 Stephen Nowers
Ten years ago, as Marilyn Eylar Conaway (’56 Hist.) rowed an
inflatable boat on an Alaskan lake, she pictured herself as a girl
working the oars of her father’s handmade boat.
The thought recalled the simple joys of an idyllic childhood in
Grand Coulee, where her father had helped build the dam. But both
of Conaway’s parents and three of her six siblings had since died,
her husband Gerry’s heart was faltering, she herself had heart
disease, and she was about to end a storied career in
education.
That day, memory became mission: Conaway didn’t want to rock a
chair; she wanted to row a boat.
“She doesn’t know that things can’t be done,” says Sharon
Clawson, a fellow teacher who in the 1970s watched Conaway help
establish one of Alaska’s first alternative schools.
Since that day on the lake, the woman who charted new waters in
Alaska’s schools became one of the state’s first senior rowers to
medal in national competitions. Before the current season, she had
amassed 10 medals in races from the Moose Nugget Miler in Anchorage
to the World Masters Games in Australia.
Conaway grew up in an era when most girls didn’t play
competitive sports. She swam, skied, rode horses, and led school
cheers, and was still active when a heart attack struck at age 35.
But when she took up competitive rowing at 63, she was out of
shape, having suffered angina throughout her life.
She became the oldest member of the Anchorage Rowing
Association, which formed in 1998 with strong Washington State
University ties and some of the school’s used equipment. Three
younger alumni—all competitive rowers in college—boosted Conaway’s
development as a rower: Andi Day (’91 Hist.), Marietta “Ed” Hall
(’91 Fin.), and Shannon Lipscy Jensen (’95 Nat. Resource Sci.).
“Every year she got fitter and stronger and better,” says Day,
who with Jensen was one of Conaway’s early coaches.
As a novice, Conaway was so determined to compete in her first
race that she trained daily on rowing machines in Seattle, where
Gerry awaited a heart transplant. The rest of her eight-woman crew
remained in Anchorage until she joined them for Seattle’s Frostbite
Regatta.
Conaway was beached after she rowed one of her best
competitions, the 2005 World Masters Games in Canada. Two
“pre-heart attacks” forced her to withdraw from the prestigious
Head of the Charles Regatta in Boston that fall. She rowed again
last summer but succumbed to clogged carotid arteries. After two
surgeries, she was back on the water this past June.
“Seeing Marilyn row, that’s the most gratifying thing about
starting this team,” says Hall. “It’s not like it’s been easy for
her to row. She could’ve had a million great excuses to give it
up.”
Ilone (Long) Lee (’57 Sp.; ’63 M.A. Elem. Ed.), a fellow WSU
cheerleader, knows her friend doesn’t want excuses. “She’d get a
bee in her bonnet and go after it, and it would happen,” says Long,
recounting how Conaway transformed the WSU squad as “yell queen”
during her junior year. As a senior, Conaway was elected student
body secretary.
From her teens through a master’s degree from Columbia
University, Conaway worked 13 summers as a waitress at the Green
Hut below Grand Coulee Dam. She credits that, along with her
parents’ influence and WSU leadership opportunities, with honing
her ability to work with people.
During her first teaching job, at Bothell High School, she
concluded “that the world would be a better place if more students
were in charge more of the time.” Under her direction, Bothell
students attracted major-party gubernatorial candidates to the
state’s first mock political convention. Bothell’s second
convention also brought Jackie Robinson, the first black player in
the major leagues in the 20th century.
Similar successes followed in Alaska. In the 1970s, she teamed
with a group of parents and children to found Steller Secondary
School in Anchorage. With Conaway at the helm, Steller students
became stellar learners with greater control of their
educations.
Clawson, a Steller teacher, remembers Conaway being “undaunted”
by opposition to the alternative school and a narrow board approval
of four to three. More than 30 years later, Steller thrives as one
of America’s Blue Ribbon Schools. Alumni include Anchorage mayor
Mark Begich and folk singer Jewel.
Conaway went on to lead innovative programs elsewhere in the
district, win numerous professional awards, and retire as principal
of Alaska’s largest high school. Throughout, she never wavered in
her belief that people who make more decisions become better
learners and leaders. Some lessons don’t end upon graduation—or
retirement.
“You can develop a new interest or start a new project at any
time in your life. It doesn’t matter when it is,” she says. “The
more you do after you qualify for AARP, the better off you
are.”
—Eric Apalategui
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