a_upfront 4.3 - Princeton Class of 1966
Transcription
a_upfront 4.3 - Princeton Class of 1966
MIKE WITTE Princeton University CLASS OF 1966 40TH REUNION BOOK 1 Copyright 2006 by The Class of 1966 Princeton University Printed in the United States of America by Global Printing Direct. Inc. Trenton, New Jersey 2 40th Reunion Survey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 By the Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Class Directory and Biographies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 In Memoriam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 257 Missing Classmates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 258 Class Officers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 259 Honorary Classmates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 260 Geographical Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 261 Princeton Prize in Race Relations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 276 Goheen on Princeton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 279 A Tiger’s Tale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 283 1966 Commencement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 285 1962 Admissions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 293 Gallery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 295 3 Acknowledgments Our thanks to all those classmates who contributed biographical statements and photos and completed the class survey — 97, 82, and 191, respectively, as of March 25, 2006. We are also indebted to Chuck Creesy ’65 for his advice and generosity in allowing us to adapt for our purposes the Class of 1965’s 40th reunion-book format, and to our printer, Fred Kiley, of Global Printing Direct, in Trenton, New Jersey. Thanks, too, to John and Cary Bruestle ’78 of RE Technologies for their assistance with the class website. We encourage classmates to visit the website (www.tiger66.org) and keep their online biographies current. EDITORIAL COMMITTEE Jim Merritt Editing and Production Lanny Jones Survey and Archives Mike Barrett Website and Photography 4 SATISFACTION The 40th-Reunion Survey of the Class of 1966 By Landon Y. Jones When I get older losing my hair, many years from now. Will you still be sending me a Valentine Birthday greetings bottle of wine? —“When I’m sixty-four,” The Beatles W e’re not quite 64, and not all of us are losing our hair — though 28% of us do detect male pattern baldness. What else has changed in the 15 years since our 25th reunion in 1991? By that time, most of us seemed to have found a place in the world: we had married, established ourselves in our professions, and were underway with families. Even the newspaper headlines looked the same then as now: in 1991 an American President named Bush had sent our soldiers to war in Iraq. But, judging from the results of those who answered our 40th reunion survey, for many of us the world of our 25th reunion is disappearing as rapidly as if seen through the wrong end of a telescope. Since our 25th, one-half have moved into a new house. One-half have new jobs. One in five has a new wife or partner. One in 10 has had cancer. Most of our children have grown, and most of our parents have died. How do we feel about these changes? Are we besieged and stressed out? Far from it. We have mellowed. We are happier. In fact, some of the most dramatic differences between the men who answered our poll this year, as opposed to our beta-test versions 15 years ago, have to do with our psychological well-being. This year, 191 classmates completed anonymous responses to our questionnaire — 122 did so on the class’s website and 69 mailed in hard copies. Keep in mind that this is a self-selected group, so while the results are suggestive they are not definitive. By comparison, we recorded a larger total of 315 responses to the 25th-reunion survey, mainly because we followed up with nonrespondents in order to guarantee a more representative sample of the entire class. 5 Consider these issues. In our 1991 survey, we presented a list of choices and asked, “Which of the following have you experienced since you turned 40?” The numbers of us who frankly acknowledged “depression/anxiety” and “loneliness” were so high that I concluded in my analysis then that “Loneliness is potentially a troubling issue for Princeton ’66.” In 2006, we presented a similar list and asked a similar question (Which of the following experiences have you had during the past 15 years?). The responses are printed below. In each case, the actual number of respondents is followed in parenthesis by its percentage of those who answered in that year. EXPERIENCE Had a new child 25th REUNION 61 (20 %) 40th REUNION 5 (2.7 %) Depression/anxiety 147 (47 %) 36 (19 %) Separation/divorce 46 (15 %) 31 (17 %) Resetting priorities 198 (64 %) 60 (32 %) Periods of loneliness 107 (34 %) 23 (13 %) Serious health concern 71 (23 %) 34 (18 %) Health of aging parents 194 (63 %) 87 (46 %) Children’s problems 112 (37 %) 26 (14 %) We are feeling better about things. The percentage of classmates reporting “depression/anxiety” has been halved. The percentage “resetting priorities” has also been halved, and the percentage of classmates experiencing “periods of loneliness” has dropped by nearly two-thirds. The number reporting a “serious health concern” has actually fallen, even though we are facing more disease and death 15 years later. And all of this despite a slight increase in the rate of separations and divorces. Why are we less worried and less anxious today than at our 25th? Is it because the heaviest responsibilities of parenting — and the attendant anxieties — have passed? Do we feel less stress in the workplace with the growing suspicion that we may have reached the top of the bell curve of our professional lives? Have the “sandwich generation” issues of dealing simultaneously with ailing parents and growing children abated? Have we resolved the troublesome issues in our own marriages — or moved on to happier relationships? 6 Or has something subtler changed about our expectations for what life can bring us? To understand these questions better, I talked to two ’66 spouses — Barbara Goltz and Sally Witte, both psychologists and therapists. Both Barbara and Sally pointed out that the fourth decade of life leading up to the 25th reunion is usually the hardest decade for ambitious people because there is still a chance “to make it” but “time is running out.” Pressure is on and anxiety is high. “The issue of achievement is not settled,” Barbara said, “and many are still anxious to accomplish whatever it is they thought would make them feel better about themselves and their lives.” By the time our 50s arrive, most people have begun to accept their place in life. “Those who have had thecourage to look inside begin to have more comfort with their issues,” Barbara said. “For men that’s particularly the issue of achievement. In our generation the same is true for achieving women. By the time we reach our 60s — and the 40th reunion survey — people realize that there is not enough time or energy left to make substantial changes in life. As a result, many feel much more settled and accepting of themselves. Their earlier level of anxiety drops. The gift of the 15 years between the 25th and 40th reunions is more personal equanimity and calm. One of the pieces of being quieter and more satisfied in the 60s, in spite of facing more real illness and death, has to do with becoming more realistic, accepting, and compassionate with ourselves and others. This comes from surviving the bumps of life and finding out what is personally important.” As a result, Barbara said, “One great benefit of this growth is that loneliness is less a factor than it once was. We seem to need — and even relish — more time alone as we age. As we resolve more things within ourselves, being alone is less frightening and more enriching. The fact that many people survive the bumps in life and come to better terms with themselves over the years also benefits the bond in marriage.” With that as background, what follows is an analysis of the highlights of our class survey. For the details, you can go directly to the complete results of the survey printed on the following pages. ABOUT US When the newly coined members of the Class of ’66 first looked at one another as freshmen in the fall of 1962, all we could see were the differences: 454 of us were from public high schools and 358 from private schools. Some were smart (135 valedictorians), some were leaders (144 were presidents of their school or senior class), some were football captains, and some were musicians. There were 141 “Princeton sons,” as the admission office then called legacies, and 11 students from foreign 7 countries. In hindsight, though, we were more similar than we realized. There were no women, of course, and there were so few minorities in the Class of 1966 that the admission office did not bother to tell the faculty about them. In his final report as Director of Admission in 1962, C. William Edwards ’36 noted that his long-standing directives to admit students of academic excellence and good character were no longer adequate at a time of such rich supply. He had been able to accept only one of every three applicants to the Class of 1966. “In the near future,” Edwards observed, “it may be possible to select three different classes from among applicants who seem clearly qualified to meet the academic requirements — and they could be three very different classes.” Edwards asked for more specific criteria to help shape the class. The era of the well-rounded student would soon yield to the well-rounded class. Forty years after our graduation, our similarities remain more prominent than our differences — statistically, if not individually. While we live all over the country, almost half of us have stayed in the Northeast. We are scattered among cities (31%), suburbs (39%), and small towns and rural areas (29%). Wherever we are, we are working hard to keep in shape: half of us weigh the same (37%) or less (16%) than we did at our 25th reunion. More than half of us exercise more than once a week, and 20% exercise daily. Golf is now our sport of choice (33%), replacing tennis, our favorite back at our 10th reunion in 1976. One in four of us belongs to a country club, and a third of us belong to a gym. The number of cigarette smokers has dwindled — from 13% at our 10th to 7% at the 25th to 2% (4 out of 191 respondents) at our 40th. We read a lot (a third of us read more than 15 books a year for pleasure), go to concerts (75%), operas (31%), plays (70%), and movies (90%). We like pop music, especially the Beatles, though the Rolling Stones’ Satisfaction was the most-mentioned among an amazing array of favorite songs. We also contend with the usual midlife issues, ranging from sore backs (33%) to therapy (35%) and marriage counseling (36%). ABOUT OUR FAMILIES Marriage is ubiquitous in our class — 95% of us have married at least once — but even it is changing. At our 25th reunion, the percentage of us in our first marriages was 79%; that number has dropped 15 years later to 57%. Even so, more than half of us have been married for 30 years or more. A third have been divorced — lower than the national average for our peer group — and 30% are remarried. The majority of our wives are working, either full time (35%) or part time (22%). Perhaps as a result, we say we are doing a larger amount of our family’s chores now than we 8 did 15 years ago (which may suggest one reason for the large number of those married 30-plus years). While most of say “We share” responsibilities for the family budget (53%), one classmate added another option to that question: “We argue.” If our relationships have lost some sexual energy (50%), there’s also hope in a bottle: Viagra and its ilk (26%). And in any event there is a compensation: a great many of us care for our spouses at a deeper level now than 15 years ago (39%). Our child-bearing is largely completed’— two-thirds of us had either two or three children — and we are on to grandparenting. About half have grandchildren, and they like it so much that 25% complain they do not see their grandchildren often enough. The generation of our own parents is departing. Sixty-one percent of us have lost both parents; 32% have one living parent, and only 5% — 10 classmates of 191 — can report both parents living. ABOUT OUR CAREERS We are not retired and don’t want to be. But we are not fully in the workplace, either. We are in transition. At our 25th reunion in 1991, 93% of us said we were “working full time in a paid position.” This year that number has dropped to 68% working full time. But only 14% of us admit to being “fully retired.” Instead, there are growing numbers of ’66ers working part time in a paid job (12%) or full or part time in an unpaid job (7%). Full retirement is somewhere over the horizon: only 27% of us expect to be fully retired by our 50th reunion. The rest of us say they will not retire until they are either over 70 (30%) or “never” (14%). Perhaps we want to keep on working because we are so goal-oriented. We enjoy our jobs (55%), consider ourselves successful (89%) and say the reason we feel that way is “accomplishment” (54%). Someone evidently agrees: 25% of us report household incomes between $251,000 and $500,000, and another 21% are earning more than $500,000 a year. Our wives are in the workplace, too. More than a third of our spouses work full time with pay; another 22% work part time with pay, and 9% work without pay. While we like the fact that our partners work (50%), only rarely have their career interests come before ours in our decisionmaking (14%). The man’s job is usually seen as the primary one in the household. Our good fortune has spilled over in tangible ways. More than onethird of us own primary residences worth over $1 million, and nearly onehalf own second homes (most often in New England). While we have earned much — 73% say they are worth more than $1 million — our affluence has not necessarily generated complacency. One-half of us say their lives are “pretty good, but things could be better.” And we give back generously: 28% donate more than $10,000 to nonprofit causes every year. 9 OUR OPINIONS We say we are becoming more liberal — though our stands on specific issues display a broad range of opinion. Take politics (please!). Back at our 25th reunion, we were evenly split between those who said they were Republicans (36%) and Democrats (35%). (The rest were independents or did not specify.) In this year’s survey, however, 52% of the respondents identified themselves as moderately liberal or very liberal, while fewer than one in three (30%) said they were moderately conservative or very conservative. Classmates identifying themselves as middle-of-the-road have dwindled from 31% at our 10th reunion to just 13% now. Where we stand may depend on where we sit — especially given that half of us (48%) sit in the mostly blue-state Northeast. Since 1991, our classmates say they are more likely to have become “more liberal” (21%) than “more conservative” (15%). In the Presidential election of 2000, we preferred Al Gore (52%) to George W. Bush (38%). By 2004, given the Hobson’s choice of two Yalies, we preferred our 1966 peer John Kerry (57%) to Bush (34%). If anything, the President may have become even less popular since then. Two-thirds of us rate GWB’s performance as “poor” (19%) or “very poor” (47%), and 42% “strongly agree” that he is “the worst President since our graduation.” By contrast, Bill Clinton was generally approved by our classmates, with 56% rating him as good (40%) or very good (16%). Interestingly, the former President with the highest rating in this year’s poll was Ronald Reagan, approved by 58% of us. Asked who we think will be elected President in 2008, the only politician gathering more than ten percent of our votes was John McCain, named by an impressive 31%. (By contrast, Hillary Clinton was picked by only 8.5%.) Class polls from our earlier reunions report that in the 1968 Presidential election we preferred Humphrey (41%) to Nixon (31%) and McCarthy (11%), and in 1972 we voted for George McGovern (58%) over Nixon (31%). Among the other hot-button issues, we are strongly supportive of abortion rights, gay rights, and women’s rights. We are more divided about the Patriot Act, offshore drilling, and capital punishment. Almost two-thirds of us of us do not think that the war in Iraq will be worth the cost. Asked to identify the three most serious problems facing the U.S. today, we overwhelmingly named “budget and trade deficits” and “quality of public education,” which finished in a dead heat with 55% each. The next-most frequently cited problem was “lack of effective leadership in government,” named by 33%. Worries about our government and economy show up in other areas, as well. Seventy-two percent of us think it is “becoming more difficult for the average American to make ends meet.” As a consequence, perhaps, we are unsure if our 10 children will have better lives than we did. Twenty-two percent think they will; 22% think they will not; 47% are not sure. ABOUT PRINCETON The area where this survey is most influenced by self-selection has to do with our attitudes about Princeton. For instance, 58% of those who responded to this survey say they plan to attend our 40th reunion — but it is unlikely that a similar percentage of our total roll of 707 classmates will actually attend. The group that responded is especially enthusiastic about Princeton. They are proud to have gone to Princeton — 69% “strongly agree” — and were satisfied with their experience (87% agree — even though 72% wish Princeton had been coeducational in 1962-66). More than one-half attend at least one university event a year, and they like what they see: 91% think Princeton’s reputation is as good today as it was in 1966. For many, contact with the university is primarily through the Alumni Weekly. Perhaps because of the lack of personal contact, they are unsure what we think about some of the more recent issues affecting campus life, such as the residential college system. ABOUT OUR FUTURE Looking ahead to the coming decade, we are would like to travel more (63%), even while continuing to work at least part-time (44%). More of us are interested in starting a second career in a new field (19%) than in scaling back and “smelling the roses” (17%). But we are not naïve. Actuaries report that a 62-year-old American man in our peer group has a life expectancy of 18.8 years. But that only gets half of us to the age of 80. Some of us will have to contend sooner or later with heart disease and stroke (1 in 4 will die from them) or cancer (1 in 7). Understandably, our personal health is the issue that gives us the most uncertainty about the next decade. Who will take care of us when we’re 64 or older? We overwhelmingly are counting on “my spouse and my personal nest egg.” Optimism prevails. A third of us believe our best years are still ahead of us, and only 14% think they are behind us. A perhaps appropriately cautious 51% say they are “uncertain.” One classmate probably speaks for more than a few, though, when he put it this way: “I expect to outlast everyone.” The class numerals of ’66 that the university affixes to all of our names might seem to be a leveler, of sorts. But, despite the many common qualities we share, we are ultimately defined by our very different lives and different accumulations of experiences. Judging from the survey, those experiences are rich and varied. For example, question number 8 on this survey asked classmates to choose from a list of 11 experiences they may have had during the past 15 years. A write-in option was also offered. Under “Other experiences,” one classmate wrote that he “took part in the founding of a political party in 2002 in Turkey.” Another man recalled an accomplishment that was different in nature but perhaps not in personal pleasure. He wrote just two words: “Caught tuna.” So start a political party. Or catch a tuna. See you at the 50th. The writer is grateful to Barbara Goltz and Sally Schaum Witte for their help in analyzing this survey. 12 By the numbers The following results of our 40th-reunion survey are current as of March 16, 2006. For the most current data and more detailed results of “other” replies, please refer to the class website, www.tiger66.org. You once a month once a week more than once a week every day 2.6 % 12.1 % 57.9 % 21.1 % 1. In what part of the country do you live in now? Northeast 47.9 % Southeast 13.7 % 6. Do you belong to Midwest (check all that apply) 10.5 % Southwest country club 25.3 % 9.5 % Mountain states tennis or racket club 18.9 % 3.7 % Outside the U.S. yacht club 4.7 % 11.6 % West Coast YM/WCA 9.5 % * 4.7 % physical fitness center 34.2 % 2. How many times have you moved in the 15 years since 7. What are your principal hobbies our 25th reunion in 1991? and participant sports (check Still in the same all that apply) principal residence 38.9 % tennis 22.6 % 1-2 squash 44.7 % 4.7 % 3-4 racquetball 13.2 % 3.7 % 5 or more swimming 2.6 % 22.6 % skiing 19.5 % 3. Do you live in: running 22.6 % city baseball or softball 31.6 % 1.1 % suburb golf 38.4 % 32.6 % small town biking 17.4 % 23.7 % rural area other sport 11.6 % 12.1 % fishing 13.7 % 4. How do you feel about your boating 21.6 % present whereabouts? horses 3.2 % Plan to stay here the musical instrument 11.1 % rest of my life photography 54.2 % 19.5 % All right for now, but painting/sculpting 1.6 % may move later 32.6 % gardening 26.8 % Definitely plan to move 10.0 % woodwork 10.0 % Undecided reading 2.6 % 64.2 % computers/computing 28.4 % 5. Do you exercise? couch potatoing 14.2 % rarely or never 5.8 % other ** 30.5 % * Percentages do not usually add up to 100.0 because “no response” isn’t in the tally. ** Hiking” and “walking” were top vote-getters in “other” category. 13 8. Which of the following experiences have you had during the past 15 years? (check all that apply) new spouse/partner 19.5 % job change 50.0 % had a new child 2.6 % moved to a new home 56.8 % moved to a new state 22.6 % increased exercise 34.7 % depression/anxiety 19.5 % separation/divorce 16.8 % cosmetic surgery 0.0 % close nonsexual relationship with female friend 14.7 % resetting personal priorities 32.1 % death of a close personal friend 32.6 % periods of loneliness 13.2 % chronic or serious health problems 18.4 % physical health problems of aging parents 46.3 % children’s emotional/ behavioral problems 13.7 % an adult child who has moved back home 12.6 % other 9.5 % 9. How has your weight changed since our 25th reunion? actually lost weight 16.3 % weigh about the same 36.8 % added 5-10 pounds 20.5 % added 5-10 pounds 4.2 % added 10-20 pounds 15.8 % added more than 20 pounds 4.2 % 9a. If you actually lost weight, how much weight did you lose? Answers range from 5 to 60 lbs. 14 10. Have you had since college (check all that apply): gastrointestinal disorder 17.9 % serious hair loss 27.9 % seen a therapist or psychiatrist 35.8 % marriage counseling 36.3 % midlife crisis 11.1 % back problems 32.6 % heart problems 11.1 % heart bypass 1.1 % other heart surgery 2.6 % vasectomy 15.3 % joint replacement 3.2 % erectile dysfunction 16.3 % prostate cancer 5.3 % other cancer 6.8 % 10a. If you have had cancer other than prostate cancer, identify. Other cancers afflicting more than two classmates were malignant melanoma (5) and basal cell Carcinoma (4). 11. How much of a drinker are you? don’t drink 1-2 a day 3 a day more than 4 per day weekend drinker recovering alcoholic 14.2 % 47.9 % 10.5 % 1.1 % 22.6 % 1.6 % 12. Do you habitually smoke: cigarettes 2.1 % pipe 2.1 % cigars 2.6 % never smoked habitually 50.5 % used to but no more 32.6 % 13. Have you ever used any of the following? (check all that apply) marijuana cocaine amphetamines (speed) heroin other mind-altering drug sleeping pills Viagra or other e.d. drugs 39.5 % 7.9 % 2.1 % 0.0 % 4.7 % 18.9 % 25.3 % 14. Where have you traveled since 1991? (check all that apply) Lower 48 states 88.9 % Hawaii 37.9 % Alaska 22.1 % Canada 55.3 % Mexico 40.0 % Caribbean 60.0 % Central/South America 30.0 % Europe 80.5 % Africa 15.3 % Middle East 16.3 % Central Asia 3.7 % Russia 12.1 % China 20.5 % Far East 25.8 % Australia/New Zealand 23.7 % Pacific Islands 10.5 % Antarctica 2.6 % other 2.1 % 15. How many hours a week do you watch TV (live and recorded)? less than one 7.4 % 1-7 46.8 % 8-14 30.0 % 15-21 11.1 % more than 21 4.2 % 16. Which of the following do you watch regularly on TV? (check all that apply) news 77.4 % public affairs 36.3 % educational sports drama comedy game shows soap opera variety shows specials movies cartoons don’t watch TV regularly other 28.9 % 62.1 % 31.6 % 25.3 % 4.7 % 0.5 % 1.6 % 20.0% 40.0 % 0.0 % 13.2 % 2.6 % 17. If you have a Tivo, ReplayTV or VCR, what do you watch on it? (check all that apply) movies 50.0 % sports events 7.9 % news or documentaries 10.5 % regular programming 11.1 % pornography 2.1 % don’t own one 9.5 % other 1.1 % 18. Does your TV have: cable service with regular channels cable service with premium channels satellite dish antenna regular antenna don’t have TV 34.7 % 35.3 % 16.3 % 10.0 % 0.5 % 19. Do you regularly use (check all that apply): personal computer for finances/taxes 66.8 % e-mail 95.3 % cellular phone 78.9 % iPod or MP3 player 19.5 % Palm or other electronic calendar 24.7 % Blackberry-type PDA 17.4 % 15 20. How often do you read a newspaper? every day 86.8 % only on weekdays 1.1 % only on Sunday 1.6 % sporadically 7.4 % infrequently 2.1 % never 0.5 % 21. Which are your primary sources of news/current events? (check all that apply) newspapers 88.4 % computer/internet 51.6 % television 67.9 % radio 56.3 % news magazines 34.7 % other 2.1 % 16 rap show tunes easy listening jazz golden oldies soul other 0.0 % 1.1 % 7.4 % 9.5 % 14.2 % 2.1 % 16.8 % 25. What is your favorite all-time rock or pop song? Two or more responses: “Satisfaction,” “Brown Sugar” (Rolling Stones); “Bridge over Troubled Waters” (Simon & Garfunkle); “The Rose” (Bette Midler); “Old Time Rock ‘n’ Roll” (Bob Seger); various Beatles. 22. How many books not related to your business or profession do you read a year? none 2.1 % 1-5 24.7 % 6-10 24.7 % 11-15 11.6 % over 15 35.3 % 26 How much time do you spend working on local, regional, or national politics? None 61.1 % A little (<1 hour/week) 26.8 % A fair amount (1-4 hours/week) 6.8 % A lot (more than 4 hours/week) 2.6 % 23. Which of the following did you attend during the last 12 months? (check all that apply) concert 75.8 % opera 31.6 % dance/ballet 26.8 % theater 69.5 % movies 90.5 % none of these 3.7 % 27. How much time do you spend volunteering for community or other nonprofit organizations? None 25.3 % A little (<1 hour/week) 29.5 % A fair amount (1-4 hours/week) 21.1 % A lot (more than 4 hours/week) 23.2 % 24. Favorite kind of music? classical light classics opera country-western rock 28. Have you served in a leadership position (board or staff) with a volunteer nonprofit organization? Yes 70.5 % No 27.4 % 25.3 % 5.3 % 2.6 % 4.2 % 9.5 % 29. How do you think your life will change over the next 10 years? (check all that apply) Hope still to be doing just what I am now 33.7 % Expect to reassess 22.1 % my priorities Expect to be fully 27.4 % retired Will be working at 43.7 % least part time Will be focusing more on community and 32.6 % volunteer work 62.6 % Hope to travel more Expect to move into 17.9 % a smaller home Will consider moving to a retirement 6.3 % community Expect to scale back and “smell the roses” 16.8 % Hope to begin a second career in a new field, 18.9 % at least part time 30. What causes the most uncertainty or anxiety about the next 5-10 years? Please check no more than three. 45.3 % My health 34.7 % My partner’s health My financial well-being 33.7 % if I retire The welfare of my 35.8 % children The security and stability 37.4 % of our country The security and stability of the international 33.7 % community 3.7 % Other 31. Do you think that your best years are: behind you ahead of you uncertain 13.2 % 33.7 % 51.1 % Your Family 32. What is your current marital status? never married married, first time remarried unmarried, but living with a woman living with a man separated divorced widower 0.5 % 56.8 % 28.4 % 3.7 % 1.1 % 1.6 % 6.3 % 0.5 % 33. How many years have you been married to your current spouse? less than five 3.7 % 5-10 5.3 % 11-20 12.6 % 21-30 16.3 % more than 30 52.1 % 34. What is the difference between your age and that of your current partner or spouse? Partner is more than 10 years younger 9.5 % Partner is 5-10 years younger 14.2 % Partner is less than 5 years younger 26.3 % Partner is about my age 38.4 % Partner is older 5.3 % 35. If divorced or separated, how many years were you married to your first spouse? less than five 5.8 % 17 5-10 11-15 16-20 more than 20 9.5 % 9.5 % 2.1 % 11.1 % 41. Who controls the family budget? I do 32.6 % My spouse does 8.9 % We share 53.7 % 36. Is your wife or partner employed? full time with pay 35.3 % part time with pay 22.1 % yes, but without pay 9.5 % 42. With regard to your relationship with your current spouse or partner, please check which statements below best reflect your experience since our 25th reunion in 1991: Our relationship is pretty much the same 39.5 % We do more things together now 29.5 % We tend to pursue our individual interests 14.7 % We are less active sexually now 49.5 % We care for one another at a deeper level 37.9 % Our relationship has undergone personal crises that have made us closer 16.8 % One of us has had an illness serious enough to make the other the primary caregiver 7.9 % Our relationship is less close 5.3 % 37. If your partner is working, how do you feel about that? We need the money 4.2 % Like it 50.5 % Don’t like it, but accept it 2.6 % She doesn’t work now, but I wish she would 2.6 % None of the above 7.9 % 38. Have your partner’s career interests ever come before yours in determining where you live or your own career decisions? No 65.8 % Yes 14.2 % Not applicable 12.6 % 39. What share of the household chores do you do? All 3.7 % Most 6.8 % About half 39.5 % Some 45.3 % None 0.5 % 40. Are you doing a larger percentage of your family’s household chores and duties than you did 15 years ago? Yes 36.3 % No 29.5 % About the same 31.1 % 18 43. How many children do you have? One Two Three Four Five or more None 6.8 % 46.8 % 20.5 % 8.4 % 3.7 % 11.1 % 43a. If any of your children were adopted, how many? One 3.7 % Two Three 4.7 % 1.6 % 43b. Of the children that you have, are they from more than one spouse? 14.2 % Yes 70.0 % No 44. How many grandchildren do you have? 13.2 % One 14.7 % Two 5.3 % Three 4.7 % Four 5.8 % Five or more 48.4 % None 45. If you have grandchildren, please indicate what best expresses your feelings about your experience? About as rewarding 21.1 % as I expected 1.6 % Not as rewarding 20.0 % More rewarding 46. Are you able to see your grandchildren as often as you’d like? 18.4 % Yes 24.7 % No 47. Are your own parents still living? No Just one Both 61.6 % 31.6 % 5.3 % 48. Does your spouse have the same religious affiliation as you? 64.7 % Yes 25.8 % No 49. Politically, compared to you, is your spouse: 23.7 % more liberal 10.5 % more conservative 57.9 % about the same 50. How much time do or did you devote to your children? 2.1 % Too much 64.2 % Enough 21.6 % Not enough 51. How happy is your family life? 65.8 % Very 30.0 % Fairly 1.6 % Not very 0.0 % Not at all 52. Who do you think will take care of you when your are old and gray? 36.3 % My spouse or partner 4.2 % My children Social Security or other 10.0 % retirement fund 35.3 % My personal nest-egg 11.1 % Other Your Career 53. If you had your college years to do over again, would you major in the same discipline? Yes 61.1 % No 24.7 % Don’t know 13.2 % 54. If you had to do over again, would you go to Princeton again? Yes 84.2 % No 3.2 % Don’t know 10.5 % I wouldn’t go to college 0.0 % 19 I’d go to Yale or Harvard 1.6 % 56. In how many different organizations (including the military) have you had a full-time job since graduation? None 0.5 % One 10.0 % 2-3 33.7 % 4-5 26.3 % 6-7 18.4 % Eight or more 10.0 % 57. How many different “careers” would you say you’ve had (including service in the military)? One 32.1 % Two 22.1 % Three 30.5 % Four 11.6 % Five or more 2.1 % 58. What is your present occupation? Fully retired 13.7 % Working full time in a paid position 67.4 % Working part time in a paid position 11.6 % Working full or part time in an unpaid position (other than as a Board Member) 6.8 % 20 I am now I have been, but not now Not now, but plan to be No 39.5 % 20.0 % 2.1 % 37.9 % 61. Have you ever been fired or asked to resign? Once 26.8 % More than once 13.7 % Never 58.9 % 62. Do you consider yourself successful in your professional life? Yes 88.9 % No 5.3 % Don’t know 4.2 % 63. If you consider yourself successful, what is the main reason? Position Income Enjoyment Accomplishment Other 9.5 % 6.3 % 18.4 % 54.7 % 1.6 % 64. If still working, is your primary reason for working: to keep active 10.0 % for the money 28.9 % interest in work 46.3 % for the benefits 0.5 % other 1.1 % 59. If still working, when do you expect to completely retire? Between now and 65 11.6 % Between 66 and 70 28.4 % Over 70 30.0 % Never 14.2 % 65. If you haven’t retired, what is your primary reason? Still enjoy working 53.2 % Not financially able 23.2 % Not sure what I’d do if retired 4.7 % 60. Have you ever been selfemployed? 