WILL MAAS

Profile Updated: September 16, 2025
WILL MAAS
WILL MAAS

Then

WILL MAAS

Now

WILL MAAS

Yearbook

Yes! Attending Reunion
Residing In Concord, CA USA
Spouse/Partner Charo Carbajal (wife)
Occupation Servant and Writer
Children Tom, born 1970, Anne, born 1973, Nina, born 1987. Grandchildren, Katie, born 2004, Sarah, born 2005, More…Sinead and Abdi born 2007.
Military Service Army 1965-1968  
Comments

My days are divided between helping others and writing books, stories and personal essays. About 50-50. I've published ten books since retiring from Criminal Defense work in January 2010. Book numbers nine and ten are collections of stories about the U.S. Army Pathfinders, a group with whom I served in Vietnam.

I actively serve my wife, 3 children, 4 grandchildren, and numerous Twelve Step recovering addicts and alcoholics like me. I've been blessed with sobriety since June 14, 1988.

My favorite activity is a weekly songfest with 1965 ICHS classmates Patty Wade and Charlie Itzin. We caterwaul and remember! Nothing brings back the past like Mark Dinning in 1958 singing "Teen Angel."

And oh, I like to hike. There are enough trails, ravines, hills and mountains to last a lifetime out west where we live.

Attending the 2022 City High Reunion and touring City High that Saturday following it were among the best memories of my life. Everyone I met was so kind. It was good to listen to and talk to people whom I had not seen since 1965. I have been communicating regularly with Connie Beaver since the reunion and it's wonderful!

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Sep
21
Sep 21, 2025 at 2:33 PM

Posted on: Sep 16, 2025 at 10:39 PM

Will and Don Otto, DVM.
Dr Don explained definitively the differences between "Hoof and Mouth Disease" and "Mad Cow Disease" after Will asked, "Which is worse?"

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Sep 21, 2025 at 2:37 PM

Posted on: Sep 16, 2025 at 10:10 PM

William Schwaigert (Regina Class of '65), Mike Sheridan, Bill Blanchard, ICHS '64

Fred Stieglitz, Will Maas and John Moyers

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Feb 19, 2025 at 1:56 PM

Posted on: Feb 13, 2025 at 3:33 AM

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Nov 16, 2024 at 8:12 AM
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Jul 04, 2024 at 1:57 PM

Wow, Becky! Born on the Fourth of July. Now that's something I did not know about you. Hope you're happily celebrating the onset of your 77th year, on this precious day in our nation's history.

WILL MAAS has left an In Memory comment for his Profile.
Apr 23, 2024 at 8:47 PM

I didn't know Jane in high school.  But it was nice to see Diane Williams (Hobson) writing her memories.  It's comforting to believe someone from our class may remember us when we're gone.  Thank you, Diane!

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Feb 13, 2024 at 10:48 PM

Posted on: Feb 13, 2024 at 3:33 AM

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Jan 09, 2024 at 7:40 PM
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Jan 09, 2024 at 7:09 PM

For those who may wish to send sympathy cards or letters to Candy's family, here is the address for her younger son, Shea Fowler.  He will pass along your messages to his family.

Shea Fowler

4521 Johnson Avenue

Western Springs, Illinois 60558

WILL MAAS has left an In Memory comment for his Profile.
Jan 08, 2024 at 11:51 AM

 

IN MEMORIAM

SMILE BECAUSE IT HAPPENED

CANDY CHELF GRIFFEY

July 27, 1947-December 28, 2023

                              “Don’t cry because it’s over, smile because it happened.” – Dr. Seuss

 

 

 

                  Candy Chelf Griffey, left, with Margaret Cretzmeyer & Ginger Kornegor Schapira.

                                Iowa City High School Class of 1965 Reunion.  September 13, 2023.

 

YOUR LAST NIGHT ON THIS EARTH

 

You disappeared in the dead of winter, on a dark cold night in Western Springs, Illinois.  On the evening of December 28, 2023, the thermometer sank in the mouth of the dying day to 34 degrees.  But it felt colder.  More like 28.

Cloudy skies drizzled on treetops and rooftops.  But you were warm and safe and dry on a couch with your son Shea’s family celebrating Christmas.  Oh how you loved your two sons, Mike and Shea, and their wives and your grandchildren and great grandchildren! 

You were that woman whose beaming smile lit up a room when she walked in. Still glowing in the aftermath of last September’s Class Reunion, you reached out to your old friend Connie Beaver Throckmorton.  You were sending out Facebook friend requests to other class members. 

Your son Shea, an Iowa Football season ticket holder, was sending tickets for your other son Mike and you to attend the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Florida.  You were psyched to see the Hawkeyes take on Tennessee, just four days away, on January 1, 2024.

