The information below is an archive of submissions received through May 31, 2024. All new submissions received as of June 1, 2024 are located here.
Learn the latest news about your former classmates! Search the database below for class notes, births, memoriams and marriages reported by fellow alumni. If no filters are selected, all submissions are shown alphabetically by last name of alumni.
Please contact alumni@maryvillecollege.edu with any questions.
Browse Class Notes:
(Default list is alphabetical of all notes – sort by year or category to filter the list)
Class of 1987
After completing her Ph.D., Norehan has been named Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Northern Malaysia.
Class of 1987
David Marcum, PE, Class of 1987, is the Senior Civil Engineer for the City of Alcoa. Additionally, David has expanded his lifelong interest in mysteries by authoring nearly 120 Sherlock Holmes mysteries, some with Publishers Weekly starred reviews, and editing over 1,000 Holmes short stories in over 80 volumes. Additionally, the funds from some of these edited books have raised over $100,000 for a school for special needs children.
Class of 1987
Risa has created a mental health support website, www.GenuineU.com where college students who feel alone in their suffering, can view personal videos from peers with live mental health experiences. Risa's partner in this endeavor is Matthew Barksdale, a Kansas City serial entrepreneur. She is also backed by the Rockhurst University Chapter of the Year, Active Minds student organization, for which she serves as faculty sponsor. You are invited to check out the site and send a note of support.
Class of 1987
Risa Stein, PhD has earned a Master's degree in Organizational Leadership from the Rockhurst University's Helzberg School of Management in Kansas City, MO. Risa has also published a self-guided therapy workbook entitled the Best Damn Life Workbook. It is available on Amazon.
Class of 1987
SALISBURY, MD—A few months before he was assassinated, President John F. Kennedy made a historic trip to Europe, which included his ancestors’ homeland in Ireland. The event left an indelible impression on the Gaelic country, which recently hosted the nationwide anniversary celebration “JFK 50: The Homecoming.” Invited guests included the Kennedy family, singer-songwriger Judy Collins, Riverdance choreographer Michael Flatley … and Salisbury University voice instructor John Wesley Wright. A singer with the American Spiritual Ensemble, Wright joined three other hand-selected members of the group during four days of performances for the high-profile celebration. His one-of-a-kind experience was made possible by Dr. Pearse Lyons, owner and president of international company Alltech. Born in Ireland and now living in Kentucky, Lyons is a supporter of the American Spiritual Ensemble. When he learned of plans for the 50th anniversary celebration, he recommended the group because of its musical excellence and symbolic representation of Kennedy’s support for civil rights. They sang songs that the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and others used to punctuate meetings and demonstrations in the 1960s, including “Walk Together, Children” and “I Know I’ve Been Changed.” Wright and his colleagues began their whirlwind tour shortly after landing in Ireland, joining a community chorus outside Dublin for a cultural exchange concert that evening. The next morning brought a performance on an Irish radio show featuring a panel of Kennedy experts. They then were guests at a 280-person dinner held in the Kennedys’ honor. Afterward, once all the clinking of glasses and silverware had stopped, they performed for what, by the standards set the next day, was an intimate crowd. “All the Kennedys were sitting three feet from me,” Wright recalled, adding that the ensemble representatives received accolades from Kennedy’s daughter, Caroline. On Saturday, June 22, some 15,000 gathered before a stage at the Kennedy Monument in New Hope, Ireland, where the president had spoken five decades prior, for the main event of this once-in-a-lifetime celebration. “The magnitude felt like that of our presidential inauguration,” said Wright. Millions watched the nationally televised ceremony as representatives from the Peace Corps, Special Olympics and others carried a fire that originated with a torch lit from the Eternal Flame at Kennedy’s graveside at Arlington National Cemetery. Irish Prime Minister Edna Kenny joined the president’s sister, Jean Kennedy Smith, and Caroline Kennedy in lighting Ireland’s own version of the Eternal Flame, the Emigrant Flame, inside an iron globe. Ireland, Wright noted, is “a singing nation.” The crowd sang along with Collins during her performances and, following the lead of former Maryland Lt. Governor Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, all 15,000 in attendance stood and joined the American Spiritual Ensemble in a powerful post-slavery song used heavily during the civil rights era, “Oh, Freedom.” Most Irish may not have experienced the slave conditions that gave birth to American spirituals, but the historical hardships their country has suffered helped them understand, Wright said. The ceremony culminated as Wright and others joined Collins in a heartfelt rendition of “Amazing Grace.” As Collins clutched Wright’s hand, a squadron of Irish Air Corps jets flew in formation, with one breaking off from the group to symbolize the loss of Kennedy. “It was one of the most touching things I’ve ever experienced,” said Wright. He was not the only one who thought so. Afterward, he and other members of the ensemble were recognized by Irish citizens who had attended the ceremony or watched it on television. From the cab driver who drove them back to their hotel to men gathered in a nearby pub, nearly everyone had the same reaction. “They would say, ‘Irish men don’t share their pain … but you moved me,'” said Wright. (PLEASE SEE PICTURES IN MEDIA SECTION)
Class of 1987
John Wesley Wright ’87 was a featured performer with the National Chorale, New York’s premier professional choral company, during the 50th presentation of “Handel’s Messiah Sing-In” on Dec. 15 at Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts. The presentation included an audience-chorus of almost 3,000 voices under the batons of 17 eminent conductors from around the country who each conducted a movement. Wright, a tenor, is coordinator of the voice and opera programs at Salisbury University in Maryland. A member of the internationally acclaimed American Spiritual Ensemble, Wright is also an active clinician, consultant and leader of workshops on voice production, song interpretation and African-American song tradition.