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6 Entries
Debbe Rigney-Hays
August 11, 2022
This is a beautiful, beautiful tribute to Ginny! Smiling, enthusiastic and vigorous, that is my memory of her. Peace to all of you. Joy in the memories.
Will and Barbara, John and Sam Ridenour
August 7, 2022
Our hearts are full of memories of Ginny and her family. Love to you all from all of us.
Nancy West Malecha
August 7, 2022
What an amazing woman who touched so many. Love and light to you all. May her memory be for a blessing.
Ray Miller
August 7, 2022
This obituary touched me so very deeply. Thank you for sharing your experience with bipolar disorder, the extreme range of intensity and the love that ultimately allowed you all to survive living with it. You and your family are in my prayers. I am fortunate to have known both your parents. Great people!
Bob Holschuh Simmons
August 6, 2022
I met Ginny (and Bob) soon after my family moved to Monmouth in 2014 to begin my job at Monmouth College. Tom Sienkewicz was hosting the Classics Department fall picnic, and your parents were their normal charming selves, welcoming my wife and me and interacting playfully with our four kids, who were between five and nine at the time.
We had lovely interactions with them periodically after that point. We had each other over for dinner several times, and your mom set up creative stations at her apartment at which for our kids to play during the gatherings. Ginny and Bob were also regular attendees at further Classics fall and spring picnics and at our annual Cena Classica dinners followed by our Fox Lectures. Both were invariably charismatic and convivial, and they clearly took pride in my acknowledging Ginny as the honorand of the Virginia K. Hellenga Award for Excellence in Latin when we awarded it each spring, and Bob as the author of the book (Fall of a Sparrow) that led me to decide to pursue graduate school in Classics in 1999.
Ginny made a marked impact on Monmouth College and Monmouth Classics. She was a beloved teacher, as the campus was reminded this spring in an article on the College web site about incoming student Kailyn Gore, whose Latin teacher in New Jersey, a Monmouth alum, referred fondly to her influence on him in his pursuit of the career that has given him so much satisfaction. Her spirit was well known also among other long-time faculty, who shared many fond stories of her.
She lived a meaningful, impactful life. I will miss her.
Hannah Schell
August 6, 2022
I remember your mother so vividly - we taught together at Monmouth over many years and it was always clear that she was passionately committed to her students. It was an honour to be her colleague. May her spirit continue to be free, now in other dimensions!
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