Kay and I were good friends in Jr. High & High School. We were in Booster club together, Intramural sports, and years of bowling teams. With Kay's great scores, we were often receiving the first place trophy for the season... or at least battling for it until the end. Kay was a part of my first wedding but I lost track of her in the mid '70's. I've tried to contact "Kathryn Myette" a couple of times hoping it would be her but unfortunately it was never Kay.
I don't know the circumstances of Kay's death but I sincerely hope she enjoyed a rich life full of friends and family. She has been in my prayers for years. May God bless her soul and perhaps we will meet again someday. I will truly miss her.
Kay was one of the first childhood friends I had when we lived on Hartman Drive in Lawrence. We stayed in touch for a while, in the 60s and 70s, but then I lost track of her. She was a sweet girl. So sorry she is gone.
Kay had a warm personality and a good sense of humor. I still remember, more than 40 years on, a story she told in class about making sauer kraut. The process began, she said, with cleaning the baseball bat, which was used to mash the cabbage leaves. She told this story in a charming way..
Susan Whitcomb (Smith)
Kay and I were good friends in Jr. High & High School. We were in Booster club together, Intramural sports, and years of bowling teams. With Kay's great scores, we were often receiving the first place trophy for the season... or at least battling for it until the end. Kay was a part of my first wedding but I lost track of her in the mid '70's. I've tried to contact "Kathryn Myette" a couple of times hoping it would be her but unfortunately it was never Kay.
I don't know the circumstances of Kay's death but I sincerely hope she enjoyed a rich life full of friends and family. She has been in my prayers for years. May God bless her soul and perhaps we will meet again someday. I will truly miss her.
Sue Whitcomb Smith
Sally Perry
Kay was one of the first childhood friends I had when we lived on Hartman Drive in Lawrence. We stayed in touch for a while, in the 60s and 70s, but then I lost track of her. She was a sweet girl. So sorry she is gone.
Sally Perry
Bill Nolan
Kay had a warm personality and a good sense of humor. I still remember, more than 40 years on, a story she told in class about making sauer kraut. The process began, she said, with cleaning the baseball bat, which was used to mash the cabbage leaves. She told this story in a charming way..