Candy, in your days on this planet, you got around!  Having traveled already to Europe and Japan, you dreamed of new journeys: vorages to Western Europe, South America,  and Antarctica!

 In the middle of the chaos of your happily human life, your heart suddenly stopped.  They sped you to a hospital a block away.  They tried to revive you. 

         

                     SWEET MEMORIES OF YOU

Memories, pressed between the pages of my mind
Memories, sweetened through the ages just like wine
Quiet thoughts come floating down and settle softly to the ground
Like golden autumn leaves around my feet
I touched them and they burst apart with sweet memories…
           

             Memories” by Ash Howes, Richard Stannard, Iain James & Brad Ellis

 On July 20, 2023, in a naked attempt to lure you into coming to our final class reunion in September, I wrote you an email with two photos attached.

1985.  ICHS Class of 1965 20th Reunion. It looks like we’d just been indicted and The National Enquirer showed up. 

 

The same reunion, different night. Next to Jan Davis.  You're sort of fake-smiling?  Maybe annoyed that I caught you fiddling with your earring?

I opened with:

Dear Candy:

My first memory of you may be mistaken.  In grade school I vaguely recall Cynthia Suter and you mopping up your competition in the Iowa City Recreation League Table Tennis Tournament.  You murdered my sister Beth and me in Ping Pong.  I'm not sure that we scored any points against you two professionals.

My first wife Cynthia (Suter) Maas remembers that you got a ping pong table, and though you were a left-handed swinger, you mastered the game in short order.  Cynthia has athletic genes, but she was no match for you.

          I went on in this email to you:

My second memory is meeting you in our 7-12 homeroom and liking you.  You and Bruce Schwab were the first two people to be nice to me in junior high. 

Then there was the 8th grade typing class taught by Clifford Walters.  Mr. Walters was on the short side, stooped over, balding.   He perched thick, black-rimmed glasses on his beak-like nose.

             When I first met him, I thought, Barn owl.

He warned our class,  "I’m sorry, but I can’t pass you unless you can type 40 words a minute by the end of this semester."  During oral dictation exercises Mr. Walters stumbled on one word, repeatedly, "Okay, boys and girls, now we are going to begin typing set-ness-es!"

On the final exam I eked out 40 words per minute.  I recall you effortlessly rapping out 95-100 w.p.m.  Is that right?  I think you got faster with time and may have broken 100 many times after that class.

When you were later introduced to the IBM Selectric Typewriters, with their revolving golf ball elements, I bet your word count shot up into the stratosphere.

This one high school memory of you is the most poignant.  It was in the spring of our sophomore year at City High in a Biology Class taught by Dr. Richard Rush.

 

         Me at 16.

I was  pathologically shy.  Pathetically unsocialized.  For the past four summers, while  other boys were learning new dances and hanging out with girls in bikinis at the Iowa City Swimming Pool, I was sweating away my childhood.  Laboring in the heat at a turkey ranch in West Liberty, and later at three farms scattered across two counties. While other guys were talking to and flirting with girls, I was slinging turkey poop with a pitchfork, whacking down roadside weeds with a sythe under a sweltering sun, and stacking bales in musty hay mows.

I first met Cynthia Suter in tenth grade biology class at City High taught by  Dr.  Richard Rush.  Through my teenaged eyes he looked like a diminutive, red-headed, bow-tie sporting, tight-ass Ph.D.  He was like a wall-eyed pike, bred for running white rapids in the Canadian Rockies,  now condemned to paddle around in this little pond of a public high school.

We were seated at two-person desks.  I, who had no friends, sat alone.  Cynthia Suter and you giggled and fired secret notes around the class. 

 

                       

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Cynthia  Suter as a sophomore.

 

                                                                     Candy Chelf as a sophomore.

When Dr. Rush dimmed the the lights for a science movie, I glanced back at you two.  The eight millimeter projector chattered. A nasal-drone announcer  intoned, “Boys and girls, welcome to today’s film, Fauna and Flora of the Middle Western States."  Dr. Rush, apparently finding our biology movies a notch or four below his educational ledge, quietly slipped out the door while the films were playing, so he could sneak a smoke in the teacher’s lounge.

That was a mistake.

Cynthia and you shoved wads of notebook paper into your mouths, soaked them thoroughly, then fired your spitwads at the back of  Drew Appleby’s head.  Gawd.  You girls could pitch!   Appleby, a skinny kid with freckles and brown-rimmed glasses whirled around, scanning the back of the room.

Soon, Drew was soaking down his own spitballs.  The battle of the flying spittles was on!

You and Cynthia were so naughty.  I’d look fleetingly and disapprovingly at you ladies.  And then quickly turn away so you’d not catch me looking.

