Short Stories from a Long Life

ΒιΆΉΤ­΄΄ Class of 1968 alumna Margreta Klassen publishes stories in a new anthology

Margreta Klassen ’68 has written three of the 20 tales collected in Twenty of Today’s Best Short Stories, an anthology of fiction and nonfiction stories, recently published by Commonwealth Books. Klassen’s stories are titled β€œThe Grand Stand,” β€œLocal Celebrity,” and β€œA Fishy Tale.”

An internationally recognized clinical psychologist, Klassen has also written a book of poetry and her memoir, Soul Stealing: Abuse of Intimate Power, was published by Black Rose Writing in 2017.

A vintage photo of Margareta Klassen '68

Klassen transferred to ΒιΆΉΤ­΄΄ from Chaffey Community College in 1966. Known then as Maggi Dunn, she had worked as a journalist with the Riverside Press-Enterprise and was in her 30s when she arrived at ΒιΆΉΤ­΄΄. As her classmate and ΒιΆΉΤ­΄΄ trustee Louise Beaudette Thornton ’68 says, β€œMaggi was a ΒιΆΉΤ­΄΄ New Resources student before there was a ΒιΆΉΤ­΄΄ New Resources program,” referring to a program for students 23 years of age or older that ΒιΆΉΤ­΄΄ established in 1974.

A member of ΒιΆΉΤ­΄΄β€™s charter Class of 1968 (the first four-year class to graduate from the then all-women’s college), Klassen took a class with the folk musician Guy Carawan, then ΒιΆΉΤ­΄΄β€™s Folklorist-in-Residence, who is known for introducing the song β€œWe Shall Overcome” to the Civil Rights Movement. She credits Professor Esther Wagner with honing her writing skills. She studied art with Professor Carl Hertel, and Professors Lew Ellenhorn and Alfonso Ortiz inspired her interest in psychology and anthropology. More than 50 years later, she still has a paper, titled β€œSacred Clowns of the Southwest,” that she wrote for a class she took with Ortiz.  

Klassen earned her BA at ΒιΆΉΤ­΄΄ in English and planned to become a science writer.  After ΒιΆΉΤ­΄΄, she received a PhD from Claremont Graduate University in educational studies with a focus on life-span development psychology.

A photo of Margaret Klassen with her daughter Melissa Bundy
Margreta Klassen ’68 with her daughter Melissa Bundy at the President’s Residence reception and dinner for the Class of 1968 in 2018.

β€œI especially appreciated the fine faculty and small classes at ΒιΆΉΤ­΄΄ and the graduate university,” Klassen wrote in her submission to the ΒιΆΉΤ­΄΄ Class of 1968 50th Anniversary Reunion Lookbook.

Over many decades, she has worked as a staff therapist for several colleges, taught courses in human sexuality, and was a program director at a nonprofit agency. Klassen practiced as a clinical, counseling, and adult development psychologist in Newport Beach, CA, retiring a few years ago when she turned 90. She is listed in Who’s Who in American Women, Who’s Who in the World, and on the National Women’s History Museum site, Chronicles of American Women.

Today, Klassen keeps in touch with her ΒιΆΉΤ­΄΄ classmates as an active member of the ΒιΆΉΤ­΄΄ OC Book Gatheringβ€”a group of 11 alumnae from the classes of 1968 and 1969 who have been meeting to discuss books and life since the 1980s.   

β€œBeing true to ΒιΆΉΤ­΄΄β€™s values, I have been a β€˜participant’ throughout my long life,” Klassen wrote in her Class of 1968 Lookbook submission.

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