ANGELA CLARKE PACKS BIG
             
            PUNCH IN SENIOR COMMUNITY  
            BY MARC DAVID 
              
            Angela Clarke epitomizes a fighter. 
             
            A woman given a cancer death sentence just before she turned 70, the 
            Sun City Summerlin resident has fought back with a vengeance. 
             
            But then, Clarke was always a fighter. She grew up in Baltimore in a 
            family of 10 children. Her mother, Cora Webb, demanded good grades. 
            Bs were met with more than disapproval -- they were met with 
            corporal punishment. 
  
            "I don't have a mark anywhere on me," Clarke says.  
             
            Part of that is because as one of the youngest in her family, she 
            was towards the end of the line of getting hit. The other part is 
            she didn't get many Bs. Nine of the 10 Webb children graduated from 
            college, with 27 advanced degrees among them. Cora Webb attended 
            finishing school and  
            became an illustrator for a black newspaper in Baltimore. Angela 
            Clarke has far exceeded her mother. 
             
            When ailments forced her to retire as a physician in her mid-50s, 
            Clarke left behind an impressive resume. A graduate of Morgan State 
            University, Clarke was summa cum laude from the University of 
            Maryland School of Medicine. 
             
            When she graduated from Maryland, she telegrammed her mother who /at 
            the time was living in California with the words, "Can I stop school 
            now?" Her mother didn't attend her graduation, sending her the 
            airfare money with a note saying, "It's more important for you to 
            have this (air- fare money) than for me to be there." 
             
            Clarke is also an Air War College graduate. She's listed in Who's 
            Who of American Women, Who's Who in the West, Two Thousand Women of 
            Achievement, Director of Medical Specialists and Personalities of 
            the West and Midwest. 
             
            She has mastered five languages besides English -- Latin, French, 
            German, Spanish and Hebrew. She did some traveling with Harry James, 
            serving as personal physician to the renowned bandleader. 
			 
			Clarke 
            is a Korean War and Gulf War veteran. She didn't serve on the front 
            lines in either, but she was in Air to Ground Communications in 
            Tokyo at the time of the Korean War, which made her eligible to 
            receive college tuition. 
             
            She was a physician for 10 years in Beverly Hills. During that time, 
            she made television appearances on the Dating Game and Let's Make a 
            Deal, as well as appearing in commercials and as an extra in movies 
            such as 1,000 Miles to Graceland. 
             
            Upon moving to Las Vegas in 1975, she became the first 
            board-certified family practitioner in Nevada. When a bleeding 
            disorder forced her to retire from private practice and the Air 
            Force reserves in 1987, Clarke, who believes in holistic healing, 
            turned to Tai Chi, "a healing form of martial arts"; she says. 
             
            Clarke, 71, who has three grown children, moved to Sun City eight 
            years ago and threw herself into a myriad of activities. She is a 
            member of the Lynette Jazz Dancers, Sun City Folk Dancers, Sun City 
            Sun Cats, plays piano and recently performed in a choreography 
            showcase where she was among a group that did a senior hip hop 
            dance.  
             
            It's quite an impressive list of activities for a woman who was 
            diagnosed with cancer two years ago. Two weeks after her last 
            surgery, she was on the stage dancing.  
             
            "I was told not to lift my arms up," says Clarke. "But how do you 
            dance without lifting your arms?"  
             
            There's no slowing Clark, who says, "The secret to retiring is to 
            make sure you are as busy as you were when you were working and that 
            you enjoy what you are doing. The more I do, the happier I am, the 
            less pain or aches I feel." 
             
            Pages 90 and 91 
            THE MAGAZINE OF SUMMERLIN, May 2004  | 
           
         
       
      
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