Reflections Magazine Issue #55 - Summer 2001 | Page 26

Class Notes are compiled with information gathered from the reply cards in each issue of Reflections, alumni updates sent via e-mail and the web, newspaper clippings, and letters. We do not report engagements or pregnancies but will gladly announce weddings and births. Information received after February 1 will appear in the Fall issue. Mary Brocchetti Pavan ‘35 writes from East Lansing: “I am 87 years old and live in an assisted living establishment. My daughter is a dental hygienist. My grandson is a graduate student in Tallahassee, FL; his wife is a veterinarian.” Frances Louise Borges, OP ‘40 taught elementary school for 59 years and is now retired and living in Maria Health Care Center where she volunteers for the Adrian Dominican Sisters in the mailroom. She also takes a Scripture class and enjoys cultural events at Siena Heights and in the community. Mary Frances White, OP ‘40 has lived at the Villa Serra retirement center in Salinas, CA, for 11 years. She no longer travels much but has fond memories of a 60th Jubilee trip to Kuwaii. Dorothy Singer Elliott ‘45 lives in St. Louis, MO, with her husband of 51 years. Of their four children, two live in St. Louis, one in Chicago and one in Kansas. Dorothy still works part-time as a consultant dietician. Mary Louise Dahl Corcoran ‘46 is a retired counselor and teacher who is “living near downtown Nashville, TN, in historic Lockeland Springs. I am using my counseling skills as a volunteer at the Crisis Intervention Center. My interests include historic reno vation, gardening and travel.” Mary Louise and her daughter visited the Siena Heights campus last spring for the first time in many years. Marjory Thompson Iott ‘49 and her husband, Robert, celebrated their 50th anniversary last spring. Recent travels have included trips to Maine (visiting Lois Hueneman Chazaud ‘49) and to San Jose, CA to visit family and tour the Napa Valley wine country. Seven sons and seven daughters have given Bob and Marjory 29-goingon-30 grandchildren. “We are truly blessed!” Joan Gardzinski Bartoszewicz ‘50 lives in Grosse Pointe Farms with her husband, Leonard, a dentist. They have 9 children, 13 grandchildren and 3 great-grandchildren. Over the years, Joan has been active with Girl Scouts, Cub Scouts, school activities, several dental organizations, “Pregnancy Aid” of Detroit, and the Bon Secours Hospital Assistance League, as well as being a local elections commissioner. She previously taught and was librarian at St. Ambrose Elementary School in Detroit. She loves cooking, playing bridge, travel and family. Ita Marie Brennan, OP ‘50 lives in W. Palm Beach, FL, where she retired after a career as a teacher, principal and religious educator in many locations. Since retiring, she has assisted teachers and helped in the library at Rosarian Academy. Dorothy Jeanne Burns, OP ‘50 spent many happy years teaching elementary school and working as an elementary principal. Since 1990, she has visited hospitalized and homebound seniors of St. Alphonsus Parish in Dearborn where she lives. A pilgrimage to the Holy Land is a highlight of recent years. Virginia Ernst Gerhardt ‘50 of Sandusky, OH, taught music for three years after her Siena gradu- ation, then focused on raising four daughters and two sons. Now there are 14 grandchildren in the family. These days, Virginia and her husband volunteer at church and in their community. They enjoy traveling and have visited the Holy Land and other holy sites such as Lourdes and Fatima. Marie Cataldo Kuhnlein Gilbert ‘50 and her husband, Harry, live in St. Clair. Marie was widowed when her 10 children were aged 5-16 and remained a single parent for 12 years. Working as a teacher in inner-city Detroit, she managed to send all 10 children to college! She married Harry 17 years ago and they take great pleasure in their combined total of 23 grandchildren. They enjoy travel in Europe (especially visiting a daughter in Spain) and Marie remains active in a longtime prayer group. Barbara Hengesbach, OP ‘50 of Hazel Park, formerly Sister Agnes William, spent 46 years teaching elementary, middle and high school students before switching to a part-time career in “senior outreach.” Now she works with the elderly, ministering to homebound seniors and those in nursing homes, along with bereavement work. A gardening enthusiast, she also enjoys travel, baking, sewing and reading. “I’ve always been proud to belong to a Congregation that was far-sighted and willing to take risks,” she says. “I hope many of you (alumnae of the ’40s) felt the strong support of the Adrian Dominicans while you were at Siena striving to be valiant women of the Gospel!” Joan Nylen Italiano ‘50 lives in West Boylston, MA, and winters in West Palm Beach, FL. Joan was an Adrian Dominican Sister for the first seven years after graduat- ing from Siena Heights; she subsequently became a Lay Dominican in the West Springfield, MA, Chapter. Joan and her husband, William, have a daughter who is a computer graphic designer, a son who builds homes and teaches vocational education/carpentry, and two grandchildren. An artist who has exhibited her sculpture in dozens of solo and group exhibitions, Joan taught high school and college art for 40 years and was the first woman hired in a tenuretrack position at the College of the Holy Cross (Worcester, MA). She is profiled in numerous directories of women artists and has garnered many awards for her sculpture through her career. Ann Mitchell Politzer ‘50 is retired after an education career that included 15 years as a 6th grade teacher and 25 years as a middle school counselor. She and her husband, John, an architect, live in Grosse Pointe Park where Ann volunteers with Bon Secours Hospital and is active in parish work. Ellen Robertson, OP ‘50 lives in Okatie, SC, in the “low country” where she was called in 1972 to start a