Category Archives: Medical School Alumni

Father of medical informatics, Utah’s Homer Warner dies

Homer Warner, a pioneer of computerized medicine, pictured before one the first analog computers. Courtesy Homer Warner, Jr.

Homer Warner, a Utah cardiologist widely recognized as the father of medical informatics, died last week from complications of pancreatitis. He was 90.

Warners research is still redefining medicine, colleagues say. Modern intensive care units can be traced back to the electronic systems he built to monitor heart patients in the mid-1950s. And his creation of one of the first electronic medical records in the 70s set the stage for a new academic field and multi-billion dollar health IT industry.

Funeral services

A public service will be held at noon on Thursday, Dec. 6, at the Foothill Stake Center, 1933 S. 2100 East in Salt Lake City.

In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations to the Homer R. Warner Scholarship Fund in Medical Informatics at the University of Utah.

Online condolences may be left at http://www.larkincares.com.

He had the mind of an intellectual and the soul of an adventurer, captivating University of Utah medical students in a speech just weeks before he died, said his son Homer Warner Jr. "He just had a quiet magnetism about him."

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Father of medical informatics, Utah’s Homer Warner dies

President Bill Clinton to Address Health Care Leaders at Inaugural Patient Safety, Science & Technology Summit — a …

IRVINE, Calif., Dec. 3, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- President Bill Clinton, leading healthcare professionals and industry executives will convene at the first-ever Patient Safety, Science & Technology Summit, January 13-14, 2013, at the Ritz-Carlton, in Laguna Niguel, Calif.

Each year, more than 200,000 patients die preventable deaths in U.S. hospitals.1,2 At the inaugural Patient Safety, Science & Technology Summit, leading physicians, hospital administrators, medical technology manufacturers and patient advocates will collaborate, commit, and pledge to improve patient safety by taking action on three key areas in 2013:

"Far too many patients suffer preventable harm including receiving care that is disrespectful and undignified," said Dr. Peter Pronovost, MD, Sr. Vice President for Patient Safety and Quality at Johns Hopkins Medicine, and Director of the Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality. "Too often the safety of patients relies on the heroism of clinicians rather than the design of systems.We need to design a healthcare system that eliminates all types of preventable harm; and to do so,clinicians must partner with patients, their families, and technology companies."

In any given hospital room, up to 15 medical devices, including monitors, ventilators and infusion pumps, are connected to a patient, but they don't communicate with each other. For example, patient controlled analgesic pumps that deliver powerful narcotic painkillers where a known side effect is respiratory depression aren't linked to other devices that monitor breathing, leaving patients at potential risk.

This Summit is not just about information, it is about action.

The Patient Safety, Science & Technology Summit will confront large problems with actionable ideas and innovations that can transform the process of care for dramatic improvements in patient safety and cost of care. Some of the best minds in healthcare will engage and collaborate on high-impact patient safety challenges through monitoring and feedback, predicting risk, therapeutic advances, decision support, interoperability, automating and integrating quality measures.

Joe Kiani, Chairman of the Masimo Foundation for Ethics, Innovation & Competition in Healthcare, stated: "We are excited to help gather some of the most passionate advocates of humanity to focus on tangible, actionable recipes for advancing patient safety. The goal is to have zero preventable deaths in hospitals. Attendees will leave with action plans to tackle and eliminate the three challenges discussed above. In addition, we hope through President Clinton's challenge, and encouragement of the world-renowned speakers from Dr. Joshua Adler to World Health Organization special envoy Thomas Zeltner, the health care industry will begin a new level of cooperation to help every patient go home safely after their hospital procedure is over."

In addition to President Clinton, other luminaries participating in the Patient Safety, Science & Technology Summit include:

Joshua Adler, MD, Chief Medical Officer of UCSF Medical Center, UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital, and Medical Director of UCSF Ambulatory Care;

Richard Afable, MD, President and CEO of Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian;

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President Bill Clinton to Address Health Care Leaders at Inaugural Patient Safety, Science & Technology Summit -- a ...

Hundreds turn out to honor Saugus High drama teacher

Home > News Hundreds turn out to honor Saugus High drama teacher Originally Published on Sunday, December 02, 2012 By Matt Tempesta / The Daily Item

SAUGUS More than 30 years worth of Saugus High School Drama Club alumni took to the stage Friday night at the high school auditorium to honor drama teacher Nancy Lemoine, who has been on medical leave since the summer with a rare form of cancer.

