After graduating in 1948, he enrolled at Gonzaga University. Upon realizing he lacked the math background for engineering, he studied law, graduating from Gonzaga Law School in 1954, which awarded him its graduate Law School Medal. After two years in the U.S. Army, he joined the Colfax law firm of the late Henry Savage.
In Colfax, he coached youth baseball, taught high school catechism, sang in and directed the St. Patrick's men's choir, volunteered for Boy Scouting and was a member of the Colfax Elks Lodge, including as exalted ruler. He helped Gonzaga Law School acquire its first building as well as with construction of St. Patrick's and, in what he considered his greatest community legacy beyond his practice, Whitman Community Hospital. He later helmed the Catholic Foundation of the Diocese of Spokane, urging that resources go to parishes without Catholic schools. With his wife Mary Lee, he helped manage the community food bank when it was at St. Patrick's.
One lapse in civic service came during the 1972 Colfax centennial, when the family left town on vacation the day he was scheduled for the dunk tank for failing a beard-growing contest.
In the late 1980s, he led the Washington Commission on Judicial Conduct, a high-profile tenure, for which the Washington State Bar Association recognized him with its President's Award in 1991.
He enjoyed daily card games with friends, as well as morning coffee groups, usually after attending weekday Mass. He used cribbage to help improve his grandchildren's math skills. He enjoyed gardening, golf, skiing, an evening martini and watching baseball and Gonzaga basketball - recalling his freshman year playing basketball at GU. In earlier years, he went hunting for pheasants, but never for deer. He thought deer were too pretty an animal to shoot, an opinion that changed in later years as deer invaded his yard and garden. With friends, he once tried to canoe the entire Palouse River (with the exception of Palouse Falls).
He treasured time with family at home and at Priest Lake, Idaho. After illness forced his wife Mary Lee Toepel, whom he married in 1962, to move into assisted living, he visited her twice daily.
Lewiston Tribune March 30, 2016
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After graduating in 1948, he enrolled at Gonzaga University. Upon realizing he lacked the math background for engineering, he studied law, graduating from Gonzaga Law School in 1954, which awarded him its graduate Law School Medal. After two years in the U.S. Army, he joined the Colfax law firm of the late Henry Savage.
In Colfax, he coached youth baseball, taught high school catechism, sang in and directed the St. Patrick's men's choir, volunteered for Boy Scouting and was a member of the Colfax Elks Lodge, including as exalted ruler. He helped Gonzaga Law School acquire its first building as well as with construction of St. Patrick's and, in what he considered his greatest community legacy beyond his practice, Whitman Community Hospital. He later helmed the Catholic Foundation of the Diocese of Spokane, urging that resources go to parishes without Catholic schools. With his wife Mary Lee, he helped manage the community food bank when it was at St. Patrick's.
One lapse in civic service came during the 1972 Colfax centennial, when the family left town on vacation the day he was scheduled for the dunk tank for failing a beard-growing contest.
In the late 1980s, he led the Washington Commission on Judicial Conduct, a high-profile tenure, for which the Washington State Bar Association recognized him with its President's Award in 1991.
He enjoyed daily card games with friends, as well as morning coffee groups, usually after attending weekday Mass. He used cribbage to help improve his grandchildren's math skills. He enjoyed gardening, golf, skiing, an evening martini and watching baseball and Gonzaga basketball - recalling his freshman year playing basketball at GU. In earlier years, he went hunting for pheasants, but never for deer. He thought deer were too pretty an animal to shoot, an opinion that changed in later years as deer invaded his yard and garden. With friends, he once tried to canoe the entire Palouse River (with the exception of Palouse Falls).
He treasured time with family at home and at Priest Lake, Idaho. After illness forced his wife Mary Lee Toepel, whom he married in 1962, to move into assisted living, he visited her twice daily.
Lewiston Tribune March 30, 2016
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Married May 5, 1962
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