Alphabetical Alumni
Young, Patricia

Young, Patricia
Murray, Utah

Patti VanWagenen

Class of 1947. Patti Young. She married _______ VanWagenen. Our devoted mother, grandmother, sister, and friend, (Mary) Patricia Young VanWagenen, passed away at home on October 16, 1999, after a valiant battle with cancer. (Patti did not use her first name.) Born October 14, 1929, to George Leonard Young and Elsie Irene Torkelson in Butte, Montana. She lived in California, Boise, Provo, and spent most of her adult years in Salt Lake City. She is survived by her sister, Jacqueline Young (W. Mack) Lawrence (BYH Class of 1945) of Salt Lake City; daughters, Cathy VanWagenen (Brian) Zarkou of Boise, Idaho; and Sheralin VanWagenen (Troy) Christensen of Logan, Utah; son, Bradford VanWagenen; and 10 grandchildren. Patti graduated from the University of Utah in secondary education. She was affiliated with Alpha Chi Omega. After she graduated, she worked as an executive secretary for ZCMI. Pat later worked for the Granite School District as a secretary. In 1990 she received Secretary of the Year Award which recognized her many years of kind, caring service rendered to students, teachers and parents. Patti had many wonderful experiences while traveling with friends and family. She loved to visit the ocean. She was a woman of many talents and abilities which included woodworking, tole painting, flower pressing and arranging, and was always making thoughtful, homemade gifts for others. She was a wonderful cook and a gracious hostess. She had the ability to make and keep lasting friendships. She was an active member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and served with enthusiasm in many capacities. She enjoyed singing in the choir. Recently she served as a temple worker. The greatest joy Pat experienced was in spending time and in serving her family. Her lifetime efforts were concentrated on making life better for her children and grandchildren and in helping them to succeed. Funeral services were held on Wednesday, October 20, 1999, in Murray, Utah. Interment, Wasatch Lawn Memorial Park. [Deseret News, Monday, October 18, 1999.]

Young, Richard W.

Young, Richard W.
Salt Lake City, Utah US

Richard and Minerva Young

Board of Trustees, 1903 to 1920. [The following record is for Richard W. Winter who died in December of 1919. It is likely correct, although his term on the Board of Trustees extended through 1920.] Richard Whitehead Young was born on April 19, 1858 in Salt Lake City, Utah. His parents are Joseph Angell Young and Margaret Whitehead. He married Minerva Richard on September 5, 1882 in Salt Lake City, Utah. He died on December 27, 1919 in Salt Lake City.

Young, Rose

Young, Rose

Rose Young

B. Y. Academy High School Graduate, Class of 1901. Rose Young. She also received a Special Certificate in Phonography. [Phonography is a system of shorthand stenography developed by Isaac Pitman.] Source: Students Record of Class Standings B. Y. Academy, Book 1, Page 17.

Young, Sondra
543 East 2780 North
Provo, Utah 84604-5917 US

Sondra and Robert Jones
  • Work: (801) 356-3686

Class of 1967. Sondra Young. Pep Club, F.H.A., Thespians, Symphony Debonairs, Science Club, Drama, Forensics, Band, Wildcat Yearbook Staff (Assistant Photographer), Basketball, Track, Softball, Gymnastics (2nd All-Around), 4th Year Seminary, Girls' State, Anna B. Hart Literary Award, Girls P.E. Service Award. BYU BA English & Teaching Certificate 1972. BYU MA History 1995. Sondra Young Jones, Provo, has written her first book, a revisionist history based on research she did for her masters thesis at BYU. The Trial of Don Pedro Leon Lujan: The Attack Against Indian Slavery and Mexican Traders in Utah was published by the University of Utah Press in November 1999. An adjunct writing instructor at BYU and at Utah Valley State College, she is working on another book about the history of the Ute Indians in Colorado and Utah. Husband, Robert Jones, BYU 76. @2007 ~ ~ ~ I entered BY Elementary in Kindergarten, age 5, and continued through BYH and then BYU, where I received a BA and an MA, before being forced to go elsewhere for my PhD. Today, in my ancient years, I am teaching part-time at BYU. I occasionally grin at my students and tell them I've been attending BYU since I was 5 years old. Which I have. We all had BYU photo IDs. And I have watched it change -- oh, how it has changed. As a youngster I watched buildings being built which are now being torn down. @2023

