Borah Class of 1977
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Mr. Tick axtell passes away...

7/23/2017

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Richardson (Tick) Chaddon Axtell
1934 - 2017

Richardson (Tick) Chaddon Axtell, 82, of Boise died June 30 at home. Tick was born July 12, 1934 in Cottonwood, Idaho to Donald and Frances Axtell. He spent his early childhood in a log cabin in the mountains of Idaho near Lucile. At the beginning of World War II, the family moved to San Francisco where Tick graduated from Lowell High School and San Francisco State University. He joined the army and was a Korean War Veteran. He married his childhood sweetheart, Sally Arquette, in San Francisco and together they had two sons, Alex and Nick. They later divorced. In 1977, he married his soulmate, Shelley, and added Scott and Christine Griffin to his family.
Tick began his teaching career in San Francisco at Pelton Junior High. In 1961, he moved to Idaho where he taught art, pottery, photography, industrial arts, computer aided drafting and coached tennis at Nampa and Borah High. He retired from teaching in 1997.
Tick was one of the founders of the Boise Racquet and Swim Club in 1967. He was a lifelong tennis player and held a national ranking in his 40's.
Tick was an avid photographer and in retirement bought antique cameras to sell at their business at the Antique World Mall. Each summer he looked forward to the Shakespeare Festival and had attended every season since its inception with Shelley. Tick loved politics and activism in general and specifically when it involved issues of equality. He worked on Frank Church's first campaign and was extremely active in President Obama's Boise campaign. Tick and Shelley were in the first group to be arrested in the Add the Four Words Campaign. After Shelley retired from teaching, they traveled thousands of miles in their small motorhome with their dogs to 49 states and the Canadian Provinces. They were saving for a trip to Hawaii this fall for a wedding and to complete the 50 states. Best of all he enjoyed spring trips to the Adobe on the Oregon Coast where they had gone for 39 years and fall trips to Redfish Lake and Upper Payette Lake where the dogs could swim, play and hike. In the past 5 years, Tick found peace and intellectual stimulation in the Shin Buddhist teachings. He attended the Boise Sangha each week and was a member of the Idaho-Oregon Buddhist Temple in Ontario. Together with Shelley, Tick took his passion for dogs to the Idaho Humane Society's prison training program, IDAPI. He will always be remembered with the New Yorker or the newspaper in hand, drinking coffee at the Flying M, or enjoying precious time with his family and those whom he made part of his family.
His adventurous spirit, humanistic ideals, keen sense of social justice, reverence for nature, and enthusiasm for life will be dearly missed, but will live on in all of us.
Tick was preceded in death by his parents and beloved dog, Bart. He leaves his wife, Shelley; three sons, Alex Axtell (Michelle) of Boise, Nick Arquette (Megan) of Manhattan Beach and Scott Griffin (Denise) Albuquerque; one daughter, Christine Griffin (Eric) Baltimore; two granddaughters, Marin Axtell of Boise and Sydney Axtell (Hannah) of Boise; two brothers, Larry (Lucretia) of San Francisco and Don (Glayne) of Comox, BC, Canada; three nephews, Matthew (son, Sam) of Washington, DC, Robert (Rose) of Oklahoma City and Michael of San Francisco, and his faithful dogs Biscuit and Jade.
If you wish to donate, Tick would have liked: Idaho Humane Society-IDAPI, 4775 Dorman St, Boise, Idaho 83705 or Walk With Sally, 840 Apollo Street, Suite 324, El Segundo,CA, 90245 or Alex Axtell's Art Class, Education Foundation of the West Ada School District, 1303 East Central Drive, Meridian, ID 83642.
Cremation was done by Accent Funeral Home, Meridian. Remembrances may be left on their website. A casual open house celebration of Tick's life will be held on July 16, 2017 from 3:30-6:00 at the Berryhill Bacon Restaurant, Downtown Boise.
​
Published in Idaho Statesman from July 4 to July 12, 2017

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Mrs. Lorraine Gundersen Passes Away...

