The Pat Navolanic Memorial Award has become the most prestigious honor that can be bestowed on a Glendale High School senior. The purpose of the award is to encourage a higher level of achievement in leadership, academics, community service and athletics, as well as to commemorate the life of a truly great individual.
Identical twins Peter and Pat Navolanic set the standard for leadership and on- and off-campus involvement. They led the student government while at Wilson Middle School. At Glendale High, Pat was elected sophomore class president and their senior year the brothers took turns as ASB president - Peter during the fall semester and Pat during the spring semester.
They were brilliant students and gifted athletes. They received athletic letters in track, basketball and football and played on one of Glendale High’s greatest football teams ever. Both achieved the high honor of Eagle Scout and were inducted into the Order of the Arrow, the honor society of the Boy Scouts.
In late December 1965, Pat’s untimely death at the age of 20 was front page news in the Glendale News-Press. The city and school mourned his passing. On campus, members of GHS’s National Honor Society decided to launch a project which would keep the memory of this exceptional person alive. A scholarship was established that would stimulate other students to emulate the qualities of character which made Pat such an outstanding student and leader.
The life of Pat Navolanic was a truly amazing one.
With hopes set upon a career in medicine, Pat had taken the most challenging classes at GHS and never earned less than an “A”. The most significant aspects of his high school career were his personal drive for excellence and his unique ability to lead by example. Pat won many awards during his senior year at GHS, the highlight of which was the Seymour Memorial Award, which recognizes the most outstanding high school student in the state of California. He is the only student in GHS’s more than 100 year history to win that honor.
Upon graduation, Pat received a four-year scholarship to Stanford University. His brother Peter has said that that achievement allowed Pat to pursue his desire to study at the most outstanding university he could imagine attending. There, he became fascinated with French customs and people. He loved the French culture and because Stanford had a campus located south of Paris, Pat signed up to spend a year abroad studying. It was in France during the Christmas holidays in 1965 that Pat died. His death was blamed on gas leaking from a faulty heater.
Once a year we gather to remember Pat at the PNMA assembly and in doing so we celebrate more than his many accomplishments. We recognize the spirit of this truly inspiring young man. We remember Pat, the model student, the model citizen, the model son, brother and friend.
Pat Navolanic used his life to inspire others and his story has inspired generations of Glendale High School students. His legacy has touched us all. In fact, seated in this audience today are students destined to become the 2008, 2009 and 2010 PNMA finalists and winners.
At this time I would like to introduce a longtime friend of the Navolanic family and a member of the GHS Class of 1963, our guest speaker Prudy Kohler.