Young, Susa

Young, Susa
Provo, Utah US

Susa and Jacob Gates

Faculty & Staff. Susa Young Gates, Domestic Science teacher, 1897-1903. Board of Trustees, Brigham Young Academy, 1891 to 1933. ~ ~ ~ ~ Susa (Susan, Susannah) Gates was born on March 18, 1856, in Salt Lake City. A writer, publisher, advocate for women's achievements, educator, missionary, genealogist, temple worker, wife, and mother of thirteen children, she was fond of saying, "Keep busy in the face of discouragement." The second daughter of Brigham Young's 22nd wife, Lucy Bigelow Young, Susa Young has been called "the most versatile and prolific LDS writer ever to take up the pen in defense of her religion". Following private education that included music and ballet, she entered the University of Deseret at age thirteen. The next year she became co-editor of the College Lantern, possibly the first western college newspaper. In 1872, at age sixteen, she married Dr. Alma Bailey Dunford; they had two children, Leah Eudora Dunford and Alma Bailey Dunford. The marriage ended in divorce in 1877. The next year, Susa entered Brigham Young academy in Provo and, while a student, founded the department of music and conducted a choir. During a trip to the Sandwich Islands (Hawaii), she renewed her acquaintance with Jacob F. Gates, whom she married on January 5, 1880. The success of their marriage has been attributed to their mutual respect for, and support of, one another's work. Only four of the eleven children born to this marriage survived to adulthood: Emma Lucy Gates Bowen, Brigham Cecil Gates, Harvey Harris (Hal) Gates [BYH Class of 1909~H?], and Franklin Young Gates. During the 1880s and 1890s, Susa Gates focused her energy on childbearing and child-rearing, missionary work, education, writing, and women's concerns. After completing a Church mission with her husband to the Sandwich Islands in 1889, she founded the Young Woman's Journal. It was adopted as the official magazine for the Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association in 1897. She founded the Utah Woman's Press Club, became press chairman of the National Council of Women, and founded the Relief Society Magazine, which she edited until 1922. She wrote biographies of Lydia Knight and of her father, Brigham Young, novels including "John Stevens' Courtship" and "The Prince of Ur" -- a pamphlet entitled the "Teachings of Brigham Young," and a history of women in the Church, on which she was still working at the time of her death. Concern for women's achievements was a prominent force in Susa Gates's life. During the 1890s, while she was most occupied with raising her own children, she became a charter member of the National Household Economic Association and was a representative to women's congresses in Denver, Washington, D.C., Toronto, and London, where she was invited to speak on the topic "Equal Moral Standards for Men and Women" and where she joined other women of the International Council, including Susan B. Anthony, for tea with Queen Victoria. At the turn of the century, Susa suffered a nervous and physical breakdown. Ill for three years, she was forced to terminate a mission that she and her husband had begun in 1902. A priesthood blessing that promised her she would live to do temple work marked the beginning of her recovery. She underwent a year of intense spiritual introspection and later wrote of that period, "I disciplined my taste, my desires and my impulses — severely disciplining my appetite, my tongue, my acts … and how I prayed!" (Person, p. 212). While maintaining her commitments to family and women's advancement, she focused her energy on genealogy and temple work. In 1906, Susa Young Gates organized genealogical departments in two newspapers, the Inter Mountain Republican and the Deseret News, and wrote columns for both papers over the next ten years. She produced instructional manuals for genealogists, devised a systematic index of names for the Church, and published the Surname Book and Racial History. In 1915, she introduced genealogical class work at the International Genealogy Conference in San Francisco and became head of the Research Department and Library of the Genealogical Society of Utah in 1923. She personally cataloged more than 16,000 names of the Young family. She spent much time in the last years of her life doing ordinance work in the Salt Lake Temple with her husband. She died on May 27, 1933. More biographical information