7/23/2017

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Lorraine Carson Gundersen
December 2, 1922 - July 15, 2017

Maude Lorraine Carson Mosley Gundersen, 94, died July 15, 2017 in Nampa. Lorraine was born December 2, 1922, in Ontario, Oregon, the oldest child of Claude Loran Carson and Mary Siddy Rutherford.
She married J.B. (Jy) Mosley in Parma, Idaho, in 1940. Two children, Jonathan Baker (Jack) and Linda Lee, were born while they were living on a sheep ranch north of Vale, Oregon. Lorraine and Jy divorced in 1945.
She met James Peter Gundersen at a dance in Cairo Junction, Oregon, and they were married in 1949. The family moved to Nampa, Idaho, where Lorraine lived until her death.
Lorraine graduated from Northwest Nazarene College, Summa Cum Laude, in 1961. She then taught at Nampa High School, leaving in 1972 for Borah High, where she taught until her retirement in 1986. A lifelong learner, she continued her education on fellowships at University of Nevada, University of Texas, University of Oslo in Norway, and University of Hawaii. She traveled the world, visiting France with her daughter and China with her son.
Lorraine was active in community organizations, among them PTA, Idaho Journalism Advisers, League of Women Voters, Retired Teachers Association, AARP, Friends of the Library, Pet Haven, and book clubs in Nampa and Boise. Governor Andrus appointed her to the Board of Examiners of Residential Care Facility Administrators. A fervent Democrat, she worked to elect many candidates. She was elected State President of the League of Women Voters in 1955.
Lorraine is survived by her daughter Linda Mosley Steinberger and Gary Hawk of Nampa and Gary's daughter, Salie Anne Henry of Dallas, Texas; daughter-in-law Mary Mosley; granddaughter Stephanie Gibbons and husband Loyal; grandson Brent Foster and wife Cindy; grandson Ben Mosley and wife KC; great granddaughters Andrea Gibbons-Moore and husband Brady; Erin Gibbons and partner Matt Sam; great grandson Chase Foster; great granddaughter Adley Mosley; sisters, Teri Fray and Jeri Carson of Vail, Colorado, many nieces and nephews, and her dear friend Cindy Anderson, who took loving care of her.
Lorraine was predeceased by her parents, her husband James, her son Jack Mosley, and her brother George William Carson.
A celebration of her life will be held at the Nampa Funeral Home, Yraguen Chapel, 415 12th Ave. So. – 442-8171 at 10:00 am Monday, July 24, 2017. A complete obituary and guest book is available at www.nampafuneralhome.com
In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to Pet Haven, P.O. Box 481, Nampa, ID 83653; Idaho Public Television, 1455 N. Orchard St., Boise, ID 83706-2239 or the Nampa Senior Center, 207 Constitution Way, Nampa, ID 83686.

Published in Idaho Statesman on July 23, 2017
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EARLY BIRD PRICING GOES AWAY AFTER JULY 15TH

7/13/2017

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Only 2 more days until the price increase for tickets to the Saturday evening event at the CW Moore Penthouse! 

Registration numbers have been growing, and many comments have been received about how excited we all are to see each other again and to make new friends with classmates we did not know as well!

It's been 40 years since we graduated - many life experiences have molded, changed, and hopefully, matured us all to the point that we can simply celebrate the times we had together through our youth. The reunion will be a great time to focus on what we have in common, rather than what divides us. Whether or not we went to school together during elementary, junior high, or high school, or all three, we all have similar memories about Boise, popular music and TV shows, clothing styles, local and national events, and America, in general. Come prepared to hear and share memories about eating local food and flipping on the new Zipper ride at the Western Idaho Fair, standing by the lighted fountain in Ann Morrison Park at night, riding the paddle boats and then the Tilt-A-Whirl and airplanes at the Fun Spot at Julia Davis Park, going to Saturday morning movies at Plaza Twin Theaters, eating at the Royal Restaurant, shopping at Wells Department Store, buying furniture at Foster's Warehouse Furniture, hurrying to Big Bun during lunchtime, taking formal pictures at the Union Pacific Depot, swimming at Sandy Point, tubing across from Hilltop Cafe, and more! So, dust off your memory cells and come and have a good time!
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HERE COMES THE REUNION!

7/4/2017

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Our 40th class reunion weekend is just 38 days away!
The reunion committee has been working hard to hammer out the last details of the weekend, but we could still use your help. We are looking for volunteers to help in a variety of areas:
  • ​Taking the reigns of one of the tasks at the reunion (i.e. cleanup, manpower)
  • Assisting with details of the reunion (i.e. assembly of reunion information packets)
  • Host out-of-town classmates
​and more...

