University of Mary Washington - IndexUniversity of Mary Washington - summer08 - Indexnetworking firm
Corporate Executive
Board in Washington,
D.C. He hopes to
move into new
business development
or research within
the year.
Amanda Grubbs
married Jeremy
Kent in September,
and they moved to
Alexandria, Va., where Amanda is a
project analyst at the project portfolio
management and software development
firm Metier, Ltd.
Andrea Rajacic does sales
for Raven New York LLC in the
meatpacking district in Manhattan.
She is looking at grad schools – one
in France and one in Italy – to study
management in luxury goods, and she’d
like to start in September 2009.
Ken Coulter moved to Seattle,
Wash., where he works with Boeing.
Andrew L. Napier moved back to
his hometown, Front Royal, Va., and
serves on the administrative staff at
Wayside Theatre, works in the tasting
room at Linden Vineyards, and does
website design on the side.
Stacy Boyd and Jeanine
Petrigliano are mental health
technicians at Remuda Ranch in
Milford, Va.
Justin Baker planned to receive
his MBA, with a concentration in
accounting, from UMW this spring.
Thanks to everyone for all of your
submissions!
In Memoriam:
Pauline Cosby Clements ’23
Mary Kathryn Warren ’28
Margaret Potts Coakley Humphrey ’33
Marie Carneal Deere ’35
Christine Maria Tanner Johnston ’35
Lucy S. Stanley ’35
Elizabeth Glenn Swinburne ’35
Elaine Butler Griffin ’36
Elizabeth Minor Lancaster ’38
Alice Kilduff Dove ’39
Betty Boggs Peddrick ’39
Charlotte Scott “Scootie” Booker
Tuggle ’39
Rosella Tuck Davidson ’40
Victoria Marshall Harris Massie ’40
Elizabeth H. Cox Williams ’41
Esther Anna Prochazka Bass ’42
Mary Gouldin Goebel ’42
Elizabeth “Betsy” C. Perry Houghton ’42
Virginia Johnson Moeller Kisner ’42
Pela Love Bobbitt ’43
Virginia Richardson Middleton ’43
Catharine Vaughan Powell Miller ’43
Flora Copenhaver DeBusk Scott ’43
Katie Donohue ’07 served as a
language and culture assistant
in Huelva, Spain, and received
a fully-funded grant from the
Embassy of Spain Counsel of
Science and Education.
Josephine Potts Coleman ’44
Mary Griffin Underwood ’44
Audrey Enroughty Bucceroni ’45
Lucy Land Harris ’45
Jane Vaughan Eastland ’45
Frances Drummond Gay Stickles ’45
Grace Bailey Fallin ’46
Alice Leora Beale Prange ’46
Anne Bradley Guerrant ’47
Marylouise D. Meder ’47
Beverly Jane Saul Mulligan ’47
Patricia Maguire Bilodeau ’48
Marrilyn Jamison Bovis ’48
Jane Maury Denton ’48
Martha Annette Warriner Dodson ’48
Sarah Virginia Wilson Estep ’48
Mae Coldren Moyer ’48
Helen Williamson Scarlett ’48
Anne Maxey Robertson ’49
Jean Elizabeth Scott Marks ’50
Beverly Hackett Runge ’50
Peggy Rudacille Chapman ’51
Betty Anne Wilkinson Davis ’51
Dorothy Melanie Reisig ’53
Patricia J. Saunders ’53
Garnett William Galyen ’54
Lucy Ann Ingalls Hostettler ’54
Anna Nash Kay McDaniel ’54
Virginia Dare Sadler ’54
Imre Jo Broome Shively ’54
Ann E. Collins Hawes ’55
Elizabeth “Betty” Billingsley Hill ’55
Vernon Oliver Tyson ’57
Jeannine M. Raymond ’58
Claire Sue Jennings Rutledge ’58
Jean Miller Whitfield ’58
Geraldine A. Jenks Winston ’59
Sarah Jordan Buchanan ’61
Susan McFarland Markel ’63
Carolyn Watkins Magruder ’64
Romine Rita Newsome ’64
Elizabeth A. Handy Hawkes ’65
Judith Anne Blair Dean ’67