Young, Wayne R.
1054 North 440 West
Orem, Utah 84057 US

Wayne Young
  • Work: (801) 235-1699

Class of 1970. Wayne Young. BYU Counseling & Guidance Teaching Certificate 1975. BYU BS Physical Education 1975. Pennsylvania State University MA 1980. University of Utah MD 1990. PUBLICATION: In the book, Becoming One: Intimacy in Marriage, by Robert F. Stahmann, Ph.D., Wayne R. Young, M.D., and Julie G. Grover, M.D., the authors state: “This book is written to give you a perspective of how you and your marriage partner are similar and, at the same time different in your physical, sexual, and emotional makeup.” WAYNE R. YOUNG, M.D., Advanced Women's Healthcare: Timpanogos Medical Building, 742 West 800 North, Orem, Utah 84057 - 801-222-9244 - 801-222-9226 (FAX) - RCOHOON@COGOLINK.COM Wayne R. Young, PC, Obstetricians & Gynecologist, Locations: - American Fork, Utah (UT) 84003 - Orem, Utah (UT) 84097 - Saratoga Springs, Utah (UT) 84043

Young, Willard

Young, Willard

Willard Young

Board of Trustees, 1909 to 1917. Willard Young was born on April 30, 1852 in Salt Lake City, Utah. His parents are Brigham Young and Clarissa Ross. He married Harriet Hooper on August 1, 1882 in Salt Lake City, Utah. He died on November 30, 1939.

Young, William H.

Young, William H.

William Young

BY Academy High School Class of 1886. William H. Young. Awarded Special Certificate in General Chemistry. Source: The (Provo) Daily Enquirer, May 25, 1886.

Young, Zela or Zelma

Young, Zela or Zelma
Mona, Utah US

Zela or Zelma Young

Class of 1924. BYH Class of 1924. A female student named Young is shown in a composite Class of 1924 photograph of 4th Year (senior) BYH students. Surname source: 1924 BYU Banyan yearbook, BYH section. Records show two female students named Young who graduated in 1924: Mildred Young, of Provo, Utah, and Lavon Young of Blanding, Utah. A third female student, Zela or Zelma Young, received a Normal Diploma (teaching) in 1924. ~ ~ ~ ~ Zelma Young. Zelma Young received a Normal Diploma, BYH Class of 1924. Source: Annual Record, B.Y. University, Book 10, Page 468. [Research by Scott Cowley.]