The show, called "Nan Through the Years," featured more than two dozen scenes and musical numbers from shows Lemoine had directed throughout her 20-plus year career.

The first act of the revue started with an introduction by Christopher Sicuranza (class of '02) followed by a reunion of close to 10 years of members of the Needs Improvment improvisation troupe. Musical numbers included "We Go Together" from "Grease" and "Light of the World" from "Godspell."

"She would always make sure I was known to people, I was a little shy at the time," Sicuranza told the audience. "She made sure to bring out the best in everybody. That's what we're celebrating tonight. The fact that somebody meant so much to so many people and we're here to pay homage to her."

Alumni from as far back as 1975 participated in the show, as John Macero (class of '81), teamed up with David Picariello (class of '13), Peter DiMauro (class of '06) and Brittany Daley (class of '07) to sing "Put on a Happy Face" from "Bye, Bye Birdie."

In act two, the cast sang numbers from "Chicago," "Fiddler on the Roof" and "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dream Coat," and performed a scene from a "Midsummer Night's Dream."

Bobby Imperato (class of '01) and Priscilla Swain (class of '05) co-directed "Nan Through the Years," and Swain said when they found out Lemoine was sick, they wanted to "give back."

"She was born and raised in Saugus and made this a great program here," said Swain. "Nan taught us a lot about using your talent to give back to the community, and she brought a lot of us out to sing for homeless people and the elderly. She does all of this selflessly. She's a wonderful lady."

Tricia Savage's son Robert, who was featured in Friday's show, graduated from Saugus High in 2000. She said Lemoine played a "huge" role in her son's life.

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Hundreds turn out to honor Saugus High drama teacher

‘90210’ Celebrates 100th Episode With A Striptease At The Playboy Mansion (EXCLUSIVE VIDEO)

'Beauty and the Beast'

Detective Catherine Chandler is a smart, no-nonsense homicide detective. Several years earlier, Catherine witnessed the murder of her mother at the hands of two gunmen. Catherine would have been killed too, but someone - or something - saved her. No one has ever believed her, but she knows it wasn't an animal that attacked the assassins...it was human. Years have passed, and Catherine is a strong, confident, capable police officer, working alongside her equally talented partner, Tess. While investigating a murder, Catherine discovers a clue that leads her to a handsome doctor named Vincent Keller, who was reportedly killed by enemy fire while serving in Afghanistan in 2002. Catherine learns that Vincent is actually still alive and that it was he who saved her many years before. For mysterious reasons that have forced him to live outside of traditional society, Vincent has been in hiding for the past 10 years to guard his secret - when he is enraged, he becomes a terrifying beast, unable to control his super-strength and heightened senses. Catherine agrees to protect his identity in return for any insight he may have into her mother's murder. Thus begins a complex relationship between Catherine and Vincent, who are powerfully drawn to each other yet understand that their connection is extremely dangerous for both of them.

It's 1984, and life isn't easy for 16-year-old Carrie Bradshaw. Since their mother passed away, Carrie's younger sister Dorritt is more rebellious than ever, and their father Tom is overwhelmed with the responsibility of suddenly having to care for two teenage girls on his own. Carrie's friends - sweet, geeky Mouse, sarcastic and self-assured Maggie and sensitive Walt - make life bearable, but a suburban life in Connecticut isn't doing much to take her mind off her troubles. And even though the arrival of a sexy new transfer student named Sebastian brings some excitement to Carrie's world, she is struggling to move on from her grief. So when Tom offers Carrie the chance to intern at a law firm in Manhattan, she leaps at the chance. Carrie's eyes are opened wide at the glamour and grit of New York City - and when she meets Larissa, the style editor for Interview magazine, she's inspired by the club culture and unique individuals that make up Larissa's world. Carrie's friends and family may have a big place in her heart, but she's fallen in love for the first time with the most important man in her life - Manhattan.