66. How much was your Princeton major related to your work? Greatly A lot Little Not at all 18.4 % 21.1 % 36.8 % 22.6 % 67. Has the fact that you went to Princeton helped you in your career? (check all that apply) Applicable knowledge 65.3 % Useful contacts 38.4 % No benefit 18.4 % Hindered 1.1 % 68. How many times over the years has contact with a Princetonian proved valuable in your work? Never 40.5 % 1-5 37.4 % 6-10 10.5 % 11-25 4.7 % 26-100 3.2 % More than 100 2.6 % 69. Have you ever been: arrested named in a lawsuit none of the above 7.4 % 26.3 % 63.2 % 70. What is your estimated annual household income before taxes? Under $30,000 2.1 % $30,000-$50,000 2.1 % $51,000-$75,000 5.8 % $76,000-$100,000 10.5 % $101,000-$150,000 12.6 % $151,000-$250,000 15.3 % $251,000-$500,000 25.3 % More than $500,000 20.5 % 71. What was your annual salary in your first full-time job (other than military, Peace Corps, VISTA, graduate school) after graduating from Princeton? Under $10,000 $11,000-$15,000 $16,000-$20,000 $21,000-$25,000 $26,000-$30,000 More than $30,000 42.6 % 35.8 % 8.4 % 1.6 % 1.6 % 6.8 % 72. If you own your primary residence, what is your estimate of its current market value? Don’t own one 4.2 % Under $100,000 0.5 % $100,000-$300,000 8.9 % $300,000-$500,000 15.8 % $500,000-$1,000,000 28.9 % More than $1,000,000 37.4 % 73. As your primary residence, do you: own a house 82.1 % rent a house 1.1 % own a condo or co-op 10.0 % rent a condo or co-op 0.5 % rent an apartment 3.2 % other 2.1 % 74. Do you own a second home? No 54.2 % Yes 35.8 % More than one other home 8.4 % 75. In what part(s) of the country are your other homes? (check all that apply) Florida/Southeast 8.4 % Southwest/California 7.4 % New England 15.8 % Mountains/Central US 8.4 % Caribbean/Island 0.5 % Overseas 4.7 % Northeast 5.3 % 21 76. Do you live within your income? Yes, easily Yes, but it’s difficult No, but we’re close No, we live beyond it 62.1 % 22.6 % 9.5 % 5.3 % 77. What do you think your current net worth is? Less than $100,000 $100,000-$500,000 $500,000-$1 million $1-10 million More than $10 million 1.6 % 7.4 % 12.6 % 57.4 % 15.8 % 78. What is your average annual contribution to charities? 14.2 % Under $1,000 33.2 % $1,000-$5,000 22.1 % $5,000-$10,000 11.6 % $10,000-$25,000 16.3 % More than $25,000 79. How many cars do you (and your spouse) own or lease? 3.2 % None 7.9 % One 53.7 % Two 22.1 % Three 12.6 % More than three 80. Is at least one of your cars a foreign car? 82.6 % Yes 13.2 % No 81. What kind of vehicle do you drive? (check all that apply) 32.1 % SUV 7.9 % Truck 7.9 % Minivan 58.4 % Sedan 15.8 % Sports car 2.1 % Minicar 22 Hybrid Motorcycle Other 5.8 % 2.6 % 13.7 % 82. Considering your entire life (career, family, leisure time, etc.), do you consider yourself to be: Extremely self-fulfilled and satisfied with life 42.1% Fairly happy, but things could be a little better 51.6 % Not very happy with how 3.7% things are going Extremely unhappy with how things are going 0.5% Your Opinions 83. What is your religious affiliation? Jewish Protestant Roman Catholic Evangelical Muslim Athiest/Agnostic Deist Other 10.0 % 54.2 % 10.0 % 0.0 % 0.5 % 15.8 % 1.6 % 6.3 % 84. How often do you attend religious services? Weekly 17.4 % Monthly 6.8 % Several times a year 18.4 % Once or twice a year 14.2 % Rarely or never 42.6 % 85. Do you believe in God (or some form of ultimate being)? Yes 51.1 % Not sure 25.3 % No 22.6 % 86. Do you believe in life after death? Yes Not sure No 28.4 % 27.9 % 42.6 % 87. Compared to when you were in college, are you now: more religious 20.5 % less religious 23.2 % about the same 51.6 % same degree, but different beliefs 3.7 % 88. What is your personal attitude toward growing old? Looking forward to it 4.7 % Accept it 76.3 % Fight it tooth and nail 11.6 % Not going to age 1.1 % Never give it a thought 3.2 % I can’t cope with it 1.1 % Other 1.6 % 89. Have you ever engaged in (check all that apply): premarital sex 76.3% extramarital sex 36.8% homosexual activities 3.7% group sex 5.3% none of these 16.3% 90. How many sexual partners have you had since graduation? None 0.0 % One 22.6 % 2-5 21.1 % 6-10 19.5 % 11-25 20.0 % 26-100 6.8 % More than 100 1.1 % Don’t know 3.2 % 91. Do you think abortions should be legal and available? (check all that apply) Not at all 0.5 % When the mother’s life is endangered 39.5 % In cases of rape or incest 38.4 % When the child would have a birth defect 30.0 % When mother or rest of the family would suffer emotional distress 26.8 % On demand 64.2 % 92. Do you fell there has been a decline in moral values in the U.S. since you graduated from college? 36.3 % Definitely 35.8 % Somewhat 16.3 % Not at all 10.0 % Don’t know 0.5 % Don’t care 93. If there has been a decline, has it occurred primarily in (check all that apply): 50.0 % personal morals 59.5 % business ethics 51.6 % social values 53.7 % government conduct 35.8 % legal practice 4.7 % no decline 1.1 % other How do you feel about the following statements? 94. It is becoming more difficult for the average American to make ends meet. 24.2 % Strongly Agree Agree 47.9 % 14.7 % Neutral/Unsure 10.5 % Disagree 23 Strongly Disagree 1.6 % 4.7 % 95. My children can expect to live a better life than I have. Strongly Agree 2.1 % Agree 20.0 % Neutral/Unsure 47.9 % Disagree 20.0 % Strongly Disagree 2.1 % 100. Enjoying your work is more important than making money. Strongly Agree 28.9 % Agree 57.9 % Neutral/Unsure 7.9 % Disagree 4.2 % Strongly Disagree 0.0 % 96. Inflation must be kept under control, whatever the cost in unemployment. Strongly Agree 5.8 % Agree 36.8 % Neutral/Unsure 27.9 % Disagree 26.8 % Strongly Disagree 0.5 % 101. Our political system really works. Strongly Agree Agree Neutral/Unsure Disagree Strongly Disagree 97. Social Security benefits have gotten too large; their growth must be limited. Strongly Agree 5.3 % Agree 17.4 % Neutral/Unsure 18.9 % Disagree 43.2 % Strongly Disagree 14.2 % 98. Labor unions have been good for America, all things considered. Strongly Agree Agree Neutral/Unsure Disagree Strongly Disagree 11.1 % 45.8 % 21.1 % 17.9 % 3.2 % 99. America’s strength derives principally from its business leadership. Strongly Agree 4.2 % Agree 31.1 % Neutral/Unsure 23.2 % Disagree 35.3 % 24 Strongly Disagree 10.0 % 46.8 % 14.2 % 23.2 % 4.7 % 102. American society has become too materialistic in recent years. Strongly Agree 16.3 % Agree 55.8 % Neutral/Unsure 17.4 % Disagree 8.9 % Strongly Disagree 0.5 % 103. Greed is basically good. Strongly Agree 0.5 % Agree 13.2 % Neutral/Unsure 12.1 % Disagree 45.3 % Strongly Disagree 27.4 % 104. Women’s liberation had an important, positive impact on American society. Strongly Agree 40.0 % Agree 45.8 % Neutral/Unsure 5.3 % Disagree 6.3 % Strongly Disagree 1.6 % 105. People are more likely to cheat on their income taxes today than they were in 1966. Strongly Agree 3.2 % Agree 25.8 % Neutral/Unsure 46.3 % Disagree 22.1 % Strongly Disagree 0.5 % 106. Religion is a force for good in society. Strongly Agree Agree Neutral/Unsure Disagree Strongly Disagree 13.7 % 36.3 % 22.6 % 20.0 % 5.8 % 107. Anybody can grow up to be President. Strongly Agree 5.3 % Agree 33.2 % Neutral/Unsure 10.0 % Disagree 37.9 % Strongly Disagree 13.2 % 108. Our national motto seems to be “Look out for Number One.” Strongly Agree 7.9 % Agree 38.9 % Neutral/Unsure 13.7 % Disagree 30.5 % Strongly Disagree 5.8 % 109. The war in Iraq will prove to be worth the cost. Strongly Agree 6.8 % Agree 17.4 % Neutral/Unsure 9.5 % Disagree 21.6 % Strongly Disagree 42.1 % 110. George W. Bush is the best President since our graduation. Strongly Agree 0.0 % Agree 1.6 % Neutral/Unsure 3.7 % Disagree Strongly Disagree 26.3 % 67.4 % 111. George W. Bush is the worst President since our graduation. Strongly Agree 41.6 % Agree 12.6 % Neutral/Unsure 7.9 % Disagree 23.7 % Strongly Disagree 13.2 % 112. Social Security needs privatization to save the system. Strongly Agree 6.3 % Agree 15.8 % Neutral/Unsure 15.3 % Disagree 39.5 % Strongly Disagree 22.1 % 113. Campaign contributions have become a form of legalized bribery. Strongly Agree 28.4 % Agree 47.4 % Neutral/Unsure 9.5 % Disagree 11.6 % Strongly Disagree 1.6 % 114. We should reduce support of Israel and side more with Arabs. Strongly Agree 4.2 % Agree 24.7 % Neutral/Unsure 28.9 % Disagree 30.0 % Strongly Disagree 10.0 % 115. Homosexuals ought to have equal rights, including marriage or a civil union. Strongly Agree 34.2 % Agree 31.1 % Neutral/Unsure 11.6 % Disagree 14.2 % Strongly Disagree 6.8 % 25 116. America’s stature in the world is in decline. Strongly Agree 33.2 % Agree 44.7 % Neutral/Unsure 6.3 % Disagree 13.2 % Strongly Disagree 1.6 % 117. Global warming is a critical issue today. Strongly Agree 37.4 % Agree 35.3 % Neutral/Unsure 14.2 % Disagree 10.0 % Strongly Disagree 2.6 % 118. Forget Social Security; it’s Medicare that will bankrupt us. Strongly Agree 11.6 % Agree 47.4 % Neutral/Unsure 26.3 % Disagree 12.1 % Strongly Disagree 1.6 % How do you feel about the following? 23.2 % 23.7 % 8.4 % 122. The Patriot Act Strongly Pro Pro Neutral/Unsure Con Strongly Con 9.5 % 26.3 % 16.8 % 27.9 % 18.4 % 123. Tax all throw-away containers Strongly Pro Pro Neutral/Unsure Con Strongly Con 16.3 % 45.8 % 23.2 % 11.1 % 1.1 % 124. Simplify the tax code Strongly Pro 57.9 % Pro 35.3 % Neutral/Unsure 5.8 % Con 0.0 % Strongly Con 0.0 % 125. Stricter gun controls Strongly Pro Pro Neutral/Unsure Con Strongly Con 55.3 % 24.2 % 5.8 % 8.9 % 5.3 % 120. More nuclear power plants Strongly Pro 21.6 % Pro 51.1 % Neutral/Unsure 11.6 % Con 10.0 % Strongly Con 4.7 % 126. More consumer protection laws Strongly Pro Pro Neutral/Unsure Con Strongly Con 20.0 % 33.2 % 30.0 % 14.7 % 1.6 % 121. More offshore oil wells Strongly Pro 11.1 % Pro 32.1 % 127. All-volunteer Army Strongly Pro Pro 17.4 % 43.7 % 119. Zero population growth Strongly Pro 12.6 % Pro 39.5 % Neutral/Unsure 26.3 % Con 18.9 % Strongly Con 2.1 % 26 Neutral/Unsure Con Strongly Con Neutral/Unsure Con Strongly Con 18.4 % 13.2 % 6.3 % 128. Charter Schools Strongly Pro Pro Neutral/Unsure Con Strongly Con 17.4 % 41.6 % 25.3 % 11.6 % 3.2 % 129. Affordable Housing Programs Strongly Pro Pro Neutral/Unsure Con Strongly Con 22.1 % 54.7 % 15.8 % 5.3 % 1.6 % 130. School Vouchers Strongly Pro Pro Neutral/Unsure Con Strongly Con 15.8 % 32.6 % 22.1 % 17.9 % 8.9 % 131. Gay marriage Strongly Pro Pro Neutral/Unsure Con Strongly Con 17.9 % 36.8 % 17.4 % 16.3 % 10.5 % 132. Capital punishment Strongly Pro Pro Neutral/Unsure Con Strongly Con 11.6 % 33.7 % 13.2 % 21.1 % 20.0 % 133. What are the most serious problems facing the U.S. today? (check three) Budget and trade deficits 55.3 % Drugs and crime 18.4 % Pollution and environmental damage 21.1 % Exporting jobs 8.9 % Quality of public education 54.7 % Global warming 20.0 % Unemployment 0.5 % Poverty and homelessness 18.4 % Government paralysis 10.5 % Urban decay and suburban sprawl 6.8 % Defending our interests abroad 8.4 % Political corruption, PACs, 23.2 % influence peddling 2.1 % Agricultural policies Lack of effective leadership in 33.2 % government Disengagement in 3.7 % civic activities Disintegration of our moral life 8.9 % Lack of moderate voices 24.7 % Religious conflict 8.9 % 134. Are you in favor of the legalization of (check all that apply): Marijuana and hash 41.1 % Hallucinogens like LSD 5.8 % Hard drugs like heroin and cocaine 7.9 % Prostitution 32.1 % Hard-core pornography 14.2 % Alcohol for 18 and over 36.8 % 135. Contemplating the long-term future of mankind, are you: 47.4 % Optimistic 26.8 % Pessimistic 24.7 % Neither 27 137. What is your present political orientation? Very conservative 4.2 % Moderate conservative 26.3 % Middle of the road 13.2 % Moderate liberal 36.8 % Very liberal 14.7 % Radical 1.1 % Other 2.1 % 138. Since 1991 has your political thinking: become more liberal become more conservative remained the same 21.1 % 14.7 % 63.2 % 139. Since 1991 has your interest in politics: increased 34.7 % decreased 14.7 % remained the same 49.5 % 140. Whom did you prefer in 2004? Bush 34.2 % Kerry 56.3 % Other 2.1 % Didn’t vote 2.1 % Other 4.2 % 141. Whom did you prefer in 2000? Bush 37.9 % Gore 52.1 % Nader 4.2 % Other 1.6 % Didn’t vote 2.1 % 141a. If you responded to 140 with “Other,” whom did you support? Nader, McCain, Dean, Badnarik (Libertarian Party) 28 141b. If you responded to 141 with “Other,” whom did you support? Bradley, McCain, Browne (Libertarian Party) 142a. Rate the performance of George W. Bush Very Good Good Fair Poor Very poor 3.2 % 15.3 % 14.7 % 18.9 % 46.8 % 142b. Rate the performance of Bill Clinton Very good Good Fair Poor Very poor 15.3 % 40.0 % 25.3 % 14.2 % 4.7 % 142c. Rate the performance of G.H.W. Bush Very Good Good Fair Poor Very Poor 4.7 % 37.9 % 41.1 % 10.0 % 4.7 % 142d. Rate the performance of Ronald Reagan Very Good Good Fair Poor Very Poor 25.3 % 32.6 % 21.6 % 15.3 % 4.2 % 142e. Rate the performance of Jimmy Carter Very Good Good Fair Poor 3.2 % 19.5 % 35.8 % 28.4 % Very Poor 11.6 % 143. If you voted for George W. Bush in 2004, what do you think now? 1.6 % Sorry I voted for him Still think him a better 33.7 % choice than Kerry 0.5 % Unsure 144. I have campaigned actively for a political candidate since 1991 for (check all that apply) 18.9 % President 13.2 % Senate 10.5 % House 14.7 % State 13.2 % Local 61.1 % Have not campaigned Would have campaigned if not restricted 1.1 % by the Hatch Act 145. Have you ever held public office? (check all that apply) 7.9 % Appointed 3.2 % Elected 3.2 % Ran for office but lost 146. If one of your children announced they were running for national office, would you be: 57.9 % happy 1.6 % sad 31.6 % worried for them 0.5 % worried for yourself 147. Whom do you think will be elected President in 2008? 0.5 % Jeb Bush 1.1 % Bill Frist 8.4 % Hilary Clinton 3.7 % John Edwards John Kerry George Pataki Evan Bayh John McCain None of the above Other * 2.1 % 0.5 % 1.1 % 30.5 % 30.5 % 9.5 % Princeton 148. How many class reunions have you attended? none 15.3 % 1-2 21.1 % 3-4 16.3 % 5-10 30.0 % 11-20 8.9 % More than 20 7.4 % 149. If none or rarely, what principally keeps you away? Distance 12.1 % Cost 4.7 % Family 2.1 % Too busy 16.3 % Lack of interesting programs 1.6 % Dislike of the area 0.0 % Unpleasant memories 2.1 % Other 11.6 % 150. Do you plan to attend the 40th reunion? Yes 57.9 % No 24.7 % Undecided 14.7 % 151. What was your attitude toward Princeton as an undergraduate? Very enthusiastic 68.4 % Mildly enthusiastic 27.4 % Indifferent 1.1 % Negative 1.6 % * Write-ins receiving more than two votes: Condoleezza Rice (4) and Barack Obama (2). 29 152a. If you had an indifferent or negative attitude about Princeton, in what year did that develop? Freshman 3.7 % Sophomore 1.6 % Junior 1.1 % Senior 0.5 % 152b. Did your negative attitude about Princeton develop because of Courses 0.5 % Social relationships 4.2 % Access to professors 0.5 % Problems with the administration 1.1 % Other 1.6 % 153. Were you happy during your time at Princeton? Yes 70.5 % So-so 26.3 % No 2.1 % Don’t know 0.0 % 154. Are you happier today than you were as an undergraduate? Yes 62.1 % About the same 30.0 % No 6.3 % Don’t know 0.5 % 30 3-4 5-6 more than six 8.4 % 2.1 % 5.8 % 157. How many of them were your friends while an undergraduate? None 22.6 % 1-2 28.9 % 3-4 8.9 % 5-6 1.1 % more than six 2.1 % 158. How many Princeton-related events do you attend a year? None 47.4 % 1-2 32.6 % 3-4 9.5 % 5-6 1.6 % more than six 7.9 % 159. What is your most important link to Princeton? Alumni Weekly 65.8 % Local Princeton Club 2.6 % Annual Giving 4.2 % Correspondence from University 1.6 % Fan of sports teams 2.6 % Academic connections 2.1 % University website 2.1 % Other 15.8 % 155. If you had it to do over again, would you attend Princeton? Yes 84.7 % No 3.7 % Don’t know 10.5 % 160. Is the fact that you went to Princeton important to you? Very 60.5 % Somewhat 32.1 % Not very 5.8 % Not at all 0.5 % 156. In a typical month, how many classmates do you see or talk with? None 47.9 % 1-2 33.7 % 161. If you have any grandchildren, would you want them to go to Princeton? Yes 63.2 % No 2.1 % Don’t care one way or the other 23.7 % 162. How often have you contributed to Annual Giving? Never 2.1 % Occasionally 13.7 % Frequently 7.9 % Usually 13.7 % Every year 61.1 % 163. Do you belong to a Princeton club or association? Yes 38.9 % None available 5.3 % No 54.2 % 164. Do you read the Princeton Alumni Weekly? Yes, every issue 58.4 % Most issues 28.4 % Occasionally 7.4 % Rarely 3.2 % No, never 0.5 % Strongly Agree Agree Neutral/Unsure Disagree Strongly Disagree 168. Overall, Princeton has improved since I was an undergraduate Strongly Agree Agree Neutral/Unsure Disagree Strongly Disagree 17.9 % 57.9 % 10.5 % 11.1 % 1.6 % 20.5 % 39.5 % 30.5 % 7.9 % 0.5 % 169. Princeton has done a good job of communicating with its alumni Strongly Agree 32.1 % Agree 55.8 % Neutral/Unsure 8.4 % Disagree 1.6 % Strongly Disagree 1.1 % 165. Coeducation has been a good thing for Princeton Strongly Agree 65.3 % Agree 27.9 % Neutral/Unsure 2.6 % Disagree 3.2 % Strongly Disagree 0.0 % 170. Princeton’s admissions policies are well conceived, fairly administered Strongly Agree 10.0 % Agree 50.0 % Neutral/Unsure 29.5 % Disagree 6.8 % Strongly Disagree 1.1 % 166. I wish Princeton had been co-ed when I was there Strongly Agree 43.7 % Agree 27.9 % Neutral/Unsure 12.6 % Disagree 10.0 % Strongly Disagree 4.2 % 171. Ability to pay should not be a factor in Princeton admissions Strongly Agree 41.6 % Agree 41.1 % Neutral/Unsure 11.6 % Disagree 3.7 % Strongly Disagree 1.1 % 167. Princeton should continue to give preference to alumni children 172. The university continues to live up to its motto, “Princeton in the nation’s service and in 31 the service of all nations” Strongly Agree Agree Neutral/Unsure Disagree Strongly Disagree 18.4 % 56.8 % 16.3 % 5.8 % 1.6 % 173. I am proud to have attended Princeton University Strongly Agree 68.4 % Agree 28.9 % Neutral/Unsure 1.6 % Disagree 0.0 % Strongly Disagree 0.5 % 174. Princeton’s reputation is still as good today as in 1966 Strongly Agree 63.7 % Agree 26.8 % Neutral/Unsure 7.4 % Disagree 1.1 % Strongly Disagree 0.0 % 175. I am very satisfied with the total experience I had at Princeton Strongly Agree 42.1 % Agree 45.3 % Neutral/Unsure 5.3 % Disagree 5.3 % Strongly Disagree 1.1 % 176. The education received by the Class of 2005 is better than 1966’s Strongly Agree 11.6 % Agree 21.1 % Neutral/Unsure 52.6 % Disagree 11.1 % Strongly Disagree 1.6 % 177. Princeton should keep moving toward a residential college system for undergraduates 32 Strongly Agree Agree Neutral/Unsure Disagree Strongly Disagree 13.7 % 26.8 % 50.5 % 4.2 % 3.2 % 178. Princeton should continue to discourage fraternities and sororities Strongly Agree 31.6 % Agree 32.6 % Neutral/Unsure 18.4 % Disagree 12.1 % Strongly Disagree 3.7 % 179. The eating clubs are an important Princeton tradition and should be preserved Strongly Agree 20.0 % Agree 44.2 % Neutral/Unsure 23.2 % Disagree 9.5 % Strongly Disagree 2.1 % Our 35th-reunion logo (Mike by Witte) Class Directory and Biographies 33 EDITOR’S NOTE: Classmates who are deceased or for whom the university does not have a current address are not included in this section. Their names appear on separate lists on pages 257-258. There are additional classmate photographs on pages 295-297. 34 Hussein M. Adam 56 College St., Worcester, MA 01610-2317; (508) 767-0020; hadam@holycross.edu Business: Holy Cross College, Box 165-A, Worcester, MA 01610 Spouse: Fadumo M. Abdisalam John F. Adam 29 Maryhill, St. Louis, MO 63124-1358; (314) 993-8343; jadam2000@aol.co Spouse: Patricia Allen Adam Daniel F. Adams P.O. Box 366, Corona, NM 88318-0366; (505) 849-1186; dadams@plateautel.net Vice President Emeritus, World Bank/International Finance Corp., 1818 H St., NW, Washington, DC 20433; (505) 849-1186 Spouse: Marcia Adams James McCabe Adams 5160 Aster St. Elida, OH 45807-1365; (419) 339-2835 Thomas F. Adams 4137 Bellmawr Dr., Livermore, CA 94550-0132; (925) 455-1164; adams35@llnl.gov Associate Division Leader, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, P.O. Box 808, L-095, Livermore, CA 94551; (925) 422-1248 Spouse: Joan C. Adams William G. Adamson 13 Blackburn Lane, Haverford, PA 19041-1121; (610) 527-2339 Attorney 35 Bruce H. Adee 1975 N.W. Blue Ridge Dr., Seattle, WA 98177-5425; (206) 784-4429; badee@u.washington.edu Associate Professor, Department of Mech. Engineering, University of Washington, Box 352600, Seattle, WA 98195-2600; (206) 543-7446 Spouse: Laurie Wieder Adee Edwin W. Aiken (Ed) 663 Torrington Dr., Sunnyvale, CA 94087-2445; eandjaiken@sbcglobal.net Chief, Army/NASA Rotocraft Div., NASA-Ames Research Center, M/S 243-10, Moffett Field, CA 94035-1000 Spouse: Jean Daenzer Aiken (office manager) Children: William H. Aiken; Julia C. Walker Thomas D. Allison Apartment #8-A, 3750 North Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, IL 60613-4233; (773) 477-6607 President, Allison, Slutsky & Kennedy, P.C., Suite #1880, 208 South LaSalle St., Chicago, IL 60604; (312) 364-9400 Spouse: Sherry Holland Robert L. Amdur Apt. 3-E, 395 Riverside Drive, New York, NY 10025-1841; (212) 222-4613 David W. Ames 5 Wild Heron Point, Hilton Head Island, SC 29928-3351; (843) 842-4535; amesco@earthlink.net Business: President, Amesco, Inc., P.O. Box 7282, Hilton Head Island, SC 29938; (843) 686-3810 Partner: Nancy Saner Ames (part-time tutor) Children: Lindsay, 12/16/71; Kristen (Krissie) Ames Axon, 3/21/74 My life on Hilton Head over the last 32 years has been relaxed by most standards and rewarding at the same time. I have been fortunate in many ways. Good health, a comfortable lifestyle, a beautiful coastal environment outside my window, my family and now, the addition of a grandson bless me. I am able now to enjoy myself while sitting on the 36 sidelines of community development until the right opportunity surfaces. Profit potential has become less important than the enjoyment of sharing the experience with compatible partners and creating a project that distinguishes itself from mainstream developDave and Nancy Ames with grandson David Axon. ment. I guess this metamorphosis reflects a natural shift in priorities. Today, civic interests occupy most of my time. They include activities like a county aviation board, a state association of private colleges and universities, a rape-crisis and child-advocacy center, and out-of-the-blue requests that come with being involved in a community for so long. My primary focus is the prevention of child sexual abuse. At other times I exercise by kayaking (as much as possible in warmer weather and longer days), an occasional round of golf or a swim, plus an almost daily exercise routine, which I began 30 years ago to ward off back problems. Flying remains a passion. (Nan and I have flown cross-country twice, the Lewis and Clark Trail, to Newfoundland, and to the Bahamas.) And too, there are the invention ideas that lie dormant in file drawers. Our first grandson, David Neal Axon, was born in November 2004 to Krissie Ames Axon ’96 and her husband, Dr. Neal Axon. David is very healthy and Krissie and Neal are wonderful parents. What could be better! What an experience for our family! She attended Fuqua and he, Duke Med. Much to Nan’s and my excitement, they moved to Charleston, South Carolina, last summer. Our other daughter, Lindsay, has established herself on Hilton Head, offers smiles to everyone, and is recognized by so many islanders because of her willingness to help others with their personal training, house sitting, pets, and catering needs. Nan continues in her 15th year of tutoring math to middle school and high school students, but has had to curtail some of her other favorite physical activities like gardening, tennis, and kayaking because of muscular and joint troubles. Finally, we are happy to have Bob Bedell, Rich and Suzanne Thomas, Keith and Bev Jennings, and Bob and Sarah Haarlow living on Hilton Head with us. Come join us. 37 Lynn R. Anderson 22 Burran Ave. Mosman 2088 NSW, Australia 61-299694273; lsanders@bigpond.net.au Managing Director, Russell Reynolds Assoc., Inc., Level 41, Australia Square, 264-278 George St., Sydney 2000 NSW, Australia, 61-292583116 Spouse: Sidney Hubbard Anderson Thomas M. Anderson 2120 West Schiller St., Chicago, IL 60622; (773) 643-1312; tmanderson7044@hotmail.com Chairman, Radiological Physicians, Ltd., Mercy Hospital & Medical Center, 2525 South Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60616; (312) 567-2712 Spouse: Gretchen Oppmann Anderson Peter L. Andrus (Pete) 3130 Lake Crescent Dr., Kingwood, TX 77339; (281) 358-2751; plandrus@kelsey-seybold.com Physician, Kelsey-Seybold Clinic, 2755 West Lake Houston Parkway, Kingwood, TX 77339; (713) 442-2122 Spouse: Sharon Noss Andrus (nurse, psychologist, consultant, antiques dealer) Children: Scott C. Binder, 9/7/64; Sean M. Binder, 6/22/66; Ethan L. Andrus, 3/673 Just a short note to update the last 40 years, since this will be my first reunion attended since graduation, although I have been back a few times on other occasions. My affection for Old Nassau and respect for the opportunities that attending college at Princeton granted have been steady. My annual giving has been modest, but very consistent, and I still look up football scores in the Sunday paper, although my wife advises that “nobody cares” about Ivy scores anymore. Formal bullets: Penn for medical school (1970), and subsequently got an MBA in health care administration at Wharton (1976), a bit ahead of the current bow wave of joint MD/MBA grads. Residency at Montefiore in the Bronx in the pediatrics track of the Social (not socialized) Medicine program. Joined Medical Corps of Navy Reserve as first-year med student, so went from residency to active duty in Pensacola, Florida (1974-76), then on to junior faculty position in community medicine at 38 Baylor College of Medicine (Houston) from 1976 to 1983. In 1983 started a solo, private general-pediatrics practice in Kingwood, a northern suburb of Houston, and have been at it ever since through various permutations. Currently practice as part of a large Pete and Sharon Andrus with their two “best multispecialty group kids,” Robbie and Fiona, their Dandie Dinmont practice, a move made Terriers, at the lakeshore in Kingwood, Texas. about 11 years ago to accommodate my senior-level activities in the Navy Reserve. Retired as rear admiral from same in November 2005 after 39 years, one month, and 10 days since first raised right arm and swore “true faith and allegiance.” Family life has been rich: my single best move ever was marrying Sharon in 197 and acquiring two sons, Scott and Matt, in the process. Ethan added as a result of my own efforts in 1973. Grandkids include Josh, Scott’s son, who sadly died in 2004, age 18, and Hayley, Matt’s adopted daughter (from Belize), who was seven in 2005 and is a pistol. Sharon owns and operates a seasonal antiques shop on Lake Skaneateles in the Finger Lakes, and as I throttle back to part-time employment we will spend most of each summer at our lake place in that area, with me going sailing on a wonderful old Bristol sloop and serving as her general gopher in the shop. During the winter months, Houston will be our venue and I will work in the practice, providing an extra pair of hands for flu season. See you at our 40th, and hope your lives have been as good and fulfilling as mine. Thomas R. Armstrong (Tom) 21 Chandler Circle, Weston, MA 02493-1559; (781) 899-7204; tra66@mindspring.com Managing Partner, TRE Associates, 21 Chandler Circle, Weston, MA 02493; (617) 645-4320 Spouse: Elizabeth Guether Armstrong (Director of Medical Education, Harvard Medical International) Children: Thomas K. Armstrong, 1974; Gregory R. Armstrong, 1977 It’s been a quick five years since the 35th, which we missed due to our son Tom’s wedding to Jennifer Hevey that weekend. In 2005 Tom and Jenn presented us with Ryan, our first grandchild, ushering us into a 39 world of new roles as grandparents. The year 2004 gave me and Greg ’99 a chance to help father/grandfather Thomas C. Armstrong ’39 attend his 65th (and unfortunately last) reunion, which was a wonderful and memorable occasion. Liz and I have continued to travel extensively, often because of our Tom Armstrong with Jenn, Thomas, Liz, and respective careers in Greg ’99, plus new arrival Ryan. international medical education and global private-equity investing. Liz continues to run the Harvard Macy Foundation at Harvard Medical School, offering medical education courses for medschool faculty and deans from around the world, with courses in Boston, Australia, Germany, India, Singapore, Grand Cayman, Japan, the UAE, and elsewhere. With the successful launch of Thrasos Therapeutics, a new type of drug-discovery firm, shortly after our 35th reunion, my last several years have been focused on working with several small companies in the Boston Tom ’66, Tom ’39, Greg ’99, and Liz at 1939’s 65th. area and on starting two new venturecapital/private-equity firms. The latest, Cartesian Capital Group, should complete the raising of its first large global fund by mid-2006, with offices in the U.S., Eastern Europe, Asia, and Latin America. As always, time spent with the expanding family is precious, whether in New Hampshire in the summers, or skiing in the West, or (hopefully) at even more interesting locales soon. Since we don’t seem inclined to hang up the track shoes just yet, I suspect we will be taking occasional weeks in more interesting places, as we did last year in Tasmania. Our sons are both embarked on careers in financial services, Tom as a vice president at CitiStreet, a division of CitiGroup, and Greg about to reenter the world of private-equity investing on completion of his MBA at MIT/Sloan in June. Tom’s wife, Jenn, continues to work on a very parttime basis as a licensed physical therapist, although recently confirmed rumors of further expansion to their family may curtail that for a while. We’re looking forward to seeing classmates at the 40th and other venues! 40 James D. Askew (J.D.) 7708 Mountbatten Rd., NE, Tuscaloosa, AL 35406-1146; (205) 758-6772; jaskewj@aol.com Spouse: Pamela M. M. Askew (lawyer and artist) Children: Marisa Welch, 5/77; Amanda Askew, 4/86 I withdrew from Princeton in the fall of sophomore year, then worked in civil engineering until the following summer. Princeton readmitted J.D., Pam, and me for that fall but financial issues precluded Amanda Askew matriculation. Various institutions — Florida junior college, Mercer University in Macon, Georgia, and the University of Florida — yielded an undergraduate degree in math with a multitude of minors, including pre-med. My next stop was the University of Tennessee for an M.D. in June 1972. Pam and I were married in March 1971. We moved to Augusta for my internship and then to Tampa for a residency in kidney disease. Marisa was born in 1977, just before our move to Tuscaloosa, where I opened the city’s first dialysis clinic while Pam began law school at the University of Alabama, which she completed in 1980. In 1985, Ray Perkins, Alabama’s football coach, recruited me as team physician. Athletics gave me the opportunity to share my knowledge and experience with motivated young people. My experience as an injured athlete at Princeton gave me insights I passed on to the Alabama players. My desire to win raised my vigilance in both my practice and in sports medicine. We lost a football player on the practice field that first year. That was humbling. Our second daughter, Amanda, was born in 1986. She has been a joy to watch grow. Currently, she is a sophomore at Washington & Lee University and very much a little “queen bee.” She and I are close. In 1996, I walked off the tennis court in Destin, Florida, and developed atrial fibrillation. I was overweight and out of shape, and the night before, with the ambient temperature at 100 degrees, I was attacked by a yearling osprey on the court and run around by a junior assistant pro who didn’t know he was supposed to hit the ball back to the client. That 40 minutes of being the patient with no control changed my life and the way I look at life. I quit my practice and sports medicine for a rest. Later I tried to resume the practice but finally gave it up for good, in 1998. The abrupt cessation of multiple activities is not recommended. The transition was anything but easy. It did allow me to participate in my younger daughter’s growing up, but that also yielded me a new 41 meaning for “intrusive,” and who decides what is intrusive? For the first few years after withdrawing from P.U. I was busy, but also embarrassed about leaving. It took years before it occurred to me that PAW would keep on coming whether or not I had a degree. Pretty soon, it seemed I should send some money for class dues. The year and a half at Princeton left so many indelibles in my mind. It is a wonderful feeling to be included and to keep up with classmates. There still seems to be a little room at the end of the runway career-wise. It’s just hard to pull back on the yoke at our age. There isn’t much time for new GPS settings. Michael L. Ayling 5309 South 70th East Pl., Tulsa, OK 74145-7519; (918) 663-9736; mlayling@alumni.princeton.edu President and Executive Recruiter, MLA Resources, Inc., P.O. Box 35115, Tulsa, OK 74153-0115, (918) 877-3202 Spouse: Virginia Saviano Ayling William B. Baine P.O. Box 163, Waterford, VA 20197-0163; (540) 882-3466 Physician, Center for Outcomes & Effectiveness Research, Agency for Health Care Policy & Resrearch, 6010 Executive Blvd., Rockville, MD 20852-3813; (301) 594-0524, ext. 1466 Spouse: Martha Scott Baine Brian C. Baker 280 West Rd., Stephentown, NY 12168-9752; (518) 733-6304; bbakerlaw@taconic.net Attorney, P.O. Box 430, 386 N.Y. Route 43, Stephentown, NY 121680430; (518) 733-5287 Spouse/Partner: Nancy Marie Petersen Stephen L. Bakke 2765 Pheasant Rd., Excelsior, MN 55331; (952) 471-7264; bakkeco@att.net President, Bakke and Company, Suite 202, 4829 Minnetonka Blvd., Minneapolis, MN 55416; (952) 848-2210 Spouse: Sheila M. Bakke 42 Stuart S. Ball 33 Stephen St., Montclair, NJ 07042; (973) 783-0961 Attorney and Partner, Ball Livingston, 661 Franklin Ave., Nutley, NJ 07110; (973) 622-4545 David R. Baraff 630 Llewelyn Rd., Berwyn, PA 19312-2013; davidbaraff@msn.com President, American Artificial Larynx Co., 19 East Central Ave., Paoli, PA 19301; (610) 640-2159 Spouse: Georgia Portner Baraff David W. Barber 1704 West Sixth St., Las Animas, CO 81054-1506 Spouse: Sharon Bates Barber James O. Barney 43 Songbird Dr., Concord, NH 03301-4704; jbarney@sulloway.com Partner, Sulloway & Hollis, PLLC, Nine Capitol St., P.O. Box 1256, Concord, NH 03302; (603) 224-2341 Spouse: Susan Barney John A. Barrett 3311 North Oklahoma, Shawnee, OK 74801-2245; President, Barrett Refining Corp., Suite 19, 1210 South Gordon Cooper Dr., Shawnee, OK 74801-8632; (405) 275-3051 Spouse: Sheryl Suggs Barrett Michael L. Barrett 1932 Upper Lake Dr., Reston, VA 20191; (703) 476-1932; michael.barrett@worldnet.att.net Producer/Director, Tiger Paw Productions LLC, 1932 Upper Lake Drive, Reston, VA 20191; 703-620-3227 Spouse: Jaleh Fathian Barrett (Deputy Chief Counsel, Foreign Claims Settlement Commission, Department of Justice) After 34 years as a civil-rights lawyer for