Young, Zina

Young, Zina
Salt Lake City, Utah US

Zina & Thomas/ Chas. Williams/Card

Class of 1880? Faculty & Staff. Zina Young Williams, Training School, 1879-1884. Board of Directors, 1918 to 1930. A daughter of Brigham Young, Zina Young was born April 3, 1850, in the "old log row the first house built by Brigham Young after he entered the Salt Lake Valley." She was given the name of her mother, Zina Diantha Huntington Young, by her father. The Huntington family roots dated back to England. The family immigrated to America in 1633 and established themselves in the state of Massachusetts. They were strict Presbyterians. Samuel Huntington was reportedly one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. Zina D. H. Young herself, Zina Card's mother, was a notable figure of Mormon history. Married first to Henry Bailey Jacobs, then sealed to Joseph Smith and then Brigham Young, she was the wife of two prophets. She, like her daughter who would follow, worked in the Church Relief Society, was matron at the Salt Lake Temple and later, General President of the Relief Society. Zina Card and her mother, Zina D. H. Young, were close. Family papers are replete with references to this mother and daughter bond. In the Brigham Young family Zina Card, the daughter, grew up as one of "the big ten"--this was what President Young called his ten eldest daughters and it gave young Zina both refined learning opportunities and a position of prominence. She moved into the "Lion House" when she was six years of age and lived with twenty-nine other children. Zina wrote affectionately of her life in her father's home: "How joyous were our lives. There were so many girls of nearly the same age, and everything was so nice. Our mothers all occupied their apartments on the center floor. The upper floor we children had for bedrooms. Downstairs were the dining room, kitchen, wash room, school room, weave room, and cellars. The parlor, a large well-lighted, well-furnished and well-kept room was the place where our father assembled his family every evening for prayers. No scene is more vivid in my mind than the gathering of our mothers with their families around them, our loved and honored father sitting by the round table in the center of the room. We all controlled every childish display of temper or restlessness, and a sweet spirit of reverence pervaded all hearts. His presence was commanding and comforting, a peaceful control of his family that brought love and respect for him and each other, and his prayers were the grandest and most impressive I have ever heard." Brigham Young tried to provide a good education for his children and "to give everyone in his family an opportunity for knowledge, improvement and culture". They had a music teacher, a dance teacher and a governess. When they had learned a song, a dance or a part in a play they performed it for their father. Zina's first educational classroom experience was conducted in the basement of the Lion House, where Harriet Cook, another one of Brigham Young's wives, conducted school classes for the children. Zina was first married, at the age of eighteen, to Thomas Williams. Williams, age 40, was an employee of Brigham Young. He had worked as manager of the Salt Lake Theatre and as Young's bookkeeper for several years. Little was written of this relationship perhaps because William's death cut it short. John Taylor became the third President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, serving from October 10, 1880 to July 25, 1887. Some months after becoming President of the Church, President Taylor was visited by Zina Young Williams, the Dean of Women of the Brigham Young Academy in Provo and a daughter of Brigham Young. The Academy was less than a decade old and was experiencing serious financial difficulties that, if not resolved, would mean its closing. After listening to Sister Williams's plea for help, President Taylor took her hand "in a fatherly way" and said: "My dear child, I have something of importance to tell you that I know will make you happy. I have been visited by your father. He came to me in the silence of the night clothed in brightness and with a face beaming with love and confidence told me things of great importance and among others that the school being taught by Brother [Karl G.] Maeser was accepted in the heavens and was a part of the great plan of life and salvation; . . . and there was a bright future in store for . . . preparing . . . the children of the covenant for future usefulness in the Kingdom of God, and that Christ himself was directing, and had a care over this school." [Leonard J. Arrington, ed., The Presidents of the Church (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Co., 1986), pp. 108-109] Zina and Charles Ora Card's relationship began at the time she was Matron of Brigham Young Academy. Card had two of his own children, from his first marriage, who were in attendance and Zina was involved in counselling his daughter. Card saw his daughter's disenchantment with her father and his Church as a result of his controversial (polygamous) public life, and he encouraged her to seek out "Sister Zina and allow her to advise you." Card made several trips to Provo visiting his own children and was also reportedly heroic in saving some of the books and valuable papers from a fire which almost destroyed the school. The relationship between Zina and Card grew serious following the dedication of the Logan Temple. Zina and her mother had been called to work in the Temple, May 19 [1884]. They were considering the purchase of C.O. Card's home in Logan where they expected to live and work in the temple. It was on May 25, 1884 while at her home in Provo making provisions to move to Logan that she received a letter from C.O. Card proposing marriage: While she respected him very much she had never thought of marrying him. She deferred answering him until she went back to Logan. She had a dream that convinced her that he was the right man. They were married on the 17th of the following June, 1884. She was thirty-four years of age, he was forty-five. Zina returned to Logan from Canada in 1903 after her husband became ill, in Cardston, and after his death, at age 67, September 9, 1906, she moved to Salt Lake City where she lived the remainder of her life. Zina had five children--Sterling Williams, Thomas Edgar Williams; and Joseph Young, Zina Young (the third Zina) and Orson Rega Card. She was appointed as a member of the L.D.S. Primary General Board, where she served for the next fifteen years, and assumed the duties as matron of the L.D.S. Business School in Salt Lake City. On January 31, 1931, at 81 years of age Zina passed away quietly in her sleep.

Zabriskie, Cheryl Anne
12653 S 2360 W
Riverton, Utah 84065-6724 US

Cheryl Zabriskie
  • Work: 801-253-3884
  • Home: 801-904-3749

Class of 1970. Cheryl Zabriskie. Graduated from Orem High School, Class of 1970. Cheryl is a.k.a. Cheryl Anne Butehorn.

