Showing posts with label condolences. Show all posts
Showing posts with label condolences. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

In Memory of Catherine Austin Buzzett

It is with heavy hearts that we share that we have lost a Beta Eta Alpha Chi Omega alumna sister. Cathy was a 1947 initiate.

Catherine Austin Buzzett, 81, of St. George Island passed away Monday, Jan. 31, 2011 in Tampa.

Cathy Buzzett was born Feb. 1, 1929 to the late Loretta and Eugene Austin in Apalachicola. She graduated from Florida State University in 1950 and married Lt. Harry A. Buzzett later in that year. She was a devoted wife and mother to six children. She was an active member of St. Patrick Catholic Church and served many volunteer organizations throughout her life.

She is survived by her beloved husband of 60 years, Col. Harry A. Buzzett, children Ellen E. Mackay and husband, Steve, of Andover, Mass.; William A. Buzzett and wife, Kelly, of Seagrove Beach; Lisa M. Tanjuatco and husband, Ferdie, of Atlanta, Ga.; Cecilia A. Lovett and husband, Perrin, of Augusta, Ga. and Joseph G. Buzzett and wife, Jennifer, of Tampa; 10 grandchildren, Tricia, Daniel, Ryan, Austin, Wells, Trey, Gabrielle, Alexandria, Jacqueline, and Jordan; and numerous nieces and nephews.

She was preceded in death by her son, Michael A. Buzzett, and sisters Jean Elizabeth Atchison and Mary Marjorie Austin.

Funeral services will be held at 10 a.m. on Friday, Feb. 4 at St. Patrick Catholic Church in Apalachicola with Father Roger Latosynski officiating, with interment to follow in Magnolia Cemetery.

The family will receive friends Thursday, Feb 3 from 5 to 7 p.m. with a rosary at 7 p.m. at Kelly Funeral Home in Apalachicola.

In lieu of flowers donations may be made to St. Patrick Catholic Church, 6th Street, Apalachicola, FL.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

In Memory of Betty Hodges

It is with a heavy heart that we share the news that we have lost an Alpha Chi Omega sister. Betty Hodges initiated Beta Eta chapter in 1955. Her memorial will be held (address below) on Saturday, July 24th in Atlanta.
Elizabeth (Betty) Ann Hodges, 74, died on July 6, 2010 at her home on Lake Lanier in Flowery Branch, Georgia after a long battle with cancer. Betty was born in BainbridgeGeorgia to Lillian Caldwell Hodges and William Lancelot (“Dance”) Hodges. Several years later, the family moved to TampaFlorida. Graduating from Tampa’s Plant High School In 1955, Betty enrolled at Florida State University in Tallahassee where she joined Alpha Chi Omega sorority, toured as a trapeze artist with FSU’s all-student “Flying High Circus,” performing proudly at the winter quarters of Ringling Brothers in Sarasota, accepted honorary membership in the F Club, a university athletic excellence award, and became an ardent and lifelong Seminoles fan. She graduated in 1959 with a BA, and went on to receive a Master’s degree in Education from the University of Alabama. In Atlanta, she taught in elementary schools in the Dekalb County School System for thirty-two years. After retiring, she moved to Lake Lanier, where she enjoyed caring for her pets, fishing, gardening, and getting together with the friends she had made in the small lakeside community of Paradise Point. Betty was a gentle soul who loved children and animals. She will be especially missed by her partner, Dot Hartsfield, with whom she established two corporations: Transpet, Inc. (d/b/a Critter Sitters), and Seawatch Beach Properties, LLP. Other survivors include cousins Mayo and Carolyn Livingston of Bainbridge, Georgia, Merle and Edward Sparkman of CharlestonSouth Carolina, along with several nieces and their children. She is also fondly remembered by her godchildren Reid Hartsfield IV, and Wrece Hartsfield-Mazur, their spouses and children, to whom she was affectionately known as “Aunt B.” There will be a Memorial of Remembrance for Betty on July 24, 2010 at one o’clock in the afternoon at the home of Bonnie and Tom Dougherty, 2412 Bohler Rd., NWAtlantaGeorgia 30327. In lieu of flowers, please make donations to The American Cancer Society or The United States Humane Society in memory of Elizabeth (Betty) Ann Hodges.

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

In Memory of Ada Leigh Wall Soles

It is with a heavy heart that we share the news that Ada Leigh Wall Soles, a 1956 initiate of Beta Eta chapter of Alpha Chi Omega, passed away earlier this month. She was a trailblazer, a woman who lived our values everyday, as you’ll see from the articles that follow. 

