com, an elearning company.

Thomas J. Melville ’73 of Cedarburg, Wis., wrote the book Early Baseball and the Rise of the National League which won the 2001 Seymour Medal awarded annually by the Society of American Baseball Research for the year’s best baseball book.

Class of 1963

In front, from left, are Patricia L. Hayes, Suzanne E. Shade, Susan Keller Matthes. In the second row, from left, are Cheryl K. Rofer, Eleanor Rader Alcock, Mary L. Sfasciotti, Lynne Siebel Sundelius; Edward C. Krause Jr., Carolyn Qulling Wolf and Nancy Hutt Ackley. In the third row, from left, are Judith Ellicson Kovarik, Jlie Brockel Baum, Karen Wohlford Staege, Judith Gruber Schrader, Penny Bucher Schleibach and Marcia MacLeish Higgins. In the top row, from left, are Roger E. Wheeler, Wayne W. Wolfgram, Robert L. Nelson and John Kirchgoerg. Not pictured is Helen Steinman Ackley.

David Zerfoss ’68 of Honolulu has been named senior vice president and chief investment officer of Central Pacific Bank’s new asset management division. The new venture complements the bank’s trust and private banking divisions. Zerfoss previously served as a senior vice president and manager of the Bank of Hawaii Asset Management Group. He has had a 34-year career in professional capital markets in Hawaii.

Blair Northwood ’73 of Morgan Hill, Calif., is a graphics designer at Infineon Technologies.

Deborah Evans Clem ’74 of Boulder, Colo., continues to work in piano and as an extension office plant clinic volunteer. She recently toured the Apennines of Italy with her father and his World War II ski troop comrades who served on the Gothic Line.

Dennis G. Frahmann ’74 of Los Angeles has been

Tagge ’55 Elected to Cavalry Association Board

Robert W. Tagge ’55 of Round Rock, Texas, was elected to the board of directors of the 1st Cavalry Division Association.

Tagge, who retired from the military in 1977 after more than 22 years, served with the 1st Cavalry Division initially assigned to the division headquarters and subsequently as a commander, Battery B, 1st Battalion, 77th Field Artillery, taking the unit from Fort Benning to Vietnam in August 1965. He is also a member of the 77th Artillery Association and is the current local area coordinator for the 1st Cavalry Division Association “Trooper Support Program,” which solicits support from veterans and others for 1st Cavalry Division troopers when their units are deployed overseas.

Tagge is also involved in a project that aims to name a major Texas highway as the “1st Cavalry Division Memorial Highway,” in honor of the division which was formed at Fort Bliss, Texas, in 1921. The designation will also commemorate the division’s Texas heritage over the 50 years it has been located in the state when not otherwise deployed. Additionally, Tagge is involved in the organization and implementation of a 1st Cavalry Division Museum New Building Fund, in an effort to replace the antiquated facility presently occupied.

An active community member, Tagge serves on the Williamson County Appraisal District Board of Directors, on several district level committees in the Round Rock Independent School District and on several committees for the city of Round Rock.

Tagge graduated from Ripon with a degree in political science.

Abby Williams ’04 Williams is a senior from Ripon, Wis., majoring in English.

appointed senior vice president, integrated marketing communications for Best Software. He is responsible for internal and external marketing communications, including corporate behavior, public relations, advertising and events.

Frederick M. Strader ’74 of Timonium, Md., has been named president and chief executive officer of United Industrial Corp. He was previously president and chief operations officer of the firm’s defense subsidiary, AAI Corps.

Jose Aleman ’78 of Panama City, Panama, resigned as foreign minister of Panama to seek his party’s nomination for president of the country. Panama’s electoral law says that members of government who are running for president must resign from their positions at least six months prior to the election.

Jeanne Spychalla Lietzan and her husband, Ernest ’78/’81 of Appleton, Wis. have started their own financial services business, Lietzan Associates Inc., a branch of LPL/Linsco Private Ledger.

Thomas E. Ritsch ’78 of Winnetka, Ill., is senior information technology business consultant for Fidelity Information Services in Chicago.

John M. Zindar ’78 of Jersey City, N.J., is a senior associate for The European-American Business Organization Inc.

Patricia Gallun Glandon ’79 of Cedarburg, Wis., has assumed leadership of Community Bank’s newly formed marketing department and will also be responsible for the bank’s community relations and charitable-giving programs.

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