Zabriskie, Gary Keith
1297 W Baneberry Dr.
St George, Utah 84790-7505 US

Gary Zabriskie
  • Home: 801-372-2928

Class of 1969. Gary K. Zabriskie. Provo Fire Department engineer. Retired Provo City Fire Rescue Engineer/Paramedic after 30 years of service. Also retired Commercial Pilot with A&P Mechanic licenses. @2021

Zabriskie, George Olin

Zabriskie, George Olin
Salt Lake City, Utah US

Olin and LaVera Zabriskie

Class of 1921. Olin Zabriskie. Source: Photograph of the BYH Graduating Class of 1921, taken in 1921. ~ ~ ~ ~ Class of 1921. Olin Zabriskie. Source 2: 1921 BYU Banyan, BYH section. ~ ~ ~ ~ Class of 1921. George Olin Zabriskie. He received a High School Diploma in 1921. Source 3: Annual Record, B.Y. University, Book 10, page 418. ~ ~ ~ ~ George Olin Zabriskie was born in Fairview [or Mt. Pleasant], Utah, on April 26, 1904. His parents were George Alva Zabriskie and Mary Magdalene Breckenridge. He married LaVera Lublin on November 17, 1926 in Salt Lake City, Utah. LaVera was born on August 1, 1907 in Moore, [Lost River, Blaine, Camas] Idaho. Her parents were Samuel Lublin and Inger Kjerstine Hansen-Bogh. She died on May 1, 1984 in Salt Lake City, Utah. George Olin Zabriskie died on September 25, 1988 in Salt Lake City, Utah. His interment, Springville, Utah. ~ ~ ~ ~ Footnote about their son: New Temple Presidents: Orlando Florida Temple. Kenneth L Zabriskie, 70, Longwood Ward, Lake Mary Florida Stake, called as president of the Orlando Florida Temple, succeeding Pres. Jack F. Joyner. Pres. Zabriskie's wife, LeOra Williams Zabriskie, will serve as temple matron. Pres. Zabriskie served as president of the Florida Ft. Lauderdale Mission, Young Men general board member, temple sealer, stake president's counselor and patriarch. A retired regional sales manager and chief executive officer of Medical Device Manufacturing Co., he attended various business training courses. He was born in Provo, Utah, to George Olin Zabriskie and LaVera Lublin Zabriskie. Sister Zabriskie, who served with her husband when he was mission president, is a former ward and stake Relief Society president, Church Office Building hostess and temple worker. She attended BYU and was born in Heber City, Utah, to David A. and Eva Thacker Williams. [September 27, 1997, Deseret News]

Zabriskie, Joel Daniels

Zabriskie, Joel Daniels
5558 W Town Center Parkway
Highland, Utah 84003 US

Joel & Ruby Zabriskie
  • Work: 801-766-7600
  • Home: 801-420-3500

Class of 1966. Joel Zabriskie. Track, Wrestling, Chorus President, Brigadier Newspaper Asst Sports Editor, All State Chorus, Seminary 4 years. Mission: British South 1967-1969. BYU BS Finance 1980, VP/Controller CETEC IVIE audio products. Joel married Ruby Kimball, BYH Class of 1967. They have Five Girls, Three Boys, all married. 20+ grandchildren. Utah National Parks Council, Boy Scouts of America: Sector One Chairman -- Sector One - Lehi, Alpine,Timpanogos, Utah Lake, Bridal Veil Falls and Silver Lake Districts. 1991 Silver Beaver Award Recipient. Also: Former high councilor, bishop and counselor, assistant priests quorum adviser, elders quorum president's counselor, ward music chairman, stake president's counselor, and currently Stake President. Primarily an Accountant. @2005. Joel is a twin brother of Noel Zabriskie, who is also a member of the BYH Class of 1966. @2016 Joel and Ruby attended the 50th Anniversary Reunion of the BYH Class of 1966 on September 2, 2016. "Loved BY Elementary, Junior High, and High School."