Delaware Grapevine: Remembering Ada Leigh Soles, 1937-2010

By Celia Cohen, Political columnist
Posted Jun 09, 2010 @ 04:01 PM
DoverDel. —
Politics is not exactly known for its grace and decency. It is the reason Ada Leigh Soles stood out, because glad grace and deft decency were what she was.
Soles, a Democratic state representative from Newark from 1980 to 1992, was a political figure in her own right, but she did not stand alone.
She was also half of a compelling couple in her marriage with Jim Soles, a political scientist who peopled state politics for a generation with the students he taught at the University of Delaware.
Together they were an inspiration, a delightful pair who could fill your glass with the fine bourbon of their Southern roots, enlighten you with their wisdom, or liven up the moment with an observation that was wickedly on point but never tawdry.
In the infinite irony of life, they towered despite being small in size.
Ada Leigh Soles died Monday evening at 73 after a gallant toil against Parkinson’s disease for more than 20 years, her supple mind betrayed at length by an uncooperative body.
Tom Carper, the Democratic senator, met Ada Leigh and Jim Soles 36 years ago, Ada Leigh first. Carper was a graduate student, and they were introduced while attending a performance on the University of Delaware campus.
“I was smitten by Ada Leigh. What a wonderful, wonderful woman,” Carper said.
Carper stayed impressed. After he was elected governor in 1992, he brought her in to his administration, primarily because of her knowledge of the legislature.
She had proved herself there, the memory of it still clear to Lonnie George, a fellow Democratic legislator before becoming the president of Delaware Technical & Community College.
“She was the consummate citizen-legislator, a woman of integrity, intellect and vision who brought to bear all of her talents and energy to represent her constituents,” George said.
“In a difficult environment, she always remained a gentlewoman, treating everyone with dignity and respect. Delaware has lost one of its most beloved public servants.”
Soles arrived in Legislative Hall in Dover at just the right time, as the General Assembly was reinventing itself as something at least marginally better than a glorified frat house, where the place was soggy with booze and not just bills were laid on the table.
She brought class and civic-mindedness. She brought her Newark constituents’ devotion to learning and libraries. The majority Republicans in the House of Representatives saw a star in the making and countered. They stuck her on the agriculture committee, instead of the education committee she requested, to try to make her disappear. It backfired.
Soles instantly became a cause, her committee assignment protested by Lonnie George, then the Democratic minority leader.
“You’ve got the numbers and you can punish us,” George railed. “A woman of her intellect is being punished. They don’t want to give her the exposure she needs to show her constituents what a good legislator she can be. They’re cutting her right at the knees.”
Soles said simply, “I will do a good job wherever I serve.”
Soles was a rare legislator who actually could change minds and votes during debate. A bill that would have limited the right to trial by jury in certain circumstances appeared to be on its way to easy passage, but it was voted down after she spoke against it.
Soles did not mind causing a little mischief. In one of those times, she involved herself in a story about how Carper met Ed Freel, his chief political strategist who also was the secretary of state when he was governor.
After a stint as Jim Soles’ graduate assistant, Freel went to Florida for a job and left a girlfriend behind in Delaware. They agreed they would date other people, but Freel came to think she was seeing someone else a little too much.
It was 1974. It was going to be a huge Democratic year because of Watergate, and Jim Soles decided to run for the state’s lone congressional seat, unsuccessfully as it turned out. Freel came home to manage the campaign and reclaim his girlfriend. She introduced him to the other guy — “Ed, I’d like you to meet Tom Carper.”
All three of them worked on Soles’ campaign. All three of them also went their own way romantically and married other people.
In interviews for a book about Delaware politics, Carper and Freel freely told the story of the mutual girlfriend but kept her name out of it. When they were not around, Ada Leigh Soles secretly spilled it.
The girlfriend later consented to have her name used. You can look it up in Only in Delaware, a modern history of state politics, because of Ada Leigh Soles.
Grace and decency and a little mischief. What a gift.

