Reflections Magazine Issue #80 - Spring 2014 | Page 29
Alumni News—Class Notes
1995
Julie Goll was named the president
and CEO of the Blissfield (Mich.)
State Bank on March 1, 2014. She
has worked at the bank since 1982,
and was most recently its executive
vice president and chief lending officer. Goll and her husband, David,
reside in Blissfield Township.
2006
Alumni
Lisa VanderPutten married Kevin
Justusson June 1, 2013, in Detroit
Mich. The bride is employed in
media finance with Aegis Media in
Detroit. After a honeymoon to Bora
Bora, the couple resides in Keego
Harbor, Mich.
Sister Mary Frances Coleman, OP ’43
Sister Mary Dougherty, OP ’44
Connie Berube Binsfeld ’45
Rosemarie Van D’Elden Birman ’47
Frances Bork Nowakowski ’48
Sister Francesca Bartos, OP ’50
Sister Mary Anthony Marelli, OP ’53
Sister Catherine Henry Schmid, OP ’53
Sister Sean Therese Halpin, OP ’54
Josephine “Pat” Finn ’61
Sister Bernadette Vozobule, OP ’62
Sister Mary Eileen Sullivan, OP ’69
Janet Walter Klein ’70
Annette Herr Lerner ’74
Stephen Smallets ’76
Louis Wamsher III ’79
George Wagner II ’88
Carol Ann Forbes ’89
Donald Saul ’98
Linda Marutz ’99
Kathleen Tarr ’00
Randy Collier ’08
Dane Conyers ’13
2007
Friends
1998
LuAnn SawdeyRoberts earned
the 2014 Carl J.
Latona Distinguished Service
Award for leadership and dedication at Highfields.
She currently serves as director of
Community Services at Highfields
and was recognized for her integrity,
passion to help others, perseverance
and commitment to excellence. She
oversees five counties and 10 programs as well as 40 staffers from
the mental health and child welfare
system in her current position. Sawdey-Roberts has been with Highfields since 2001.
1999
Kristin Baty Watts and her husband, Jay, announce the birth of a
daughter, Colby, on Dec. 5, 2013.
She is the couple’s first child. Kristin
is employed as director of Admissions at Trinity School in Atlanta, Ga.,
where the family resides.
2003
Emily Gray Catrell authored her
first book, “Meanmna: Book One
of the Daearen Realms,” in January
2014. The digital book uses the
Adrian and Irish Hills areas as a
backdrop, and Gatrell said in an
Adrian Daily Telegram news story
that her love of the Adrian community and Siena Heights were the
primary reasons. “Meanmna” is
a Scottish Gaelic word for “spirit”
and “courage.” Gatrell said the book
combines a coming of age story
and the paranormal. The book is a
kickoff for a planned series of six.
The book is available on Ama 齸