Zabriskie, Katharine Newell
145 S. 1860 W.
Provo, Utah 84601-3856 US

Kate and Steve Belmont
  • Home: (801) 374-2605

Class of 1959. Katharine Zabriskie. Student Body Art Manager. Vocal Music, Special Art Award, Art Purchase Award, Notre Maison, Publications Award, Y'ld Cat Newspaper, Junior Academy of Arts and Sciences Award, Chorus, Hi-Steppers, Quill & Scroll, Pep Club, Junior Prom Committee, Seminary Graduate, Sweethearts Ball Committee. (Katie, Katy, Kate) Married Steven W. Belmont. --@2009

Zabriskie, Noel Reynolds

Zabriskie, Noel Reynolds
1310 Rushton Street
Ogden, Utah 84401 US

Noel and Sherrie Zabriskie
  • Cell: 801-791-4734

Class of 1966. Noel Zabriskie. Track, Chorus Vice President, Thespians President, Lettermen's Club, Brigadier Newspaper News Editor, Science Club, School Play, 2 Superior Solos Music Festival, Holds Yr. Record in Track 880 Region, Division, Seminary 4 years. Mission: Uruguay-Paraguay 1967-1969. BYU BA Spanish Education 1972, BYU Masters in Education (MED), Secondary Curriculum & Instruction 1977. Education Administrator. Noel married ReNon Fisher, also BYH Class of 1966. They had four daughters, one son: Ranae and Danny Hart, Kaysville, Utah; Rachelle and Tony Greenwell, Roy, Utah; Alan and Jennie Zabriskie, Warrensburg, Missouri; Becky and Brad Petersen, Ogden, Utah; and Lauren Zabriskie, also of Ogden, Utah. They have eleven grandchildren. -- see tribute to Renon in her record. ~ ~ Noel is formerly Weber School District, Human Resource Director. 2002 Olympics Torchbearer, Ogden, Utah. Noel is a twin brother of Joel Zabriskie, also a member of the BYH Class of 1966. Noel became Superintendent of the Ogden School District on July 1, 2006. Renon died on August 26, 2011. Address updated. @Jul2013 Noel Zabriskie married Jan. @2016 Noel and Jan attended the 50th Anniversary Reunion of the BYH Class of 1966 on September 2, 2016. ~ ~ ~ ~

Zabriskie, Richard Goodridge

Zabriskie, Richard Goodridge
Ephraim, Utah US

Richard and Vicki Zabriskie

Class of 1957. Richard G. Zabriskie. Band, Graduation Committee. BYU BA 1961. HIS OBITUARY: Ephraim, Utah -- Richard Goodridge Zabriskie passed away Wednesday, June 24, 2004 at the age of 64 in the Gunnison Valley Hospital. Dick was born September 20, 1939 in Lethbridge, Alberta Canada to Arnold Hooper Zabriskie and Barbara Goodridge Zabriskie, the last of four children. The family moved back to Provo in 1944 following the death of his father. Dick attended Provo schools and graduated from Brigham Young High School in 1953 [actually 1957]. He later attended BYU. Dick joined the Army Reserve when he was 17, and served for 6 years. He served an honorable LDS mission to New Zealand. He married Vicki Lynne Wahl on June 28, 1963 in the Manti LDS Temple. Dick worked for Dixon Taylor Russell Home Furnishings until he started working for the U.S. Postal Service in Provo. He and the family moved to Ephraim, Utah in 1976 when he became the Postmaster of the Ephraim Post Office. Dick's greatest joy was spending time with his family. He also enjoyed his work in the Manti Temple. His hobbies included reading about U.S. history, coin and stamp collecting and target shooting. He was survived by his wife, Vicki, their children Lisa McGinnis (Vic) and their daughters Joan and Morgan, R. Cary Zabriskie (Kristin) their son Zach; Laura Hunter (Josh) and their son Lance; and Jennifer L. Zabriskie. Dick is also survived by his sister, Virginia Fielding, his brother, Bill Zabriskie, and many nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents and his sister JoAnne Carter. Funeral services were held Monday, June 28, 2004 in Ephriam. Interment, Ephraim City Cemetery. [Provo Daily Herald, June 26, 2004.]