Katherine Badran Snow ’69
Megan D. Schell ’72
Brenda Faye Chewning Pritt ’75
Dorothy Lee Puller Banning ’80
Katherine Crockett Hathaway ’80
Susan T. Daley ’95
Cheryl Branighan Lorson MacEwen ’96
Sanford Leon Martin II ’96
Jean Ann Fairfax Fallin ’01
Brett David Watsen ’05
Lisa Sharon Batchelder ’06
Christopher Edward Morawetz ’10
Condolences:
Elizabeth E. Parlin Newcomer ’42, who
lost her husband
Alice Williams Carver ’43, who lost her
husband
Christine L. Hall Herndon ’44, who lost
her sister
Helen Hawley Turner ’44, who lost her
husband
Louise Lilly Barrett ’45, who lost her
husband
Christine Brauer Krausse ’45, who lost
her husband
Betty J. Altenberger Calandruccio ’46,
who lost her husband
Judith L. Davis Clardy ’47, who lost her
husband
Phyllis Peery Riley ’47, who lost her
husband
Geraldine Boswell Griffin ’50, who lost
her husband
Helen Hopkins Timberlake ’50, who lost
her husband
Carolyn D. Bowers Atwell ’51, who lost
her mother
Jeanne Burckell MacDonald ’51, who
lost her father
Catherine Pizzuti Petraiuolo ’56, who
lost her husband
Barbara Broome Hamner ’57, who lost
her sister
Beverly Cooke Lordi ’58, who lost her
husband
Sue May Smyth Lam ’60, who lost her
husband
Margaret “Peggy” Howard Hodgkins
’61, who lost her mother
Kathleen L. Sprenkle Lisagor ’62, who
lost her husband
Karen Elliott Vandevanter Chapman ’63,
who lost her husband
Mary A. Settle Johnson ’63, who lost her
husband
Elizabeth Watters Miller ’69, who lost
her husband
Diana J. Rupert Livingston ’71, who lost
her husband
Caren Moore Van Pelt ’73, who lost her
father
Lanona “Nonie” Gassman Robinson ’74,
who lost her mother
Faith Ann Geibel Moore ’75, who lost
her father
Kristen Maher Griesert ’95, who lost
her parents
Kristin M. Ruhl Bergstrom ’99, who lost
her father
Pauline Cosby Clements ’23:
A Remembrance
Pauline Cosby Clements ’23,
who was featured in the last issue
of University of Mary Washington
TODAY, died on May 3, 2008.
Before her death, she was Mary
Washington’s oldest known
living alumna. Born on Sept.
15, 1902, nearly six years before
the University itself, Clements
graduated from the institution
when it was known as the
Fredericksburg Normal School.
A retired school teacher who commanded the respect and earned the
love of legions of students during her 45 years in the classroom, she was a
devout Baptist who held an intense interest in politics.
She was married to the late Luther Raden Clements, and during
her lifetime, she had been a member of the Retired Teachers Association
of Virginia, Chatham Baptist Church, Woman’s Christian Temperance
Union, the Maude Clement Garden Club, Friends of the Library, and the
Historical Society. She was involved in the Maury Literary Society and the
YWCA, and she was a charter member of the Hargrave Woman’s Club. She
also served as chaplain of the William Pitt Chapter of the D.A.R.
In the magazine article, written by UMW history professor William
B. Crawley Jr., Clements once again shared her great wisdom. In talking
to Crawley, her former pupil, she paraphrased this Gandhi aphorism as
advice to take to heart: “Learn as if you’re going to live forever, but live as if
you’re going to die tomorrow.”
UNIVERSITY OF MARY WASHINGTON MAGAZINE��������������� �
87