the U.S. Department of Justice, I “retired.” I am now involved with making a documentary film related to the challenges faced by people with mobility impairments in 43 finding an accessible place to live. My work at the Justice Department for the last several years involved bringing lawsuits against architects and developers for failing to design and construct apartment complexes with accessible features required by law. While my interest in filmmaking has been with me since before I even entered my teenage years, my strong interest in addressing accessibility for people with disabilities has become a tremendous incentive to use the film/video medium to spread the word that it isn’t just someone else who may Mike and Jaleh Barrett with need accessible features sometime granddaughter Cammy. in the future. I have received tremendous support for this effort in concept (even from prospective distributors and experienced filmmakers), but, as I write this, I have a lot of work ahead to piece together a detailed, pre-production outline of what the end product will show in order to seek and obtain the funding I need to complete the project and get it distributed. Even with this film project, I found time to practice some law for the first time as an independent attorney. Two people with disabilities who are helping me with my film asked me to assist their attorney in a lawsuit involving accessibility violations of the Fair Housing Act (my old specialty). The biggest news we have is really what happened in the last 13 months. Cameron and Liz (our son and daughter-in-law, both Class of ’95) had a daughter, also named Cameron (Cammy for short), who was born on Jaleh’s and my 36th wedding anniversary, December 21, 2004. Not to be outdone, Tara and Greg (our daughter and son-in-law, both Class of ’97) had twins named Austin and Christian (nicknames, Ace and Ty, the only names they are called) on December 19, 2005. Since Cameron’s birthday is January 1, we are planning on having an annual party every year for the last two weeks of December. I have been the program chair and a vice-president of the Princeton Club of Washington, DC, for the past several years and have had an absolutely fantastic time setting up really successful events, including four for classmates including Nelson Hendler, Tom Reid, Lanny Jones, and Peter Cary. We have had the Triangle Show in town for the last three consecutive years, and I am the local producer. This year I wrote and performed in an introductory skit where I sang “East of the Sun.” I never 44 was in Triangle, but I’ve been a big supporter over the years, so this was my contribution (in addition to huge amounts of time). I have otherwise spent the last six first weekends in December being a “talent escort” for the Kennedy Center Honors. I am normally assigned someone special for the weekend of the event, and I’ve been responsible for such people as Sidney Poitier, Jeremy Irons, Len Cariou (double Tony Award winner), and Kim Catrall. I ended up with Faye Dunaway’s son for the fifth show and an incredible choreographer for the most recent show, but I’ve gotten to know a bunch of people fairly well, including a Tony Award winner who is currently speaking to me about doing the voice-over for my documentary. William R. Barrett (Bill) 28 Pinckney Landing Dr., Sheldon, SC 29941; (843) 846-2732; wrbarrett@att.net Spouse: Nancy Kroll Barrett Children: Campbell; Ben Somewhat to my surprise, I realized as I began to think about this essay that I’ve experienced quite a few major changes in my life over the past few years: I stopped working; moved from New York to South Carolina; both children are married and making their own lives; and I have two wonderful grandchildren. The most important thing that hasn’t changed is that I’m still married to the girl I fell in Bill and Nancy Barrett. Below: Grandchildren Mia and Oscar. love with more than 45 years ago. I retired from JP Morgan in 1999, thankfully before the firm merged with Chase, and Penny and I moved to Brays Island, outside of Beaufort, South Carolina. It’s a beautiful part of the country and we built a terrific house with great views of the marshes; a project I enjoyed more than Penny did, but one neither of us plans to do again. I play golf and shoot at clay pigeons occasionally, but most of my time is spent in my workshop, an old barn, only slightly larger than our house, which I’ve converted and filled with woodworking tools and equipment. Building furniture had long been a weekend avocation, but it’s now become closer to full time, and I enjoy it at least as much as ever. 45 I have no plan or desire to make it a business, but with our own new house, both kids in new places, and a large list of nieces and nephews getting married, I have no problem finding homes for my output. Our daughter, Campbell, is married and living in London. Her husband, Knut Hellandsvik, a Norwegian who went to college and grad school in the U.S., is a great guy, and they have two kids, Oscar, An example of Bill Barrett’s three, and Mia, one and a half. I had woodworking skills. always heard that having grandchildren was great, but it’s actually much better than that. Watching them grow and learn is a wonderful adventure. While we wish they were all closer, the wonders of digital photography and the Internet keep us visually up to date, and London is, after all, not a bad place to visit a couple of times a year. Our son, Ben, is in New York, where he’s in the investment business. His wife, Sarah, is a lawyer, but we love her anyway. No grandchildren yet on this side, and of course we don’t apply any pressure, but we’re hopeful. My one remaining link to the world of finance is a bank directorship, which gives me an excuse to get to New York once a quarter, and Ben and Sarah enjoy visiting Brays Island, so we get to see them often. All in all, life is good. Great family, wonderful place to live, activities we enjoy, good health, good friends. I look forward to our Fiftieth with considerable optimism. Timothy M. Barrows 51 Otis St., Newton, MA 02460; (617) 965-4040; barrows@draper.com Mechanical Engineer, Charles Stark Draper Lab, 555 Technology Square, Cambridge, MA 02139; (617) 258-2427 Spouse: Ruth Helfrich Barrows James A. Bartholomew 317 North Broad. St., Allentown, PA 18104-4844; (610) 434-1423; jimbartholomew1@aol.com Attorney, Scoblionko, Scoblionko et al., 40 South Fifth St., Allentown, PA 18101; (610) 434-7138 Spouse: Terri Magnusson Bartholomew 46 Roderick W. Bass Apt. 7, 306 Trinity Court, Princeton, NJ 08540-7026; (609) 734-0956 Spouse/Partner: Deborah Armington Tegarden Linton Ware Batten 3021 Skipper St., San Diego, CA 92123-3046; (858) 279-2362 William E. Bausch 156 Lessner Rd., Damariscotta, ME 04543-4124; (207) 563-7981; wbausch@juno.com; Website: wbausch.tripod.com Spouse: Mary Keegan Bausch (retired) Bill and Mary Bausch Ronald Beall 4735 Lost Creek Lane, Bellingham, WA 98229-2574; (360) 756-1405; rbeall@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Sharon Mason Beall John T. Beaty (Terry) 5312 Allandale Rd., Bethesda, MD 20816-2801; (301) 986-4750; tbeaty@beatyhaynes.com President, Beaty, Haynes & Patterson, Suite 800, 7475 Wisconsin Ave., Bethesda, MD 20814; (301) 718-8600 Spouse/Partner: Anne L. Mehringer David P. Beck P.O. Box 670, 9100 Amity Rd., Amity, OR 97101; beck825@comcast.net Co-owner, Casa Blanca Vineyard, 9100 Amity Rd., Amity, OR 97101 Spouse: Jeanne Crawford Beck (vineyard co-owner) Children: David Andrew, 8/5/76; Jennifer Jeanne, 3/13/72 I am pleased to say that Jeanne and I have “retired” from our previous jobs at the Coriell Institute and have moved on to our second love (the first being science), that of wine. Jeanne and I have bought a vineyard in the Willamette Valley of Oregon. Considered oenologically where California was 20 years ago, Oregon is catching up fast. Our 50-acre farm 47 is now producing pinot noir, pinot gris, and chardonnay grapes, and we hope to expand the quantity and variety in the coming years. I must note here that my large tractor is an orange, yup orange, Kabota! We fully expect to return to the East Coast frequently to continue the many tasks we have undertaken here, and we hope these trips will coincide with Reunions from time to time. Unfortunately, the press of the vineyard work will not permit us to attend the 40th. J. Robert Bedell 6 Audubon Pond Rd., Hilton Head Island, SC 29928-4142; (843) 816-2667; jrbedell@aol.com Significant other: Barbra (real estate) Children: Kirk, 1975; Lisa, 1979 (PU ’01) Christopher B. Bedford 6543 Hancock Rd., Montague, MI 49437-9262; (231) 893-3937; cbedford@hsus.org Spouse/Partner: Lisa A. Walker Louis Michael Bell 2500 Simpson St., Evanston, IL 60201-2175; (847) 491-9007 Attorney, Griffith & Jacobson, Suite 3550, 55 West Monroe, Chicago, IL 60602; (312) 236-8110 Spouse: Brigitte Schmidt Bell P. Thomas Benghauser Castlemead, Lower Castle St., Bristol BS1 3AG, United Kingdom SatisfactionResearch.com Limited, Castlemead, Lower Castle St., Bristol BS1 3AG, United Kingdom; ceo@satisfactionresearch.com Spouse: Margaret Bailes Benghauser Edward S. Bent (Ted) 60 Hinkle Rd., Washington, CT 06793; (860) 868-0577; tbent@alumni.princeton.edu Business Manager, Canterbury School, 101 Aspetuck Ave., New Milford, CT 06776; (860) 210-3806 Spouse: Rebecca Lambert Bent (financial sales and fundraising Children: Maxwell S. Bent, 7/04/88 48 TEDBENT.COM FAPQ Q: What’s TedBent.com FAPQ? A: It’s a bio site put up by Ted Bent for his 40th P.U. Reunion. Q: What’s the FAPQ stand for? A: Frequently Asked Paranoid Questions. It’s a Q&A format Bent’s been noodling in recent years. Q: Bent’s paranoid? A: Since freshman year when he couldn’t understand what Reinhold Niebuhr was talking about in Politics 101. Q: But no one could understand old Niebuhr. He’d had a stroke and his speech was impaired. A: Still, Bent was the standout guy among the 425 who took that gut. He did all the reading, went to every lecture & precept, wrote all the papers, and still flunked! Q: Why? A: He couldn’t psyche it out. Q: What was there to psyche out? A: What Niebuhr was talking about. Bent couldn’t get it. You may remember Steve Ingersoll had the same problem in those days. He was plenty smart but nothing made sense to him either, which was why he wore those black motorcycle boots with his grey flannel pants. Q: So what does that make Bent now? Our class’s leading suicide prospect? A: No. Bent’s just always been one step behind the exponential complexity of things, and now at our age, on top of the routine complexity, the losses have piled up and then there’s the regret. Q: Regret about what? A: For opportunities missed, stones left unturned, loved ones too little loved, jobs not well enough done, music not heard — however one’s played the hand one was dealt. Q: Oh, please. Isn’t the 40th a little late to lament about the rules of the game? A: Not if you’re still uncertain where the goal line is — and who’s keeping score. Q: Why didn’t Bent just cash in his P.U. Bachelor’s for some serious money? That’s answered a lot of questions for the rest of us — and most of the complaints of our ex-wives too. A: Making more-than-enough money is another thing Bent’s never done very well. Luckily, his first wife wanted none. She only wanted out. Q: Why? A: He never figured that one out either. His heart got broken before he realized he had one, and that’s when his paranoia locked in for the duration. Q: But didn’t he bounce back to write that notorious book How to 49 Make Love to a Single Girl that was advertised all over Playboy? Wasn’t it one of the first of what became a genre goldmine? A: Yes, but he couldn’t really take credit for that. It was a publisher’s marketing idea. They gave him the title, he just fulfilled it. Q: Still, it must have involved some pretty interesting basic research? A: No, he made it all up, cribbing from the white-hot feminist rhetoric of the day, remembering how difficult the desperate social scene at P.U. was, and then hypothesizing that nothing was as seductive as treating a girl like the woman she wished to become. That, and always being scrupulously polite. He had discovered at dancing school that being polite offered a significant competitive edge. Q: So that’s why he was a bachelor for 15 years after wife No. 1? Testing his theory on single girls? A: For a while, but after he lost count, he also lost interest. He never wanted not to be married; he just couldn’t find another woman he wanted to marry. Q: We’ve all have had such problems. A: Bent’s real problem has been his inchoate desire to write — even when he’s had no idea what he wants to write about. That’s added a lot of gut-wrenching anxiety to the paranoia even, paradoxically, as it’s been the paranoia that’s kept him writing — and not writing. Q: What’s this paranoia all about? A: He picked it up in Philip Roth’s little-known creative writing seminar our sophomore and junior year. Roth was paranoid too. Q: But Roth’s been a great success. A: This irony has not escaped Bent’s attention, especially since he himself has had so little — unless you count a single episode of TV’s Ryan’s Hope, a few pieces in People magazine (courtesy of former managing editor and classmate Lanny Jones) and The New York Times, or one widely unread novella in The Massachusetts Review. Q: Did he ever try an honest job? A: There have been a number. But it took him seven years on Madison Avenue writing TV commercials and print ads before he figured out that an Ivy-educated WASP was never going to have a chance among streetsmart Italians. And when he drove a cab he was often too scared to make correct change. In recent years, however, he’s been the fully capable business manager of a Connecticut prep school — surprising and pleasing no one more than himself. Q: So he retreated back to the sheltered preppy world of privilege from where he came? A: It’s a job he does well and he’s glad to have it, even if it doesn’t pay enough to make ends meet. Q: Why not? A: His wife Rebecca’s burn-rate requires the kind of financial re50 sources only legally available to those who have prospered in the forprofit sector. Q: Rebecca’s the trophy wife? A: As we all wish? No, Rebecca’s the godsend of Bent’s mid-life, the sunlight that penetrated under his dark rock, the blessed mother of their only child Max, and an impulsive, wide-eyed, reckless entrepreneur who’s lost every million she’s ever made. Q: Sounds like Bent at least did better the second time around. A: Yes, if he could only get Rebecca to stay home more. Q: She won’t? A: She can’t. As enthusiastic a homemaker as she is (and she’s a marvel; you should see their drop-dead home, an eclectic mix of thrift and gift), the narrow horizon of domesticity quickly depresses her. Q: Why? A: Unlike stay-at-home Bent, she needs to be out in the world, beating the bushes of opportunity and then happily having a “quick dinner out” with whomever she turns up. These days, with typical humility and reserve, she’s promoting a cure for cancer. Q: She’s a physician too? A: No, a doctor’s daughter. Q: Then she must be something of a nut? A: Not if there is a cure for cancer. Q: What does Bent think? A: He’s too hang-dog loyal and grateful for the fresh air her manic vitality blows into their middle-aged life not to support — or to disbelieve — whatever obsesses her, even a promising cure cancer. Q: Is there any evidence to support her claim? A: One dramatic cure. Her 45-year-old sister developed a rare case of terminal leiomyosarcoma, and Rebecca’s saved her. Q: How? A: With an alternative, over-the-counter protocol of anti-angiogenesis inhibitors she found — of all places — online. The sister was about to start her knee-jerk chemo at Sloan-Kettering when she was waylaid by the flu, so Rebecca got her to take the protocol and now, never having done the chemo, she has no evidence of disease. Q: Nice, but a single terminal anomaly doesn’t prove anything — especially in light of the tens of thousands of medical professionals working 24/7 to find a comprehensive cure for cancer. And all the other crackpot alternatives out there. Talk about complexity! It’s a committed workforce that includes more than a few of our classmates. A: Lemmings are committed too. Finding a cancer cure may need a whole new approach, which was Christopher Columbus’s hunch when he set out sailing west to go east. His vision looked beyond the horizon, so he could see what the naval experts of his day couldn’t. 51 Q: Still, one success of an anti-angiogenesis protocol hardly makes for a cure. A: There have been others too, but that’s why Rebecca’s raising money now for a formal FDA clinical trial. Q: Sounds like Rebecca’s ambition and cash flow have given Bent quite a ride. A: But not one he’s always enjoyed. From project to project, he’s the one who’s kept the books and written the checks, watching the money pour in and drain away, tallying up the losses and then warehousing the detritus in the aftermath. The whole process has only stoked his paranoia. Q: So how does he look? A: Unaccountably youthful, cheerful and unscathed. It’s his behavior that remains cautious, guarded, aloof, slavishly devoted to routine, reluctant to travel and perpetually anxious. His tone has a cynically defensive edge. And, a laughable Yankee, he still wears the ill-fitting, worn-out clothes he used to affect around campus. Q: So where does the Bent family live now? A: In a former psychiatric sanitarium established by a pioneering Jungian, Beatrice Hinkle. It’s a huge, shabby house on a dirt road in northwest Connecticut across from an even more rundown farm with 300 milking cows. It’s the idyllic property Bent dreamed of during the 25-plus years he was holed up in a New York tenement. There’s a barn, a pond, and a space to write — and not write — separate from the house. It feels perfectly like home to him, even if he’s indentured to it. Q: Indentured why? A: It’s more than he can manage or afford. Bent’s like the cobbler whose children have no shoes — the school business manager who can’t balance his own budget. Q: Haven’t we all sometimes lived beyond our means? Putting our kids through school, redecorating, taking vacations, funding IRA’s, getting a gift for the girlfriend on the side, stretching for that boat. It’s never been an easy balance. A: Yes, but our 40th is the beginning of the end game. Those who aren’t provisioned now for the long retirement winter ahead will soon be looking at Title 19. Until the last few years, hapless Bent has never held a job long enough to build any retirement equity. So, assuming his health holds, he’ll be in the traces until our 50th and probably well beyond. Q: Can’t he sell off the sanitarium? Or how about his family property in Nantucket? A: He balks at selling his patrimony, and now his son’s. His father died when he was a kid, and two step-fathers bit the dust after that. Their property is all that is left of them. Q; Then there’ll be a problem even qualifying for Title 19. A: Rebecca points that out, whenever she’s not traveling or writhing in 52 the arms of the sweating angel of menopause. Q: So what are the Bents going to do? A: It’s a budgetary puzzle. And if it weren’t challenge enough, this fall their son Max is heading for college, which will empty the nest and — at a minimum — shift the burden of conversation and companionship squarely on their three Labs — a junk black, an aged brown and a puppy yellow. And now Rebecca wants a Weimaraner too. Q: Dogs aside, is Max going to Princeton? A: Are you kidding? This wondrous and beloved but otherwise normal kid is not considered Princeton material, nor would his father be anymore. Of course, most of our class’s offspring (with notable exceptions like Tooke, Watrous, and Witte’s estimable boys among a handful of others) also haven’t made the cut. We’re grist now primarily for the Development Office’s mill and Reunion’s nostalgia. Q: Why has this happened? It seems so unfair. A: The demographics alone have turned the world into which we matriculated on its head, as decisively as did Columbus’s voyage west, and as will the Web too. Q: So there’s some basis in reality for Bent’s paranoia? A: Of course, but no more so than four thousand years ago when the psalmist lamented, “How long shall I have perplexity in my mind, and grief in my heart, day after day?” Q: Is this why Bent calls the FrequentlyAskedParanoidQuestions he posts at www.tedbent.blogspot.com Web Psalms? A: Yes. He thinks the Psalms still pretty much tell the whole and only story. Q: But the Psalms are so anguished and self-contradictory! A: They do detail a more erratic and less manageable economy of experience than Niebuhur’s relatively upbeat “Serenity Prayer.” However, the reality seems to be that “The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away” — often on the same day, always in every lifetime. Q: So how does Bent think the end game will play out for him? A: As usual, he doesn’t have a clue. Ironically, his unfulfilled ambition keeps him fit, healthy, faithful, and still hungry to make his mark. Q: But practically speaking, isn’t time running out? Most of our prostates have started to swell, and being unable to remember names is now commonplace. Who knows when that whore Dementia will sidle in, more distracting than the hooker at House Parties? A: That’s why, as often as he can, Bent sits down at his computer first thing in the morning, arranging and re-arranging words, trying to hone them to an edge sharp enough to scratch the fickle face of Western culture while he’s still got a chance. Q: Didn’t he ever take Fagles’s class about Sisyphus? A: He knows Sisyphus well enough, but he also remembers the 2253 year-old who drove away from campus in June of 1966 in a grey 356C Porsche he didn’t deserve; who’d written an unreadable novel for a thesis and barely passed his departmental exams; but who had also won the university’s Ward Mathis prize for fiction and was about to have a short story published in George Garrett’s collection The Girl in the Black Raincoat. And who less than a week later dodged the Vietnam bullet — willy-nilly — when he failed his Army physical at the Boston Navy Yard. Q: At that point Bent must have thought he had a future? A: He still does. Don’t we all? Lloyd M. Bentsen 2145 Troon Rd., Houston, TX 77019-1511; (713) 523-3248 Co-Founder and General Partner, Triad Ventures Limited, Suite 100, 4600 Post Oak Place Dr., Houston, TX 77027; (713) 627-9111 Spouse: Gayle Flannery Bentsen Philip J. Berg 92 Overbrook Dr., Princeton, NJ 08540-4139 President, Princeton Cybernetics, Suite 159, 301 North Harrison St., Princeton, NJ 08540; (609) 683-4545; pjberg@princetoncyber.com Spouse: Paula L. Berg Richard L. Berger 4132 41st St. North, Arlington, VA 22207-4802; (703) 528-5608 Research Scientist, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, 7000 East Ave., Livermore, CA 94550; (925) 422-7419; rberger@pppl.gov Spouse/Partner: Beverly Beverly Eric A. Berman 5287 Seneca, Memphis, TN 38117-5933; (901) 767-1807; bermane@hotmail.com 6191 Park Ave., Memphis University, Memphis, TN 38119; (901) 761-9004 Spouse/Partner: Joan Traffas 54 Graham G. Berry Apt. 107, 1021 S Orange Grove Blvd., Pasadena, CA 91105-3517; (626) 403-6763; peteberry@earthlink.net Spouse: Virginia Braun Berry Richard S. Beth 6811 Prince Georges Ave., Takoma Park, MD 20912-4862; (301) 270-0435; rbeth@crs.loc.gov Specialist in Legislative Process, Congressional Research Service, Government and Finance Division, LM-304 Library of Congress, Washington, DC 20540-7470; (202) 707-8667 Spouse: Claire Kreymborg Beth William J. Bethune (Thune) Hart Lane Farm, 13618 Goodhart Lane, Leesburg, VA 20176; (540) 822-4237; bethunew@pepperlaw.com Attorney, Pepper Hamilton LLP, 600 14th St., NW, Washington, DC 20005 Spouse: Linda Joyce Bethune (preschool teacher and interior designer) Children: James, 11/12/81; Lisa, 7/11/85 I am blessed to be able to continue enjoying life with energy and good health, and with a wife and family who are special to me. We live on a farm in Loudoun County, Virginia, where our horses are next-door neighbors. Living in the country and staying on top of things on the farm provide a welcomed balance to a demanding law practice based in Washington, DC. Unlike law practice, where cases move slowly and intellectual power is what counts, farm life presents opportunities to fix things with hand tools and to see instant results. I have come to appreciate more than ever the virtues of self-sufficiency and hard work outdoors. I also count myself fortunate to be in the regular company of classmates who are also good friends. This part is surely the lasting benefit of a Princeton education! James C. Beverley (Beaver) 7380 South West 54th Court, South Miami, FL 33143-5702; (305) 661-5642; yogadiane@the-beach.net Instructor, Law and History, Palmetto Senior High School, 7460 SW 118th Street, Miami, FL 33157; (305) 235-1360 Spouse: Diane Rosin Beverley (pre-school teacher) 55 Children: Eric Lewis Beverley, 2/19/76; Mark Curtis Beverley, 10/12/79 Some things remain the same — I’m still married to the same woman, Diane (32 years); still teaching law and history; still playing rugby (Old Boys — two championships at Aspen and two more at Ft. Lauderdale tournaments since our 35th); still playing soccer; and still living in South Miami. Some things keep changing — retirement from full-time teaching will come about in the next two-to-four years; both of the children are now out of college — Eric, 29, Harvard (PhD, Jim and Diane Beverley with South Asia studies), and Mark, 25, sons Mark and Jim. University of Miami (BA, music) — and working, Eric in Cambridge as an instructor at Harvard and Mark here in Miami as a jazz bassist. I am continually reminded, as a teacher, of the wonderful intellectual experience that Princeton was and is — also of the bizarre quality of the current admissions process and cost. As always I look forward to Reunions — the chance to be a sophomore again and to follow my new rules for life — never become mature; excess in moderation. Remember, age and treachery defeat youth and fitness. See ya! John S. Bildersee P.O. Box 504, Wynnewood, PA 19096; (610) 667-4272 Professor of Accounting, New York University, Stern School of Business, 40 West Fourth St., New York, NY 10012; (212) 998-0027 Spouse: Marjory Bildersee Frank J. Biondi 110 N Rockingham Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90049-2632; (310) 476-4201; fbiondi@waterviewllc.com Senior Managing Director, WaterView Advisors, L.L.C., Suite 4030W, 2425 Olympic Blvd., Santa Monica, CA 90404; (310) 586-3333 Spouse: Carol Oughton Biondi 56 Paul Berton Birkeland 129 Lake Ave. West, Kirkland, WA 98033; (425) 576-5551 Owner, Birkeland & Associates, Suite B, 1321 Queen Anne Ave. North, Seattle, WA 98109-3168; (206) 285-1835 Spouse: Joyce Schroeder Birkeland Gordon S. Bjorkman 3210 Escapade Circle, Riva, MD 21140-1307 U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555; gsb_tiger66@yahoo.com Spouse: Loris Lovelace Bjorkman John H. Black 1101 Embarcadero Rd., Palo Alto, CA 94303-3152; (650) 424-0188; mvspa@best.com Director, Transcendental Meditation, 1101 Embarcadero Rd., Palo Alto, CA 94303; (650) 424-8800 Walter R. Bliss 202 Moore St., Princeton, NJ 08540-3404; (609) 921-2382; munsonbliss@aol.com Attorney, Research Park, 260 Wall St., Princeton, NJ 08540; (609) 683-9220 Spouse: Mary Cunningham Bliss Neil J. Bloomfield 233 Hillside Dr., Fairfax, CA 94930; 415-454-2294 Attorney, Law Offices of Neil Jon Bloomfield, 901 E Street Suite 100, San Rafael, CA 94901; (415) 454-2294; www.njblaw.com Spouse: Sheri Lang Bloomfield (writer, horse breeder) Children: Violet, 1981; Jennifer, 1975; Erica, 1985 After a five-year stint as a part-time rancher/farmer/ranch adminstrator and a part-time wave surfer, while working full time in law and real estate, I have shed the ranch and moved back to Fairfax. Now just surfing, practicing law, and doing special real-estate projects (including another West Marin ranch soon!). Sheri and I are looking forward to reunions. She is starting a book — an exposé of the world of horse training, breeding, and showing — which should be fun when she completes it! 57 Dieter Bloser 18185 Windswept Circle, Chagrin Falls, OH 44023-2439; (440) 543-2975; dbloser@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Deborah Forbes Bloser Children: Peter Forbes Bloser, 1/16/72; The Blosers at Macchu Picchu Timothy Philip Bloser, 10/25/73 I am happily retired. After many years of rising at 5 a.m., I realized that I was not really a morning person. I also tired of the frequent battles with administrators and insurers which were part of running my group radiology practice. I switched to a part-time locum tenens radiology practice for a few years and now have fully Dieter, Deborah, and Peter Bloser with retired. Debbie and I love to Tim, a newly minted PhD. travel and now have the time to take extended trips and cruises. We also spend about a month in Sedona, Arizona, each year. I spend other time doing a lot of video and photo editing, fooling with the computer, and enjoying astronomy, yard work, reading, and bagpipes. I now agree with a retired surgeon friend who told me that he can’t believe that he ever had enough time to go to work. We have had some of the problems which probably affect many classmates at this age, dealing with the illness and death of parents and friends. But overall, we are content, and we happily anticipate the wedding of our son Peter (Princeton ’94), which will occur about a month after this reunion! Ralph E. Bodine 660 Lands End Rd., Sidney BC V8L5K9, Canada; (250) 656-3642; bodine@shaw.ca Chief Executive Officer, The Marlin Group, Inc., Suite 202, 17220 Boswell Boulevard, Sun City, AZ 85373; (623) 977-7733 Spouse: Linda Sue Bodine Children: Kevin Bodine, 10.4,64; Lisa (Bodine) Mercado, 11.14.67; Carrie (Bodine) Ybarra, 4.24.69; Sarah Bodine, 11.16.94; Amy Bodine, 12.27.94; Arthur Bodine, 12.27.94 How am I doing? Well, at 63 I have nine-year-old twins and an elevenyear-old daughter. And whoever said it keeps you young, never experienced it. It’s a catchy phrase. Just doesn’t happen to be true. But if 58 Larry King can do it, so can I. My life has been great, being blessed by a lovely wife and six children. Watching these young ones grow makes me realize how much I missed in the growing years of the older three children. But what truly is important is that they are all well and happy. My wife and I have lived in British Columbia now for 13 years. We live on the water close to Victoria and it truly is paradise. We have salmon, crabs, oysters, prawns, and clams at our doorstep. Of course, the kids want McDonalds. But it is truly a Ralph and Linda Bodine gorgeous spot. My professional life took me to the chairmanship of Sunkist Growers and the largest agricultural trade association in the West, the Western Growers Association. Several other lesser chairs have been in my past. I have made a good living and have told the older kids I intend to spend it all, leaving only enough for my young ones and my somewhat (!) younger wife. And, proudly, I am doing a very good job of just that — at spending it. My priorities have changed at my age. Instead of making a fortune I get much more satisfaction watching my young son catch his first salmon or my young girls playing softball in the spring. These are gifts that no money can buy. I am truly blessed. David A. Boetcher 6409 Misty Top Pass, Columbia, MD 21044-6000; (410) 531-7630 Physician, Suite 118, 14300 Gallant Fox Lane, Bowie, MD 20715-4092; (301) 464-3020 Spouse: Kathleen Tomczyk Boetcher David H. Bonnett 481 Yorkshire Dr., Severna Park, MD 21146-1630; (410) 544-6047 Senior Engineer, Northrop Grumman Corporation, Electronic Systems, MS G13, BWI Airport, Linthicum, MD 21076; (410) 765-4176 Michael Z. Booth 659 Crozet Ave., Crozet, VA 22932-3430; (434) 823-5232 Spouse: Charlotte Zinsser Booth 59 Viggo Boserup 10522 Cheviot Dr., Los Angeles, CA 90064-4338; (310) 202-7665; vboserup@alumni.princeton.edu Mediator, Boserup Mediation Group, Suite 155-E, 2425 Olympic Blvd., Santa Monica, CA 90404; (310) 829-0099 Spouse: Anne-Marie K. Boserup Henry M. Bostwick P.O. Box 381, Fairhope, AL 36533-0381 Drake Properties, Inc., P.O. Box 912, Daphne, AL 36526-0912; bostfarm@aol.com Spouse: Donna Bostwick David C. Bothell 3623 Pleasant Beach Dr., N.E., Bainbridge Island, WA 98110-3213; (206) 842-7723 Senior VP/Investment Officer, RBC Dain Rauscher Corporation, Suite 2500, 1201 Third Ave., Seattle, WA 98101; (206) 621-3120 Spouse: Sheryl Lynn Bothell N. Kenneth Boudwin 14 Fountain Blvd., Burlington, NJ 08016-9752; (609) 386-9304 Supply Chain Advisor, Aspen Technology, Chapman Rd., Newark, DE 19702; (302) 295-5003 Spouse: Kathleen Coolidge Boudwin Kenneth A. Bourne 820 Drohomer Pl., Baltimore, MD 21210; (410) 323-7661; kenneth.bourne@mercantile.net Executive Vice President, Mercantile Bank and Trust, 2 Hopkins Plaza, P.O. Box 1477, Baltimore, MD 21203; (410) 237-5753 Spouse: Deborah Bell Bourne 60 Richard G. Bowers 8 Eagle Pointe Pass, Rapids City, IL 61278-0548; (309) 496-2829; rbowersjr@aol.com President & Chief Executive Officer, The Bowers Group, P.O. Box 548, Rapids City, IL 61278-0548 Spouse: Alice Bowers John Webster Bowman (Bows) 6456 Georgetown Pike, McLean, VA 22101-2212; (703) 893-6483; bowmajw@hqda.army.mil Deputy Program Manager, North America Telecommunications, Inc., Eastek Services, Ltd., 9015 Rhode Island Ave., College Park, MD 20740; (703) 602-1521 Spouse: Grace Barlow Bowman Frederick N. Bradstreet (Rick) 8308 Appalachian Dr., Austin, TX 78759-8413; (512) 338-9907; rbradstreet@sbcglobal.net Retired Spouse: Lesley Bradstreet (retired) Children: Casey Harrington, 6/6/75; Cody Bradstreet, 6/6/75; Stephanie Toups, 6/6/78; Ryan Miller, 6/8/79; Ross Miller, 11/8/82 The past five years have delivered several surprises: 1. Retirement is wildly underrated: Having worked enthusiastiRick and Lesley Bradstreet cally for 25 years with few breaks, I feared that retirement would be boring or that I might shrivel into a dreary routine. In fact, retirement has allowed me the delightful luxury of controlling my own time, whether reading the daily paper at a relaxed pace, exploring music, taking historical road trips, or volunteering in political campaigns. Such a guilty pleasure. 