Former Delaware lawmaker Ada Leigh Soles dies

Honored as advocate for education, libraries

BY ROBIN BROWN • THE NEWS JOURNAL • JUNE 9, 2010
Education advocate and former state representative Ada Leigh Soles of Newark died Monday night at age 73.
Her husband of more than 50 years, University of Delaware Distinguished Professor Emeritus James R. Soles, said, "She was outstanding in every way."
"She was a very, very special lady and an unbelievable presence, a tremendous mother and grandmother," said her son-in-law Paul J. Pomeroy, a Newark city councilman. "It's a tough loss, not only for the family, but for the community."
A representative from 1980 through 1992, she had five Joint Finance Committee terms, led grant reform and championed ethics, education and libraries.
U.S. Rep. Mike Castle, offered condolences, calling her "a very bright, kind-hearted, compassionate and genuine woman who always had the best interest of her constituents and district in mind." Recalling times with her when he was governor, Castle said, "I will always remember very fondly her sincerity for helping others."
Soles decided not to run again as Parkinson's disease began to tire her, but she became a senior adviser to then-Gov. Tom Carper.
"We needed somebody who understood the legislature, knew the legislators and was trusted by both Republicans and Democrats," Carper said. "Because of her, they were willing to work with us."
Carper said her death made him sad, but grateful he knew her.
Soles had been in a Newark-area care facility for the past 18 months. "She was in such bad health for so long," James said, "at least she is now at peace."
Ada Leigh and James met in college, working at a summer camp in their home state of Florida. She was valedictorian at Landon High School,Jacksonville, where her mother had been the first valedictorian, and studied English at Florida State University.
"I knew she was the only person on Earth I would be happy with," he said. "I proposed to her over 300 times, once twice in one day." She finally agreed.
Ada Leigh was first in her class, president of Alpha Chi Omega and the student body.
In 1968, they came to Newark. As their two daughters grew, she worked at UD, led library groups and the League of Women Voters before she was recruited to run for the House. She is in the Delaware Women's Hall of Fame and received honors from the University of Delaware, National Library Association, the Delaware Bar Association and Delaware Humanities Forum.
Last year, a student of 45 years earlier wrote to her that Ada Leigh made a huge difference in her life. James "read that letter to her many, many times."
On Aug. 1, James held her hand and said it was their 50th anniversary. "She said, just as clear as a bell, 'We were married on a Saturday,'" he said. "That was the last moment that I'm certain she knew who I was."
She is survived by Catherine and Paul J. Pomeroy, children Paul IV and Julia; Nancy Beth and Dan Garrett of California and children Elizabeth Leigh, Thomas, Maggie and Jack.
A memorial will be 11 a.m. Monday at St. James Episcopal Church, 2916 St. James Church RoadStanton. The family suggests gifts to Friends of Newark Free Library, 750 Library Ave.NewarkDE 19711 or Food Bank of Delaware14 Garfield WayNewarkDE 19713.
Contact robin brown at 324-2856 or rbrown@delawareonline.com.
http://www.delawareonline.com/article/20100609/NEWS02/6090339/Former+Del.+lawmaker+Ada+Leigh+Soles+dies



Posted: June 14, 2010

A FAREWELL FOR ADA LEIGH SOLES

By Celia Cohen
Grapevine Political Writer
The church held the state. St. James Episcopal Church is a 300-year-old sanctuary near Newark, compact and colonial in its motif, but in all its days, it never had a gathering like the one it had late Monday morning as its bell pealed in grief.
The Stars & Stripes and the Delaware flag, solemnly at half-staff in the dooryard by the governor's proclamation, signaled what was unfolding within.
It was a memorial service for Ada Leigh Soles a week after her death at 73. As a Democratic state representative from Newark from 1980 to 1992, she was hardly Delaware's most famous public figure or its most powerful, but she was its wise counsel and its conscience.
The church was the right place for this moment. No Delawarean could fail to fall for its historic charm or its intimate embrace, a site of worship since the days of Caesar Rodney with an interior that could just squeeze in the state's officialdom in a reminder that Delaware's smallness is its pride and joy.
So they came, 200 people shoulder to shoulder, upstairs and down, in the white boxlike pews.
Governor Jack Markell. The congressional delegation. Chancellor Bill Chandler, former Supreme Court Justice Bill Quillen and Len Stark, nominated for a federal judgeship. Newark Mayor Vance Funk. Former Lieutenant Governor John Carney. House Speaker Bob Gilligan and former Speaker Lonnie George. Past and present legislators, past and present Cabinet secretaries, professors, family members and friends.
The Rev. James Bimbi, who presided, was distinguished enough himself as the 41st rector of St. James but still seemed somewhat thrown by his congregation for the day. He supposed he was the only one there who never ran for office.
"I was president of my high school student council, if that counts," he said.
People came in memory of Ada Leigh Soles but just as much in honor of Jim Soles, her husband whose years as a political science professor at the University of Delaware made him a patron saint of state politics.
Together they guided a generation in public life, and the pews were crammed with people who treasured their touch.
Three governors spoke at the service -- Markell, the current Democratic one, along with Tom Carper, now a Democratic senator, and Mike Castle, now the Republican congressman.
Ada Leigh Soles was remembered for taking up the causes of learning and libraries and for her unequaled civic-mindedness and conduct. Still, she was no porcelain doll, as Jim Soles reminded everyone with a story he told.
"When a lobbyist invited her to dinner, he asked if he could get her a white wine spritzer, and when she replied, she served notice that she was not a 'lady' legislator but a legislator. 'No,' she said, 'but I would enjoy a double Jack Daniels on the rocks."
As Carper put it, "She had the calm confidence of a Christian holding four aces."
The tribute from Jim Soles was the heart of the memorial service. For him, it was love at first sight, but Ada Leigh made him work before he could turn it into love forever. He had to propose any number of times, and on his first try, she told him they should stop seeing each other.
"That is not just a 'no,'" he said.
Jim Soles is grateful he got Ada Leigh. As a matter of fact, Delaware is grateful it got her, too.
http://www.delawaregrapevine.com/6-10solesmemorial.asp