It's 1984, and life isn't easy for 16-year-old Carrie Bradshaw. Since their mother passed away, Carrie's younger sister Dorritt is more rebellious than ever, and their father Tom is overwhelmed with the responsibility of suddenly having to care for two teenage girls on his own. Carrie's friends - sweet, geeky Mouse, sarcastic and self-assured Maggie and sensitive Walt - make life bearable, but a suburban life in Connecticut isn't doing much to take her mind off her troubles. And even though the arrival of a sexy new transfer student named Sebastian brings some excitement to Carrie's world, she is struggling to move on from her grief. So when Tom offers Carrie the chance to intern at a law firm in Manhattan, she leaps at the chance. Carrie's eyes are opened wide at the glamour and grit of New York City - and when she meets Larissa, the style editor for Interview magazine, she's inspired by the club culture and unique individuals that make up Larissa's world. Carrie's friends and family may have a big place in her heart, but she's fallen in love for the first time with the most important man in her life - Manhattan.

At long last, Emily Owens feels like she is an actual grown-up. She can finally put her high school days as the geeky-girl-with-flop-sweats behind her; she's graduated from medical school and is now a first-year intern at Denver Memorial Hospital, where she'll have the chance to work with world-famous cardiologist Dr. Gina Beckett - and where, not-so-coincidentally, her med-school crush Will Rider is also an intern. So why does everyone keep warning her that the hospital is just like high school? Emily soon finds out the hard way - her high school nemesis, the gorgeous, popular Cassandra Kopelson, is also just starting out at Denver Memorial, and it seems like they're rivals all over again - not only as surgical interns, but for Will's attention. Fellow intern Tyra Granger warns Emily that the cliques at Denver Memorial are all too familiar: the jocks have become orthopedic surgeons; the mean girls are in plastics; the rebels are in the ER, and Tyra has her own awkward place as the principal's kid - her father is the chief resident. Emily's the new kid all over again, and it's just as awkward as high school. Only this time around, Emily will have to balance the personal and emotional turmoil of social politics with the high-stakes world of life-and-death medical decisions. At least she has fellow intern Tyra and nerdy-but-cute resident Micah, to count on as friends. Emily is growing to realize that although she may be a geek, she may also grow to be a great doctor, flop sweats and all.

At long last, Emily Owens feels like she is an actual grown-up. She can finally put her high school days as the geeky-girl-with-flop-sweats behind her; she's graduated from medical school and is now a first-year intern at Denver Memorial Hospital, where she'll have the chance to work with world-famous cardiologist Dr. Gina Beckett - and where, not-so-coincidentally, her med-school crush Will Rider is also an intern. So why does everyone keep warning her that the hospital is just like high school? Emily soon finds out the hard way - her high school nemesis, the gorgeous, popular Cassandra Kopelson, is also just starting out at Denver Memorial, and it seems like they're rivals all over again - not only as surgical interns, but for Will's attention. Fellow intern Tyra Granger warns Emily that the cliques at Denver Memorial are all too familiar: the jocks have become orthopedic surgeons; the mean girls are in plastics; the rebels are in the ER, and Tyra has her own awkward place as the principal's kid - her father is the chief resident. Emily's the new kid all over again, and it's just as awkward as high school. Only this time around, Emily will have to balance the personal and emotional turmoil of social politics with the high-stakes world of life-and-death medical decisions. At least she has fellow intern Tyra and nerdy-but-cute resident Micah, to count on as friends. Emily is growing to realize that although she may be a geek, she may also grow to be a great doctor, flop sweats and all.

After a violent shipwreck, billionaire playboy Oliver Queen was missing and presumed dead for five years before being discovered alive on a remote island in the Pacific. When he returns home to Starling City, his devoted mother Moira, much-beloved sister Thea, and best friend Tommy welcome him home, but they sense Oliver has been changed by his ordeal on the island. While Oliver hides the truth about the man he's become, he desperately wants to make amends for the actions he took as the boy he was. Most particularly, he seeks reconciliation with his former girlfriend, Laurel Lance. As Oliver reconnects with those closest to him, he secretly creates the persona of Arrow - a vigilante - to right the wrongs of his family, fight the ills of society, and restore Starling City to its former glory. By day, Oliver plays the role of a wealthy, carefree and careless philanderer he used to be - flanked by his devoted chauffeur/bodyguard, John Diggle - while carefully concealing the secret identity he turns to under cover of darkness. However, Laurel's father, Detective Quentin Lance, is determined to arrest the vigilante operating in his city. Meanwhile, Oliver's own mother, Moira, knows much more about the deadly shipwreck than she has let on - and is more ruthless than he could ever imagine.

Robert Knepper as Billy Grimm/Roger Reeves and Alona Tal as Kelly/Marti.

