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Pastimes : The New Qualcomm - write what you like thread.
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To: Maurice Winn who wrote (1775)6/13/2000 7:46:00 PM
From: Jon Koplik  Read Replies (1) of 12239
 
("Feel good" story) - widower looks up old sweetheart.

June 13, 2000

Widower Looks Up Old Sweetheart

Filed at 1:22 p.m. EDT

By The Associated Press

WOODBURN, Ore. (AP) -- After his wife died, loneliness and curiosity took
95-year-old Paul Johnston to the doorstep of his college sweetheart's home.

Seventy-five years after they last saw each other, the spark was still there,
and it led to marriage.

``I love you,'' Johnston says as he kisses the cheek of his 94-year-old bride.
Lula Marschat giggles like she's a schoolgirl again.

The two, who had a yearlong romance in college, never imagined they would
reunite. Johnston lived in Idaho, Marschat in Oregon.

They started dating at an Idaho college in 1924 -- Marschat was a junior and
Johnson a senior. They shared picnics and never missed a dance.

``We simply liked each other,'' Johnston said.

After graduation, Johnston moved back home -- 150 miles away -- while she
remained at school. Since they did not have telephones and had to borrow a
car to see each other, it was difficult to stay together. But Johnston never
forgot his sweetheart.

Johnston, whose wife of 70 years died in 1997, first tracked down
Marschat's sister in Idaho. He discovered that Lula was alive and that she,
too, had lost her spouse. But her sister, protective, dissuaded him from
contacting her.

Undaunted, Johnston went home and spent three days composing a letter. He
mailed it on a Wednesday, and on Friday night, the phone rang. It was Lula.

``I was excited to know he was still alive,'' she said.

They had a lot to talk about. Johnston, who was a radio operator during
World War II, survived a Japanese torpedo attack that sank his ship off
Hawaii. He later received a master's degree in history at University of
California at Berkeley and taught secondary education in Idaho.

Coincidentally, his four children lived near Marschat. She also became a
teacher and had three children with her husband, a school superintendent.

After the phone conversation, Johnston booked a flight immediately. When he
arrived at her doorstep, she expected to greet him with a handshake. Instead,
he opened his arms. ``We clasped,'' she said.

Four days later, he proposed at the dinner table. When she accepted, he
leaned over and kissed her lips. ``It was such a long kiss,'' she said, blushing.

They were married Saturday. More than 200 people attended the wedding at
a Woodburn church, with the bride in a green suit and the groom wearing
navy blue.

``We were college sweethearts,'' he said. ``We still are.''

Copyright 2000 The New York Times Company
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