Zabriskie, William
184 East 2950 North
Provo, Utah 84604-3947 US

Bill and Vivian Zabriskie
  • Work: 801-373-6785

Class of 1957 ~ Honorary. William (Bill) Zabriskie. [Name, photo do not appear with senior class in 1957 Wildcat yearbook.] He married Vivian. ~ ~ ~ ~ Email sent to bzabriskie@heroworks.com bounced back. @2010

Zemp, Brian Lynn

Zemp, Brian Lynn
Provo, Utah

Brian Zemp

Class of 1963. Brian L. Zemp. Track, Tennis, Drama, Homeroom Rep, Thespians, Wildcat Yearbook Business Manager, Newspaper Photo Editor, Seminary 4 years, KOVO Reporter, Spanish Club, Science Club. BYU BA Political Science 1971. Born June 1, 1945 in Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada. Died January 28, 2000 in Utah. His parents: Lynn Hurst Zemp and Lila Naomi LeBaron. ~ ~ ~ ~ HIS OBITUARY: When Brian Lynn Zemp was born on 1 June 1945, in Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada, his father, Lynn Hurst Zemp, was 23 and his mother, Lila Naomi LeBaron, was 20. He immigrated to Sweet Grass, Montana, United States in 1951. Brian graduated from Brigham Young High School, Provo, Utah, in the Class of 1963. He lived in Phoenix, Maricopa, Arizona, United States in 2000. He died on 28 January 2000, in Tucson, Pima, Arizona, United States, at the age of 54, and was buried in Phoenix, Maricopa, Arizona, United States.

Zenger, John H.
275 Luzern Road
P.O. Box 1268
Midway, Utah 84049-1268 US

Jack and Holly Zenger
  • Work: (435) 654-6604

Class of 1949. Jack Zenger. Wildcat Yearbook Editor, Debate. He graduated from BYH on May 26, 1949. Source: 1949 BYH Graduation Exercises Program. ~ ~ ~ ~ John H. "Jack" Zenger received a bachelors degree in psychology from BYU, an MBA from UCLA, and a PhD in Business Administration from the University of Southern California. He served on the faculty at USC and later taught at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. He and his wife, Holly, reside in Midway, Utah, and his company is located in Orem, Utah. ---- Jack Zenger, CEO, Zenger | Folkman ---- Jack Zenger is the co-founder and CEO of Zenger Folkman, a broad-scale provider of consulting, research, materials and technology for leadership development. In 1977 he co-founded Zenger-Miller and served as its president and CEO until 1991. The Wall St. Journal named Zenger-Miller one of the top 10 companies providing executive education. From 1966 to 1977 he was vice president of human resources for the Syntex Corporation. In 1994, Mr. Zenger was inducted into the Human Resources Development Hall of Fame. He earned the Distinguished Citizen Award, Stanford Area Council, Boy Scouts of America, and is an Honorary Member of the Instructional Systems Association, for meritorious service to the industry. Jack is also a member of the American Psychological Association, American Society of Training and Development, and was Vice President of the Instructional Systems Association. He serves on the Executive Board of the Utah National Parks Council-Boy Scouts of America as the Chairman of Benefits and Compensation Committee; was the President of the Brigham Young University Alumni Association; is on the Board of Trustees of the Utah Valley State College; and is currently the President of the Midway Boosters. Dr. Zenger’s areas of expertise focus on leadership development and leadership development program design. Mr. Zenger has published 45 articles and is a co-author of the best-selling book, Self-Directed Work Teams: The New American Challenge (Irwin Professional Publishing, 1990); Leading Teams (Irwin Professional Publishing, 1993); author of Not just for CEOs - Sure-Fire Success Secrets for the Leader in Each of Us (Irwin Professional Publishing, 1996); Keeping Teams on Track (Irwin Professional Publishing, 1996), co-author of Results-Based Leadership, published by Harvard Business School Press, 1999 (voted the SHRM 2000 Best Business Book) and co-author of The Extraordinary Leader: Turning Good Managers into Great Leaders, published by McGraw-Hill, 2002. Active in community affairs, he serves as the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Utah Valley State College and has served as the Chair of their Business School Advisory Council. He was President of the Midway Boosters from 1999 to 2002. ---- Jack Zenger, CEO, Zenger|Folkman, 610 East Technology Ave. Bldg. B, Orem, UT 84097 - (801) 705-9494 Alternate email 1: jack@zenger.net Alternate email 2: drjzenger@aol.com Website: http://www.zfco.com/ ~ ~ ~ ~ Dr. John “Jack” H. Zenger, president and CEO of Extraordinary Performance Group. Zenger received a bachelor’s degree in psychology from BYU, an MBA from UCLA and a doctorate in business administration from the University of Southern California. Zenger has published many articles and books based on leadership and teamwork in the corporate environment. He and his wife, Holly, reside in Midway, Utah. ~ ~ ~ ~ John H. (Jack) Zenger writes, teaches, and speaks about extraordinary leadership. Today he is one of most authoritative voices on leadership and performance. He received a degree in psychology from Brigham Young University, an MBA from UCLA, and a doctorate degree in business administration from the University of Southern California. He has been the CEO and President of one of the world's largest performance skills improvement companies, Provant, Inc. In 1977, Jack co-founded Zenger Miller, a leading management and leadership development company. He later became the Chairman of Times Mirror Training, Inc. (which consisted of Kaset, Learning International, and Zenger Miller) for many years. He has authored or coauthored seven books, including The Extraordinary Leader: Turning Good Managers into Great Leaders, The Handbook for Leaders: 24 Lessons for Extraordinary Leaders, Results-Based Leadership (which was honored as the best book of 2000 by the Society of Human Resource Management), and best-selling The New Self-Directed Work Teams: The New American Challenge. In 1994, Jack was inducted in the Human Resources Development Hall of Fame. (See photo of Jack on the Class of 1949 reunions page.) ~ ~ ~ ~ Jack Zenger books at Amazon.com

