Reflections Magazine Issue #58 - Summer 2002 | Page 29

ter’s in social work (MSW) from Wayne State University. Sharrain McFarley Stafford ‘99, who earned her associate’s degree on Siena’s main campus in 1991 and completed her bachelor’s eight years later in Southfield, is a special education teacher living in Detroit and working on a master’s degree at Wayne State. A former Lady Saint who played basketball at Siena Heights, Sharrain has one son, Dylan Kerigan (4). Dante Davoli ‘00 of Waterford is serving on the Siena Heights Alumni Association Board of Directors. ing toward his second Siena Heights degree as a master’s candidate in the organizational leadership program. He recently was promoted to Commander of the First Precinct, becoming the youngest commander in the Detroit Police Department. This was a twostep promotion from Lieutenant to Commander, skipping the Captain rank. Asked if his Siena Heights education had played a role in this promotion, Ralph answered, “Absolutely!” Leo Patrick Dion ‘01 lives in Howell and is an engineer with EDS at the GM Proving Grounds in Milford. Ralph Godbee, Jr. ‘00, a Detroit police officer, is work- ment, Sister Colette was an active and creative craftsperson, who sewed and crocheted until just a few months before her death. For the last few years, she had made baby booties for the Siena Heights Alumni Office to send to the “Baby Saints” of SHU alumni parents. Class Notes Florence Therese McKernin, OP ‘37 died June 19 at the Dominican Life Center. She was 98 and in the 75th year of her religious profession in the Adrian Dominican Congregation. She attended St. Joseph Academy before earning her bachelor’s degree at Siena Heights. She spent 64 years ministering in education in Ohio, Michigan, Illinois and Florida. She retired in 1990 when she came to the DLC. Franc Gage Rockwell ‘37 of Largo, FL, passed away Feb. 12. Many Metro Detroit grads received Kente stoles at graduation in Adrian. gan, Puerto Rico and Florida, including serving as principal of St. Alphonsus School in Deerfield from 1933 to 1939. She also ministered in social work Angelico, to provide appropriate decoration for the pure white walls at the entrance of the new Benincasa Dining Hall, named in honor of St. Catherine Benincasa, of Siena, Italy. Sister Helene had just returned from art studies in Italy, where she was impressed by the staying power of Italian frescos (wall paintings) that had lasted centuries with no diminution of color. Sister Helene invited Ade Bethune to Siena Heights to design and execute a series of frescos for the Benincasa entrance. in Cincinnati and Chicago, and was general assistant at Maria Health Care Center (Dominican Life Center) from 1975 until she retired in 1985. In retire- Bethune’s illustrations depict Catherine in her home: washing clothes, working in the kitchen and preparing meals for her many brothers and sisters. The scene paintings are accompanied by texts selected from “The Dialogue of St. Catherine of Siena.” Ade Bethune did the work at Siena Heights in the summer of 1939 with help from Siena art students, particularly Sisters Dorothy Ferguson ‘OP ’42, Eileen Minges, OP ’49 and the late Jane Burke, OP. Mary Jo Campbell, OP ‘42 (formerly known as Sister Mary Maxine) died May 10 in Waukegan, IL, where she lived since retiring in 1988. A grad Յє