Finally, your misbehavior ratcheted up and snatched both of you by the neck.One afternoon, Dr. Rush stood glaring down at Cynthia and you, his eyes racing across the apparently empty pages of your notebooks.

He growled, “You girls haven’t filled out your science notebooks!”

It started with Cynthia and spread to Candy: shaking and crying.Heavy tears rolling down your cheeks.I got mad.I thought Dr. Rush was bullying you and making you cry.Cynthia later told me your were both laughing so hard you were crying.

Not a speck remorse in you two miscreants.

Dr. Rush snapped, “You girls are not going to sit together anymore!Cynthia—find another desk mate!”

Cynthia rose from her chair.She scanned the room, like a hawk searching for a juicy field mouse.Her green eyes lit on me.I’m sure I was blushing.When I put my head down on my desk to hide out, she announced, pointing at me, “I”ll take him.” She later told me she was looking for the shyest boy in the room and saw me put my head down.

I closed my 2023 email to you:

 But for your misbehavior, I’d never have dated Cynthia.  My children and grandchildren would never have appeared, Candy!  My family thanks you for acting up.

Every time I’ve seen you since high school it looks like you’ve been sipping Ponce De Leon’s More…fountain of youth.

I would love to see you come to what Ed Etheredge called our "Last Picture Show" this September.  I imagine you've got lots of stories to tell.

            Warmly,

            Will Maas

 

HOW WE REMEMBER YOU

On this 8th day of January, 2024, in the New Year you did not live to see, we are gathering our stories about you, like sheaves of oats during harvest time in Iowa.  We’ll spread those oat seeds in the winds of a website, which who knows, may be our only legacy to survive in the uncertain centuries to come.

Candy, I can’t help crying that your life is over.  But I can go on smiling that your life happened!

Rest in Peace, kind soul!

Love, Will

P.S.  I'll always remember you in our "Last Picture Show" group photo taken on September 13, 2023, at the Big Grove Brewery as the young woman in blue, standing right behind Earl Lockhart in his wheelchair.  You were a lovely classmate, and a fine friend.

 

 

 

 

 

 

WILL MAAS has left an In Memory comment for his Profile.
Jan 05, 2024 at 3:06 PM

Finally, your misbehavior ratcheted up and snatched both of you by the neck.One afternoon, Dr. Rush stood glaring down at Cynthia and you, his eyes racing across the apparently empty pages of your notebooks.

He growled, “You girls haven’t filled out your science notebooks!”

 

It started with Cynthia and spread to Candy: shaking and crying.Heavy tears rolling down your cheeks.I got mad.I thought Dr. Rush was bullying you and making you cry.  Cynthia later told me your were both laughing so hard you were crying.

 

Not a speck remorse in you two miscreants.

 

Dr. Rush snapped, “You girls are not going to sit together anymore!  Cynthia—find another desk mate!”

 

Cynthia rose from her chair.She scanned the room, like a hawk searching for a juicy field mouse.Her green eyes lit on me.I’m sure I was blushing.When I put my head down on my desk to hide out, she announced, pointing at me, “I”ll take him.” She later told me she was looking for the shyest boy in the room and saw me put my head down.

 

WILL MAAS has left an In Memory comment for his Profile.
Jan 05, 2024 at 3:01 PM

Candy Chelf.

WILL MAAS has left an In Memory comment for his Profile.
Jan 05, 2024 at 2:59 PM

WILL MAAS has left an In Memory comment for his Profile.
Jan 05, 2024 at 2:52 PM

The same reunion, different night. Next to Jan Davis.  You're sort of fake-smiling?  Maybe annoyed that I caught you fiddling with your earring?

WILL MAAS has left an In Memory comment for his Profile.
Jan 05, 2024 at 2:51 PM

WILL MAAS has left an In Memory comment for his Profile.
Jan 05, 2024 at 2:47 PM

SWEET MEMORIES OF YOU

Memories, pressed between the pages of my mind
Memories, sweetened through the ages just like wine
Quiet thoughts come floating down and settle softly to the ground
Like golden autumn leaves around my feet
I touched them and they burst apart with sweet memories…
           

Memories” by Ash Howes, Richard Stannard, Iain James, Brad Ellis

          On July 20, 2023, in a naked attempt to lure you into coming to our final class reunion in September, I wrote you an email with two photos attached.

WILL MAAS has left an In Memory comment for his Profile.
Jan 05, 2024 at 2:43 PM

SMILE BECAUSE IT HAPPENED

 

IN MEMORIAM

 

CANDY CHELF GRIFFEY

 

July 27, 1947-December 28, 2023

 

 

“Don’t cry because it’s over, smile because it happened.” – Dr. Seuss

                                                                 

                                                                By Will Maas

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