Catherine Dale Norman
March 30, 1915 - May 31, 2012
Catherine Norman died peacefully on May 31, 2012 at St. Joseph Villa. She was born in Oakley, Idaho on March 30, 1915, the daughter of Charles Gordon and Mollie Miller Kirkpatrick. She was raised in Blackfoot, Idaho, attending Blackfoot High School. She married Oscar B. (Bud) Norman in 1943 and resided in Logan, Utah for 27 years where she was active at St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Parish and in the Ladies Golf Group at Logan Golf and Country Club. Her family moved to Salt Lake City in 1968 where she was active in Newcomers and Ladies Golf at Four Lakes. Her final years were spent at St. Joseph Villa.
She is survived by two sons, William Michael (Liz) Norman of Irvine, CA and The Rev. John E. Norman of Magna, Utah; and two grandchildren, Catrina and Robert; and brother Robert Kirkpatrick and family of Sarasota, Florida.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Bud; two sisters; Dorothy Blalock, Helen Brown; and one brother, Charles.
A mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated Wednesday, June 6, 2012 at Our Lady of Lourdes, Magna, Utah, 2840 South 9000 West at 11:00 am. Gathering and greeting will begin 9:30 am. Rite of Christian Burial will follow on Thursday at Mt. Calvary Catholic cemetery at 11:00am.
In lieu of flowers, please contribute to the Alumni Alliance Scholarship Fund at Judge Memorial Catholic High School. Special thanks to the community at St. Joseph Villa and her special pal, Cece.
In Loving Memory
Our love and prayers to Father Norman and his family. May your beautiful mother rest in God's gracious peace.
The Buhlman-Nendell Family
Grantsville, UT
To Father Norman and his family I send my heartfelt sympathy at this time. My prayers are with all of you. May your mother rest in peace.
Veronica Brand
West Jordan, Ut
Dear Father Norman, So sorry you have to say goodbye for now to your beautiful Mother. I loved that she played golf - that is where your wonderful swing comes from. Love and Prayers, The Prokopis Family
Marie Prokopis
nan, nan
Farewell sweet friend, may your new life in Christ include lots of golf, royal blue outfits, new shoes, spice drops, easy jigsaw puzzles, hard crosswords and may you have all the angels enjoying lovely crocheted lap blankets. I will miss you, Miss Kitty and our Tuesday/Thursday visits.Hugs, Your "special pal Cece"
Cece Holt
Salt Lake City, Ut
We were sorry to read of your mothers passing. Our prayers are with you Father Norman, William and your family. Celebrate your mom's life and remember the happy times.
Jim and Nancy Coronado
Whitehall, MI
To Father Norman and Family, Please accept our condolences and find comfort in the support and love of your many friends.
Joe, Anne, Carolyn and Lauren Fratto
Salt Lake City, Ut
Father John, It is so hard letting them go but knowing they are no longer in pain is comforting. We all love you and are here for you. Melissa
melissa mcIntyre
Salt Lake City, Ut
Dear Father Norman, My thoughts and prayers are with you. Your Mom was a wonderful person and I will never forget the day she showed up to say good-bye to the Sisters of the Presentation on one of the Sister's last days in Utah. It meant so much to them and showed her genuine goodness. May your Mom rest now in the grace and peace of Christ and may good memories bring you solace.
Dianna Pugh
West Jordan, Ut
John, So very sorry to get the news of your Mother's passing. Our love and prayers are with you and your family. Take care, Michele & Michael
Michele Brown-Riding
Applegate, Or
John so sorry to hear about the loss of your dear mother..Please accept my deepest symphony. She will be in my prayers. God bless you and your family
Joanne Mayo
slc, Ut
To Father Norman and family, please accept our prayers and love for your dear mother, Cathy I remember the days when I played golf with her wth Friends Unlimited club at Fore Lakes. She was so much fun and a darn good golfer! We'll look forward to your masses up at Our Lady of the Snows next winter, if you are still doing them. .
Bud and Elaine Patnode
Cottonwood Heights, Ut
To me this is where this series rlelay started to go off the rails and divert into self-parody. I read most of these books as a teenager and enjoyed the action scenes and the female slave aspect at the time but now they just seem horrible. Norman never says anything once he can say three or four times; does he think being so repetitous makes the utterances more profound or does he just not have anything else to say and needs to take up space? I do not agree with the sexual philosophy but even if I did once a book is enough starting with this book you seem to get it once a chapter. When the bandit Hassan enters the palace dining romm on the back of his kaila end scatters gaurdsman with one sweep of his mighty sword and grabs the girl with one crack of the whip i just laugh. Books four, five and six are still good reads as far as I am concerned. The yellow pool of Turia is a truly unique adversary I did not figure out immediately and Harold and Kamchak of the Tuchuks are very funny. Book five is good for the action sequences, yes they are a little farfetched, and the plot twist where the hero realizes he is not fooling anyone but that they are fooling him. Book six I just liked the battles at sea, everything else was very pedestrian. Books eight and nine had overtones of Beowulf which i liked also.
Demet
iSxvOlNMMpMRZYVV, Zm
To me this is where this series relaly started to go off the rails and divert into self-parody. I read most of these books as a teenager and enjoyed the action scenes and the female slave aspect at the time but now they just seem horrible. Norman never says anything once he can say three or four times; does he think being so repetitous makes the utterances more profound or does he just not have anything else to say and needs to take up space? I do not agree with the sexual philosophy but even if I did once a book is enough starting with this book you seem to get it once a chapter. When the bandit Hassan enters the palace dining romm on the back of his kaila end scatters gaurdsman with one sweep of his mighty sword and grabs the girl with one crack of the whip i just laugh. Books four, five and six are still good reads as far as I am concerned. The yellow pool of Turia is a truly unique adversary I did not figure out immediately and Harold and Kamchak of the Tuchuks are very funny. Book five is good for the action sequences, yes they are a little farfetched, and the plot twist where the hero realizes he is not fooling anyone but that they are fooling him. Book six I just liked the battles at sea, everything else was very pedestrian. Books eight and nine had overtones of Beowulf which i liked also.
Marina
knIOfbksISLcDhjpJ, hP