Cosentino, Catherine (Kay)

was born September 9, 1917, in Tempe. She passed away
peacefully of natural causes in Sedona, Arizona on April
2, 2010. Arizona was a far different world and had been a
state only five years when Kay was born to David Carns
and Bertha Roberts Carns who owned a farm close to the
Salt River . There they cropped cotton, alfalfa, beans,
okra, melons and vegetables and had a small dairy and
many chickens. She swore off chickens for years when
she left the farm for good but she never lost those farm-
raised characteristics--that spirit of independence, hard
work, belief in the value of education, doing the right
thing even when it's hard and helping neighbors and her
community. She spent treasured childhood summers at
the Pleasant Valley (Young) ranch of her Aunt Beaulah
and Uncle Jack MacKenzie. In those days the Mogollon
Rim country was the back of beyond and getting there
was a real trip. Once when she was out with her Uncle
Jack checking on the cattle she asked him if he was
worried about not being in church that Sunday. Sitting on
a fallen log on the top of a hill he raised his arms to
encompass the sky and rugged mountains and told her
quietly in his Scots brogue, "I am." His reverence was a
thing the young Catherine took to heart. Kay left the farm
to go to college in her home town, Tempe. There she
excelled in both her classes and in athletics. She was a
member of National Honor Society and Kappa Kappa
Alpha, many clubs and sports. As a senior, she and her
best friend tied for the honor of receiving the college's
highest athletic award and received an A-blanket which
was one of her most valued possessions through her life.
At Arizona Teachers College she met Frank Cosentino
who was on a football scholarship. He was a gregarious
man who loved to dance as much as she did. When she
graduated she turned to classroom teaching. She resigned
when she and Frank married and went to California where
Frank trained men for the Navy during World War II and
Kay worked as a secretary in a shipyard. They returned to
Arizona in 1946 in time for the birth of their first child,
Sandra. Frank and two of his brothers built the Phoenix
home the family lived in for 46 years. When Kay was
young she was offered a reporter post at the Kansas City
Star, to work at chemistry or to follow her love of sports
and the out of doors. She chose sports and for many
years she was a PE teacher for the Phoenix Elementary
District where she included folk dancing as part of the
athletic curriculum. She was also active in community life
including being a member of the Kachina Woman's Club
for half a century. Their good works included raising
money for the Phoenix paramedics. Kay was a skilled
seamstress and could make anything and many a man at
the VA hospital has been comforted by the lap quilts she
made for them. Frank and Kay remained very active with
alumni groups especially ASU football. They not only
loved to dance, they loved to travel. After retirement
Frank and Kay traveled much including overseas before
his death in 1991 after which Kay moved into a condo.
She was open to adventure from backcountry camping in
Alaska to bus and train trips in Mexico with her children.
There seemed to be nothing she didn't know about desert
gardening. She loved the land and the out of doors and
to grow things all her life, traits she passed along to her
children. It seemed like she could make a tea rose grow
in alkali and peppers grow in winter. Her thumb was that
green. Catherine Cosentino was a spirited long-lived
woman of strong values who always remained open to
new things. She is survived by her three children, Sandra
(Sedona, AZ) , Marsha (Winclock, WA), and Brian
Cosentino (Olympia, WA), one grandchild and three great
grandchildren all of whom with others who love her and
will miss her, join in the hope that she is dancing in the
great beyond. There will be no service. Donations to
KAET public television in her honor are welcome. She
was a big fan and even donated her car to them three
years ago when she no longer drove.

Published in The Arizona Republic on April 4, 2010