2. Marriage to Lesley is a gift: We would not have been attracted to each other had we met 30 years ago. Our personalities are so different. After barely graduating from different boot camps of divorce, we learned to take ourselves less seriously and to delve into differences instead of avoiding them. As a result, I am treated daily to delicious moments of intimacy and a growing appetite for getting naked with Lesley. 61 3. Aging is not for sissies: Graceful healthy bodies and quick never-fail minds are wasted on the young. I hate having to exercise and eat small portions of food to prevent weight gain. I despise forgetting simple words or the author of a favorite book. Research suggests that we over-40 types have mental skills that younger folks lack. That’s reassuring … a little. 4. The Ferris wheel of life is still a fun ride: While the view from the top was exhilarating, I feared the arc toward earth. How can I feel alive without my old power and prestige? What will become of us when the know-nothing youngsters take over? Amazingly, those upstarts are impressive, and surprisingly, I am feeling enriched rather than diminished as the ride glides down. 5. We Americans are lucky puppies: Despite the folly of our leaders and the brutal economics of corporate downsizing and off-shoring, we all enjoy a remarkable existence. The luxury of choosing our multiple careers, mates, and educations; the freedom to speak out and create our personal lifestyles. It is breathtaking. 6. Spiritual development is hard work: Like the false seductive promise of romantic love, the pious dedication to scripture or church attendance proved a dead end for me. The real disciplines are opening myself to uncertainty rather than feeling smug about my knowledge, questioning my love of judging others rather than feeling proud of witty repartee, and seeing the sacred in the ordinary rather than only being satisfied with the extraordinary. Makes me tired just thinking about it. Have a great year! Melvyn C. Branch 2899 South Lakeridge Trail; Boulder, CO 80302-9312 Joseph Negler Professor of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering Dept., Campus Box 427, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309-0427; (303) 492-7427; melvyn.branch@colorado.edu Spouse: Noelle Bergstrom Branch Children: Miles, 1971; Nicoloe, 1974 William J. Brauer Suite 386, Two Admiral Dr., Emeryville, CA 94608-1570; (510) 547-6550 Attorney, P.O. Box 9981, Oakland, CA 94613; (510) 430-2250 62 Seth N. Braunstein 29 Stone Tower Lane, Wilmington, DE 19803-4536 Associate Professor of Medicine, Hospital of University of Pennsylvania, 3400 Spruce St., Philadelphia, PA 19104; (215) 662-7280 Spouse/Partner: Barbara Duffy Brian H. Breuel 100 Hodge Rd., Princeton, NJ 08540, (609) 683-5060; bbreuel@hqoffice.com President, Wealth Strategies LLC, Suite 200, 116 Village Blvd., Princeton, NJ 08540; (609) 951-2249 Spouse/Partner: Shirley Anne Breuel Edwin B. Bronstein 2404 Naudain St., Philadelphia, PA 19146; (215) 732-7811 Artist and Architect, 2404 Naudain St., Philadelphia, PA 19146; (215) 732-8596 Spouse: Sophie Jacobs Bronstein Philip M. Brooks 989 Cragmont Ave., Berkeley, CA 94708-1431; (510) 526-1928 Attorney, Suite #233, 1442-A Walnut St., Berkeley, CA 94709; (510) 528-7996 Spouse: Sara S. Brooks Robert R. Brooks (Bob) 25 Valeria Dr., Pisgah Forest, NC 287689618; (828) 862-4343; brooksrr@alumni.princeton.edu Principal Scientist, Procter & Gamble (retired) Spouse: Sherry Kimball Brooks (retired) Children: Patrick Kimball, 4/2/71; Joshua David, 7/1/71; Andrew Carroll, 5/23/75; Catherine Pennington, 2/16/79 After earning a PhD in biochemistry from The Johns Hopkins University and doing a two-year post-doc at the University of Bob Brooks 63 Florida, I settled into a 28-year career with Norwich Pharmacal, which was bought by Procter & Gamble. Sherry and I raised four kids in a small town in central New York State, paying our dues in the Snow Belt before we discovered winter sun in Cincinnati. My work in pharmacology research and development taught writing on the job (30 papers and a million reports and memos), which I am using by being a mostly unpublished writer in retirement in western North Carolina. I write mystery, science fiction, fantasy, historical vignette, and humor in between playing double-bogey golf, dabbling in Spanish, walking the dogs, traveling, and inhaling the rich arts life of this area. My hiking wife, Sherry, and I love Brevard, North Carolina, the small town in the mountains we’ve chosen for retirement. At least a half dozen other couples from the central New York town of our child-raising years have chosen the same place for retirement. We are always happy to return to our moderate climate after visiting children and grandchildren in Ohio, Connecticut, and Arizona. Lawrence W. Brown 4898 Sugar Maple Lane, Dumfries, VA 22026-3018; (703) 670-8199; larryap@comcast.net Newsman, Editor and Anchor, AP Broadcast Services, Suite 615, 1825 K St., NW, Washington, DC 20006; (202) 955-7250 Rexford T. Brown (Rex) 3093 South McRaven Rd., Route 7, Box 4, Jackson, MS 39209-9807; (601) 922-4900 Attorney, P.O. Box 23007, Jackson, MS 39225-3007 Spouse: Laurie Brown-Nagin M. Warren Browne P.O. Box 398, Waccabuc, NY 10597-0398; (914) 763-5599 Corporate Attorney John C. Brunner P.O. Box 130, 3780 Gstaad, Switzerland Oil Consultant, Brunner Energy Consulting, P.O. Box 130, 3780 Gstaad, Switzerland; john@becswitz.int.ch Spouse: Mary Elizabeth Brunner 64 Robert S. Bruser 157 Sherwood Ave., Toronto, ON M4P 2A9, Canada; (416) 484-6887 Partner, Blake, Cassels & Graydon, Commerce Court West, Box 25, Toronto M5L 1A9, Canada; (416) 863-2618 Spouse: Joan Macdonald Bruser Richard O. Buck 1066 East 22nd Ave., Eugene, OR 97405-3018; (541) 343-9021 Physician, Suite C, 2201 Willamette St., Eugene, OR 97401; (541) 683-0730 Spouse: Virginia Buck Willard Bunn (Googan) 815 E Barberry Lane, Lake Forest, IL 60045; (847) 234-6203; willard.bunn@baytreebank.com Vice Chairman of the Board, Baytree Bank, 9 Market Square Court, Lake Forest, IL 60045-1825; (847) 615-3425 Spouse: Jeannette Woodward Bunn Children: Willie, 6/18/72; Anne, 12/2/75; Mande, 11/30/82; Meg, 11/13/84; Grace, 3/9/89 John W. Burke III (Jack) P.O. Box 329, Middleburg, VA 20118; jwb3rd@aol.com President, EIGov, 23 Wilkes St., Alexandria, VA 22314; (703) 380-7453 Spouse: Judith Elizabeth Ayers Burke Children: Coventry Ayres Burke After almost 30 years in California, I left federal service and returned to the East Coast with my family last spring. Living in Middleburg, Virginia, I regularly travel to the West Coast, where I am the president of an environmental consulting firm (EIGov) headquartered in Seattle. I also run a small horse farm with my daughter, Coventry, who is graduating this spring with her masters in anthropology. My wife, Judith Ayres, is a presidential appointee at the Environmental Protection Agency, serving as the assistant administrator for international affairs. David G. Burnett Executive, Pfizer, Eastern Point Rd., Groton, CT 06340; (860) 441-4588 Spouse/Partner: Claire Lynn Gaudiani 65 Charles G. Burr Unit 1501, 371 Channelside Walk Way, Tampa, FL 33602-6775; (813) 223-6030 Attorney, Suite 300, 442 West Kennedy Blvd., Tampa, FL 33606; (813) 253-2010 Spouse: Norma Gene Lykes Burr Michael J. Burrill 578 McAlpin Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45220-1534; (513) 281-4030; burrilmj@email.uc.edu Community Planner & Architect, Urban Visions, 578 McAlpin Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45220; (513) 281-4030 Spouse: Marilyn Helene Burrill (terrific mother and home maker) Children: Jennifer Helene, 12/05/70; Cynthia Jane, 11/14/74 The Burrills: Marilyn, Cynthia, Michael, Leo, Jennifer, Dante, and Matias, December 2004. Jeffrey A. Burt 1855 Plymouth St., N.W., Washington, DC 20012-2209; (202) 722-2912 Partner, Arnold & Porter LLP, 555 12th St., NW, Washington, DC 20004; (202) 942-5929 Spouse: Sandra Cass Burt A. Peyton Bush 479 Audubon St., New Orleans, LA 70118-4947; (504) 862-0346 Partner, School St. Capital Group, 479 Audubon St., New Orleans, LA 70118; (504) 862-0346 Spouse: Barbara Gott Bush David A. Butler 1936 Mill Creek Rd., Macungie, PA 18062-9747; (610) 395-7175; dbutler002@rcn.com Manager of Business Development, Universal Industrial Gases, 2200 Northwood Ave., Easton, PA 18045; (610) 515-8591 Spouse/Partner: Mary Raymond (shipping coordinator) Somehow the last five years have slipped by much more quietly than 66 any other similar period. There has been a sense of stability, despite ongoing change. I still work for a small company, partially owned by me, named Universal Industrial Gases, Inc. We did an MBO in early 2001, freeing ourselves from a corporate parent that was in financial trouble just in time to feel the economy slow down. We have managed to stay afloat and grow the business; but like many smaller businesses with limited financial reserves, we have perpetually seemed to be weeks away from either great success or utter disaster. I have a multifaceted role that is a mix of business development and project development, with elements of sales, marketing, engineering, proposal development, financial planning, financing, and project execution. For good measure, I developed and administer the company website (www.uigi.com). We are evolving the business from reliance on cyclical sales of equipment and services to more stable long-term product-supply arrangements. Mary and I have been together for more than six years. Several years ago, it was her turn to experience corporate downsizing after 12 years with DNB collecting and disseminating corporate data. She took a month off to do some volunteer work, moved through a succession of temporary jobs, and finally landed in a position quite different from the sanitized DNB office environment. For the past two years she has been working in a cold-warehouse operation, doing shipping and receiving management and scheduling, actively managing the interface between the truck drivers and the warehouse personnel. More often than not it is fast-paced and intense; and it is the most satisfying job she has had, with real responsibility for doing real work and with immediate feedback on the quality of her contribution to making things happen as efficiently as possible. Mary is an animal lover. Several years ago we volunteered with Springer Spaniel Rescue to foster dogs needing temporary shelter. It didn’t work out quite as planned. We drove from Pennsylvania to Virginia to pick up a dog that lost her home due to a divorce. She turned out to have multiple health problems, which took five weeks or so to identify and treat. Then a prospective adoptive family spent a month debating whether or not to take her. They said no, and we said “enough.” Dixie needed a real home and she felt she had found one. We were not going to put her through even more trauma by passing her to another home. She lived with us for about four years — until last year, when her legs would no longer hold her up and she lost her desire to keep going. We now have a cat, Felix, which Mary first met 10 years ago when she did pet sitting as a part-time business. Recently, Felix’s owner went through a series of life changes and was unable to keep him. He has settled in nicely. Aside from our day-to-day activities, we get together with Mary’s parents and brothers and sisters and her nieces and nephews fairly regularly. As a result of her family connection to Jamestown, Rhode Island, I created a website, www.jamestown-ri.info. 67 Andrew Butz 15410 River Rd., Darnestown, MD 20874-3540 Of Counsel, Gilberg & Kiernan, Suite 600, 1250 I St., NW, Washington, DC 20005; (202) 712-7015; abutz@gilberg.com Spouse: Alexis Marie Butz John H. Caldwell Apt. 48, 7900 E Dartmouth Ave., Denver, CO 80231-4265; (303) 751-0983 Professor, Cell and Developmental Biology, BRB Room 242, UCHSC, Box B111, 4200 East Ninth Ave., Denver, CO 80262; (303) 724-3190 Spouse: Honora Caldwell John A. Carlson Apt. A, 18 Rocky Knolls, Chapel Hill, NC 27516-0327; (919) 968-1158; carlso_j@bellsouth.net Residential Real Estate Appraiser, Carlson Appraisal Service, Apt. A, 18 Rocky Knolls Rd., Chapel Hill, NC 27516-8680; (919) 968-1158 Spouse: Michele Leigh Carlson Richard G. Carlson Rua Dr. Armando da Silva Prado 379, 04672-041 Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil; 55-1156863972; richardcarlson@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Dorothy Carlson Daniel H. Carmichael 15317 Stoney Spring Rd., Edmond, OK 73013 Surgeon Spouse: Walta Wilkinson Carmichael Tony Carroll 710 Cathcart Rd., Blue Bell, PA 19422-1406; (610) 275-9456; southshi@alumni.princeton.edu President and Owner, Southshire Enterprises, 710 Cathcart Rd., Blue Bell, PA 19422; (610) 270-3950 Spouse: Jean Sullivan Carroll 68 James F. Carter 12134 Lawler St., Los Angeles, CA 90066-1906; jimc@math.ucla.edu Computer Programmer, Mathematics Department, University of California at Los Angeles, 405 Hilgard Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90095; (310) 825-2897 Thomas P. Carter 2593 Taylor’s Gap Rd., North Garden, VA 22959; (434) 979-1484; tpcarter@cstone.net Assistant Professor Spouse: Ruth Rollins Carter John W. P. Cartwright (Jake) 231 Arbor Lane, San Mateo, CA 94403-3337; (650) 358-0774; jcartwright@tagaviation.com President and Chief Executive Officer, TAG Aviation USA, Inc., 111 Anza Blvd., Burlingame, CA 94010; (650) 342-1717 Spouse: Deborah Milson Cartwright Peter A. Cary 3237 Highland Lane, Fairfax, VA 22031-2809; (703) 849-8524 U.S. News & World Report, 2400 N St., NW, Washington, DC 20037; (202) 955-2031 Michael D. Case 1833 Dolce Dr., Las Vegas, NV 89134-6151 Tire Distributor, Charlie Case Tire Company, 3655 West Quail Ave., Las Vegas, NV 89118; (702) 736-0577 J. Lauson Cashdollar 734 Fourth St., Beaver, PA 15009-2107; (724) 728-4440; jlauson@cashdollar.com Attorney, The Fourth St. Professional Building, 640 Fourth St., Beaver, PA 15009; (724) 728-4440 69 Juan M. Castro 2404 Culpeper Rd., Alexandria, VA 22308; (703) 360-0116; juan.castro@hq.doe.gov Senior Cost Analyst, U.S. Department of Energy, SO-1, Room 1J-051, Washington, DC 20585 Spouse: Isis Perez Castro Bruce S. T. Chang 7378 Wolf Spring Trace, Louisville, KY 40241 Nephrologist, Nephrology Associates, 100 West Market St., Louisville, KY 40202-1332 Ralph R. Chasteen 9044 Shady Grove Rd., Mechanicsville, VA 23116-2838; (804) 730-9073; ralphchasteen@yahoo.com Sales consultant, Professional Beauty Supply, 7090 Golden Ring Rd., Rosedale, MD 21237-5501; (410) 391-4800 Children: Carter After leaving Princeton in June of 1966, my wife and I moved to Philadelphia, where I took a sales position with Sunbeam Corporation. The Army yanked me away in November of 1966, and kept me for a twoyear stint. I was lucky to have duty in Germany, unlike so many classmates who went to Vietnam. I returned to my sales position in Philadelphia in 1968. A transfer took me to Richmond, Virginia, in 1969, and another took me to Pittsburgh in 1973. In 1979 I left Sunbeam to join an independent manufacturer’s rep firm, returning to the Richmond area, where I remain today. In 1991 I left the rep company to create a market in Richmond for a Baltimore-based distributor. I am still with that firm on a part-time basis. In addition, I am treasurer and partial owner of a successful day-spa company in this area. My wife, Eugenie, whom some of you knew, and I did not have children of our own, but we did have several foster children. One of them, Carter, we adopted. Eugenie and I separated in 1981 and then divorced in 1985. She passed away in Seattle in 2002. I have been in a committed domestic partnership for many years and look forward to continued happiness and challenge. If all goes according to plan, we will phase into retirement over the next two or three years. Or am I speaking only for myself? Perhaps I can be a kept man, tending my gardens, traveling, and enjoying the fruits of much labor over the past 40 years. I appreciate the enormous changes that have taken place at Princeton since our days on campus. The university continues to move forward in 70 ways which should all make us proud. The only really sad note in all of this for me is that the changes in social opportunities have forced the closing of several of the eating clubs, places of relaxation and enjoyment, good fun, and great friendships. The Princeton Campus Club, of which I was president in 1965-66, is now closed. The only happy note in this matter is that the club will be given to the university and the building will continue to serve the student body in many of the ways that it served us many years ago. I shed a tear of nostalgia while happily eying the future. Leighton Chen 117 Einstein Way, East Windsor, NJ 08512-2548; (609) 448-9525; leighton@riviera-ew.com Spouse: Kay Wang Chen (professor) Children: Christine, 12/1/75; Stephanie, 1/6/87 As predicted in my 35th Christine ’97, Kay, Stephanie ’09, and Reunion Book entry, retirement < 5 years — the deed is done. The Leighton Chen in Tahiti, July 2005. mantra now is to live life to the fullest — especially coming from the perspective of a cancer survivor. Life is too short to miss out on doing the things one always wanted to do. That has meant (in the last five years) balancing family trips (Galapagos, China, Caribbean, Tahiti, and Egypt) with adventure trips: biking the Dolomites, Greece, and the Alpine stage roads of the 2004 Tour de France (cheering Lance onto three stage wins); rafting the Middle Fork of the Salmon River; and cross-country skiing Yellowstone. My newest toy is a kayak that I bought with the proceeds from my 40-year-old racing bike, and I promptly explored practically all the local streams and lakes nearby. That’s been a good cross-training activity to complement the 2,000 miles or so I rack up each year on my modern road and mountain bikes. The empty nest created by our youngest daughter, Stephanie, entering Princeton with the Class of ’09 allowed us to downsize by moving to a new home minutes from Princeton. This has made it easy to audit interesting courses at Old Nassau and take advantage of all the other exciting intellectual and cultural events happening on campus. I have grown even more appreciative about how special Princeton really is. Stephanie even ended up at Forbes College, on the same floor and wing where Christine ’97 lived as a student. I’m particularly pleased that Stephanie’s Outdoor Action freshman trip kindled an interest in wilderness backpacking and motivated her to enroll in leadership training. Her 71 Joel M. Cherlow 3305 East First St., Long Beach, CA 90803-2607; (562) 433-8397; joelmc@aol.com Radiation Oncologist, Long Beach Memorial Medical Center, Department of Radiation Oncology, 2801 Atlantic Ave., Long Beach, CA 90801; (562) 933-0300 Spouse: Fran Levine Cherlow 72 ALAN RICHARDS dance and gymnastics background has given her the movement balance needed for wall climbing and snowboarding, her current athletic passions. She’s ecstatic that she got into her freshman seminar on computer animation and has already put her computer skills to use as the Leighton Chen leading the 1966 Triangle Club webmaster. Christine has, in her own words, National Collegiate Champions. lived out her dreams by dancing and touring with STREB, a troupe characterized by David Letterman as “making dance into an extreme sport” during their appearance on that show. Her other highlights have included dancing at Jazz in Lincoln Center and being twirled around on a revolving flying arm in a widely televised Cirque du Soleil Midnight Sun show in Montreal. She has been featured in The New York Times, the New Yorker, and in a close-up profile in the Princeton Alumni Weekly. One of her tour performances was at the University of Wisconsin’s Union Theater in Madison, where Kay and I first met. Kay is happy to have her commute lessened by half an hour from our new home and still be able to play with all her established tennis teammates from our old home in Marlboro. She even moonlights as an adjunct professor at the local community college while still teaching a full course load in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. She didn’t miss a beat by qualifying for USTA sectionals in her age group. Both Kay and I have been able to make new friends playing tennis in our new community, as well as taking advantage of the extensive recreational facilities in our “active adult” development, literally right across the street. In summary, I don’t miss the workplace and am quite content optimizing our asset allocation to insure continued financial independence. It’s great having both daughters close by so we can cheerlead everything they do. Ours is truly a Princeton family. Stephen H. Chertock Apt. 711, 5904 Mount Eagle Dr., Alexandria, VA 22303-2538; 703-960-3383; schertock@aol.com Strategic Analyst, Defense Logistics Agency, Stop 6226, 8725 John J. Kingman Rd., Ft. Belvoir, VA 22060-6221; (703) 767-3547 Spouse: Laura C. Chertock (teacher) Children: Michael, 1967; Amy, 1970; Nicholas, 1975 Robert N. Chester Managing Director, Lakefront Property, Ltd., PO Box 199, Zephyr Cove, NV 89448-0199; (775) 588-8005; rchester@rchester.com Spouse: Annetta Rosenhaus Chester John H. Chidester 6 Hayfield Rd., Malvern, PA 19355-9737; fyremaker@aol.com Orthopaedic Surgeon, Paoli Memorial Hospital, Suite 2, 254 West Lancaster Pike, Malvern, PA 19355; (610) 644-5040 Spouse: Rosemary Chidester Sunday C. Chikwendu 22 Pinecrest Rd., New Paltz, NY 12561-1318; (845) 255-6383 Professor and Department Chair, Mathematics Department, SUNY/ New Paltz, New Paltz, NY 12561; (845) 257-3564 Spouse: Eudora E. Chikwendu William A. Childress 192 North Cove Rd., Old Saybrook, CT 06475-2537; (860) 388-2118 Attorney Spouse: Randi J. Bradbury 73 Lance A. Chilton 2604 Candelaria Rd., N.W.; Albuquerque, NM 87107-2911; (505) 345-3130; lancekathy@yahoo.com Pediatrician, Young Children’s Health Center, 306-A San Pablo S.E.,Albuquerque, NM 87108, (505) 262-7594 Spouse: Katherine Vonbriesen Chilton Children: Annelise Bauer, 10/2/71; Noel Chilton de Castro, 12/24/73 I arrived on what we then called the PJ&B one warm early fall afternoon 44 years ago, a poor boy from the West. I write this four decades later, still a relatively poor boy (compared to the classmates of whom I read in PAW) in the West. Relative poverty and a far-away location are among the reasons I won’t join you for our 40th reunion. Some would say I live a dull, placid life; others that my life is full of excitement. I like both aspects. I have been married to the same woman for 38 years, have lived in the same house for 31 years, and had the same job for 23 years before I recently changed to one where medicine would not be so dominated by financial considerations, where I can serve poor families as I would like. But I have hiked to where I had a fine view of Mt. Everest, have bicycled with my brother Jan from Canada to Mexico, have camped in rain, hail, and snow (and occasionally clear weather) and have skidded down a Sausalito hill with rollerblades on my feet and less than the usual amount of skin on my seat. My department chairman at my first University of New Mexico job called me a dilettante, which I disputed at the time. He wanted me to become an expert at something. But he was right. He was talking about pediatrics: I loved and love taking care of healthy children; I loved and love figuring out complex medical problems; I loved and love the challenge of devising public-health solutions to community problems. So he was right about my tastes in pediatrics, and the same is true of my other interests — I don’t seem to settle down and become expert at anything. But I love the sums: my life as a pediatrician and my life as a person and member of a family. I have loved my family when it was a matter of changing diapers or attending unnumbered soccer games, and now when it means keeping up with the doings of my talented daughters and their husbands and children, my delightful grandchildren. I have tried to be as supportive as anyone could be of my wife Kathy’s career as a teacher and artist, but no one could be as supportive of someone else’s career as she has been of mine. I love music (Haydn’s Creation at the moment I’m writing this), even though I’m only a rhythm-impaired recorder player; I love the outdoors, even though I don’t get out there nearly enough; I love woodworking, even though my 88-by-92-degree chest lists in our dining room; I love basketball, even though I have a very inconsistent jumpshot. I love to read, even 74 though my library card goes unused for weeks at a time; I love art-gallery hopping, even though I am at a third-grade level in my artistic knowledge; I love tapping away at what my favorite almost-Aunt Lilo, whom I first met during my Princeton days, called my “infernal flickeroo,” even though I know the Dell Computer tech-support folks by their first names. I often muse at how much of my life has been determined by chance. For example, the chance to study at the University of California during my senior year in high school led me to a summer job as a park ranger at four parks in four years. My lack of a social life at Princeton meant that I wanted to leave after two years, so I entered medical school at Johns Hopkins early and met my wife as a student at Goucher College in Baltimore. The Vietnam War determined that I would have to serve my country, so I chose the Indian Health Service. Two very fulfilling years in Gallup, New Mexico, followed — though I had to go to Pittsburgh to finish residency, there wasn’t any chance I’d spend the rest of my life there, so I returned to the Southwest and have been involved for many years in Indian child health. This in turn led me into involvement with the American Academy of Pediatrics, where I’ve greatly enjoyed sharing endless meetings with similarly committed colleagues from throughout the country. Driving around one Sunday after attending a Pueblo Indian dance, my wife and I stumbled on the house in a semirural part of Albuquerque near the Rio Grande where we’ve lived ever since. I saw a pair of used rollerblades at a ski swap and picked them up and have zipped around Albuquerque (and Sausalito) ever since. How would life be different if any of these events hadn’t happened? One of my two daughters attended Princeton (the other was offered admission but chose to go elsewhere) — that wasn’t by chance. As a member of the Class of 1994, Annelise loved her time there in a way I did not; of course, those of a female persuasion weren’t there at our time, which was one of the problems. She has already been to more reunions in her 11 years than I have in my 40, but she also stayed there twice as long as I did. I salute my classmates and hope the 40th is a fine one. Russell L. Ching 1707 Nalulu Pl., Honolulu, HI 96821-1338; (808) 377-5393; rlccym@aol.com Partner, Ching Yuen & Morikawa, Suite #2770, Pacific Tower, 1001 Bishop St., Honolulu, HI 96813; (808) 524-8880 Spouse: Kathleen Chang Ching 75 Anthony F. Christhilf Attorney, 124 South St., Annapolis, MD 21401; (410) 269-6424 John P. Classen 7783 Via Cassano, Burbank, CA 91504-1102; (818) 768-6217 Spouse: Rachel Simon Classen Curtis L. Clay 320 North Marion St., Oak Park, IL 60302; (708) 848-6645; curtis@harlanjberk.com Spouse: Maria Clay Robert C. Clendenin 7250 Yuba Rd., Williamsburg, MI 49690-9376; (231) 264-8110 Spouse: Patricia Ann Clendenin Charles E. Coco 17 Hortense Pl., St. Louis, MO 63108-1207; (314) 367-4495; cocoed1@aol.com President, Protein Technologies International, 901 Chouteau Ave., St. Louis, MO 63102; (314) 982-1179 Spouse: Catherine Kelty Coco Edward M. Coe Inst. Hondureno of Turismo, Apartment 154-C, Tegucigalpa, Honduras Arthur Cohen 19 Flag Lane, Manhasset Hills, NY 11040-1049; (516) 352-4370; cohensq@optonline.net OB/GYN, 2001 Marcus Ave., Lake Success, NY 11042; (516) 488-2757 Spouse: Nancy Ellen Cohen (teacher) Children: Ira D. Cohen, 4/13/70; Douglas M. Cohen, 2/12/72; Lori B. Nevins, 5/12/75 Arthur and Nancy Cohen 76 June 1, 2006, is both the beginning of our great 40th and my 40th wedding anniversary. Nancy and I were married and honeymooned during the week between finals and graduation. After medical school we settled on Long Island. I practiced obstetrics and gynecology for The Cohen kids and families: Jordyn, Jen, Ira, Cole, Lori, Howard, and Doug. well over 30 years in the community near where we both grew up. Being an obstetrician gave me entry into the real world of humanity; caring for families in the most personal chapter of their lives. For the past two years I have restricted my practice to gynecology. This gave me considerable free time to spend with my three children, their two spouses, significant other, and especially my two grandchildren (a third is due on July 4). Our family spends much of the summer together at our home in Southampton, where we can enjoy the beaches and fun of outdoor living. Life has been hard work and rewarding since college. Nancy and I look forward to spending our anniversary at Princeton, rekindling the friendships we enjoyed at that time in our lives. Jack A. Cohen 36 South New Jersey Ave., Blackwood, NJ 08012-2940; (856) 228-4855 Professor, Department of Psychology, Camden County College, Blackwood, NJ 08012; (856) 227-7200 Jack D. B. Coleman 212 East Benezet St., Philadelphia, PA 19118-4411; (215) 242-0642; jcoleman@penncharter.com Teacher, William Penn Charter School, 3000 West Schoolhouse Lane, Philadelphia, PA 19144; (215) 844-3460 Spouse: Roxane Coleman Bruce E. Constant 300 York St., Burlington, NJ 08016-1513 77 Charles O. Cook 740 Adams St., Denver, CO 80206-3932; (303) 355-9338; W.G. Watson Group, Inc., Suite 140, 3525 South Tamarac, Denver, CO 80237; (303) 741-5100 chazzc53@aol.com Lawrence P. Cook POB 3258, Gaithersburg, MD 20885-3258; l.p.cook@att.net Research Chemist, National Institute of Standards & Tech., Ceramics Division, Gaithersburg, MD 20899; (301) 975-6114 Stephen S. Cook (Steve) 566 River Rd., Belle Mead, NJ 08502-4702; (908) 359-0557; snmrcook@aol.com Orthopedic Surgeon, University Orthopaedics Associates, 211 North Harrison St., Princeton, NJ 08540; (732) 545-0203 Spouse: Nina Wormser Cook (domestic engineer) Children: Jennifer, 2/19/68; Stephen, 7/9/70; Matthew, 10/29/86; Rebecca, 8/13/89 Work is fulfilling and productive in spite of all the impediments to being a surgeon in the present climate. I can’t recommend the profession to my son. Life with Nina, my love and boss, could not be better: four children, five grandchildren, a Division I hockey player (at Union — P.U. did not want him) playing on a team that regularly beats Princeton. I am still playing hockey for the Minnesota Old Timers in the over-60s national tournaments. It’s great playing with my brothers and old pros. We finally figured out how to catch tuna and get them home fresh. Nina is now a high-level sushi chef — a great treat for all. Stop by if you’re in town! We’re only four miles north off Rt. 206. James M. Cooper POB 465, East Glacier Park, MT 59434-0465; (406) 226-9350 Spouse: Nell Simunic Cooper 78 John C. Corckran 112 St. Johns Rd., Baltimore, MD 21210-2124; (410) 435-2255; jcorthe3@aol.com President, Clendenin Brothers, Inc., 4309 Erdman Ave., Baltimore, MD 21213; (410) 327-4500 Spouse: Pamela Corckran David M. Corcoran 4206 Stanford St., Chevy Chase, MD 20815-5212; (301) 986-1407 Physician, 4206 Stanford St., Chevy Chase, MD 20815; (301) 986-1407 Paul Edward Corcoran 16 Clifton St., Prospect 5082 SA, Australia; 61-882694768; paul.corcoran@adelaide.edu.au Associate Professor of Politics, Department of Politics, University of Adelaide, Adelaide 5005 SA, Australia, 61-883035609 Carl W. Corey 88 Bellevue St., West Roxbury, MA 02132-2643; (617) 323-4763; cwcorey@alumni.princeton.edu Teacher and Department Head Spouse: Barbara Sherman Corey Foster H. Corwith 10 Solana Court, Santa Barbara, CA 93109; (805) 563-5149; fcorwith@aol.com Spouse: Margaret Corwith (retired) Children: Foster, 6/15/78; Kate, 12/19/80 Foster Corwith at the Grand Canyon, 2005. Stephen M. Craig 517 Blue Ridge Rd., Indianapolis, IN 46208-3609; (317) 283-7744 Management Consultant, 517 Blue Ridge Rd., Indianapolis, IN 46208; (317) 283-7744 79 Douglas W. Crase Apt. 6D, 470 West 24th St., New York, NY 10011-1209; (212) 989-5706 Laurence D. Cromwell 21 Trescott Rd., Etna, NH 03750; (603) 643-6452; laurence.d.cromwell@hitchcock.org Professor, Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center, Department of Radiology, One Medical Center Dr., Lebanon, NH 03766; (603) 650-8315 Spouse: Deborah Davis Cromwell Jay C. Cross 30 Poppy Lane, Berkeley, CA 94708-1408; (510) 525-9487; jaycross@alumni.princeton.edu Chief Executive Officer, Internet Time Group, 30 Poppy Lane, Berkeley, CA 94708-1408; (510) 528-3105 Spouse: Uta Bawey Cross Ernest Cruikshank 14 Long Way, Hopewell, NJ 08525-9740; (609) 466-1304; ecruikshank@jamisonfirst.com Senior Vice President, Jamison Eaton & Wood, Inc., 39 Main St., Chatham, NJ 07928; (973) 635-6700 Paul E. Culley 6635 Bayou Grande Blvd., N.E., St. Petersburg, FL 33702-4725; (727) 521-1233; peculley@hotmail.com Senior Vice President, Sun Bank, Tampa, FL 33602 Spouse: Emily Culley William C. Cummings POB 121, Oregon, WI 53575-0121 President, Accessible Consulting, 104 South Shuman St., Verona, WI 53593; (608) 848-8649 80 Henry F. Cygan 17 Towhee Dr., Topsham, ME 04086-1590; hcygan@mindspring.com President, Cygan and Associates, 17 Towhee Dr., Topsham, ME 04086-1590 Spouse: Susan Bysshe Cygan Bernard J. D’Avella (Bud) 105 Rensselaer Rd., Essex Fells, NJ 07021-1400; (973) 228-9153; bdavella@alumni.princeton.edu President & Chief Executive Officer, Prudent Publishing Company, 65 Challenger Rd., Bud D’Avella with Elaine, sons BJ (left) Ridgefield Park, NJ 07660and Anthony (right), BJ’s wife Laura, 2140; (201) 641-7900, ext. 300 and Bud’s mom, July 2005. Spouse: Elaine Benucci D’Avella Children: Bernard J. III, 10/3/75; Anthony, 5/22/78 Alan R. Dahl 4731 Waterloo Rd., Canal Winchester, OH 43110-8810; (614) 834-5807 Spouse: Mary Frieberg Dahl Robert F. Darling Seventh Floor, 2238 Hyde St., San Francisco, CA 94109-1546; (415) 474-3993 Senior Counsel, Wells Fargo Bank, NA, Seventh Floor, 633 Folsom St., San Francisco, CA 94107 John E. Davenport 1112 Bellegrove Pl., Charlotte, NC 28270; (704) 846-5357; jdaven@carolina.rr.com Physician, Mecklenburg Medical Group P.A., 201 E. Matthews St., Matthews, NC 28105; (704) 321-7500 Spouse: Susan Milly Davenport (Director of Technology, Charlotte Latin School) Children: Benjamin, 3/9/75; Daniel, 