Zobel, Clarissa
835 N. 700 W.
Provo, Utah 84601-1469 US

Clarissa Zobell

Class of 1947? Honorary? Clarissa Zobel. [Her name, photo does not appear with the senior class in the 1947 Wildcat yearbook.] ~ ~ ~ ~ Clarissa Zobel was interviewed on July 30, 1999 for the Provo City Sesquicennial Oral History Project, by Jennifer Winn. A transcript of the interview is available at Provo City Library.

Zufelt, Arvin Lloyd

Zufelt, Arvin Lloyd
Oceanside, California US

Arvin Zufelt

Class of 1949 ~ Honorary. Arven Lloyd Zufelt. Arven was born on March 8, 1930, in Bridgeland [Duchesne], Utah. His parents were Lloyd Ray Zufelt and Uinta Serale Zufelt Arven died on October 16, 1976, in Oceanside, California. Interment, Provo City Cemetery.

Zwahlen, Josefine Emma
1746 N. Sego Lane
Provo, Utah 84604-1878 US

Josy & Ben de Hoyos
  • Home: (801) 375-9829

Class of 1954. Josefine Zwahlen. [Name, photo does not appear with senior class in 1954 Wildcat yearbook.] Born in Switzerland, Josefine moved to the USA (Logan, Utah) in 1949. She came to BYU at age 16 after graduating from a correspondence school in Chicago. That school's credits were recognized by other colleges but, she discovered, they were not accepted by BYU. She was able to take a sufficient number of classes at BY High, while simultaneously taking classes at BYU. She graduated from BY High in the spring of 1954 along with the the senior graduating class of that year. ~ ~ ~ ~ She married Benjamin F. de Hoyos on September 10, 1954 in the Salt Lake Temple. They have 12 children. In addition to their own 12 children, they have a foster son who is Tongan. So they are a multi-national family: her husband born in Mexico, she in Switzerland, their children in the US, and their foster son in Tonga. Josefine served a mission in the Missionary Training Center [MTC] as a tutor and translator in Spanish and German, 1995-1997; served missions with her husband as Executive Secretaries in the Mexico South Area Presidency, 1997-1999, and in the same calling in the Chile Area Presidency, 2005-2006. @2007

ZZZ, Honorary Classmates 1947

ZZZ, Honorary Classmates 1947

Honorary Classmates ZZZ

Click on links to visit profiles of Honorary Classmates in the BYH Class of 1947.

ZZZ, Honorary Classmates 1949

ZZZ, Honorary Classmates 1949

Honorary Classmates ZZZ

Click on links to learn more about Honorary Classmates in the BYH Class of 1949.

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