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'90210' Celebrates 100th Episode With A Striptease At The Playboy Mansion (EXCLUSIVE VIDEO)

Ateneo de Davao High School Class ’62 celebrates Golden Jubilee

Fifty years after graduation from high school, members of the Ateneo de Davao High School Class 1962 will return to the Matina campus on December 7 for a reunion that will begin with a mass and recollection.

Retired Malaybalay Bishop Honesto Pacana, SJ, who was one of the class advisers, will officiate the mass and the recollection with another former teacher, Fr. Rene Ocampo, SJ, who heads the Alumni Office.

Forty-eight students gradudated from the Ateneo de Davao High School in 1962, many of them distinguished in their respective fields, including the scion of a prominent family who went underground when martial law was declared and was arrested, tortured and killed in 1975.

Class members who are now based in the United States, Spain and Australia and from other parts of the country have confirmed their attendance to the reunion.

Those who have confirmed attendance to the reunion are Davao City-based Michael Mike Aranas, Solomon Mon Carpio, Jerry Jerry Garcia, class valedictorian Manuel Manny de Leon, Frank Sulim Liu, Prospero Totoy Mojica, Humberto Nonoy delos Santos, Jose Ting Tiongco and Amor Amor Yap; Mati-based Octavio Boy Zamora; Quezon City-based Domingo Inggo Garcia and Cristeto Titoy Vertido; Alabang-based Joseph Jojosan Sison; Subic-based Roberto Boy Calida; Malaybalay-based Danilo Danny Fanlo.

Class members who are coming from abroad are class salutatorian Bertito Bert Bisnar who is now based in Reno, Nevada: Rey Rey Domingo of San Francisco, California; Alfono Apo Gallego of Zaragoza, Spain; Nilo Nilo Garriga of Sydney, Australia; and Gil Ernesto Hell de los Reyes of Baltimore, Maryland;

Other members of the class who have been contacted but have yet to confirm attendance are former Trade Secretary Tomas Alcantara, now Chair and President of Alsons Consolidated Resources, Inc.; Amable Aguiluz V, the father of computer education in the Philippines; Benjamin Malones and Bienvenido Gamir. Aguiluz V, whose nickname is King, is founder of Asias first largest computer-based education system in the Philippines The AMA Education System and since 2003, the Special Envoy of the Philippine President to the Gulf Cooperation Council.

Aranas is a retired bank manager of Family Bank before it merged with Bank of the Philippine Islands; Bisnar is an actuarian of a Health Maintenance Organization in Reno Nevada, Calida is a businessman based in Subic, Zambales, Carpio is into agribusiness, Domingo is retired from his job in a research lab in California, Fanlo is a mechanical engineering graduate and an efficiency expert, Gallego is an anaesthesiologist in Zaragoza, Spain; Domingo Garcia is a civil engineer and housing contractor; Garcia, Jerry is a retired prosecutor in Tagum City, Garriga is a retired salesman in Sydney, De Leon retired as consultant of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization in Japan, Liu runs a wholesale grocery in Sta Ana, Mojica is a lawyer, Morales was with top management in a pharmaceutical company; De los Reyes is a retired doctor in Baltimore Maryland; De los Santos runs Humbertos Hotel along Palma Gil St., Sison is a retired diplomat who served as Agricultural attach in Japan, Tiongco is chief executive officer of Medical Mission Group Hospitals and Health Services Cooperative-Philippines, a health cooperative that started in Davao City in 1991 and has since spread nationwide; Vertido is a retired actor and playwright; Yap is a practicing lawyer; Zamora is into agri-business.

Those who have sent word they could not attend are Carlos Tamayo, Vicente Tionko and Alex Yackwa Liu.

Among the class members who passed away are Eduardo E. Lanzona who belonged to a rich, prominent family, taught economics in his alma mater, influenced the student movement there, helped organize farmers and the labor unions of Ateneo teachers and bank employees, went underground when martial law was declared in 1972 and was arrested, tortured and killed along with four others in Nabunturan, Compostela Valley on January 17, 1975; and Amado Lacuesta, who was an investment banker for 10 years before becoming an award-winning screenplay writer. Lacuesta suffered a fatal heart failure on New Years Day 1997.

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Ateneo de Davao High School Class ’62 celebrates Golden Jubilee

Saugus students, alums to pay tribute Friday to ill drama teacher

Home > News Saugus students, alums to pay tribute Friday to ill drama teacher Originally Published on Thursday, November 29, 2012 By Matt Tempesta / The Daily Item

SAUGUS Several generations of Saugus High School students and Theater Company of Saugus members from across the country will gather at the high school auditorium Friday night to honor longtime drama teacher Nancy Lemoine.