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

In Memory of Valerie Stubbs Mecutchen

Beta Eta alumna Valerie Mecutchen passed away April 24, 2010. She initiated Alpha Chi Omega in 1935 at Florida State College for Women, just six years after Beta Eta chapter was installed on campus.

Valerie lived a full, rich life and in many ways was a woman ahead of her time. She will be greatly missed by Alpha Chi Omega alumnae all over the country but especially by those in Alpha Epsilon Alpha alumnae chapter in Washington, D.C. and Gamma Phi Gamma in Tampa, FL. Condolences can be shared on the Blount & Curry website: http://www.blountcurrymacdill.com/obituaries/tribute.html?url=http://stei-23784.tributes.com/show/Valerie-Mecutchen-88459033

MECUTCHEN, Valerie Kathryn Stubbs, 94, of Tampa, died April 24, 2010. She was born June 17, 1915, to Rose Dombrowsky Stubbs and William Oscar Stubbs in their Hyde Park neighborhood home. Mrs. Mecutchen attended Gorrie Elementary and Wilson Junior High, and graduated as valedictorian from Plant High School in 1923. She continued her studies at the University of Tampa, then transferred to the Florida State College for Women, where she received a bachelor' s degree. She began her career teaching school in Williston, Fla., before teaching five years in Tampa at Memorial and Wilson Junior High Schools. During World War II, she worked in the Office of Censorship in Miami before transferring to the office in Washington, D.C., in 1943. Mrs. Mecutchen retired in 1970, after working for Military Intelligence, Department of the Army, The Industrial College of Armed Forces, the office of Chief of Military History, Department of the Army and earning a master' s degree from American University. 


Mrs. Mecutchen returned to Tampa in 2003 to reside at Canterbury Tower, after living 60 years in Washington, D.C., and Silver Spring, Md. She was a 75-year member of Alpha Chi Omega Sorority, The Women' s Club of Chevy Chase, Md., Woodside United Methodist Church in Silver Spring, and Hyde Park Methodist Church in Tampa. Her hobbies were oil painting, travel and playing bridge. She was predeceased by her husband, Edward Taylor Mecutchen, who was a budget analyst with NASA and its predecessors; her sister, Daisy Stubbs Mickler Dickerson of Tampa; her brother, William O. Stubbs Jr. of Dade City; and her nephew, Brian Ellis Mickler of San Antonio, Texas. She is survived by her sister, Smithy Raeburn Stubbs Ingley of Vidalia, Ga.; her nieces and nephews, Martha Tillman Stubbs Vasquez (Ernesto), Martha Jan Mickler (Peter Temko), Karen Alison Mickler (Bruce DeGroot), Lindsay Rae Mickler (John Elbare), Dennis Ingley (Therisa), Paul Ingley (Susan) and Alan Ingley; and 17 great-nieces and nephews. A graveside service will take place at 2 p.m. May 7 at Myrtle Hill Memorial Park in Tampa. In lieu of flowers, the family requests memorial contributions go to the University of South Florida Suncoast Alzheimer' s & Gerontology Center, 4001 E. Fletcher Ave., Tampa, FL 33613 or to the Alphi Chi Omega Foundation,www.alphichiomega.org
Blount & Curry Funeral Home 
605 S. MacDill Avenue
Tampa, FL. 33609
(813) 876-2421