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tended a country school, survived the loss of his father at a very young age, and graduated from Groton High High School when the family moved to town. He met the delightful Sondra Paetznick and after several requests for her hand while he attended the University of South Dakota, they were finally married in 1955 during his last year at the University of Pittsburgh Medical School. He completed his residency in otolaryngology while serving in the United States Navy. The family had grown to four children when they returned to South Dakota and Winston joined the Huron Clinic. In 1969 they moved to Aberdeen, where he joined the father and son medical practice of Bunker and Bunker. Winston and Sondra remained in Aberdeen to raise their children until retirement when they moved to Roscoe, SD, to live near their eldest son. • As a person who was always learning, Winston's curiosity led to a diversity of life talents, awards and accomplishments: He had a passion for the outdoors, was forever a farm boy raising Appaloosa horses and Black Angus cattle, ran the Double O stables, authored a western novel entitled, "Cadet The Sunset Cowboy", worked on its sequel, wrote and shared his poetry, loved music and the arts, enjoyed various travels with his wife and family, played the harmonica, sang, and painted scenes of the landscape he knew so well from wildlife to friends who attended his annual Duck Hunt on Lake Enemy Swim. Winston was a Mason and a Shriner who participated in the motorcycle corps and horse patrol. In 1980, he was one of South Dakota's delegates to the National Republican Convention ushering in Ronald Reagan to Presidency. He was a past president of the SD Medical Association, and (Continued on page 12)
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