10/6/77; Rebecca, 2/25/81 Forty years? Is that right? Doesn’t seem like it, but I guess someone’s 81 been keeping track. Let me summarize the first 25 years in what seems to be about the same time it took to live them. Following the “Rule of Four” established in high school and college, I left engineering in 1970 and spent the next four years in medical school, followed by three years of residency (which seemed like four). I volunteered for the Indian Health Service in Cherokee, North Carolina, and moved on Davenport birthday gathering, 2005. four years later to an internalmedicine practice in Charlotte. Somewhere along the way I matured enough to escape the four-year cycle and have been in Charlotte ever since with the same practice and (since ’71) the same wife, Susan. Now for the last 15! A year after our 25th (which I was not privileged to attend) our first child asked to visit Princeton and that started a chain of events which warmed my heart and emptied my wallet. Now Ben ’98, Daniel ’00, and Rebecca ’03 are spread out across the country but, sadly, share no major reunions with me. Not very good planning on my part, I confess. With far fewer science fairs, athletic events, and algebra homework reviews to keep me busy, I have found more time for running, swimming, and biking, with a rare marathon and occasional triathlon thrown in to assess the competition. That is still pretty tough in the 60-65 age group, so I am hoping to outlast everyone else and grow old enough to be considered “cute” instead of just slow. In my quieter moments I am working on my Spanish to improve communication with the increasing number of Hispanics whom I see in my practice and in the city’s free clinic, where I work once a month. Stamina is not what it once was, but I’m OK as long as I’m in bed by 8:30. Now, looking forward to our 50th, I hope to be able to write then about retirement, grandkids, same wife, and a completed ironman. My guess is that odds are good for the first three and long for the last. Stay tuned! Ralph A. Davies 130 Beech St., Pittsburgh, PA 15218; (412) 243-2257; rdavies@dmcpc.com Attorney and Managing Director, Davies McFarland & Carroll, PC, 10th Floor, One Gateway Center, Pittsburgh, PA 15222; (412) 281-0737 Spouse/Partner: Anne Lorenzetti Davies 82 Clay S. Davis 2313 Dawns Pass, Knoxville, TN 37919-9104; (865) 693-6137; csdavis@tva.gov Senior Attorney, Tennessee Valley Authority, 400 West Summit Hill Drive, Knoxville, TN 37902; (865) 632-7774 Spouse: Anita Jane Davis Dennis B. Davis 310 Salem Ave., Spring Lake, NJ 07762-1043; (732) 449-5738; dennisbdavis@aol.com President, Tiger Construction Service Corporation, 5051 Industrial Rd., Farmingdale, NJ 07727; (732) 919-7002 Spouse: Susan Reynolds Davis James V. Davis P.O. Box 1969, Gambier, OH 43022-1969 George L. Dawson 3855 N.W. 35th Pl., Gainesville, FL 32606-6163; (352) 372-3881 Professor, College of Law, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611; (352) 392-6812 Spouse: Sally Dawson Jonathan T. Dawson Six Shore Haven Rd., Norwalk, CT 06855; (203) 852-1944; jon@dscm.com Chairman of the Board, Dawson-Herman Capital Management, Inc., 354 Pequot Ave., P.O. Box 760, Southport, CT 06890; (204) 254-0091 Spouse: Deborah Pratt Dawson David K. De Longe 79 Cypress St., Millburn, NJ 07041-2026; (973) 763-0236 83 Donald P. Delisi (Don) 4805 134th Place, SE, Bellevue, WA 98006-3478; (425) 747-3341; don@nwra.com Senior Research Scientist and Chairman of the Board, NorthWest Research Associates, Inc., 14508 NE 20th St., Bellevue, WA 98007-3713; (425) 644-9660 Adele, Bergen, and Don Delisi in Spouse: Adele Orr Delisi Stalheim, Norway, September 2005. (speech and language pathologist) Children: Bergen, 8/20/80 Life has been a blast. I have a great family (one wife and one son) and probably the best job in the world, as a scientist. If, when young, anyone would have told me I would have to survive on soft money for 35 years, I would have said, “Forget it,” and found something else. It’s a good thing no one told me, for I wouldn’t trade it for anything. I have interesting work, people fly me all over the world to give talks (do I really know anything they don’t, or do I just have it better organized?), and they pay me, too! It’s been great! For the facts: I helped found NorthWest Research Associates (NWRA) in 1984. We now have 80 employees in five states, and are continuing to grow. Our emphasis is geophysical fluid dynamics, with many scientists working in ocean or atmospheric science. My own specialty is fluid mechanics, and I currently have work with the FAA, NASA, and ONR, mostly on aircraft wake vortices. I successfully got out of being president of NWRA (too much work and not enough fun), and I am now senior research scientist, executive vice president, and chairman of the board. It’s been great fun! Charles F. Dewey Apt. 1804-C, 460 South Marion Parkway, Denver, CO 80209-2588; (303) 778-1177 Attorney Spouse/Partner: Andrea I. Williams 84 Dallas P. Dickinson 27 Back Cove Estates, Portland, ME 04103; (207) 828-5330 Brian H. Dickson P.O. Box 500 (Delhi), Station A, Ottawa, ON K1N 8T7, Canada Director, United Nations & Commonwealth Aff. Div., 125 Sussex Drive, Ottawa, ON K1A 0G2, Canada; (613) 943-0248; brian.dickson@dfait-maeci.gc.ca Spouse/Partner: Kate Irene Dickson John H. DiLiberti 612 Aberdeen Dr., Chapel Hill, NC 27516-4461; (919) 960-7235; jdiliberti@nc.rr.com Pediatrician and Epidemiologist Spouse/Partner: Cynthia R. DiLiberti David B. Dollenmayer 6 Proctor St., Hopkinton, MA 01748-1157; (508) 435-6351; dbd@wpi.edu Professor of German, Department of Humanities and Arts, Worcester Polytechnic Inst., 100 Institute Rd., Worcester, MA 01609; (508) 831-5246 Spouse: Linda A. Pape Dollenmayer Children: Kate, 1/1/76; Sam, 10/13/84 Bruce McA. Draudt 163 Clinton Heights Ave., Columbus, OH 43202-1245; (614) 267-1442 Banker, 163 Clinton Heights Ave., Columbus, OH 43202-1245; (614) 267-1442 Spouse: Nancy Ellis Draudt Steven R. Duback 3212 North Summit Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53211-3151; (414) 964-9318 Partner, Quarles & Brady, 411 East Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53202; (414) 277-5883 Spouse: Sally Wood Duback 85 William J. Ducas 194 Village Ave., Dedham, MA 02026-4231; (781) 329-3431; wjd@attbi.com Managing Director, F&C Management, Suite 450, 30 Rowes Wharf, Boston, MA 02110; (617) 426-9050 Spouse/Partner: Sarah Ducas William M. Duncan (Bill) 67 Washburn Rd., Canton, CT 06019-2218; (860) 693-2165; wmduncan@mac.com; www.billduncan.us Assistant General Counsel, CIGNA Corporation, Investment Law Division, 280 Trumbull St., Hartford, CT 06103 Spouse: Susan Richardson Duncan Stephen S. Dunham 650 Emerson St., Denver, CO 80218-3217; (303) 860-0434 Attorney, Morrison & Foerster LLP, Suite 5200, 370 17th St., Denver, CO 80218; (303) 592-2251 Spouse: Victoria Cass Dunham Edward R. Durkee Apt. 2, 2101 North Lamar Blvd., Austin, TX 78705-4930; edurkee@athenara.com Henry A. Dwyer 4929 North Keystone Ave., Chicago, IL 60630-2808; (773) 286-8262; unclek@att.net Spouse/Partner: Helen J. Murray Henry Dwyer and Helen Murray 86 Leroy Eakin (Terry) 5060 Millwood Lane, NW, Washington, DC 20016-2620; (202) 364-4241; terrye@eya.com CEO & Chairman of the Board, EYA, LLC, Suite 300, 4800 Hampden Lane, Bethesday, MD 20814; 301 634-8600 Spouse: Lindsay McKelvie Eakin (part-time teacher) The Eakins on the slopes in Utah Children: Emily; Rory; Alison; Allan I’m still working at EYA, a Washington, DC–area urban residential builder I helped to start 15 years ago, and I am still enjoying the experience. I’m very pleased that I am happily married to Lindsay for over 30 years and that we have four wonderful children. I enjoy golf, tennis, and skiing, and I am thankful that my health remains good. Over the last few years Lindsay and I have been active in starting new charter schools in Washington. Some of my best friends today are Princeton classmates who also went to Stanford Business School with me, as the photo below left, taken in Palo Alto in 1967, testifies. Princeton ’66ers line up in a singlewing formation at Stanford in 1967. Backfield: George Weiksner, Frank Remley, George Largay, and Bill Reed. Line: Jon Dawson, Rick Jones, Ken Boudwin, Terry Eakin, Tom Curto [’65], and John Scully. At John Scully’s L.I. home in 2004. Backfield: Weiksner, Largay, and Reed. Line: Dawson, Lloyd Bentsen, Eakin, and Scully. 87 Carl E. Eastwick 5 Yearling Way, Lutherville, MD 21093-4590; (410) 583-0115; ceast@alumni.princeton.edu Attorney, Semmes Bowen & Semmes, 250 West Pratt St., 16th Floor, Baltimore, MD 21201; (410) 576-4786 Spouse: Juliette Fox Eastwick (teacher) College: Chestnut Hill College, 1967 Children: Matthew C. Eastwick, 3/15/70; Edward (Ted) C. Eastwick, 2/9/74 O. Seaburn Eaton 1831 South Hull St., Montgomery, AL 36104-5623; (334) 264-3020 President, The Eaton Group, Inc., 1831 South Hull St., Montgomery, AL 36104; (334) 264-3020 Spouse: Kingsley Briggs Eaton Robert S. Edelman Department of History, University of California at San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92037; (858) 534-4096; redelman@ucsd.edu Spouse: Victoria Yablonsky Edelman John A. Edie (Edes) 11422 Cedar Ridge Dr., Potomac, MD 20854-3762; (301) 765-2277; john.edie@us.pwc.com Director, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, Suite 800-W, 1301 K St., Washington, DC 20005-3317; (202) 414-1569 Website: www.johnedie.com Spouse: Gail McPherson Edie (real estate broker) Children: Brian P. Keare, 07/21/68; Bradley S. Keare, 8/29/70; Nathan C. Hubbard, 5/25/75; Samantha S. Shanley, 7/11/77; Joanna C. Edie, 06/17/81 The year 2003 was a big one for us, with a lot of changes. After 22 years as general counsel with the Council on Foundations in Washington, DC, I left to take a stab at independent consulting. A year later I was courted to join PricewaterhouseCoopers in its national tax office as a director in the nonprofit group, where I now help represent foundations and other nonprofits before Congress and the IRS. We also help a wide variety of foundations and other charities on a broad assortment of governance and tax-compliance matters. That same year, Gail and I sold 88 our seven-bedroom house of 20 years in Bethesda where we raised our five kids and moved to a townhouse (a painful transition to which we are slowly adjusting). On a more positive note, four of our five children are safely through graduate school and four are happily married. We have four delightful granddaughters. One of the brighter parts of our lives is our summer home on Beaver Island in Lake Winnipesaukee, New Hampshire. We bought two undeveloped acres on the northwest point of this delightful island in 1991. (The island is about a half mile long and has six other houses on it.) We completed building a house in 1997 and get up there all we can (working on a second guest house). I love golf, and my game is slowly improving. I have a bit of a wine collection and enjoy reading about and tasting wine whenever possible. For exercise I run, play racquetball, and lift weights. My health is pretty good (I was blessed with good knees and ankles) and all would be better if I could drop some pounds (have lost 15 since October ’05). I am pretty much liberal on social issues and conservative on fiscal issues and worried that the current administration skipped macroeconomics (Econ 102) in college. Huge Redskins fan with wonderful season tickets. Gail — After raising our brood, Gail has had her hand in a wide variety of endeavors: teaching aerobics, coaching crew at a local girls’ school, and taking major leadership roles at our church in a variety of capacities. She recently obtained her real estate license and has completed a strong, successful rookie year in this new line of work. She has her own rowing shell and is out early in the morning (Potomac River or Lake Winnipesaukee) communing with nature and staying more fit than her spouse. Our son Brian (P.U.’90, age 37) is happily married and living in Pacific Palisades, California. He and wife Eleanor have two girls, Evan (7) and Avery (5). Both parents are Stanford Graduate School of Business grads, and Eleanor has been heading up a fast-growing company that makes bath products for children. Brian and Eleanor bought out the original owner in 2005 and are working to make this venture a success. Brad (Michigan ’92, age 35) is married to Alli Cole and living in Silver Spring, Maryland. Alli completed her Masters in Public Policy at Berkeley last year and is now with the Office of Management and Budget. Brad (with a business degree from George Washington) is working at the National Cooperative Bank in Washington, D.C. Nathan (P.U.’97, age 31) lives in Charlottesville, Virginia and is married to Lindsay; they have an 18-month-old daughter, Hailey. Both parents are also Stanford Business School graduates. Nathan is working for an entrepreneur, helping coordinate his many (mostly music-related) businesses, which includes managing the Charlottesville-based Dave Mathews Band. Up to very recently, Nathan (a singer and songwriter) had considerable success with his partner, Joti Rockwell, in producing five 89 CDs and touring the country with their acoustic rock group Rockwell Church. Lindsay has started back to work part-time with McKinsey. Our daughter Samantha (“Simi,” Middlebury ’99, age 28) just finished her Masters in Fine Arts at American University in creative writing. She has started part-time teaching a freshman writing course at American University. She and her husband, Pete Shanley, were married at our island home in August 2003. Peter works for Sapient providing software solutions to businesses and government. His security clearance (he’s a former Marine) helps bring in new business. They are the proud parents of Ila Claire Shanley, who arrived on December 10, 2005. Joanna (Pomona College ’03, age 24) is our struggling actress. She was one of 22 chosen from a pool of more than 3,000 applicants for a 10month apprentice program with Actors Theater of Louisville, learning all aspects of the theater business. Her work in Louisville ended in May 2005, capped by a “showcase” in New York City where she and the 21 other apprentices presented their talents to casting directors and other theater biggies. She is now teaching English in Valparaiso, Chile. If we had a pet, I would give you some details, but we don’t. I look forward to seeing all of you at the 40th ! John Saul Edwards 3745 Forest Rd., S.W., Roanoke, VA 24015-4509; (540) 343-7434; john_edwards@roacoxmail.com State Senator, 510 Sun Trust Plaza, 10 East Franklin Rd., P.O. Box 1179, Roanoke, VA 24006-1179; (540) 985-8625 Spouse: Sara Catherine Edwards Frank W. Eighme 8081 Phaeton Dr., Oakland, CA 94605-4214; (510) 569-5902; feighme@d11.uscg.mil Resource Coordinator, U.S. Coast Guard, Alameda, CA 94501; (510) 437-3941 Spouse: Kathryn A. Eighme 90 Richard H. Eisenhart (Rick) 76181 Shawnee Circle, Indian Wells, CA 92210-8743; (760) 340-2220; ricke@dc.rr.com Salesman, California Lifestyle Realty, 50-200 Avenida Vista Bonita, La Quinta, CA 92253; (760) 564-1200 Spouse: Tina Rose Eisenhart Children: Ashley, 06/16/74; Amanda, 05/16/77 The Eisenharts in La Quinta, California. Top: Amanda (Mandy), Tina, and Ashley. Bottom: Rick and Ashley’s husband, David Kolbe. Thomas F. Eismeier 29 Park St., Portland, ME 04101-4514; (207) 774-8030 Archibald C. Elias 318 West Highland Ave., Philadelphia, PA 19118-3731; (215) 247-2527; elias@chapline.net Spouse: Susan Elias William D. Elliot 2525 Orchard Dr., Billings, MT 59102; (406) 252-2597 Ord Elliott 485 Old La Honda Rd., Woodside, CA 94062-2618; (650) 529-2111; ord@changecompanion.com Chief Executive Officer, Change Companion, LLC, 485 Old La Honda Rd., Woodside, CA 94062-2618; (650) 529-2110 Spouse: Linda A. Elliott 91 Charles C. Emmons (Charlie) 98 Harborview Dr., Yarmouth, ME 04096-6517; (207) 847-9336; mons@maine.rr.com Senior Commercial Loan Officer, The Finance Authority of Maine, 5 Community Dr., POB 949, Augusta, ME 04332-0949; (207) 623-3263 Spouse: Margaret Howe Emmons Children: Beth, 1/3/70; Chip, 4/25/72; Matthew, 4/18/77 After 58 years (and raising a family for 35 years) in Baltimore, Margie and I moved to Yarmouth, Maine, in July 2002. I have been working as the senior commercial loan officer for the Finance Authority of Maine (a quasi-governmental agency), and am commuting from Yarmouth to Augusta every day. We moved to Maine to be closer to our daughter, Beth, and her family and our son, Chip, all of whom were living in Portland. This also brought us closer to our other son, Matthew, who lives in New Hampshire. Beth and her husband, Ben, have two daughters, Ellie, who is 4 1/2 years old, and Annie, 2 1/2. As I write this, a third child is expected within days. We delight in being closer to them. The move has been very interesting and the new job (after 33 years at the Bank of America and its predecessors) is proving to be challenging but rewarding. I have seen more of the state of Maine and met more business people and politicians than I ever thought I would as someone “from away.” Everyone should try to move every 58 years! Chalmers L. Ensminger 563 Pensinger Rd., Greencastle, PA 17225-9566 Gynecologist W. Douglas Ensminger 2602 Palo Pinto, Houston, TX 77080-3820; (713) 462-9060 Pastor Michael P. Equi 27 Wood Way, Cohasset, MA 02025-2127; (781) 383-0461; drtucker@email.msn.com 92 Joe Erlichster 1657 46th St., Brooklyn, NY 11204; (212) 358-8619 Attorney, 70 Orchard St., New York, NY 10002-4523; (212) 358-1959 Spouse: Suzan Friedman Lawrence J. Eron 686 Old Mokapu Rd., Kailua, HI 96819; lawrence.eron@kp.org Physician-Physical, 3288 Moanalua Rd., Honolulu, HI 96819; (808) 432-7848 Spouse: Donna Cheng Eron Robert L. Evans 44 Putnam St., West Newton, MA 02465; (617) 964-5048 Director, The Human Relations Service, 11 Chapel Place, Wellesley Hills, MA 02181; (781) 235-4950 Roger A. Evans 15 Laurel Ln., Durham, NH 038243131; (603) 868-2451; revans@alumni.princeton.edu Urologist, Gateway Urology, Suite #3, 17 Old Rollinsford Road, Dover, NH 03820, (603) 742-5011 Spouse: Sandra L. Evans (pharmacist) Children: Kathryn (Kasey), 1976; Andrew (Drew), 1978; Gregory, 1980 Top: Roger and Sandy Evans, left, with Kasey Evans ’98, Paul Stasi, Drew Evans ’00, and Greg Evans ’02, Calistoga, California, July 2005. Bottom: Nancy Haston, Francis Kwok ’66, Nancy Woelk s’66, Sandy Evans, Roger Evans, and Guy Woelk ’66. 93 Floyd R. Everhart 16359 East Berry Pl., Centennial, CO 80015-4052 Physician, Radiology Imaging Associates, Suite 250, 3900 South Wadsworth Blvd., Lakewood, CO 80235; (303) 695-2641 Spouse: Marlene Sue Everhart Irving C. Faber 1727 West Wellington Ave., Chicago, IL 60657-4154; (773) 935-6742 Attorney, Grippo & Elden, Suite 3600, 227 West Monroe St., Chicago, IL 60606; (312) 704-7754 Spouse: Paula E. Litt Philip J. Faillace 800 Dixon Way, Los Altos, CA 94022-1106; (650) 941-4245; pjfailla@alumni.princeton.edu President, Preferred Software, Inc., 800 Dixon Way, Los Altos, CA 94022-1106; (650) 941-5579 Spouse: Sheila Faillace H. Bartow Farr 1602 Caton Place, N.W., Washington, DC 20007; (202) 338-9383 Partner, Farr & Taranto, Suite 800, 1220 19th St., NW, Washington, DC 20036-2435; (202) 775-0184 Spouse: Teekie Wagner Far Carl B. Feldbaum POB 7161, Ketchum, ID 83340-7100; cfeldbaum@bio.org Spouse: Laura Jane Klein Feldbaum Michael B. Feldman 6218 Wagner Lane, Bethesda, MD 20816-1029; (301) 229-6951; mfeldman@gwu.edu Professor, Department of Computer Science, George Washington University, Washington, DC 20052; (202) 994-5919 Spouse: Ruth Tenzer Feldman 94 John Graham Findlay 2426 Dietz Farm Rd., N.W., Albuquerque, NM 87107-3151; (505) 344-1980; john@ustrc.com Marketing Director, United States Team Roping Championships, 2340 Menaul, NE, Suite 400, Albuquerque, NM 87107; (505) 899-1870, Ext. 120 Spouse: Nola Munz Findlay (mortgage loan officer) Children: Keith Findlay, 9/27/83; Nicholas Findlay, 8/10/85 Crops are high. Basement’s dry. Top: Nola and Graham Life is good. Findlay. Bottom: sons Keith, Mark, and Nicholas. Paul Elmer M. Fine 9 Holly Lodge Gardens, London N6 6AA, United Kingdom Professor of Communicable Disease Epidemiology, School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel St., London WC1, United Kingdom; 44-1719272219 Spouse: Valerie Beral Fine John D. Firestone 2320 Wyoming Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20008-1641; (202) 338-5065 Partner, Secor Group, Suite 303, 1101 30th St. NW, Washington, DC 20007-3708; (202) 337-8066 John L. Fischer 5504 Nakoma Dr., Dallas, TX 75209-5622; (214) 358-0453; jfi144@airmail.net President, Dealer Products, Inc., 719 109th St., POB 5527, Arlington, TX 76011; (817) 695-1818 Spouse: Susan Hewitt Fischer 95 Barry M. Fisher 56 East Bellevue Pl., Chicago, IL 60611-1111; (312) 649-9606; barry@fisherandshapiro.com Attorney and Managing Partner, Fisher & Shapiro, LLC, 4201 Lake Cook Rd., Northbrook, IL 60062; (847) 291-1717 Spouse: Cheryl Haber Fisher Children: Samantha, 4/72; Theodore, 5/73; Michelle, 4/84 Warren Anthony Fitch (Tony) 3333 N St., NW, Washington, DC 20007-2812; (202) 337-9084; wafitch@swidlaw.com Partner, Swidler Berlin LLP, Suite 300, 3000 K St., NW, Washington, DC 20007; (202) 424-7695 Children: Benjamin, 2/10/77; Nicholas, 7/10/81; Ashley, 3/16/83 Richard E. Fitzpatrick POB 1296, Rancho Santa Fe, CA 92067-1296; (858) 756-1227; fitzskin@pacbell.net Dermatologist and Partner, Dermatology Associates of San Diego, Suite B-303, 477 El Camino Real, Encinitas, CA 92024; (760) 753-1027 Spouse: Betsy Knuboff Fitzpatrick Graeme L. Flanders POB 807, Chilmark, MA 02535 Spouse: Judith Young Flanders Mark L. Fleder Four Kirkview Circle, Westfield, NJ 07090-3443; (908) 232-3043; mfleder@connellfoley.com Attorney, Connell Foley LLP, 85 Livingston Ave., Roseland, NJ 07068-3702; (973) 535-0500 Spouse: Carolyn Roles Fleder 96 James A. Folts 2641 N.W. Foothill Dr., Corvallis, OR 97330-3129; (541) 758-6225; jfolts@orst.edu Chairman, Department of Art, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331; (541) 737-5672 Spouse: Jeanene Louden Folts John B. Folts Box 4117, Spring Island, Okatie, SC 29909; jbfolts@aol.com President, Stanwich Investments, P.O. Box 4117, Spring Island, SC 29910 Spouse: Cynthia Warrick Michael A. Forastiere 12 Fernwood Rd., Westport, CT 06880-3707; (203) 226-4955 Managing Director, Bear Stearns & Co., Inc., 245 Park Ave., New York, NY 10167; (212) 272-6162 Spouse: Madeline Turchin Forastiere Burton A. Ford Five Maidstone Court, Skillman, NJ 08558-2221 Director of Development, Recording for the Blind and Dyslexic – NJ, 36A Hibben Rd., Princeton, NJ 08540; (609) 688-0486 Spouse: Marcia Ford Fredric J. Forster 1221 Starboard Way, Corona Del Mar, CA 92625-1321; (949) 759-8912 Principal, Capital Performance Advisors, 1221 Starboard Way, Corona del Mar, CA 92625-1321; (949) 759-8917 Spouse: Aviva Brunner Forster Spencer W. Franck 1929 Welsh Valley Rd., Malvern, PA 19355-9760; (610) 296-9072; sfranck@saul.com Partner, Saul Ewing, LLP, Suite 200, 1200 Liberty Ridge, Wayne, PA 19087-5055; (610) 251-5082 Spouse: Peggy Miller Franck 97 Howard S. Fredman 337 South Palm Dr., Beverly Hills, CA 90210; (310) 859-2775; hfredman@alumni.princeton.edu Attorney, Fredman/Lieberman LLP, Suite 2200, 1875 Century Park East, Los Angeles, CA 90067-2523; (310) 226-6796 Peter B. Freeman 2024 North Orleans St., Chicago, IL 60614-4715; (773) 529-4238; pbanddbfreeman@email.msn.com Attorney and Consultant, Cap Gemini Ernst & Young U.S. LLP, 10th Floor, Sears Tower, 233 South Wacker Drive, Chicago, IL 606066301; (312) 879-2926 Spouse: Donna B. Freeman Daniel P. French (Dan) 1127 North Sunset Dr., Piqua, OH 45356-4445; (937) 778-1626; dpfrench99@aol.com Chairman and President, French Oil Mill Machinery Company, 1035 W Greene St., POB 920, Piqua, OH 45356-0920; (937) 773-3420 Spouse: Margaret Loomis French (homemaker, performance artist) Children: Peter Loomis French, 4/26/76; Katherine Taylor “Tayte” French, 12/1/79 Philip C. Friday Suite 1150, 700 Lavaca St., Austin, TX 78701; (512) 328-0403 Attorney, 700 San Antonio St., Austin, TX 78701; (512) 472-9291 Spouse: Pam Friday Donald M. Friedman 1802 Waverly St., Philadelphia, PA 19146-1423; (215) 735-5328; dfried55@aol.com Chief of Rheumatology Section, Crozer-Chester Medical Center, 30 Medical Center Blvd., Chester, PA 19013; (610) 876-8882 98 John M. Friedman 80 Rocky Mountain Rd., Roxbury, CT 06783-1623; (860) 210-0060 Attorney, Dewey Ballantine, 1301 Ave. of the Americas, New York, NY 10019; (212) 259-7020 Spouse: Judith Z. Friedman Paul E. Friedman Apartment #8-B, 188 East 78th St., New York, NY 10021-0406; 917-842-9044; friedmannews@aol.com Journalist Spouse: Gillian R. Friedman (real estate) Children: Rebecca, 2/19/68; David, 10/4/69; Sarah, 5/10/80; Emily, 3/17/85 I count myself extremely lucky to have lived through the golden age of network television news (now over forever) and to have played many roles in it as a a writer, reporter, producer, executive producer, and executive. Now I am even more fortunate to have my health, and — like many of my classmates — with my wonderful children almost out of the house, I face the issues of what to do with the rest of my life: how much I want to work, at what, and where. Advice is welcome. Charles A. Fritz (Terry) 2476 Church Lane, Kintnersville, PA 18930-1616; (610) 847-5264; tfritz3@aol.com President, Charles H. Mueller Company, 7091 N. River Rd, New Hope, PA 18938; (215) 862-2033 Bruce Furie 175 Oakland St., Wellesley, MA 02481; (781) 237-2615; bfurie@alumni.princeton.edu Professor, Harvard Medical School, BIDeaconess Medical Center/RE 319, 330 Brookline Ave., Boston, MA 02215; (617) 667-0620 Spouse: Barbara Cantor Furie (biochemist) Children: Eric Furie, 10/7/73; Gregg Furie, 9/12/75 Barbara and Bruce Furie after receiving honorary degrees in medicine from the University of Lund (Sweden) in 2003. 99 Stephen J. Gaal P.O. Box 91, North Sandwich, NH 03259; (603) 284-7734; steve@gaal.com Managing Director, P.O. Box 91, North Sandwich, NH 03259; (603) 284-7183 Spouse: Wendy Whittemore Gaal David C. Garlow (Dave) 75 Poplar St., Apt 2F, Brooklyn, NY 11201; (718) 237-5128; dgarlow@nyc.rr.com Vice President, Country Risk Management, American International Group, 175 Water St., 14th Floor, New York, NY 10038; (212) 458-3563 Spouse: Eleanor Garlow (sales manager) Children: Marjorie, 6/26/77; Daniele, 8/27/79 Dave and Eleanor Garlow Bruce L. Gates 635 Church St. SE, Salem, OR 97301; (503) 585-8314; bgates@willamette.edu Professor of Management, Willamette University, Salem, OR 97301; (503) 370-6440 Children: Stephanie Lane, 10/94; Chloe Elizabeth, 10/01 Biggest change since our Bruce Gates with Chloe and Stephanie 25th is another daughter (Chloe) and another divorce. Mean age married is 13 years with a standard deviation of one. Consistency seems to be about the only thing I’ve got going for me on that front. Still enjoy teaching, researching, and consulting immensely. I still remember many of my favorite professors (which is probably odd considering how much I slept in) and give my best shot at emulating their knowledge and passion. (I think it’s the passion of my Princeton professors that ultimately caught on with me). Spend much time evaluating state-run lotteries and what they mean for our future financially 100 and morally. Despite persistent growth, believe we are near bankrupt on both counts. Biggest kick these days is being a dad. H. Burton Gay 3491-A Roswell Rd., Atlanta, GA 30305-1210; (404) 231-1910; bgay@marcusmillichap.com Income Property Broker, Marcus & Millichap, Suite 650, 1200 Abernathy Rd., Atlanta, GA 30328; (770) 393-1700 Spouse: Cynthia Lea Gay John J. Ghingher 901 Hillside View Rd., Parkton, MD 21120-9753; (410) 343-3221 Attorney and Partner, Saul Ewing, LLP, 16th Floor, 100 South Charles St., Baltimore, MD 21201; (410) 332-8748 Spouse: Patricia Moore Ghingher Gary W. Gilbert P.O. Box 11, Hollis, NH 03049-0011; (603) 465-2573 New York Manager, Treen Box & Pallet Corp., P.O. Box 713, Nashua, NH 03061; (603) 882-8931 Spouse: Lois M. Gilbert Thomas S. Gilbert 216 East 61st St., New York, NY 10021; (212) 759-0211; tgilbert@knowledgedelivery.biz Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Knowledge Delivery System, Inc., 36th Floor, 20 Exchange Pl., New York, NY 10017; (212) 809-2960 Spouse: Shelley Rea Gilbert John W. Glasser 1912 Edinburgh Terrace, Atlanta, GA 30307-1114; (404) 982-9681; jwg3@cdc.gov Mathematical Epidemiologist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Rd., NE., Atlanta, GA 30333; (404) 639-8256 Spouse: Jane E. Glasser 101 John Paul Godich 8014 Sargent Ridge, Indianapolis, IN 46256-1873; (317) 226-7572; john_godich@wiwd.uscourts.gov U.S. Magistrate Judge, U.S. Courts, Judiciary, U.S. Courthouse, Room 355, 46 East Ohio St., Indianapolis, IN 46204; (317) 229-3630 Spouse: Suzanne Geringer Godich Charles P. Gogolak 47 Village Ave., No.,211, Dedham, MA 02026-4233; (781) 326-0794; cpgogo@comcast.net Vice President, Institutional Sales, A.G. Edwards & Sons, Inc., Suite 3500, One Boston Pl., Boston, MA 02108; (617) 523-9133 Spouse: Marion Madeira Gogolak Daniel R. Goldenson (Dan) Apt. 2, 29 Chauncy St., Cambridge, MA 02138-2418; (617) 945-4466; dan@referencenet.com Real-estate Developer, Medical Publisher; 617-945-8300 Spouse: Suzanne Kimmel Goldenson (food writer) Children: Andrew, 1/30/74; Jeffrey, 8/17/76 The past 10 years have been fun, productive, and gratifying for our whole family. Our oldest son, Andy, graduated from Cornell Engineering (’96) and then received a Masters in Engineering from Cornell in 1997. He married Jennie Markes at our farm near Damariscotta, Maine, in 2003, Four generations of Goldensons: and they have produced a son, Suzanne, Dan, Andy, Max, and Dan’s Max, who just turned one in mom, Irene w’30. January of this year. Andy has started an exciting engineering R&D company in the Boston area and is in the late stages of development of an important type of sensor for the aerospace and defense industry. Our younger son, Jeff, Princeton ’99, has come a very long way in 10 years. From a start as an architecture major he experimented with jobs as a real estate and construction paralegal, an architectural marketer for a large New York firm, a house renovator, and then as the construction 102 manager for a fast-growing chain of boutiques. Now he is completing his first year as a graduate student in architecture and technology at the MIT Media Laboratory. Jeff married Natalie Dean at our Maine farm in the summer of 2005 (following his brother’s example), and is enjoying a free ride at MIT with a research assistantship. Having both sons, and our first grandson, in the Boston area has made our new home in Cambridge a special place. Suzanne and I moved from Princeton, where we had lived since college, realizing we were ready for a change of scenery and experience after almost 40 years. Suzanne is a successful food and wine writer, restaurant reviewer, and, as many know, the organizer (with David Stitzer) of all the food for this reunion and many major past reunions. As for me, I have continued my “entrepreneurial track” as actively as ever over the past decade. In 1999 I started an Internet medical-indexing business, which I sold two years later to the PDR — Physicians’ Desk Reference — division of Thomson Healthcare, following a pattern of quick start-ups that began as an undergraduate. After staying with Thomson for three and a half years and delivering enough profits to cover the full cost of the acquisition, I left to pursue other interests in mid-2004. We moved to Cambridge in September 2004. Most recently I developed a mega website in medicine (www.med bioworld.com), which I quickly sold to a small public company, and then decided to return to real estate development, which had been an important part of my earlier career. I am currently developing 250 acres on an island (Bremen Long Island) off midcoast Maine and simultaneously creating a mainland marina to serve the island. I have even purchased a large boat that Suzanne wants to name “Dan’s Folly”! With no shortage of ideas or energy, and thankful for good health, I have no intention of retiring anytime soon. Richard A. Goldfine 256 Bonad Rd., Chestnut Hill, MA 02467-3642; (617) 469-0860 Robert H. Goldie Nine Osborn Rd., Rye, NY 10580-1320; (914) 967-3760; rgoldie@ssbb.com Partner, Satterlee Stephens Burke & Burke, Suite 1130, 230 Park Ave., New York, NY 10169-0005; (212) 818-9200 Spouse: Julia H. Goldie 103 Michael L. Goldstein 2720 Shadybrook Lane, Salt Lake City, UT 84121-1539; (801) 277-1535 Neurologist, Western Neurological Assocs, 1151 East 3900 South, Salt Lake City, UT 84124; (801) 262-3441 Spouse: Barbara Goldstein Glenn P. Goltz 4240 Arguello Way, San Diego, CA 92103-1506; (619) 299-0440; gpg325@cox.net Ophthalmologist, retired Spouse: Barbara Sue Goltz (clinical psychologist, retired) Children: Joshua, 8/10/72; Sarah, 2/22/74 What a pleasure to return to Princeton for the 40th reunion of the Class of 1966. These past 40 years have passed so quickly and have been filled with more joy, opportunity, and rewards than I ever could have imagined back in 1966. After leaving Princeton I attended medical school and completed an ophthalmology residency. Barbara completed her training in clinical psychology. We settled in San Diego Glenn and Barbara Goltz and raised two delightful children while pursuing our professional careers and sharing our interest in community public service. Barbara has been a long-time member of the Mayor’s San Diego Quality of Life Board and very active in recruitment of minority candidates for higher education opportunities, especially to her alma mater, Barnard College. I served for many years as a member of San Diego’s Zoning Appeals Board and continue to have a strong interest in local historic preservation. It has been great fun to be active in ways we hope will create long-term improvements in our community. These community activities have given us a chance to meet and interact with many very dynamic and committed people we might otherwise have not met. These undertakings, more importantly, got me out of darkened exam rooms and small surgical suites and broadened my outlook from the relatively narrow perspective and focus of eye surgery. Ten years ago I received a blow when it was discovered that I had an unusual heart condition, which caused me to abruptly retire and to severely limit my physical activities. At first I felt quite