Please fill out the Volunteer & Interest Indicator Form (even if you have already registered and paid for the event) to give us a picture of what to expect. Thanks!
​
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Coming to the reunion? let us know!

1/30/2017

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By submitting the Event Registration/Tickets form AND the News and Contact Updates, you are providing us with the information we need to make sure you are notified anytime more information is sent out about the reunion.

You do not have to make a full commitment to attend at this point, although if you can be fairly accurate about your attendance, it would help in planning.

A list of "missing" classmates will be posted on the site soon, after some recent contact information has been updated in the current list. Be sure to share the class website address with any classmates you know -- it's going to be a fun time!


As Willy Wonka said, "So much time and so little to do. Wait a minute. Strike that. Reverse it. Thank you."
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Borah Teacher - Charles "chuck" Hornaday

3/25/2015

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We have had an inquiry from someone in the Borah Class of '75 that would like to find out if anyone has information about Mr. Hornaday's death or family members he may contact for more information. If you can help fill in the blanks, please use the form on the Contact Us page.


Thanks!

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The Borah Senator needs your help!

2/6/2015

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Several of you have seen the link to the Borah Senator newspaper archives that was posted by Philip Willeford to the Borah Class of 1977 Facebook group (Thanks, Phil!). It has been fun going through some of the old issues to bring back some of those memories we may have forgotten.
After the link appeared, I checked out the hosting site because it was claiming copyright for the scanned pages. Since I worked on the Senator during our time at Borah and wrote some of those stories that appeared in the Senator, I felt an obligation to ask the current faculty advisor what arrangements had been made with this archiving site. Michelle Harmon (Borah class of 1979), the faculty advisor, was very surprised to learn that the archivists were claiming copyright. She is pursuing this issue with the company. 
In talking with Michelle, I found out that not all of the Senator editions during our time there have been scanned. She is letting us borrow the 1975 - 1977 archives from Borah (which are "yellowing" from the years) to do our own scanning, so over the next few months, we will create a complete archive from our time at Borah on this class site. 
While meeting with her on campus at Borah, she took me on a tour of the revised newspaper office, where the paste-up table has been replaced with a computer lab and a wall was removed to add enough space for more than one person to walk through at a time. Yay! 
She is working very hard to encourage new students to join the program and provide them opportunities to attend journalism conferences and enter writing contests. Some students at Borah have very limited family income, so if only the students that have money can afford to attend conferences and enter writing contests, it would create a divide of "haves" and "have nots" between students. Michelle has decided to enter the most deserving writing submissions and somehow try to find money to pay the entry fees. About $350 each year is spent on competitions. 
What I didn't know (and frankly, unsure how they came to this conclusion), is that the Department of Education in Idaho has classified the journalism program as a "professional and technical" class, like a shop class, and provides very minimal funding for the publishing of newspaper edition
s each month, due to the smaller enrollment numbers. It costs $3000 to $4000 per year to publish the Borah Senator and borahsenator.com, the online version. Students are constantly selling ads to companies in order to be able to publish. However, the Borah Senator newspaper is about to shut down, due to lack of funding. The department has enough money for one more issue and that's it. 
If you would like to help continue the Borah Senator legacy for the Class of 2015 and other fellow Borah Lions who are yet to come, here's how to help:
  • The Boise School District Education Foundation allows for the donation to specific classrooms through their "Thank-A-Teacher" program, AND the donations are tax deductible! You can check out the program information and find specific donation instructions here: http://boiseschoolsfoundation.com/thank-a-teacher
  • If you own a business and would like to advertise in the Borah Senator, contact Michelle Harmon and she will route you to the advertising manager for the newspaper.
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BRent Nokleby Passes away - February 2, 2015