Lemoine has been on medical leave since the summer after she was diagnosed with cancer, and Fridays event, called Nan Through the Years, will pay tribute to Lemoine with a grand revue of musical numbers, scenes and sketches recreated from 20 years worth of performances.

Amanda Allen helped organize the event and said, after recently starting a Facebook group for it, she received more than 300 responses almost overnight.

It was amazing and overwhelming, she said. I am thrilled and beyond excited to see it all come together, and for her to see some of the alumni come will be awesome.

Allen did her first musical with Lemoine in 2004 and since then she said she has become a huge part of her life.

Both in theater and personally, said Allen. Shes been a theater mentor and a life mentor for me over the last eight or nine years. Shes helped me grow both as a performer and a person throughout the years. Shes opened my eyes to so many things.

According to the release, Lemoine was raised in Saugus and graduated from Saugus High. She started working at the high school after college, first as a drama coach and later as a teacher.

In addition to teaching and directing theater, Lemoine has formed and directed the award-winning Saugus High School Chorus and barbershop quartets, both male and female, and an improvisation troupe Needs Improvment. She has directed numerous plays and musicals, supervised the student-directed one-act play festival, and brought a production every year to the Massachusetts High School Drama Guild competition.

Lemoine has also been a member of the Theatre Company of Saugus since she was a girl. She has directed, musically directed and performed in dozens of their productions over the past 40 years. Lemoine has also been the organist and choir director for the Cliftondale Congregational Church for many years.

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Saugus students, alums to pay tribute Friday to ill drama teacher

Boys’ High alumni holds mission today

SOME 100 indigent residents of City Camp will benefit from the medical mission of an alumni association.

Saint Louis University-Boys High Club 7882 will conduct a medical, dental, and optical mission for the indigents of Barangay City Camp Proper and City Camp Central today, Friday, from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. at the City Camp Proper Youth Center.

The alumni of class 1982 of the SLU Boys High School will once again share their blessings to the needy. This is part of the outreach program the group does annually said Felizardo Gacad, president of the group.

Club 7882 president Joselito Itong Tan said the project is in coordination with Association of Barangay Councils president Joel Alangsab.

Drs. Louie Llanes and Noli Tandoc will diagnose medical conditions, while Dr. Nestor Ventura will handle dental concerns, and Dr. Jhun Dizon for optical.

This year, one of the farthest elementary schools in Benguet and seven high school students were beneficiaries of the 3rd Miners Cup Basketball Invitational Tournament which the group of alumni organized with mining companies.

Some P40,000 was given to the Pimmingan Elementary School and scholarship program from the basketball tournament. (Redjie Melvic Cawis)

Published in the Sun.Star Baguio newspaper on November 30, 2012.

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Boys’ High alumni holds mission today

Geisel School of Medicine – Wiki Article – Video


Geisel School of Medicine - Wiki Article
Dartmouth Medical School is the medical school of Dartmouth College, located in Hanover, New Hampshire, in the United States. The fourth-oldest medical school in the United States and one of seven Iv... Geisel School of Medicine - Wiki Article - wikiplays.org Original @ http All Information Derived from Wikipedia using Creative Commons License: en.wikipedia.org Author: Samuel Morse Image URL: en.wikipedia.org ( This work is in the Public Domain. ) Author: Unknown Image URL: en.wikipedia.org ( This work is in the Public Domain. ) Author: Unknown Image URL: en.wikipedia.org ( This work is in the Public Domain. ) Author: Kane5187 Image URL: en.wikipedia.org ( This work is in the Public Domain. ) Author: Kane5187 Image URL: en.wikipedia.org ( This work is in the Public Domain. ) Author: JJ Image URL: en.wikipedia.org ( This work is in the Public Domain. )From:WikiPlaysViews:0 0ratingsTime:23:00More inEducation

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Geisel School of Medicine - Wiki Article - Video

National University Announces Online Master of Science in Health and Life Science Analytics Program

SAN DIEGO, CA--(Marketwire - Nov 27, 2012) - National University, the second-largest private, nonprofit institution of higher education in California and the 12th-largest in the nation, has introduced a new, first-of-its-kind, online Master of Science in Health and Life Science Analytics degree program.