at a loss and 104 confused about how I would spend my time and energy. Fortunately, our classmate Brian Bruel kindly sent me a book that helped me to understand the importance of refocusing and following the pathways of earlier but incomplete interests. I was saved in part by the broad concept of “exploration” and the application of this concept to continuing education, boating, and volunteering. Suddenly, having all the free time in the world, I slowly learned to truly enjoy the process of an activity and to become less focused on any particular outcome or completion date. Continuing education has opened up entire new worlds of interest to me. I have taken scores of classes at our local community colleges in areas as divergent as electronics and astronomy to the history of California Indian tribes to figure drawing. Barbara and I have spent each of our last 10 summers cruising the canals and rivers of Europe aboard our canal boat L’Amité. Perhaps the biggest personal enrichment of my life has been to have had this long period of extended quite times of joy and exploration with Barbara. Each day of river cruising is magic, — new, exciting, and tremendously enriching. Each year we spend several weeks aboard our boat moored in Paris under the shadow of the Bastille monument and feel that we have made this little corner of Paris our second home. Over the years I also developed a special interest in activities of my home state’s 32nd Red Arrow Division during World War I. I have read extensively on the war and have visited the site of each and every training and battle action by the 32nd as well as the graves of those who died in France and during the division’s occupation of the Rhineland. Over the years I became progressively weaker, but a new cardiac pacemaker installed last year has restored much of my strength and vitality and has allowed me to renew many pleasurable activities and interests. I have resumed sailing, walking, and now even do some moderate biking. Last winter, while in San Diego, I took courses in piano, French, cooking, wine appreciation, and 20th-century European history. This summer, shortly after Reunions, I intend to complete the Tour du Mont Blanc hike in Italy, France, and Switzerland. This will be my third time around Mont Blanc. La Vie est bon! This year Barbara and I delighted in celebrating our 40th anniversary with many splendid events, parties, unusual travel, and lots of unique personal indulgences. We both felt that we had really reached a milestone and we both felt so proud and exhilarated to be alive and to have had this wonderful time together. We are grateful for the joy and pleasure we take in our children and their spouses. Joshua and Sarah have grown up to be healthy, strong, caring , active, and accomplished young adults with bright personalities and boundless energy. Our son, Joshua, has accomplished everything from cultural anthropol 105 ogy to international business to film making since leaving college. He has been a Rhodes finalist, has an M. Phil. from Oxford and was selected, in the year of his college graduation from Haverford, to be among “the best and brightest” by USA Today. His passions are surfing and foreign languages. Now having completed medical school at Brown University, he will begin his neurology residency this summer. Our daughter, Sarah ’96, has recently returned to New York after four years of working in a variety of health projects in the Middle East. After graduating from Princeton she was selected as a Fulbright Scholar to Benin, West Africa, where she studied women’s health and economic issues. After several years of working in private philanthropy, Sarah started her own NGO and then took advanced degrees in public health and public administration from Columbia University. Now she will continue her public-health career commuting between New York and Europe working to accelerate vaccine production for preventable illnesses. Her passions are marathon running and long-distance biking. It will be a particular pleasure and honor to walk this year’s P-rade in Sarah’s company and in the company of other members of the Class of ’96 who as Sarah’s friends now feel like sons and daughters to us. Last, I would like to say how much it has meant to us to have enjoyed continuing connection over the years with so many dear and gifted classmates. This spring alone we have enjoyed California visits from Tiny and Betty Lou Morgan, Phil and Beth Nicholson, Andy Zimmerman and Susan, and David and Lynn Williams. We feel so fortunate to have been part of the very special group of roommates who shared the infamous Henry Hall top-floor suite. By staying connected we have shared in the joys, sorrows, and accomplishments of each other’s lives. When “the old roommates” get together it is as if no time has passed and there is a shared intimacy between us which is profoundly meaningful and immediate. Now we meet from time to time at each other’s homes and have traveled together in various parts of the world. I feel that we are so fortunate to have this special roommate connection. Much of the credit for this must go to Gary and Pam Mount, who have done a lot to keep us all connected and who have an exceptional gift for warmth, hospitality, and enthusiasm. Immediately following our 40th, John and Paula Hamilton will host an intimate Class of 1966 Henry Hall Suite reunion at their lovely Nantucket estate. Guests will include Gary Mount, Jon Waage, Gib Hentschke, David Kidd, David Willliams, Andy Zimmerman, myself, and our spouses. I know this is going to be great! Each day we are grateful that our lives have been so good. We are extremely mindful that our past and present connection to Princeton and our class has made our very good lives even better. It is such a joy to return for Reunions. 106 John C. Goodrich P.O. Box 366, Hardwick, MA 01037; (413) 477-0328; 385barre@comcast.net Management Consultant Spouse: Linda Young (retired) Children: Bob Mason, 7/64; Leah Mason, 10/72; Jennifer Mannion, 2/68 When I looked in our 35th Reunion Book, I realized that we were in the midst of a major move five years ago, so I never got around to writing an essay for it. A lot has certainly happened since our 30th — the entire decade of my 50s, which had many more surprises than I had expected. Life feels even more satisfying now than 10 years ago, and it was great back then! Ten years ago, Linda and I left our full-time work and our family behind and moved from the Boston area to the far end of Cape Cod, to the place we both loved to get away to. Well, we got away alright: from our family, our friends, our activities, our community, all the joy of the changing seasons, and so many other aspects of our daily lives that we came to realize were important to us. After five years of walking the beaches, hoping the kids would come visit in the nine-month off season, and trying to figure out how to act old and retired when we were nowhere ready for that, we moved again — this time to a small farming community in the middle of Massachusetts. This time, we got it right! We bought a very old farmhouse and barn that require constant work to keep them from falling down, and 3-plus acres to mow and plant, with stone walls to rebuild and more projects than I can ever get to. Although many would think that we live in the middle of nowhere, for us it isn’t. Yes, we are a long way from a big city or a major highway or shopping area, but we are less than an hour from Linda’s three children and three grandchildren, and we have made many friends here. We are already “in the country” — the place that so many others are trying to find the time to get to on the weekends — so our family loves to come visit us. This old farmhouse has lots of bedrooms! Perhaps what I like the most about this town is that people still take the time to drop by unannounced, to stop and chat for as long as you want, and always drop whatever they are doing to help out when someone needs a helping hand. And there is always a role for every generation: most of the tractor work on a nearby farm is done by the 15-year-old and the 85-year-old family members. The time that we spend with our family, together with my part-time consulting work, still leaves us plenty of time for all the wandering that we do. We have learned to undercommit to responsibilities and activities, and this has given us plenty of time to leisurely explore the countryside in 107 our camper van. We originally got the van eight years ago because I wasn’t sure if I would ever be able to run or walk well again after some major leg surgery, and since then we have driven to all the Lower 48. (I can walk fine now, although running is still out.) I am very grateful that my health is still basically very good. Physically, the 50s was a definite time of transition, but mentally the transition was great. Our priorities have shifted this past year from traveling to spending more time with our family. Linda’s oldest granddaughter will be going to college next fall at Champlain College in Burlington, Vermont, and we have enjoyed taking her to see a number of colleges. And we have two young granddaughters that we spend lots of time with every week. The youngest was born in February 2005 and spent the first 10 weeks of her life in intensive care, as predicted. She is doing fine now, but it was a long and tough year for the whole family. I have been very fortunate in my professional work over the past 10 years. Fifteen years ago, I left the environmental consulting firm that I had been with for over 20 years and have done consulting on my own ever since. When we moved to Cape Cod I was able to build a different consulting practice, focusing on public-dispute resolution and consensus building for towns that are dealing with contentious development or environmental issues. I am still doing the same kind of work part-time from my new location, and I have been involved for the past two years with some similar issues on a pro bono basis in our own town. It is the kind of work that builds on all the different experiences that I have had over the years, and I find that there is respect for all those years of experience — the gray hairs are helpful in this case! I definitely feel that my Princeton engineering and liberal-arts education gave me a great grounding for being able to move into new areas of work over the years. Twice in the past five years I have “retired,” only to have a client call six months or so later and encourage me to take on a new and interesting assignment. Being able to “walk away” from the work for a period of time makes it a lot more interesting when a new opportunity unexpectedly comes along. I am still working on how to say “yes” in the winter when I am more likely to be bored and “no” in the summer when I have endless projects to do. It is pretty hard to have turned 60, with a 40th reunion right around the corner, and not think more about aging, health questions, and death. Linda and I have this fantastic friend, Myron, who drove in our driveway the week we moved in, introduced himself, and asked if he could store a lot of stuff in our then vacant barn for an upcoming church fund-raiser. Well, the fund-raiser turned out to be two years later, but we have become the best of friends with him. 108 Myron is 87, grew up on a farm in town, survived six years as a foot soldier in the Pacific in World War II, ran a paper mill, and has been widowed for the past 20 years. He has the most positive attitude about everything and is constantly learning new things, taking on new activities, and spending time with his circle of friends. When I couldn’t drive a few years ago after eye surgery, Myron offered to drive me places. What a great role model for us as we grow older. This is one of the reasons why the 60s seems like the best decade to me so far. Andrew J. Goodwin (Andy) 630 Burton Dr., Lake Forest, IL 60045; (847) 295-3527; agoodwin@optimuminvestment.com Chairman, Optimum Investment Advisors, 100 Wacker Drive South, Suite 2100, Chicago, IL 60606-4006; (312) 782-1515 Spouse: Sandra Galloway Goodwin Mitchell J. Goroski P.O. Box 261, Ray Brook, NY 12977 Assistant Counsel Spouse: Jane Schneider Goroski Stephen Andre Goscin (Steve) 4706 Cleveland St., Hollywood, FL 33021-4739; (954) 983-4250; sgoscin@bellsouth.net Pathologist (retired) Spouse: Beverly Jeanne Goscin (registered nurse) Children: Christopher, 9/23/75; Melissa, 2/27/66 First, I must apologize to one of our classmates who was bent out of shape Steve and Bev Goscin about my essay in the 35th Reunion Book. Being both short of time and a literary midget, I took some Internet humor and personalized it (well, it actually sort of fit my life at the time). Anyway, I don’t recall “pledging my honor” for that particular endeavor. I retired from my career as a pathologist three years ago when my ophthalmologist informed me that I had early cataracts (not good to have for a pathologist but not bad enough to justify surgery). Although I was quite apprehensive about stopping work cold turkey, I have found that the 109 freedom to explore has been exhilarating. I have directed my attention to music and religion and fishing in addition to golf and computers. I am pretty good with computers and average at golf. I am teaching myself music theory and hope to compose a bit before I decompose. My study of religion has led to more questions than answers, but I keep searching. I do catch a lot of fish, though (my fishing buddy is guru). I love having time to travel to visit our children and grandchildren. In addition, Bev and I spend quite a bit of time in Ireland, where we have a second home. I am pretty happy and my health has been decent so far (although I suppose none of us knows what tomorrow holds in that regard). My life has been reasonably productive, but I don’t think I have achieved anything that will be viewed as significant 100 years from now. (Well, I did pass a few genes along, and I suppose that those who carry them might think they are significant!) I have never attended a class reunions, primarily due to time constraints. You won’t see me at the 40th, either. I have now developed a Peter Pan Syndrome in regard to Reunions, and seeing all of the senior citizens in my class might freak me out. I will work on myself in this regard. Maybe I will try to come to at least one reunion before I am part of that great freshman class in the sky. I wish all of you good health and personal happiness. Jeffrey C. Graf 2621 Dekist St., Bloomington, IN 47401; (812) 332-0561 Librarian, Indiana University, 10th and Jordan, Bloomington, IN 47405; (812) 855-0100 Anthony P. Grassi (Tony) 363 Belfast Rd., Camden, ME 04843-4509; (207) 236-4666; tgrassi@adelphia.net Spouse: Sally Stonebraker Grassi Children: Prentice, 2/11/72; Laurie, 2/14/75 Marvin L. Gray 4820 40th Ave. West, Seattle, WA 98199-1122; (206) 283-7311 Partner, Davis Wright Tremaine, Suite 2600, 1501 Fourth Ave., Seattle, WA 98101; (206) 628-7665 Spouse: Jill Miller Gray 110 Thomas E. Greacen P.O. Box 997, Dulce, NM 87528-0997; tgreacen@hotmail.com Spouse: Sharon Hope Greacen Robert V. Greco 15 Pilgrim Rd., Wellesley, MA 02181-2427; (781) 235-4716; robert.greco@jud.state.ma.us Judge, Framingham District Court, 600 Concord St., Framingham, MA 01701-0390, (508) 875-4525 Spouse: Marjorie Cavicchio Greco (administrative assistant) Children: David, 12/28/78; Carolyn, 1/28/84 Since our 35th reunion my son, David, has graduated from Princeton in the Class of 2001. My daughter, Carolyn, is now a senior at Bates College in Maine. Of course, at the time of our 25th I had still not recovered from the Red Sox’ loss to the Mets in the 1986 World Series. I was beginning to wonder if I would see the Sox win it all by our 50th reunion — or ever, for that matter. Then they did it in 2004. Naturally, it took a Princetonian (Larry Lucchino ’67) to bring it about, giving a whole new meaning to the saying “Princeton in the Nation’s Service.” I doubt if whoever penned that motto had “Sox Nation” in mind — but whatever. Jeffrey M. Green 3 Avigayil St., Abu-Tur, Jerusalem, Israel; 972-26732828; jmgreen@post.harvard.edu Freelance Translator/Writer Spouse: Judith Rubinstein Green Richard B. Greenberg Unit 3, 414 Beacon St., Boston, MA 02115-1115; (617) 266-2451; rbgjjb@verizon.net Principal, RBG Associates, 414 Beacon St., Boston, MA 02115; (617) 859-0890 Spouse: Janet Bobit Greenberg 111 Andrew E. Greene Le Manoir, 281 chemin des Agneaux, Saint Martin d’Uriage, 38410 Uriage, France; 33-476597694; andrew.greene@ujf-grenoble.fr Doctor, University of Grenoble, LEDSS-3-Chimie Recherche, Universite Joseph Fourier, BP 53X, 38041 Grenoble Cedex, France; 33-476514686 Children: Kristina Greene, 1973; William Greene, 1976 Douglas A. Greene 51 Darren Dr., Basking Ridge, NJ 07920-4107; (732) 302-5822; doug_greene@merck.com Executive Vice President, Clinical Science and Product Development, Merck & Co., Inc., One Merck Drive, P.O. Box 100, Whitehouse Station, NJ 08889-0100; (732) 594-7272 Spouse: Sarah Greene Joseph D. Greulich 999 Moores Club Pl., NE, Atlanta, GA 30319-1163 President & Chief Executive Officer, Solvay Advanced Polymers, LLC, 4500 McGinnis Ferry Rd., Alpharetta, GA 30005-3914; (770) 772-8200 Spouse: Mary Skoglund Greulich Edward Groth (Ned) 75 Clifford Ave., Pelham, NY 10803-1702; (914) 738-5956; nedgroth@cs.com Consultant, Groth Consulting Services, 75 Cliffird Ave., Pelham, NY 10803-1702; (914) 738-5956 Spouse: Sharon Begley Groth Children: Sarah; Daniel In January of 2004, after more than 24 years at Consumers Union, I “retired,” which is a euphemism for leaving gracefully with a big party after the company decided it could no longer afford to pay for the publicinterest research and advocacy I had been carrying out in recent years. I had taken myself out of upper management several years earlier so I could work part-time, spend more time with my kids as they were growing up, and focus my work energies on the stuff I enjoyed most. When I did that, I realized I was making myself expendable if the company’s leadership or economic condition changed, which both 112 eventually did. But I was willing to risk it, ready for change, and financially secure enough to leave. In the end, I got four more years in before the ax fell. My plan had actually been to retire, really, whenever the job got untenable, and I am enjoying not working in an office anymore. I am doing a Daniel, Sarah, Sharon, and Ned Groth little consulting — working maybe 1/3 time — for clients like the World Health Organization and U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization, on food safety and risk communication issues, the stuff I did while at CU. I have also worked with a variety of U.S. and international NGOs that need expertise to develop positions on issues like food safety and trade, or mercury in fish. I’ve been doing enough to feel useful and involved, while devoting most of my time now to those other things we never seem to have time for when we have full-time jobs. Catching up on deferred maintenance around the house, landscaping, building a website for my class from Darrow School, and organizing those reunions. One of these days I may actually clean out the attic. Sharon is now in her fourth year at The Wall Street Journal, after 25 years plus at Newsweek. She writes a science column on Fridays, well known to several in our class, I gather. We are starting to look ahead to a time when she may retire too — but she’s not ready to think about that yet (she’s a dozen years younger than I am), and we do enjoy having health insurance. Sarah is a junior now at Hartwick, enjoying her college experience, majoring in English, and aiming for a writing career — takes after her mother. Daniel is a senior at Pelham High School and doesn’t know where he will be going to college yet, but it won’t be Princeton. He expects to major in math, may or may not play soccer in college, and is eager to get out into the world more or less on his own. They’ve both turned out to be pretty great kids and a source of paternal pride. We expect to be putting our house on the market later this year, leaving behind the extreme Westchester County property taxes once our kids are done with school here. Since the WSJ has an office in South Brunswick, the Princeton area could be where we move to; we expect to start house-hunting in the spring. We’re all healthy and as happy as we have a right to be, given the state of the world. Looking forward to catching up with old friends and making a few new ones at the 40th. 113 Robert N. Haarlow 31 Sweet Bay Lane, Hilton Head Island, SC 29926-1717 Middle School Principal, Hilton Head Preparatory School, 8 Fox Grape Rd., Hilton Head Island, SC 29926; (843) 671-2286 Spouse: Sarah McCanless Haarlow John W. Haeger 1175 Channing Ave., Palo Alto, CA 94301; (650) 325-9496; jwhaeger@pacbell.net Journalist/Consultant, P.O. Box 18450, Palo Alto, CA 94309; (650) 325-9496 Partner: Julianne Frizzel (landscape architect) Eased into early retirement beginning in 2001, after 25 years with The Research Libraries Group, a not-forprofit corporation owned by universities, museums, and archives worldwide, including Princeton, that provides database and imagebase services to the research John Haeger, seated at end, at a Tokyo community. Over the years, seminar and tasting celebrating the RLG developed the first publication of his book, North American library,database system Pinot Noir. The venue is the Mauzen capable of managing non Company’s new flagship store in Roman languages in their Marunouchi, opposite Tokyo Station. original scripts, and the first system to “catalog” manuscripts, archival collections, and cultural artifacts with the same consistency libraries have applied to books and serials for decades. Some of my time since 2001 has gone to continued work for RLG and some to Stanford University for related projects, but I have captured a substantial chunk to expand a second career, writing about wine. My first wine book, North American Pinot Noir, was published by the University of California Press in 2004. Articles also appear from time to time in various periodical publications, including Saveur magazine and Japan’s leading consumer magazine about wine, The Wine Kingdom. My partner is a landscape architect with a full-time practice on the San Francisco peninsula, and we parent two dogs, a border collie and a Portuguese Water Dog, the latter of which earned the doggie equivalent of a bachelor’s degree at the American Kennel Club in 2004. Plenty of work, but lots less expensive than a Princeton education! 114 George S. Haight 1059 Frontera Dr., Laramie, WY 82072-5021; (307) 742-7974; gshiii@mindspring.com General Surgeon, High Plains General Surgery, Inc., Suite 101, 204 McCollum, Laramie, WY 82070; (307) 745-9099 Spouse: Devona Kelley Haight R. Walter Hale Park Plaza, no. 1101, 4301 Gulf Shore Blvd. N, Naples, FL 34103; (239) 732-8891; walthale@yahoo.com Executive Vice President, Suntrust Banks (retired) Spouse: Faye Hale (President, The Allen Company) After many years in the banking business with Suntrust in Nashville, I am now retired and residing in Naples, Florida. We have kept our house in Nashville for visits during the summer months. I am fortunate to have a lovely wife in Faye, and together we have three children and four grandchilden. Life is very good and we spend much time traveling, playing golf, and enjoying each other. Isaac D. Hall 170 East Kuiaha Rd., Haiku, HI 96708-5430; (808) 575-2390 Attorney, Law Offices of Isaac Hall, 2087 Wells St., Wailuku, HI 96793; (808) 244-9017 Spouse: Dana Naone Hall William E. Hall 317 Pleasant Ave., Peaks Island, ME 04108; (207) 766-2514; wehall@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Ann Hennessy Hall Colin W. Hamilton 1304 East Bay Shore Dr., Virginia Beach, VA 23451-3709; (757) 425-0164 Orthopedic Surgeon, Atlantic Orthopaedic Specialists, Suite 124, 230 Clearfield Ave., Virginia Beach, VA 23462; (757) 321-3300; colinham@pol.net Spouse: Barbara Vancelette Hamilton (licensed clinical social worker) Children: Scott, 5/31/68; Trevor, 12/31/69 115 Since our last reunion, much has happened with the Hamilton family. Bonnie and I took up scuba diving and in 2003 went on three liveaboard dive trips to the Bahamas. Unfortunately, on Christmas day that year, Bonnie suddenly went into septic shock with flu pneumonia and after being critically ill for 12 days on a ventilator, she underwent a prolonged recovery over the next year. She is doing well now, and we are planning a dive trip to Bonaire this spring. This experience taught us that it’s definitely time to smell the roses and cherish our time together. Colin Hamilton in 1966 Consequently, I have decided to cut down significantly on my work schedule by taking a three-day weekend every week and also a liberal amount of vacation time. I have no plans for retirement, as I feel that I’m at the top of my game in orthopedic (predominantly spine) surgery, and the life style is so much more tolerable with no night and weekend call duties anymore. Time with our sons and their families has been limited by geography but is highly valued. Scott (37) is a clinical psychologist at an excellent large private school in Indianapolis. His wife, Tamara, is a licensed clinical social worker (like Bonnie), and his step-kids, Justin (14) and Emily (12), are a real pleasure to have spend a week with us each summer. Our second son, Trevor (36), is quite well established in Internet advertising sales and works for Reuters in San Francisco. His wife, Wendy, last August produced a handsome lad named Tristan, who entertained the whole family when everyone came to Virginia Beach last Christmas. Bonnie and I continue to love Virginia Beach, especially after moving to a beautiful waterfront home with a gorgeous view on a small inland bay. We’ve had substantial work done on the house, and Bonnie has done a fabulous job with the interior decorating. She also bought me a 24-foot Sea Ray that the previous owner had on the lift on the dock, so we truly enjoy a built-in summer home all year round. I continue to love tennis and snow skiing (out West), and now that we’re (hopefully) through fixing up the house we are looking forward to more travel, including visting our sons’ families. We are fortunate to have the only Episcopal/ Roman Catholic parish in the world here in Virginia Beach, and consider ourselves to be truly blest for all we have. 116 John D. Hamilton 619 Oak Ave., Davis, CA 95616-3626; (530) 758-6659; john.hamilton@kp.org Senior Physician, Kaiser-Permanente Medical Center, 2025 Morse Ave., Sacramento, CA 95825; (916) 973-6158 Spouse: Paula Smith Hamilton Thomas C. Hanks 860 Hamilton Ave., Palo Alto, CA 94301-2119; (650) 327-0240 Geophysicist, U.S. Geological Survey, 345 Middlefield Rd., Menlo Park, CA 94025; (650) 329-5634 Spouse: Margaret Elizabeth Hanks George R. Hansen 2257 Hickory Hill Rd., Chadds Ford, PA 19317-9342; (610) 388-2053; george.hansen@rbcdain.com Vice President, RBC Dain Rauscher Corporation, Suite 305, Little Falls Centre Two, Wilmington, DE 19808, (302) 993-8258 Spouse: Elizabeth (Lisa) Lippincott Hansen Philip E. Hansen 22 Manning Blvd.Albany, NY 12203-1708; (518) 482-9131 Patent Agent, Heslin Rothenberg Farley & Mesiti, PC, 5 Columbia Circle, Albany, NY 12203; (518) 452-5600 Spouse: Dianne Bensinger Hansen Douglas R. Hansmann (Doug) 5008 Rockaway Beach Rd. NE, Bainbridge Island, WA 98110-2162; (206) 842-1564; hansmann@alumni.princeton.edu Chief Operating Officer, EKOS Corporation, Suite 101, 22030 20th Ave., S.E., Bothell, WA 980214405; (425) 482-1108, Ext. 226 Spouse/Partner: Nancy Lee Scharf Nancy and I are celebrating our 20th anniversary this year and are amazed at how quickly time has passed. We cherish each day. We are blessed to live Doug Hansmann, on the water with a full view of Seattle, Mt. Rainier, June 14, 1966 117 and the surrounding Cascade Mountains. We live on an island, so I have the pleasure of starting and ending my work day with a 35-minute ferry ride across Puget Sound. With WiFi and Starbuck’s coffee, it’s not a bad way to greet the morning. We have no children but, instead, two “fur kids” Doug and Nancy Hansmann (Catmandu & Annapurrna) of the feline persuasion (plus we are the adoptee of an outside feral cat we have named Sasha). My work continues to be rewarding. I co-founded a startup medical device company called EKOS Corporation in 1995 where I was, first, vice president of R&D, then general manager, and currently chief operating officer. We are commercializing a technology that incorporates ultrasound into a small drug-delivery catheter to accelerate the action of clot-dissolving drugs. Applications are in stroke therapy and relief of occluded arteries and veins in the arms and legs. We (finally) began selling product in November of 2005 after multiple starts and restarts over the past 10 years. (These overnight successes take a few years!) We are gratified at the enthusiastic initial response of the medical community so have great expectations for the future. Nancy is the gourmet cook of the family. We love to travel and I continue my love of aviation. We own a single-engine airplane, a Rockwell Commander 114, and use it to explore the West Coast from Baja Mexico to British Columbia. We flew to the famous Oshkosh Air Show in Wisconsin last summer. On the way, we explored the beautiful Rocky Mountains and plains country of Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming. When I have time, I teach some aerobatics and also instruct pilots how to become certified as judges for formal aerobatic contests. Nancy and I are both certified national judges. I increasingly look back at my Princeton experience as one of the highlights of my life — something I did not fully appreciate at the time. Heaven forbid that I would try to apply (and be accepted) today. The competition must be absolutely fierce. I look forward to seeing all of you at our 40th! Richard B. Harding 21 Buttonwood Lane, Darien, CT 06820-2807; (203) 655-4671 President, Humphreys & Harding, Inc., 420 Lexington Ave., New York, NY 10170; (212) 697-0390 118 John L. Hardwick 36299 Highway 58, Pleasant Hill, OR 97455-9614; (541) 726-4055; hardwick@oregon.uoregon.edu Senior Research Associate, Chemistry Department, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403; (541) 686-4753 Spouse: Claudia Hardwick Kenneth R. Harney 3801 Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, MD 20815-4254; (301) 652-6626; kenharney@aol.com Syndicated Columnist and President, Harney Corporation, Suite 702, 6900 Wisconsin Ave., Chevy Chase, MD 20815; (301) 657-8220 Spouse: Andrea Leon Harney Carl B. Harper 6060 Billings Rd., Mt. Hood, OR 97041; (541) 352-6889; cbharper@hooDr.r.net Richard L. Harriman 3495 San Bruno Court, Merced, CA 95348-4809; (209) 384-3328 Attorney, Suite 155, 246 West Shaw Ave., Fresno, CA 93704-2644; (559) 224-1150 William J. Harrison (Bill) P.O. Box 813, 100 Old Rancheria Rd., Nicasio, CA 94946; (415) 662-2625; bharri4055@aol.com Project Director, Burmese Migrants Education Project, 100 Old Rancheria Rd., Nicasio, CA 94946; (415) 662-2625 Witnessing the impact of the December 26, 2004, tsunami in Phuket, Thailand, led me out of semiretirement to establish the Burmese Migrants Education Project. Burmese workers flee military repression and joblessness in Burma only to find harsh living conditions, subsistence pay, mistrust, prejudice, and lack of educational opportunities in neighboring Thailand. The goal of our recently opened learning centers in Phuket and Chiang Mai is to increase language, computer, and vocational skills, improve economic circumstances, and foster a positive relationship with Thais, all building toward the day when a return to a better Burma is possible. 