2/6/2015

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BRENT NOKLEBY
1958 ~ 2015

(Obituary from Idaho Statesman/Legacy.com on 2/6/15)
Brent Roylance Nokleby was born in Boise, Idaho on October 29, 1958 to Lee Nokleby and Lucille Roylance Nokleby. Brent learned to work hard at a young age. He spent much of his boyhood helping his father at his candy business and delivering papers for his early morning paper route. He was always busy; whether it be making trouble with his brothers, enjoying music, doing experiments with his chemistry set, running the high hurdles, biking, or taking pictures to name a few. He was passionate about many things; especially about the sciences and was greatly influenced by his love of air and space flight.
With all that he enjoyed, his faith was always his first priority. After graduating from Borah High School in 1977, he served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Paris, France for two years. After returning, he attended Brigham Young University where he met and married his sweetheart, Linda. Together they had their three children: Nicole, Nathan and Camille. He graduated in electrical engineering and worked for Texas Instruments in Dallas, Texas and then Raytheon in Tucson, Arizona, specializing in missile guidance.
Brent was constantly joking around. He had a warm smile for everyone and enjoyed talking with friends, family and strangers on the street. He cherished his relationship with God and his family over all else. His greatest enjoyment was spending time with his wife and children. He loved to help others and served in various roles in his church throughout his life. He spent the majority of his free time looking for ways he could help members of his congregation, people in his community, his neighbors and friends.
Even after being diagnosed with brain cancer in 2012, he continued to do all he could. He worked full-time for two and a half more years while going through continuous chemo and radiation treatments. Brent loved helping with the boy scouts and teaching the children in his church primary class during this time. He lived his life well and fought hard until his last breath on February 2, 2015.
Funeral service will be held Saturday, February 7, 2015 at 12 Noon at the Holbrook Mortuary, 3251 South 2300 East, Salt Lake City. Friends and family can visit from 10:30-11:30 a.m. prior to the service. Interment will follow at the Wasatch Lawn Memorial Park.

Source: http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/idahostatesman/obituary.aspx?n=brent-roylance-nokleby&pid=174070550&fhid=18490#storylink=cpy
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Sonja (Eide) Lamm Passes Away

11/22/2014

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SONJA EIDE LAMM
1958 ~ 2014

(Obituary from Idaho Statesman/Legacy.com on 11/22/14)
Our mom was born in Boise, ID to Elmer and Betty Eide. She was the youngest of 4 daughters - Karen, Linda and Eileen. 
Sonja was a force to be reckoned with, strong beyond her years. She miraculously survived a horrendous accident on Labor Day 1976, when she and her fiancé, Steve Lamm were thrown from a vehicle that plunged off Arrowrock. She overcame multiple injuries including a broken back/paralysis. Sonja and Steve married 1977. Although the marriage ended after 12 years, this union blessed Sonja with the lights of her life - her son, Casey Steven, born in 1979 and her daughter, Lacey Ann, born in 1981. She loved and cared for them, to the very best of her ability, from the moment they were born. 
Sonja subsequently struggled with multiple issues, many stemming from the accident, and never completely found her bearings again. What was "larger than life living" through her 20's and 30's, gradually morphed into battling many health issues. As her health declined in the last few years, she held tight to her family. She received great solace and healing from their many visits, and joy from their presence. Right up until the end, she had family surrounding her with love. We love you more mom, always and forever. 
Sonja leaves behind her son Casey, daughter Lacey (Sam) Mendenhall, and 5 grandchildren she loved dearly: Hailey, Jesiah, Cayden, Deghan, and Addison. 
Sonja is also survived by her mother, Betty, her sisters Karen (Bob) Cook and Linda (Rich) Shaffer, and several nieces and nephews. She will be deeply missed by them all. Sonja was preceded in death by her father Elmer and sister, Eileen. 
The family wishes to thank the staff of Apex center for all their loving support and help in our mom's final months.
There will be a memorial service on Sunday, November 23rd at 2:30pm at Cloverdale Funeral Home. Mom will be laid to rest at a private family gathering at Dry Creek Cemetery on Monday, November 24th at 1:00pm.
Memorials may be made to the 
.
Please spend time with your loved ones, tell them you love them, and check in with them often. 
To share memories with the family please visit Sonja's memorial webpage at 
www.cloverdalefuneralhome.com. 

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December event cancelled

11/22/2014

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We are all busy this time of year, it seems, and most of us are engaged in planning for the holidays. The Christmas get-together originally planned for December 6th is cancelled. However, once the holidays are over and we are all back to work, we will try to schedule another gathering for those who can attend.
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Truly great friends are hard to find, difficult to leave, and impossible to forget. - G. Randolf