The program, accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC), will prepare health and life science analysts for the vast and growing amount of data accumulating in the healthcare industry. Students working toward their Master of Science in Health and Life Science Analytics degree will work with real-world data and examples and use leading statistical software. By the end of the program, graduates will have experience in analytical and predictive modeling, data acquisition, data mining, healthcare information management systems and epidemiology.

"Data is the backbone of the medical profession," said Tyler Smith, MS, PhD, associate professor at National University's School of Health and Human Sciences. "Graduates of the Master of Science in Health and Life Science Analytics degree program will learn how to integrate the increasing volumes of data, frame relevant questions, and leverage cutting edge analytic tools and software to shape data-driven enhancements in healthcare."

National University's School of Engineering, Technology and Media and School of Health and Human Services will share resources for the first six classes of the program.Students then branch out into their respective, specialized analytic degree programs.

The 13-course program totals 58.5 quarter units, is fully interactive and taught in National University's completely online and convenient one-course-per-month format.

The program will prepare students, in part, to:

For more information about the Master of Science in Health and Life Sciences Analytics degree program, admission requirements, and enrollment periods, please visit: http://www.nu.edu.

ABOUT NATIONAL UNIVERSITY Founded in 1971, National University is the second-largest private, nonprofit institution of higher education in California and the 12th-largest in the United States. With 22,000 full-time students and 129,000 alumni, National University is the flagship institution of the National University System. National University is dedicated to making lifelong learning opportunities accessible, challenging, and relevant to a diverse population of students. Four schools and one college -- the College of Letters and Sciences; the School of Business and Management; the School of Education; the School of Engineering, Technology and Media; and the School of Health and Human Services -- offer 100 graduate and undergraduate degrees and 22 teacher credentials at more than 45 locations throughout California and across the nation. A leader in online education, National University offers more than 70 degree programs via the Internet. National University is headquartered in La Jolla, California. To learn more, visit http://www.nu.edu.

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National University Announces Online Master of Science in Health and Life Science Analytics Program

Merry Hanning honored as group’s 2012 Grand Honoree

(Editors note: The following article on Merry Burgess Hanning, the 2012 Grand Honoree of the Oak Hill High/Collins High Reunion, is reprinted with permission from The Log, the reunions official publication.)

Merry Burgess Hanning, Collins High Class of 1972, is a wife, mother, grandmother, gardener, professional woman, actress, singer, political activist and lifelong Red Devil. She is a member and past president of the Oak Hill High/Collins High School Alumni Association and has been selected as the 2012 Grand Honoree.

She grew up singing at the Jones Avenue First Church of God, and gospel is still at the heart of her music. She has performed in several productions at Historic Fayette Theater, including all three of the Smoke on the Mountain shows. In 2000, the cast of Smoke was invited to perform the show in Wales as part of a cultural exchange.

Gene Worthington cast Merry in the starring role in the 2002 production of Always, Patsy Cline. Cline is one of her all-time favorite singers, which made it even more special.

She is a member of Karen Vuranchs In Cahoots murder mystery troupe, which performs shows at several West Virginia state parks as well as Tamarack and Fayette Theater.

Several times each year, she will provide musical entertainment for local civic and business groups, as well as a Church and Gospel Music in the Coal Camps program for Coal Heritage Trail tours. Merry feels fortunate to be a part of Jon Kempers 4th of July Extravaganza as a member of Jons Aint Dead Yet Band, which includes the Blister Sisters trio.

She is former vocalist for the New River Jazz Band and has performed blues and jazz (her second favorite musical genre) with Welsh jazz pianist Jen Wilson.

Velma Foster, a dear friend and founding member of the Alumni Association, has mentored Merry throughout her life. She taught her about leadership (hint its delegate, delegate, delegate) and dedication to those worthwhile activities in life, first at church and later with the Alumni Association. Following in Velmas footprints, Merry has tried to make a difference.

During the past years, she has served as assistant treasurer to Velma Foster, treasurer and president of the organization. She encouraged by-law changes to keep the Association current and to allow it to continue to be viable when school consolidation occurs.

In 2007, she took football statistics which had been maintained by Avis Partain, John Duda and Tom Mason and, with the help of Sherry Keffer, published the Red Devil Football History, the proceeds of which went to fund several scholarships.

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Merry Hanning honored as group’s 2012 Grand Honoree