119 Support from friends and classmates has been generous. I travel to Asia three times a year to manage and grow the program. Notwithstanding the six 18-hour stints in the back of the plane, it’s the most fun and rewarding thing I’ve ever done. Robert A. Harsh RR 1, Box 321, Essex, NY 12936-9801; harshra@splava.cc.plattsburgh.edu EOP Counselor, 103 Algonquin Hall, SUNY at Plattsburgh, Plattsburgh, NY 12901; (518) 564-2293 Spouse: Carole Kielsmeier Harsh Johnson M. Hart 7 Pond Brook Circle, Weston, MA 02493-1425; (781) 237-4387; jmhart@world.std.com Spouse: Linda S. Hart Frederick L. Hartmann 119 West Third St., Hinsdale, IL 60521-4019; (630) 325-4483 Partner, Schiff Hardin LLP, 7200 Sears Tower, Chicago, IL 60606; (312) 876-1000 Spouse: Sally F. Hartmann David B. Harwi 2042 Mount Vernon St., Philadelphia, PA 19130-3236; (215) 235-3743; dbh@triagemediation.com President, Triage Mediation Services, Inc., 2042 Mount Vernon St., Philadelphia, PA 19130-3236; (215) 235-7711; www.triagemediation.com Children: Ashley B. Harwi, 11/3/80; Daniel H. Harwi, 12/24/83 Stephen R. Harwood (Steve) 93 Van Ripper Lane, Orinda, CA 94563-1129; (925) 254-8397; zzz9@comcast.net President, Cypress Financial Corp., Suite 420, 188 The Embarcadero, San Francisco, CA 94105-1233; (415) 281-3024 Patricia Monger Harwood (nurse practioner) Children: Will, 11/24/76; Tim, 9/13/79; Alison, 1/30/83 120 One of the questions on the class survey listed about 10 negative events and asked us to check off which had occurred in our lives. All of the events would certainly be disruptive and traumatic, and many of them would probably be life altering. The only one I checked was “death of a friend,” which I suspect all of us in the class have now experienced. But that was the only one I checked. So many of the other items on the list, such as cancer or serious accidents, seem to happen in a random fashion. I think I’ve been just plain lucky that while my life has had its peaks and valleys, I haven’t come up against the giant mountain that needs to be climbed. So I’ve been a happy camper. While I think fondly of my Princeton years, I regret that I haven’t kept up as well as I might with my Princeton friends. So, if not before, I hope to reconnect with many of them at our 40th reunion. Warm wishes to all. Peter Hatch 255 Withrow Ave., Toronto, ON M4K 1E3, Canada Gordon D. Heaton (Coach) 1162 Oakview Dr., Wheaton, IL 60187-3074; (630) 668-2215; ballandtrain@aol.com Children: Diana, 2/25/77 Robert W. Heinze 1347 Center St., Redlands, CA 92373-7004; (909) 793-1014; bheinze@alumni.princeton.edu Engineer, Cytec Fiberite Inc., 645 North Cypress, Orange, CA 92867-6698; (714) 744-5635 Spouse: Elizabeth Ratcliffe Heinze John H. Heminway “Wind’s Eye,” 289 South Cross Rd., Chatham, NY 12037-9700; (518) 392-2580; bar20@aol.com President, Abercrombie & Kent Group, 46 East 70th St., New York, NY 10021-4928; (212) 327-3797 Spouse: Kathryn H.Wilmerding Heminway 121 A. Faxon Henderson Apt. A-107, 13230 Polo Club Rd., Wellington, FL 33414-7254; (561) 795-1511; afhenderson@earthlink.net Attorney, POB 3208, Palm Beach, FL 33480; (561) 659-0102 Spouse: Cornelia B. Henderson Nelson H. Hendler 1718 Greenspring Valley Rd., Stevenson, MD 21153; (410) 653-2403; docnelse@aol.com Clinical Director, Mensana Clinic, 1718 Greenspring Valley Rd., Stevenson, MD 21153; (410) 653-2403 Children: Lee Hendler, 5/17/68; Sam Hendler, 3/5/76; Alex Hendler, 9/16/77; Lindsay Hendler, 12/8/81; Josepha Hendler, 10/3/85 There have been some major life changes for me since the last reunion. One son, Sam (Princeton ’98, Duke M.B.A. ’05), was married, another son, Alex (Duke ’99, Washington University Law School ’04), got engaged, one daughter, Lindsay, graduated from Lehigh in 2004, and the youngest, Josepha, was a freshman at Tulane for four hours. It is great watching the children develop their own lives. I got divorced. I’m still working seven days a week at Mensana Clinic, and I’ve launched a new company, which can be found at www.mensanadiagnostics.com. It sells medical diagnostic tests that I developed to insurance carriers. I still have my farm in Cambridge, Maryland, and go there for duck, goose, turkey, and deer hunting, in season. Professionally, I’ve received the Janet Travell Award of Clinical Excellence from the American Academy of Pain Management, and several years later I was elected president of the same organization. Guilbert C. Hentschke 2142 Portland St., Los Angeles, CA 90007-1913; (213) 747-0686; ghentsch@mizar.usc.edu Dean of School of Education, School of Education, WPH 1101, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0031; (213) 740-8313 Spouse: Margaret Peterson Hentschke 122 Stephen E. Herrmann (Steve) 312 High Ridge Rd., Wilmington, DE 19807-1510; (302) 654-5642; herrmann@rlf.com President, Richards Layton & Finger, PA, One Rodney Square, P.O. Box 551, Wilmington, DE 19899; (302) 651-7730 Spouse: Susan Agoos Herrmann (CPA) Children: Adam, 12/18/72; Douglas, 2/22/76 C. Dana Hershey 8820 Winged Bourne, Charlotte, NC 28210-5940; (704) 554-0239; dhershey@carolina.rr.com Staff Anesthesiologist, Southeast Anesthesiology Consultants, Department of Anesthesiology, 1000 Blythe Blvd., Charlotte, NC 28203; (704) 355-2372 Spouse: Nancy Perry Hershey Michael A. Herships 166 Montauk Highway, P.O. Box 1033, Quoque, NY 11959; (631) 6534486; herships@alumni.princeton.edu Psychologist, Suite 202, 222 Middle Country Rd., Smithtown, NY 11787-2814; (631) 361-9338 Spouse/Partner: Candyce Brokaw Wayne B. Hewitt 8009 Rose Hill Rd., Lenexa, KS 66215-2630; (913) 492-4091 Instructor, Johnson Co. Community College, 12345 College Blvd., Overland Park, KS 66210; (913) 469-8500 Spouse: Carol Thomas Hewitt Curtis A. Hicks 675 East Rd., Richmond, MA 01254-9668; (413) 698-3296; drew@bcn.net Musician, Norman Rockwell Museum, Nine Glendale Rd., Stockbridge, MA 01262; (413) 298-4100 Spouse: Mary Anne Hicks 123 Mikk Hinnov Five Holly Court, Bridgewater, NJ 088072559; (908) 722-0569 Senior Vice President and Underwriting Officer, American International Group, 300 Interpace Parkway, Parsippany, NJ 07054; (212) 770-6459; mhinnov@aol.com Spouse: Linda C. Hinnov (homemaker) Children: Erik, 3/15/67; Erin, 9/29/70 Hinnov today (left) and as a Princeton cyclist. David Y. Hinshaw P.O. Box 213, Gracie Station, New York, NY 10028-0016; (212) 722-1100 Leonard F. Hirsh (Len) 52 Bridle Way, Newtown Square, PA 19073; (610) 325-2057 Neurosurgeon, Neurosurgical Practice Associates, Ltd., Suite 428, Crozer Medical Center, Chester, PA 19013; (610) 874-4044 Children: Caroline Hirsh Knight, 8/71; Melissa Skinner, 3/74; Leonard F. Hirsh III, 6/77 I’m finishing 30 years of a successful medical career as a neurosurgeon in a large community hospital. The years have been very demanding and stressful, yet rewarding, since I have enjoyed working with and helping my patients. I can look back and feel that I was helpful in the world, even if fame or fortune did not come my way. Absorbing work was helpful in shielding me from the emotional poverty of my life. Although I was devoted to my children, I lacked the great love that can make work a game, make chores a breeze, and make insignificant the inevitable mistakes and failures of one’s life. How few of us find that, and how many of us thus focus on the mechanics of life! I still hope to fall off my dock and lose myself in a long-term relationship, which could give a deeper and more significant and lasting meaning to my time here on earth. (I don’t mean the quick fall-in-love for sex, which is everywhere now. Remember, birth-control pills were just becoming available during our college time.) Love and commitment will always trump money, fame, self-aggrandizement, and our temporary lusts. Princeton was a wonderful and challenging experience. I arrived very naïve and trustful and left somewhat “improved,” with much wider eyes for the potentials of life. In retrospect, I never achieved all the goals that I had 124 set, was never comfortable in the roles I had to play, and always had trouble escaping from the childish tapes which burden us all. Even today, many of us have trouble being totally responsible for the outcomes of our decisions and lives — as if someone else (parents, teachers?) were in charge of our very brief experience here on earth. Whose life is it, after all? May we have the wisdom to see and understand what will bring us long-term happiness and fulfillment, and also improve the state of the human condition. Robert D. Hochberg 1119 North Woodbine Ave., Narberth, PA 19072-1244; (610) 667-4036; roberthochberg@comcast.net Radiologist Spouse: Melinda Wineburgh Hochberg John H. Hodge 246 Chester Rd., Devon, PA 19333-1627; (610) 688-3246; hodgejh@aol.com Duffy Real Estate, Inc., 527 East Lancaster Ave., St. Davids, PA 19087; (610) 254-9292 Spouse: Mary Gindhart Hodge John K. Hoerster 1415 42nd Ave. East, Seattle, WA 98112-3807; (206) 323-2475; jhoerster@gsblaw.com Managing Partner, Garvey Schubert & Barer, Suite 1800, 1191 Second Ave., Seattle, WA 98101; (206) 464-3939 Spouse: Carol Hoerster Richard W. Hogan POB 35136, Richmond, VA 23235-0136 Attorney, Richard W. Hogan Law Office, Suite 202, 7643 Hull St. Rd., Richmond, VA 23235-6445; (804) 745-4735 Spouse: D. Ann Hogan James K. Holman 2713 35th St., NW, Washington, DC 20007; (202) 342-0897 Spouse: Diana Lang Holman 125 Jonathan S. Holman (Jon) San Francisco, CA President, The Holman Group, Inc., 1592 Union Street, San Francisco, CA 94123-4505, (415) 751-2700; jsh@holmangroup.net; www.holmangroup.net Spouse: Carole White Holman Children: Melissa Lawrence S. Horn (Larry) 2 Thompson Court, Morristown, NJ 07960; (973) 540-0197; 1horn@sillscummis.com Partner, Sills Cummis Epstein & Gross, One Riverfront Plaza, Newark, NJ 07102; (973) 643-5484 Spouse: Jacelaine F. Horn (retired) David Horn, Jackie Horn, Larry Horn, Children: Debbie, 7/17/71 (P.U. Ron Wolfson, Debbie Horn ’93, and ’93); David, 8/19/74 Jake Wolfson, August 2004. Fortunately, very little has changed since our 35th. I am blessed to be still married to Jackie, my wife of 37 years. I am stilling toiling in the vineyards with the same law firm I have been with since 1981, although I don’t enjoy practicing law nearly as much as I formerly did. Our children, Debbie ’93 and David, continue to enjoy our company. We speak with them regularly and see them often. Three new things have entered my life. I have two grandchildren, Jake, age three, and, Ben, one. I also am playing a lot of golf. I started playing seven years ago and find it enjoyable and relaxing while frustrating at times. Playing golf allows me to forget about life (i.e., my law practice and clients) for a while. In short, life is great. I have two goals: First, I want to be “easier” on myself. Second, I want to work significantly less so I can do more of the things I want to do, rather what I have to do. Five years ago I said I would retire as soon as I find something else I really want to do. I am still in the same position. Having a great relationship with my adult children, visualizing things anew through the eyes of my grandchildren, who live a mere 35 minutes from my home, and being madly in love with Jackie give me a wonderful sense of contentment. I don’t want anything to change. 126 Allan Horwich 216 West Concord Ln. Chicago, IL 60614-5743; (312) 649-5618; ahorwich@schiffhardin.com Partner, Schiff Hardin LLP, 6600 Sears Tower, 233 South Wacker Dr., Chicago, IL 60606; (312) 258-5618 Spouse: Carolyn Allen Horwich Children: Benjamin, 1977; Diana, 1980; Eleanor, 1983; Flannery, 1985 I remain a full-time partner at the law firm I joined out of law school in 1969, with a panoramic view from the 74th floor of the Sears Tower, where we have been since 1974 and will remain for the foreseeable future. Since 1999 I have taught part-time at Northwestern University Law School, conveniently located just a couple of miles from my downtown office. I teach courses in securities regulation, a stimulating supplement to my law practice. I have also published a number of articles in the field. Outside of work, my wife of nearly 31 years and I have been devoted to raising four wonderful independent children, our most important accomplishment. We live in Old Town in Chicago — I have never lived more than about two miles from my office — which gives me maximum flexibility in structuring my life, not being a slave to a train schedule or suffering a lengthy commute. In fact, weather and energy permitting, I walk to work, my most regular form of exercise. (Another accomplishment — I weigh only about a dozen pounds more than when I graduated.) With the nest effectively empty, though often visited, we have been redoing our townhouse of 20 years room by room. We live a fairly quiescent life, doing what we enjoy (reading, movies, theater), keeping in touch with our far flung children, and hoping that the world we leave to our children will bring more peace, more freedom, and less debt than we experience today Theodore S. Hoster 15 Hubbard Court, Stamford, CT 06902-2204; tshoster@alumni.princeton.edu Chief Financial Officer, BGT Group LLC, Suite 231, 65 High Ridge Rd., Old Greenwich, CT 06905; (203) 961-8788 Spouse: Linda Trapp Hoster Paul E. Hudak 5231 Herzell Woods Court, Fairfax, VA 22032-3916; (703) 425-7080 Senior Associate and Consultant, Booz-Allen & Hamilton, Inc., 8283 Greensboro Dr., McLean, VA 22102-3812; (703) 902-2601 Spouse: Virginia Willis Hudak 127 Peter G. Huenink Associate Professor, Art Department, Vassar College, P.O. Box 702, Poughkeepsie, NY 12604-0702; (845) 437-5220; huenink@vassar.edu Spouse: Barbara Anderson Huenink Henry N. Hulter 17 Wellbrock Heights, San Rafael, CA 94903-3787; (415) 472-3742; hulter@cgl.ucsf.edu Professor of Medicine, San Francisco General Hospital, UC Renal Center, Building 100, San Francisco, CA 94110; (650) 855-5260 Spouse: Marilyn Nelson Hulter Hazen G. Hunt 27294 Las Nieves, Mission Viejo, CA 92691-1011 Russell T. Hurlburt 3058 Via Del Corso, Henderson, NV 89052-4137 Professor, Department of Psychology, 4505 South Maryland Parkway, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV 89154; (702) 739-3305 Spouse: Roberta Jean Hurlburt Barrie L. Hurtubise 122 Pine Tree Rd., Radnor, PA 19087-3735; (610) 688-1812 Financial Consultant, Janney Montgomery Scott, 500 Chesterbrook Blvd., Wayne, PA 19087; (610) 640-9428 Ernest W. Hutton (Ernie) 172 Pacific St., Brooklyn, NY 11201-6214; (718) 834-8881; ehutton@aol.com President, Hutton Associates, Inc., Ninth Floor, 22 West 19th St., New York, NY 10011; (212) 206-0460 Spouse: Anne Frances Moore It must have been just last year that I was asked to write a similar essay for my 35th reunion. Why am I being badgered to go over the same territory again so quickly? I just made the same complaint to my wife, Anne, who told me our 10th wedding anniversary is coming up this spring, when I’ve only just shaken the rice out of my suit cuffs. 128 Well, tempus fugit and all. Anne and I are slightly bewildered at seeing so many of our friends hanging up their spurs — we are both so busy we can’t sit down. With Hutton Associates Inc., my own planning and urban design firm, I’m still advising a roster of cities and towns, from Providence to Southampton, for a variety of clients, including Lehman Brothers, Atlantic Richfield, and various municipal governments. And Anne, after a museum career including the Kimball, Dallas, Oberlin (where she was director of the Allen) and Peabody-Essex (where she coordinated rebuilding of an 18th-century Chinese house), set up her own art business, AncestorImage.com, specializing in American portraits from 1700 to early 20th century. It’s fun to watch her ruthlessly bid down major dealers at Sotheby’s auctions for a prize acquisition. What really underscored time’s rapid passage is when my daughter Lizzie (Princeton ’95) — poet, essayist, and U. Mich. teacher — announced she and her husband, Alex Ralph, are expecting my first grandchild. My new generation is tantalizingly imminent. Our other kids are not quite there yet, but they’re getting their own feet on the ground. My daughter Ellie, a publishing maven in Seattle, is packaging books on subjects ranging from Frank Lloyd Wright to Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix, and 50 Cent (!). Anne’s son Philip is also an art dealer, specializing in Old Master sculpture with New York’s Salander O’Reilly gallery. Lex is finishing up a degree in cultural anthropology at Franklin & Marshall (writing his senior independent paper on his most cultural and anthropological home town of Brooklyn), and Marya is continuing the family tradition as an art history major at St Andrew’s, Scotland. Part of what characterizes this time of life, I guess, is the impulse to plant yet more roots. Even as we continue “tearing down and building up” (Thomas Jefferson’s obsessive quest) at our firehouse home in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn, I succumbed to the ultimate folly, buying with my brother Jon an 1881 shingled ark of a house in Quiogue, Westhampton. It’s a great seductive nest — this Christmas we hosted 11 extended and extending family members, including my 87-year-old dad, up from Virginia. This impulse promises to be not only a giant black hole, sucking all our disposable income into its 125-year-old pipes, but also, we hope, an irresistible magnet for both our kids’ heavier treads and that pitter patter of little feet we hear over the horizon. It seems also at this time of life that you look for ways to give back some of what you’ve learned and received. One of the Big Events that happened to me since our 35th reunion was 9/11. Not only did it occur less than a mile from our house, with loss of a good friend and many associates, but it happened to my city, where I had lived for over 35 years, taking it completely for granted. Within four weeks, I and a small group of professional colleagues — architects, planners, engineers — 129 expanded our ranks to 30, than 60, then 350 participants desperate to help. This groundswell of passion became New York New Visions, a stillactive volunteer group for which I am co-chair. We defined the initial Principles for Rebuilding Lower Manhattan and hold the collective feet of various agencies and developers to the fire to ensure quality and action — a frustrating and mostly thankless task. Reunions are a great opportunity for rekindling friendships, reveling in a bit of nostalgia, and taking stock in anticipation of what to do with my life for the next five years. The way things are going, I’m happy to just go with the flow and hope my raft doesn’t hit a rock. David W. Ingraham 4982 Gunston Court, San Diego, CA 92130; ingraham@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Marcia Ann Ingraham Robert Haydn Jackson 14 Philip Dr., Princeton, NJ 08540-5410; (609) 924-8945; rhjackson66@msn.com Spouse: Karen Bache Jackson Carl B. Jacobs 376 Chapman Rd., POB 283, Keene, NH 03431-0283; (603) 352-0421; cr.jacobs@verizon.net Maintenance Electrician, County of Cheshire, Cheshire County Faclities, 201 River Rd., Westmoreland, NH 03467; (603) 399-7300 Spouse: Ruth Faust Jacobs Krist A. Jake 2719 Filbert St., San Francisco, CA 94123; (415) 567-2006; kjake@redcap.com President, Redwood Capital Corporation, P.O. Box 475668, San Francisco, CA 94147; (415) 397-3800 Laurie and I still live in San Francisco and enjoy the city’s attractions as well as our proximity to Golden Gate National Recreation Area and its many offerings. We’re lucky to have the choices and conveniences of a desireable urban area along with access to the saltwater Laurie and Krist Jake after of the Pacific — a combination we continue to value. In 2003, I founded the 2005 Alcatraz Swim. 130 the San Francisco Ocean Film Festival. It’s a volunteer-driven, grassroots educational non-profit that Laurie and I helped build with the support of many others (including Burke, Elliott, Hanks, Janis, Mill, Nuessle, and Young). The festival now has a committed team — although I still find the work very engaging, my role as igniter is almost complete and I now hope to make more sparks in the for-profit world … we’ll see. I swim in San Francisco Bay most days and am thankful for that simple pleasure. More than just good exercise, it is scenic and can be a bit of a wilderness experience right in the city. I enjoy introducing friends to the joy of Bay swimming, and several classmates have donned the neoprene cap and experienced the thrill … some have even come back for more! While we don’t have children of our own, Laurie and I enjoy spending time with nieces and nephews and watching their adult lives take shape. Several classmates knew our family member Raleigh, a terrifically wonderful terrier who left us in January with 15 years of memories. I often wonder what’s over the horizon — an expression of my adventurous side is a history of travel to Alaska. After our visit to Kenai Fjords last July I wrote: Sunny days propel melting tidewater glaciers which speak with icebergs Summer season smiles reflect long Alaskan days and greet you today. I look forward to greeting and reuniting with classmates at Reunions! S.F. Ocean Film Festival’s reception: Tom Curto ’65 (left) and ’66ers Jack Burke, Krist Jake, Frank Nuessle, Graeme Flanders, and Bill Young. Michael G. Janis Apt. 9, 201 Watchung Ave., Bloomfield, NJ 07003; (201) 745-3976; mjanis@jginfo.com President and Chief Executive Officer, The Janis Group, Inc., 201 West Passaic St., Rochelle Park, NJ 07662; (201) 291-5144 Spouse/Partner: Patty Vendola Keith S. Jennings 401 Mill Creek Rd., Wynnewood, PA 19096-1218; (610) 896-6050 Spouse: Beverly Bowers Jennings 131 Clinton A. Johnson 3109 Lewiston Ave., Berkeley, CA 94705-2716 1939 Harrison St., Oakland, CA 94618; (415) 273-8886 Kent E. Johnson Apt. 19, 10000 East Yale Ave., Denver, CO 80231-5958; kej66@alumni.princeton.edu Urologist, Colorado Urology Associates PC, Suite 302, 1721 East 19th Ave., Denver, CO 80218; (303) 861-8444 Spouse: Carol Johnson Lathrop P. Johnson 1002 Shellbark Rd., Muncie, IN 47304-3178; (765) 747-9610 Professor of German, Ball State University, 2000 University Ave., Muncie, IN 47306; (765) 285-1368 Spouse: Susan Johnson M. Davis Johnson 48 Ludlow Dr., Chappaqua, NY 10514-1212; (914) 241-4918; djohnson@kurzman.com Partner, Kurzman Karelsen & Frank, LLP, 23rd Floor, 230 Park Ave., New York, NY 10169-0061; (212) 867-9500 R. Craig Johnson 12 Days Landing, Biddeford, ME 04005-9266 Spouse: Elizabeth Johnson Robert L. Johnson (Rob) Apt. 4, 2504 Mandell St., Houston, TX 77006; (713) 520-6428; rjohnson@alumni.princeton.edu Attorney, Brill & Johnson, PLLC, Suite 1750, 1360 Post Oak Blvd., Houston, TX 77056-3022; (713) 629-1234 Spouse/Partner: Patricia E. Holland (professor) Children: Will Holland-Freed, 11/24/76; Robert L. Johnson IV, 5/12/77; Meredith L. Johnson, 5/4/82; Clark K. Johnson, 4/24/89 132 W. Marshall Johnson P.O. Box 131, Orient, NY 11957-0131 William E. Johnson (Bill) 5351 Spring Meadow Dr., Dallas, TX 75229-4332; (214) 363-8383; taxatty@wejohnsoniii.com President & Director, Johnson Timber & Land Company, Ltd., Suite 650, 3141 Hood St., Dallas, TX 75219; (214) 922-8884 Spouse: Kathleen McNamy Johnson (real estate agent, master gardener) Children: Billy Gilbert Underwood (Trey), 6/4/74; Christopher Charles Underwood, 11/2/75; William E. Johnson IV (Will), 3/2/84 My wife, Kathleen, and I and our three sons are enjoying life very much. I continue to practice as an international tax attorney on a full-time basis and enjoy traveling around the world in connection therewith. My brother and I continue to develop our timber business in East Texas and Alabama and have a major oil-and-gas well scheduled for drilling this spring on one of our plantations. I have been developing a 200-lot subdivision on the shores of Lake Ray Hubbard in the eastern Dallas metroplex and have just completed the sale of the first phase of it to Newmark Homes. I will sell the second phase in another 21 months and the third and final phase with all the lakefront lots in about 32 months from the date of this essay. This has been an enjoyable development and will provide for a substantial portion of my retirement. I have been developing a shopping center and medical plaza for the past 10 years in Dallas. The center presently has a bank, a Home Depot Garden Center, and a Quik Trip gasoline and convenience store. I’m beginning the construction of a plaza with restaurants and other retail outlets, as well as a free-standing urgent care/doc in the box medical building. The final portion of the development will be a four-story medical plaza with an ambulatory surgery center, an imaging center, a pharmacy, and physician offices. Construction should start later this year. I am the general counsel, secretary, and a member of the board of directors of a start-up electronics company involved in high-density storage of visual and data information and retrieval of such information, the products of which involve multi-terabyte storage abilities, 80-year memory retention, and the ability to scan data for particular images or events. We are dealing with the military, the Homeland Security Agency, various police departments, cities, and other entities that require massive amounts of video-data storage and retrieval. I have enjoyed working with the scientists and engineers in the project, most of whom come from companies like Texas Instruments, Raytheon, 133 Lockheed Martin, and other high-tech defense-oriented firms. My wife, Kathleen, and I continue to travel all over the world as much as possible. We spent a month in China last year and just returned from the island of St. Lucia over the Christmas/New Years holiday. The joy of our lives has been and continues to be our children, and now we have our first grandchild, a granddaughter. Our oldest son, Trey, lived in Peru for eight years and worked in the construction industry. He has now returned to Dallas, where he is still in the construction industry, primarily engaged in the building of golf courses. Nearly all of his workers are Spanish speaking and, of course, Trey, like all our children, is fluent in Spanish. Our daughter-in-law Gina is from Peru (of all things, from an Irish background) and we very much enjoy having her and Trey, as well as their daughter, Megan, close by; they only live a few blocks from us and we see them almost every day. Our middle son, Christopher, uses his fluent Spanish on the job as director of sales for South Texas, Mexico, Central America, and South America for Epi Med, a manufacturer of neurosurgical needles and other instruments used by neurosurgeons for nerve blocks and spinal operations. Christopher travels a great deal. He has recently been to Mexico, Peru, and Colombia. Chile is his next stop. Our youngest son, Will, has stated that he wishes to join me in my international law practice. Afler graduating from Jesuit, he attended the Institut Le Rosey in Rolle and Gstaad, Switzerland,where he became fluent in French. He is also fluent in Spanish. Will has traveled almost everywhere in the world, including his year of school in Europe. He is now in his junior year at Loyola University in New Orleans. During the fall semester of 2005, he attended the American University in Washington, DC, while Loyola was closed because of Hurricane Katrina. There he worked for our senator, Kay Bailey Hutchinson, and took a special course of study in contemporary American politics, constitutional law, and American history; he had a 3.7 average. The summer before last, Will worked for our U.S. representative from Dallas, Pete Sessions. This summer, Will will take the LSAT and begin his study of German. After a three week total-immersion course at Berlitz, he will work the rest of the summer with the insurance brokers I use in Zurich and the attorneys I use in Vaduz Liechtenstein, then spend two weeks with the head of the oldest accounting firm in Hamburg. He will have the opportunity to speak German the entire time and work with the firms that I work with in connection with foreign investors’ investments in U.S. companies and real estate. Hopefully, Will will attend the University at Texas Law School or Southern Methodist University Law School. I received a law degree from each of these two universities and would be pleased for him to graduate from either. 134 After Will completes law school and passes the bar exam, we intend for him to attend the University of Shanghai in China for one year in order to learn to speak Mandarin and to study Chinese business law and Chinese tax law, as well as making friends and developing relationships in China. After Will joins me in my law firm, hopefully, I will be able to reduce the amount of time I have to devote to business and can turn over a great deal of the work to him. I continue to serve on various charitable boards, including the Walden Piano Quartet and the Dallas Symphony Orchestra Guild, of which I currently serve as chairman and vice president in charge of fund raising. I served on the board of directors of the Dallas Symphony Association during the past two years and was president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra Guild from 2003 to 2005. Kathleen and I generally spend several weeks each summer either on Nantucket or in Santa Barbara, California. Afler Reunions, we will be going directly to Nantucket, where we have rented a house from June 4 through June 18. If any of you will be visiting Nantucket during this time we would love to hear from you. My cell phone is (214) 641-7183. We will have a number of guests during that period from various parts of the world, and we would love to see any classmates who will be in Nantucket. My wife’s health is excellent and, fortunately, so is the health of all of our children and our granddaughter. My health has been very good except for the pains of arthritis, particularly in my hands and fingers, which has restricted my piano playing. Otherwise, I continue to enjoy good health. I am very grateful for this and for the happiness that I and my entire family have enjoyed together and are continuing to enjoy. I look forward to many more grandchildren and to many more years of satisfying and intellectually stimulating activities both in business and the fine arts. We had a wonderful time at the mini-reunion in Florida and are looking forward very much to the 40th reunion of the Overall Class. E. Richard Jones Apt. 702, 840 Powell St., San Francisco, CA 94108-2006; (415) 773-2230; rick@joneswine.com Proprietor, Jones Family Vineyards, 3884 Silverado Trail, Calistoga, CA 94515; (707) 942-5215 Spouse: Sally J. Jones 135 SARAH JONES Landon Y. Jones, Jr. (Lanny) 136 20 Hibben Rd., Princeton, NJ 08540-6804; (609) 924-1420; landon.jones@verizon.net Editor and Author Spouse: Sarah Brown Jones (computer instructor, retired) Children: Rebecca, 11/30/71; Landon III, 6/20/75; Cassie, 10/2/ 79 If I were writing this report just a year ago, it might have been a fairly predictable accounting of my retirement in 2000 after Lanny and Sarah Jones at their 30 years at Time Inc. and the vacation home in Bozeman, Montana. years since then enjoying our expanding family and my long-delayed second career as an author. But then life interrupted. Last August I was wheeled into an emergency room in Bozeman, Montana, with a ruptured appendix. Before I left the hospital I learned that the doctors had found floating around in my nowremoved appendix a rare cancer type called a goblet-cell carcinoid. The upshot was follow-up surgery in New York to confirm that the cancer had not spread. Fortunately, it had not. This was actually my second bout with cancer — the first was a malignant melanoma in 1996 — but this one was far more sobering. It left me fully recovered, but awash with feelings of vulnerability and great empathy for our friends and classmates who deal quietly and courageously with similar or more grievous health issues. Meanwhile, I feel especially aware of and grateful for the precious things in life. This begins with Sarah, my wonderful (and forbearing) wife of the last 36 years. We still live in Princeton, just a short walk away from the university, where Sarah worked for most of two decades as a computer technician until she retired last year. I keep a tenuous toehold in the life of the university as a member of the advisory council of the Department of English and as a board member of Princeton Project Former roommates Ham Shields, Sandy Martin, and Lanny Jones (with 55 (with our classmates Jody Kretzmann and Bill Leahy). Colter) in Montana, 2003. Since our 25th reunion, two of our children graduated from Princeton. Elder daughter Rebecca ’93 is getting a PhD in school psychology at Columbia and works as a counselor at Nightingale-Bamford School in New York City. She and her husband, Christian Urciuoli ’93, are the parents of our two spectacular granddaughters. Son Landon ’97 is currently a law clerk for federal appeals court judge Walter Stapleton (Princeton ’56). Landon and his wife, Beth Vaccaro, live in Philadelphia, where Beth teaches at an inner-city KIPP school. Our youngest child, Cassie, studied art at Bowdoin College (’01) and this spring will be painting at the MacDowell Arts Colony in New England. I continue to pursue writing projects, most recently a biography of the explorer William Clark. But one of the great benefits of this advanced age is that the beast of ambition has been pretty well subdued (with an occasional flare-up). The result is that I find myself finally giving more time to family and friends. We spend most summers at our place in southwestern Montana, a region we share with a small but gathering group of ’66ers, including Sandy Martin, John Heminway, and Peter Longstreth. I continue to play a little tennis, less squash, and truly awful golf. We keep in touch regularly with many good friends in our class, and look forward to seeing them, and all of you, at Reunions. Robert D. Jordan (Bob) 2215 Bentivar Farm Court, Charlottesville, VA 22911-2205 Semiretired Spouse: Maryann McGee Jordan (teacher) Children: John D. Jordan, 9/29/77; Charles A. Jordan, 2/29/80 I retired from MetLife at the end of 2001 and moved to Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2002. Since moving to Charlottesville I do some consulting in insurance and financial-services law, play golf, and attend some athletic events and other University of Virginia functions with Maryann. Other than that, we have taken trips to visit our children, John and Chuck, and I have worked sporadically on a couple of book projects. At least presently Charlottesville, or at least Albemarle County, where we actually live, is a lot quieter than New York or Boston. Approximately 95 percent of county residents here live on 5 percent of the land, with the rest currently remaining open space. Unfortunately, a good part of northern Virginia seems to be in the process of moving here. 137 Edward C. Joyce Apt. 8, 114 The Fenway, Boston, MA 02115; (617) 266-7084; ecramsey@aol.com Consultant, B.L. Makepeace, Incorporated, 125 Guest St., Brighton, MA 02125; (617) 782-3800 Wallace P. Judd 14975 Echo Ridge Dr., Nevada City, CA 95959 Chief Executive Officer, ASPtrain, Inc., Suite 230, 140 Litton Dr., Grass Valley, CA 95945 Zimani David Kadzamira Kachulu Estate, P.O. Box 166, Zomba, Malawi; (+265) 01 524 453; vc@unima.mw Vice Chancellor, University of Malawi, University Central Offices, P.O. Box 278, Zomba, Malawi; (+265) 01 526 622 Spouse: Esme Patricia Kadzamira (retired nursing sister) Children: Thoko, 1970; Masoatengenji, 1972; Tamanda, 1975; Tinyade, 1980 It is very unlikely that I made a contribution to the last reunion book. This time, with better connectivity, I should try to fill any gaps in my classmates’ records. I have been associated with the University of Malawi since graduation at Princeton. I completed doctoral studies at the University of Manchester in 1974, majoring in political science (or government, as they prefer to call it out there). The University of Malawi was established in 1964 and now has an umbrella structure with five colleges. There is Bunda College of Agriculture in Lilongwe and Kamuzu College of Nursing, also in Lilongwe. The College of Medicine and the Polytechnic are based in Blantyre, while Zomba hosts Chancellor College and the Central University Offices. In addition to my teaching and research, I have over the years served in various capacities as head of department and dean of the faculty of social science. I was appointed principal of Chancellor College (1981-90) and of Bunda College (1990-92) before I accepted secondment to the Foreign Service. While serving as Malawi’s ambassador to Japan from 1992 to 1994 I met some members of the Princeton Club of Tokyo, but I was particularly delighted to meet Judge Joe Irenas ’63, a former Princeton roommate. After this short spell in the Foreign Service, I returned to the University of Malawi, where I am professor of government in the Department of Political and Administrative Studies. However, in July 2001 I welcomed 138 mandatory retirement, as stipulated in the university’s conditions of service on