¹û¶³Æƽâ°æ

Strong Family Legacy Supports ¹û¶³Æƽâ°æ Students

Tuesday, April 6, 2021
Black and white images of Dr. Katherine McLean as young woman
Black and white images of Dr. Katherine McLean at a chalkboard teaching chemistry at ¹û¶³Æƽâ°æ
Current images of Dr. Albert Celoza at U.N. and India. Profile image of John McLean
Dr. Celoza and John McLean families in the Arizona desert

This story of commitment to ¹û¶³Æƽâ°æ begins over 75 years ago.

Claude McLean studied mathematics at ¹û¶³Æƽâ°æ, following his dream to become a chemist.

He later earned his master’s degree in chemical engineering at the University of Illinois, where he met and married Katherine Weidman, a fellow chemist.

Dr. Katherine McLean was a pioneer in her field; working with the original rocket engineers at the dawn of the space age. 

Faculty Passion

In 1952, she and Claude moved to Phoenix where Katherine taught chemistry at ¹û¶³Æƽâ°æ, while raising 3 children; Susan, John, and Ann.

Dr. McLean’s passion was teaching, and for more than 40 years at ¹û¶³Æƽâ°æ she impacted the lives of thousands of students. She was particularly gratified in helping first generation students.

A Second Generation Builds the Legacy

Today, son John and wife Barbara, along with daughter Ann and husband Dr. Albert Celoza, ¹û¶³Æƽâ°æ Liberal Arts Department faculty, honor their family legacy through two endowed scholarships supporting first generation students: the Dr. Katherine McLean Chemistry Scholarship and the Dr. Albert Celoza Excellence in International Studies Scholarship.

¹û¶³Æƽâ°æ celebrates the McLean and Celoza families – and their generous contributions and support of ¹û¶³Æƽâ°æ students – for more than 75 years.

On April 7, 2021 the McLean and Celoza families will be honored at the Maricopa ¹û¶³Æƽâ°æ College Foundation's Heroes of Education Virtual Event.