PSU Magazine Fall 2003
'75 Genell e Hanken is director of the Coos County Juvenile Department. Hanken previously was assistant director for four years and has also served as a parole and probation officer for 21 years. She lives in Coquille. James Henry is supervisory investigator for the U.S. Food & Drug Administration in Clovis, California. David Porter, was appointed by Gov. Ted Kulongoski to the Ore– gon Travel Information Council. The council administers the State Highway Logo and Tourist Attraction Sign programs, the Historical Marker and Heritage Tree programs, and travel infor– mation centers in 15 rest areas. Porter has served as Oregon Trail Foundation executive director since 1994 and raised millions for growth, operations, and marketing. 115JJ'Foundation_ POJITI.AND STATE lJNIVERSITY 22 PSU MAGAZINE FALL 2003 '76 Dean Koehler retired as a cap– tain from the U.S. Navy. He is now a pilot, recently upgraded to captain, with Alaska Airlines. He lives in Beaverton. Teri Mariani was one of six people inducted into the Ore– gon Sports Hall of Fame at a ceremony on August 16 at the Portland Center for Performing Arts. Mariani has been the soft– ball coach at PSU for 27 years, compiling a 627-518 record (the most wins of any female coach in PSU history) and has been named Western Region Coach of the Year twice. While attending PSU, she played soft– ball, volleyball, and basketball. '77 William "Bill" Feusahrens MS is superintendent of the Eagle Point School District 9. He formerly was superintendent of schools in Filer, a small district near Twin Falls, Idaho. '78 Donna Derington has joined the PSU Alumni Board of Direc– tors. Derington is store manager at Rejuvenation , Inc. , in Portland. '79 Rosemary Ryan MPA is a research associate professor at the University of Washington School of Social Work in Seattle. '80 Barbara Rost is the director of Classroom Law Project, a non– profit organization in Portland that teaches students to partici– pate as informed citizens. Rost graduated from Northwestern School of Law at Lewis & Clark College in 1984. She and her husband, Terry, have two daughters and live in West Linn. Maryalice Russell MS '82 is the McMinnville School District superintendent of schools. Her husband, David Fitzpatrick '75, MS '77 is a vice president and group actuary at The Standard in Portland. '81 Lars Nordstrom is a profes– sional writer and translator. Nordstrom gave a lecture in Clatskanie on the activities of the Swedish Roots in Oregon, a nonprofit organization which focuses on genealogy, and on the written historical research on the lives of Swedes. He lives in Beavercreek. Molly Reeves is a painter whose show, Travel Near and Far, was displayed at the Bella Tierra Gallery in Lake Oswego. Reeves received a master's degree in mechanical engineer– ing from Oregon State Univer– sity and formerly worked in the high-tech field designing auto– mated manufacturing systems using robots and machine vision. She is a member of the Watercolor Society of Oregon. Age 49: The average age someone first includes a charity in their will. 43 o/o: The percentage of people under age 55 who have put a charity in their will. $50,000 or under: The income of 36% of those who include a charity in their will . 1/2: More than half of those who name a charity in their will make bequests to more than one charity. Source: NCPG survey of 170,000 U.S. households, 2000 If you have named the Portland State University Foundation as a beneficiary in your estate plan, we hope you will share this with us and be welcomed into our Centennial Society. If you would like more information on making a gift to PSU through your will, IRA, or estate plan, please contact us at the address below. Name ______________________________ Address ________ ______________ ______ Phone ______________ Ema il ____________ Return to Phil ip Varnum, PSU Foundation, PO Box 243, Portland OR 97207-0243 or contact him by phone at 503-725-5881 or by email at varnump@pdx.edu .
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