reaching age 60, with the prospect of a more relaxed life style. That did not last long, as I accepted a teaching position in the department on a contract basis. I am now back full time into university management after successfully competing for the position of vice chancellor of the University of Malawi, a position I have held since August 2005. Among the most exciting and fascinating events I have been engaged in as vice chancellor was presiding over the graduation ceremony in December and interacting with both staff and student leaders on a wide range of issues, including conflict management and resolution, the impact of the H.I.V./ AIDS scourge, and the maintenance of high academic standards. During my four-year tenure of office I would like to see UNIMA develop into a public university known for its contributions to the Malawi nation and one that excels in teaching and research and is a source of pride to its students, staff, and alumni. One of our major challenges as a relatively young university is to reduce the widening resource gap between what we can get from the public purse, which is always bombarded by numerous demands, and what we can generate on our own. Since 1975 I have been a member of Zomba Lions Club under District 412 of the International Association of Lions Clubs. On the sporting front I have maintained my interest in social golf, with a handicap that hovers between 18 and 20. Unlike standard grass “greens,” our local golf club offers sand “greens,” which we appropriately call “browns,” since the sand is brown in this part of the world. Putting can be a nightmare, especially after it rains. A family photo that appeared in one of the PAW class notes in 1994 showed that I have four children, all grown-up now. Three are married, and we have become proud grandparents. As a citizen of the so-called Third World it has not been easy to participate fully in class activities and Reunions. Living, as I do, in a resource-poor country where class dues can feed 10 hungry mouths, it has been difficult to maintain regular contributions. I shall, however, continue to cherish happy memories of Old Nassau. Cordial greetings to all. 139 Wilfried E. Kaffenberger (Will) 5826 Bent Twig Rd., McLean, VA 22101-1808; (703) 522-3152; wkaffenberger@cox.net Managing Director and CEO, Asia Fund II, Emerging Markets Partnership, 2001 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, Suite 1100, Washington, DC 20006; (202) 331-9051 Spouse/Patner: Carol Jean Kaffenberger (professor, George Mason University) Children: Jennifer Collins P.U. ’95, 1/26/73; Ross Kaffenberger P.U. ’99, 9/20/77; Sarah Kaffenberger, 4/20/79 C. William Kaiser 50 Glen Dr., Doylestown, PA 18901-2928; (215) 345-8881 Director of Services, Technology Planning Spouse: Diane Lasky Kaiser John W. Kalmbach Apt. 3A, 1300 Ritchie Court, Chicago, IL 60610-2143; (312) 988-9096; jkcgo@alumni.princeton.edu Vice President, Wunderlich Securities, Inc., Suite 2000, 200 W Madison St., Chicago, IL 60606-3437; (312) 845-9059 Spouse: Sally S. Kalmbach Richard J. Kates (Dick) Eight Alpine Meadow, Avon, CT 06001; (860) 677-6168 Gynecology and Obstetrics, PC, 100 Retreat Ave., Hartford, CT 06106; (860) 246-8568 Spouse: Maxine Paula Kates (event planner) Children: Robin, 1970; Stephen, 1973 David J. Keetley P.O. Box 270, Round Top, TX 78954; (979) 249-5391 Spouse: Ora Keetley 140 William N. Kelley, Jr. (Bill) 15211 NE Grinnell, Woodland, WA 98674; (360) 263-0496; kelley@vancouver.wsu.edu Facilities Operations Manager, Washington State University Vancouver, 14204 NE Salmon Creek Ave., Vancouver, WA 98686-9600; (360) 546-9702 Spouse: Julie Anderson (business editor, daily newspaper) Children: Bill Kelley III, 1969; Emily, 1970 After a career of 30-plus years in the mining, explosives, and metals industry which took me all over the West, Mexico, and Australia, I was nudged into a new line of work five years ago. The Enron-California electrical power debacle of 2000 convincingly shut down the aluminum industry in the Northwest. Within 10 months of that “contrived power shortage” all 10 aluminum smelters in Washington, Oregon, and Montana were down, with roughly 6,000 employees out of jobs, not to mention all the related businesses and communities affected. Luckily and happily for me, Washington State University was opening a regional campus in Vancouver, Washington, and needed a facilities and operations manager with a few “whiskers” to help run the place. As it turned out, building and operating an institution of higher learning in the early stages is not unlike developing a new mine or smelter, with surprisingly similar challenges and rewards. Four years ago I founded a volunteer choir for the school — a precursor to an eventual music program, we hope. our young campus rests atop a broad hill on the north edge of Vancouver with spectacular views of Mount St. Helens and Mount Hood incorporated into an ambitious master plan. Julie and I, now in our 16th year together, are very busy and enjoying life in southwestern Washington. She has been employed for many years as business news editor for The Columbian, Vancouver’s daily newspaper. Both of us are looking forward to retirement but are not there yet. We built a home in a remote part of northern Clark County. Our home site and small farm, originally homesteaded in 1895, are nestled in a rainforest in the foothills of the Cascades and only 15 miles as the crow flies from Mount St. Helens. This is not a bad spot for a geological engineer to end up. My classmates should appreciate that the geologic training received in Guyot Hall gave me the forethought not to build prior to the 1980 eruption and to select a site south of the active crater and not downrange of the blast area. Julie and I each have two children and a combined four grandchildren, all of whom live too far away. We share our place on Green Mountain with Griffey the cat, Coot, our black lab and very talented duck dog, plus Magic and Peno, trusty riding and pack horses. We escape periodically to our small, isolated “bunk house” on the Big Lost River in central Idaho. It was 141 built from scratch with the slave labor of friends and family over the course of several years. No surprise, the horses prefer the Idaho place, as do we. It is off the power grid, the closet neighbors are a mile away, and there is no landline phone or Internet service, no TV, and best of all no cell-phone service. We celebrated my 60th year by climbing Mount Borah, Idaho’s highest peak and nine miles across the basin from our cabin door. Last summer we participated in a choral tour of Italy, performing in several cathedrals and ancient churches in four major cities. And last November 3, just at dark, we remembered Lewis and Clark and the 200th anniversary of their journey down the Columbia by paddling to the center of the river in our canoes and firing off a musket. Life is not bad! We look forward to catching up with classmates in June. John R. Kelso 8261 S.W. 185 Terrace, Miami, FL 33157-7328; (305) 238-4143; johnrkelso@yahoo.com Attorney, Levey, Airan, Shevin, et al, 1320 South Dixie Highway, PH 1275, Coral Gables, FL 33146; (305) 661-6664 Children: Anna-Liege, 08/31/79 Update since leaving Mother Princeton, 6/66: law degree, University of Florida, 1966-70; get pilot’s license, 1970; take temporary job with large Miami law firm (large for Miami) to save money for move back north to center of universe (Boston-Washington corridor), 1970; marry Ann, 1972; daughter Anna-Liege born, 1979; angry a lot, Ann divorces, 1981-84; vision poor, quit flying, 1983; marry Toni, 1984; retinas fall off six times, get glued back, 1991; house destroyed by Hurricane Andrew, 1992; get new house, like it better, 1993; Ann finally tires of being angry, 1994; get dog, 1997; another retina falls off, get problem fixed permanently, vision improves, 1998; enjoying law practice but leave “temporary” Miami job after 28 years, 1998; move north one county, take “permanent” job in Ft. Lauderdale, 1998; leave permanent Ft. Lauderdale job, join new law firm in Coral Gables, look up definitions of “temporary” and “permanent,” 1999; contrary to wishes of sedentary parents, daughter Anna spends own money, hires guide and porter, alone climbs Mount Kilimanjaro, descends safely (parents age discernibly), 1900; return to Mother Princeton, attend beer parties in silly get-up, have wonderful times, 1971, 1976, 1981, 1986, 1991, 1996, 2001 (each better than the last); dog thrives, 2001; still no mid-life crisis, but anticipate flying again, 2001; consider for class book how to summarize adult life story in one paragraph without run-on sentence, give up, 2001; favorite T-shirt statement: “If I had known I was going to live this long, I would have taken better care of my body.” Add, since 2001: second wife of 20 142 years, Toni, leaves (suprise, no discussion or reason), 2004; Rosa enters my life, 2004; life is good, 2004-06; report to class book that all is well, 2006 (using two run-on sentences). Wade Kennedy 65 Wilsondale St., Dover, MA 02030-2260; (508) 785-2453 Principal, Kennedy Partners, 65 Wilsondale St., Dover, MA 02030; (508) 785-2453 Spouse: Deborah Conant Kennedy Paul C. Kepler c/o McKenna Surf, 96 McKenna Alanui Dr., Kihei, Maui, HI 96753; wkepler@aol.com Owner, Seascape Sports Club, 1505 Seascape Blvd., Aptos, CA 95003; (831) 688-1993 Spouse: Winnie Kepler David E. Kern (Dave) 7 Midvale Rd., Baltimore, MD 21210-2113; (410) 532-9417; dkem@jhmi.edu Physician, Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, 4940 Eastern Ave., Baltimore, MD 21224-2780; (410) 550-0509 Spouse: Susan Kathryn Gauvey (judge and lawyer) Children: Megan “GK” Gauvey-Kern, 9/18/81; Kevin Gauvey-Kern, 10/16/84; Elizabeth Gauvey-Kern, 6/6/89 GK, our oldest, graduated in May 2005 from Wesleyan University, where she majored in economics and managed to complete the pre med science requirements. She coached varsity field hockey at Park School this fall (Liz was on the team) and now is studying for the MCATS, the medical-school admission test. It is fun to have her back in Baltimore, and she and her mother are taking tennis lessons together. She and her dad in good weather go to the driving range. Kevin is a sophomore at Columbia and declares his major this spring. He is taking a pre-med curriculum but is thinking of a major in economics or perhaps creating his own major in Third World development. He is just finishing an EMT program and once he is certified will work with the emergency program on campus. Kevin worked this past summer in Honduras with a nongovernmental organization (NGO) helping troubled youths in the capital city. Liz is a junior in high school. (Can you believe it!) Susan and Liz 143 attended Dartmouth’s Rassias language program in Spanish. Liz had a great time and when not studying Spanish played soccer barefoot, breaking a toe and arriving at the theater program at Boston University on crutches. Our family, including her grandfather, attended the ending production — Theatre of the Absurd — not the musical that we were hoping for, but very interesting nonetheless. This year Liz is writing for the school newspaper, Postscript, and playing field hockey, soccer, and lacrosse. She has just started volunteering in a local political campaign (she is a West Wing fan), and is starting a new vocal group. Susan continues on the court and had a great time in Japan early last year presiding over a prisoner-transfer hearing and then setting off on a whirlwind trip with Liz and GK through Japan. (Kevin was in Costa Rica and could not join us and I was attending.) They spent time in Tokyo, staying in a ryokan, a traditional inn with relaxing public baths. They saw Mount Fuji in Hakone, geisha in Kyoto, and the quite moving peace museum in Hiroshima. Susan esta continuado con su clase de Espanol, pero su progreso es muy despacio. This January brings another wonderful adventure — an invitation to teach mediation to Middle Eastern judges in Dubai. I have transitioned from codirector to director of the Division of General Internal Medicine at Johns Hopkins Bayview with the semi– retirement of my long-time codirector, Randy Barker. I’ve been too busy editing the seventh edition of Principles of Ambulatory Medicine, shepherding the division through a strategic- planning process and putting together the division’s budget. I am looking forward to another trip to Cincinnati in the spring for a few days of golf with my dad, who is 92. I was invited to be a guest professor in Tokyo but was only able to stay in Japan for a few days due to another commitment in the U.S. Family vacations remain an important part of our year. Last spring we spent time in Florida, visiting Susan’s sister, Mary Jane, and her family and exploring some new areas. In the summer we borrowed the Gauvey Herbert house in Tuxedo Park, New York, and enjoyed some quiet time while checking out local tourist spots. (I like Kykuit, the Rockefeller home.) Susan, Liz, and GK joined our neighbors and spent a long weekend in Jane’s Island state park, kayaking, and camping. Last Thanksgiving we welcomed friends of the children — a friend of GK’s from college and a classmate of Kevin’s from China, and had a progressive Thanksgiving dinner with two other families in our neighborhood. Christmas was in Baltimore, with Jim, David’s father, joining us. 144 Bert G. Kerstetter 1180 Meetinghouse Rd., West Chester, PA 19382-8128; (610) 793-1718; bkerstetter@calicocorners.com President, Everfast, Inc., 203 Gale Lane, Kennett Square, PA 19348-1768; (610) 444-9700 Spouse: Sherry Delk Kerstetter David H. Kidd 5195 68th St., San Diego, CA 92115-1749; (619) 462-7810; dhkidd@cts.com Associate, Ault Midlam and Deuprey, 1455 Frazee Rd., 9th Floor, San Diego, CA 92108; (858) 592-6190 Frank W. Kilpatrick 5888 Timber Ridge Trail, Madison, WI 53711-5180; (608) 271-3365; fwkilpat@facstaff.wisc.edu Physician-Physical, UW Health, Suite 405, 20 South Park St., Madison, WI 53715; (608) 287-2435 Spouse: Mary Jo Freitag Kilpatrick David M. Kinard 55 Webb Ave., Ocean Grove, NJ 07756; (732) 776-8189; davidmkinard@aol.com Principal, Eastgarde Holdings, Inc., 55 Webb Ave., Ocean Grove, NJ 07756; (201) 924-0842 Spouse: Elizabeth Flynn Kinard Rufus G. King 3403 34th Place, NW, Washington, DC 20016-3135; (202) 237-7785; arking3@aol.com Chief Judge, Superior Court of DC, 500 Indiana Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20001-2131; (202) 879-1600 145 John P. Kipp 17 Falmouth Rd., Falmouth, ME 04105-1841; (207) 781-5458; jkipp@jahenkelcasting.com J.A. Henkel Co., 16 Union St. / P.O. Box 661, Brunswick, ME 040110661; (207) 729-3599 Spouse: Phyllis P. Hewitt Children: See below “It’s the relationships.” That, roughly, was my response in an interview to a question of what is important to me in my work. I am finding it goes for all aspects of my life. And my life is vastly different from 15 years ago. In 1992, I reacquainted with Phyllis Hewitt, and we married in 1993. We feel fortunate to have living Princetonian fathers, and fathers-in-law, for that matter, John P. Kipp ’31 and Rem V. Myers ’37. We are parents of five daughters between us, going in five distinct directions. Jessica Kipp Archer graduated from Princeton in 1999 and married Jeremy M. Archer ’97. She is a middle-school biology teacher, and he is an MD looking to start a residency in pediatrics in June. Their daughter, Cadien Linden Archer, was born Christmas Day 2005. Now in Gainesville, Florida, they plan to relocate to New England in June. Anna Hewitt lives in Portland and is a manager at a natural-food restaurant called O’Naturals. She graduated from Mount Holyoke in 2002 with a degree in studio arts — sculpture — and really wants to be a farmer. She worked several summers on a local farm, spent a season learning about sustainable agriculture in Oregon, taught bio-intensive farming in Tanzania for five months, and is looking for a way to get her hands back in the dirt organically. Brooks Kipp spent a year and a half at Roanoke College, then returned home and now works for Auto Europe, making travel arrangements. She married Joe Basler, and they have a daughter, Simone, who will be almost two at reunion time. Joe has been a chef and a preschool teacher and is now spending most of his time chasing Simone around their apartment in Portland or around the town. Kate Kipp Szlamas entered the Navy after high school and is a secondclass petty officer sonar technician. She married Alex Szlamas in January 2002. Alex is also a PO2 sonar tech. They deployed in separate ships to the Persian Gulf for the invasion of Iraq, and they were again in the Far East a year ago and went to assist Indonesians in Aceh Province after the tsunami. Caroline Hewitt graduated from Vassar in 2005 and is now in San Francisco as a stage actress. Her career is just beginning, but I expect to see her in significant productions before long. We have been fortunate to see her at the Theater at Monmouth in Maine for the last three seasons. 146 Occupationally, since 1987, my CPA career has meandered from pension administration through owning a small accounting practice through being controller for a local cellular phone company through being a business broker through being controller for an awning manufacturer to now owning a business. In April 2005, Phyllis and I bought the J.A. Henkel Co., not to be confused with the German knife manufacturer, J.A. Henckels. We manufacture gold, silver, and platinum jewelry using the lost-wax method in Brunswick, Maine. We also have a retail showroom in the same building at 16 Union Street called Snowy Owl Gallery. For the casting business, our customers are jewelers from all around the country. Many are from Maine because of our location, but others are located down the East Coast to Florida, west to California, and north to Alaska; we also have a couple in Canada. It is stimulating to apply skills assembled over more than 40 years and be in mutual charge of a small enterprise. Remember about the importance of relationships? Phyllis and I form an excellent partnership, and we have assembled a wonderful team of artisan factory workers who use relatively simple and very old methods to create beautiful objects. Employment has grown from one full-time and one half-time employee (in addition to the prior owner and his wife) to seven full-time and two part-time employees (in addition to Phyllis and me). Our list of artist customers is growing nicely, thanks to Phyllis’s efforts, and we have put a lot of energy into the retail gallery. Most of the jewelry in our gallery was cast on site, and we look for beautiful and interesting pieces in a wide range of prices. It looks terrific, so if you are in the area, please stop in. We particularly enjoy working with jewelers to solve problems getting their concepts realized in gold or silver. If we try something a little different, or they modify their design a bit, wonderful things can result. The ongoing developmental relationship is fulfilling. Our niche has to be well or excellently designed work produced in small or moderate volumes. Mass-market jewelry will be outsourced to China or India, and we cannot compete on price. We work hard to ship pieces of excellent quality within reasonable time frames and to maintain high degrees of communication with our customers. As matters of ethics and social responsibility, we pay good living wages and full benefits at levels few businesses our size do. As a result, we have surrounded ourselves with people we really like working with and who really like working with us. “Have I told you I love my job recently?” is something we have become accustomed to hearing. These are good relationships. Another result of this is that our prices are not the lowest. If we are blunt, we say, “Business is a triangle. One corner is quality; another is service, and the third is price. You may pick only two.” 147 So come visit our shop in Brunswick. I would be happy to give a tour. Or visit our websites, jahenkelcasting.com and snowyowlgallery.com. Beyond family and work, I continue to be active in the Foreside Community Church, UCC. I have reduced my involvement a lot, but I have over the years held leadership positions in stewardship or trusteeship, treasurer, ministry, or deacon, Christian education, youth groups, and voice and bell choirs. I have also been involved at the state level as treasurer of the Maine Conference. But these days, we tend to leave the house for work at 7 in the morning and not get back until 7 at night, six days a week. Sunday has become a recovery day. We are working on ways to take some time off during the week. We wish it were easy to do, but being away for our company is tough. Our work is fun, and there is always so much to do. Phyllis is my best friend ever, the love of my life, and the best partner I can imagine. There is no way I would be this fulfilled in life without her. Thanks for everything, Phyllis. Alexander L. Kirkpatrick 2421 Landings Circle, Bradenton, FL 34209-9675; (941) 761-2455 Commercial Realtor, Michael Saunders and Company, 965 Riverside Dr., Palmetto, FL 34221; (941) 729-3245 Spouse: Elizabeth Tieken Kirkpatrick John S. Kizer 4300 Highway 54 West, Chapel Hill, NC 27516-8284; (919) 942-6337; jskizer@med.unc.edu Professor, School of Medicine, C-B7005, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599; (919) 966-1456 Robert J. Klahn 410 Irving Dr., Brandywine Hills, Wilmington, DE 19802-1218; (302) 764-3330; rklahn@csc.com Computer Scientist, Computer Sciences Corporation, Christiana Corporate Center, 400 Commerce Dr., Newark, DE 19713; (302) 391-6566 Spouse: Sharon Klahn 148 Robert Y. Kopf 204 Edgeworth Lane, Sewickley, PA 15143-1053; (412) 741-6725; rkopf@thetechs.com CEO and Chairman of the Board, Smithfield Trust Co., Suite 650, One Riverfront Center, 20 Stanwix St., Pittsburgh, PA 15222-4801; (412) 261-8902 Spouse: Susan Rowland Kopf William C. Koplovitz Apt. 24-C, 145 Central Park West, New York, NY 10023-2004; (212) 874-0466 Private Investor Spouse: Kay Ann Koplovitz Kenneth L. Kreidmann (Ken) 10 Parkview Pl., Mount Kisco, NY 10549; (914) 244-6335; kkloyd@aol.com Retired Partner: Anne Davies (travel agent) I am happily retired. During my checkered work history I have been a teacher at the Lycée Français de New-York, an editor at Scribner’s and Random House, and a lawyer at Instel Corp. I call members of the class regularly (85 percent). I play tennis, hike, and collect autographs. John P. Kretzmann 4145 North Greenview Ave., Chicago, IL 60613-1924; (773) 472-4632 Senior Research Associate, Center for Urban Affairs and Policy Rsch., Northwestern University, 2040 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, IL 60208; (847) 491-3395 Spouse: Ingrid E. Kretzmann Kenneth E. Krosin 5948 Searl Terrace, Bethesda, MD 20816; (301) 229-9016; kkrosin@foleylaw.com Partner, Foley and Lardner LLP, Suite 500, 3000 K St., Washington, DC 20007; (202) 672-5332 Spouse: Ruth Henn Krosin 149 Stephen G. Krum 2735 Fort Scott Dr., Arlington, VA 22202-2304; (703) 684-7026 Project Director, U.S. Dept. of Energy and Navy, Washington, DC 20585; (202) 603-5590 Spouse: Alice Williams Krum Zdenek J. Kubes Rue de Lausanne 44, Morges 1110, Switzerland; kubes@imd.ch Professor of Strategy, IMD, 23 Chemin De Bellerive, Lausanne 1007, Switzerland; 41-216180263 Anthony Kulczycki 503 Warren Ave., St. Louis, MO 63130; (314) 721-1946; akulczyc@imgate.wustl.edu Associate Professor of Medicine, School of Medicine, Washington University, 660 South Euclid Ave., Box 8122, St. Louis, MO 63110; (314) 454-7360 Spouse: Judith Mary Brokaw Kulczycki Francis U.L. Kwok 78 Woodlawn Ave. West, Toronto, ON M4V 1G7, Canada; (416) 966-9641; fkwok@zeidlerpartnership.com Partner, Zeidler Partnership/ Architects, 315 Queen St. West, Toronto, ON M5V 2X2, Canada; (416) 596-8300 Spouse/Partner: Nancy Haston (president of a rehab comFrancis and Nancy Kwok ascending pany) the slopes in Kaprun, Austria. Confession: I entered Princeton in 1963 with the class of 1967. The extra holes in the FORTRAN cards in the administration’s computer somehow let me graduate with the great Class of 1966. More confession: Got a nice invitation from the Navy upon graduation. I had to decline such wonderful offer since I am a subject of Her Majesty, not a U.S. citizen — love to see the world but not to the ’Nam. Went to grad school in Canada and am still living in this great country. Like most folks, I have been practicing what I learned in 150 school to make a living. I am now partner in one of the largest and most reputable architectural practices in Canada, with offices in Canada, the U.S., Germany, England, and China. It is a challenging business, but after cracking the Chinese market, I have recently gained a foothold in the Middle East region by winning a large contract for the firm in the Kingdom of Bahrain; and am looking forward to more potentials. Guess retirement is not on the plate yet. Both Nancy and I enjoy relatively good health and lead very active lives. Lots of tennis, golf, cycling, and skiing; and traveling extensively. Recently we went with Princeton Journey to Antarctica and had a whale of a time. Did have a close call when the ice and snow above a crevasse collapsed under one of my feet. With one leg dangling over the deep hole, I got myself out but scared a few fellow trekkers. Looking forward to many more reunions! James R. La Fountain 474 Kaymar Dr., Amherst, NY 14228-3059; (716) 691-4623; jrl@buffalo.edu Professor, Deptartment of Biological Sciences, SUNY-Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14260; (716) 645-2896 Spouse: Kathleen Laura La Fountain Jay J. Lagemann Artist, Wild Island Studios, 18 Wequobsque Rd., Chilmark, MA 02535; jay@gowildisland.com Spouse: Marianne Neill Lagemann Charles A. Lagreco Architect & Principal, Architectural Collective, 13432 Beach Ave., Venice, CA 90292-5624; (310) 301-2012 John G. Lamb 5232 Stonegate Rd. Dallas, TX 75209-2212; (214) 358-3158; lambjoh@sbcglobal.net Attorney, EDS, 5400 Legacy Dr., Plano, TX 75024; 972-605-5412 Partner: Dave Perry-Miller (realtor) My last reunion-book essay was for the 25th, so this one covers the last 15 years. By my 25th reunion, I had made major decisions that I still am living with … identifying myself as gay, deciding to apply my legal 151 knowledge to working in the computer field, and moving to Dallas. Changes since then have been incremental, albeit personally painful in some instances. In 1992, my former partner, Greg Ford, died of cardiac arrest (strange to think that defibrillators were just starting to be developed then, although I don’t think it would have made a difference in this case). Fortunately, I developed a relationship soon after with someone I had known briefly before, Dave Perry-Miller, and we have been together since. Since Dave is in the residential real-estate field, and I have always been interested in architecture and old houses, a lot of our shared activities have focused on houses and historic preservation — we currently have four houses in Dallas, Tucson, Bisbee, and Nantucket — two of which (Bisbee and Nantucket) we rent out occasionally. Coming to Dallas was purely a business decision, and as far as ambience goes, I have mixed emotions about living here. Dallas has had two major effects on me, however — first, giving me an appreciation of entrepreneurialism, which is not my strongest suit, and second, introducing me to the Southwest. My partner has a lot of the former, and we together have used Dallas as a stepping-off point from which to explore more of the Southwest, particularly the desert areas of Arizona, where we have houses in both the Sonoran and Chiricahuan deserts. These different environments, in turn, have continued to provide me an outlet for my interest in ecology, and more recently, landscaping and gardening. In addition, I have developed an interest in the Spanish colonization of the Americas, and old maps. Dallas is also becoming an increasingly sophisticated city, with some beautiful new museums, and the restaurants get better and better. We are also involved in both national and local gays-rights groups. On the work/career front, by the time of my 25th reunion, I had already identified that fact that, much as I would like to view myself as an extremely creative individual in the arts, my real strength has involved acting as an adviser to others on basic business issues, albeit issues involving computers, and most recently, Internet technology. That in turn has also had some surprises. After working for 18 years at Nortel and smugly thinking that telecom was outside of the growing Internet “bubble,” I was quickly disabused of that notion. This realization was coupled with an accounting scandal that I fortunately was miles away from. After accepting an early retirement package in 2004, and not working for most of 2005, I was able to find a new position at EDS, again helping others work their way through contract issues that on one level are often pedestrian but that on another level involve a lot of money. I feel very fortunate in being able to land a new job at age 61, even with good credentials and experience. As for the future, I think my partner and I have been doing a pretty good job of putting building blocks in place, and the question now is when and how to implement and balance them. Time, which has not in 152 the past been much of an issue, is starting to be on my mind more and more — not having children, in the past I have often felt somewhat immune to its passing. With good health, reasonable savings, and strong interests, balancing various interests and locales is a nice problem to have. I would also have to say that I feel extremely fortunate in having benefited from the enormous social changes that have taken place over the last 20 years, particularly as they affect acceptance of gay individuals and gay relationships. Yes, there is a current backlash, and an uncertain future, but this has to be put in the context of a society where gay marriage exists in at least one state, and in Canada and even Spain. I feel very fortunate to live in such an environment, and it again makes me think of how much things have changed since 1966. Albert J. LaMontagne 3029 Waterfront Court, Chattanooga, TN 37419-1548; (423) 822-9327 Consultant, Unum Providence Corporation, 600 River St., Chattanooga, TN 37402; (423) 755-8160 Ronald J. Landeck 1210 Wallen Rd., Moscow, ID 83843-8463; (208) 882-1760 Attorney, Landeck Westberg Judge & Graham, 414 South Jefferson, P.O. Box 9344, Moscow, ID 83843-2937; (208) 883-1505 Spouse/Partner: Debra K. Wyatt Frank L. Langhammer 5051 Millwood Lane, N.W., Washington, DC 20016-2619; (202) 966-2552; flangham@aol.com Langhammer & Company LLC, Suite 800, 2121 K St. NW, Washington, DC 20037; (202) 364-4200; www.Langhammerandco.com Spouse: Betty B. Langhammer (children’s librarian) Children: Chris, 1980; Katie, 1976 Hard to know where to start, except to say that I am happy to report that all the Langhammers are still going strong in Washington! Betty is a children’s librarian, and has a large and expanding network of good friends, all of whom are less than four feet tall. I think she really has all the fun! Langhammer & Company LLC (my pen name!) is now in its fifth year (project finance and corporate debt consulting) and happily business has somehow continued to walk in the door. I used to think of retiring at this advanced age, but now that I actually have become a senior citizen I think I’ll just keep up the work for a while. After spending most of my working life with large organizations, I have found that not 153 only does independent practice keep the cobwebs out of the attic, but it keeps the adrenal glands operating at peek efficiency. On another note, daughter Katie is about to be wed to a wonderful man, and son Chris is in his second year of med school — both of them keep Betty and me young. Our very best to all members of the Overall Class, and we look forward to seeing you in the spring. George H. Largay 21 Terrell Rd., Woodbury, CT 06798-3526; (203) 263-4797; georgelargay@aol.com Dawson-Herman Capital Management., Inc., 354 Pequot Ave., P.O. BOX 760, Southport, CT 06490; (203) 254-0091 Spouse: Sheila Kiley Largay Children: Blaire Farrar, 1969; Bryan Largay, 1970; Ery Largay, 1976; Galen largay, 1980 George (left) and other members of the Largay clan Francis G. Larkin (Frank) 3416 Triway Lane, Wooster, OH 44691-9146; (330) 263-0098; nrws_larkin@tccsa.net Teacher, West Salem Elementary School, P.O. Box 802, West Salem, OH 44287 Spouse: Marty Ramsburg Children: Nate Ramsburg Since leaving the American Red Cross in 1992, I have been an elementary school teacher (first, third, and fifth grades) in Wayne County, Ohio. Marty and I are in the process of moving to Brattleboro, Vermont, where we will be opening a wine store (Windham Wines) this fall. My stepson, Nate, will be a junior at Wesleyan. I’m in too much of a transition to attend the 40th but look forward to the 45th. In the meantime, hope to see a lot of you wine drinkers in Vermont (we’ll also be selling beer). 154 Henry J. Larsen 1005 Greenhill Rd., Mill Valley, CA 94941-3498; (415) 381-3284; Larsengr@aol.com Consulting Engineer, Larsen Engineering Inc., Suite 206, 200 Gate 5 Rd., Sausalito, CA 94965-1457; (415) 332-7754 Spouse: Lee Victoria Larsen William G. Larsen (Sandy) 1600 Sobre Vista Rd., Sonoma, CA 95476; wglarsen@comcast.net Classmate and former roommate Kit Mill started a temporary services company in San Francisco in late 1993. I joined him about two months later as CFO and we focused on finding temporary (and sometimes permanent) positions for advertising and marketing individuals in the Bay Area. We worked hard but laughed harder — just like the “old days.” We eventually sold the company to a much bigger firm in mid-1998 and stayed on for another year to help in the transition. At that point I said, “Why bother to keep working?” In 2001 I moved to Sonoma in the “wine country” about an hour north of San Francisco and enjoy the relaxed pace of life here. I spend a lot of time hiking and trail-building and am serving as president of our local mutual water company (24 customers). I don’t get paid, but I do get to read the water meters with a wonderful neighbor who is 87. I recently decided to take up golf again and joined the local club. I’m now focused on getting back down to double digits. Looking forward to our Fortieth — can you believe it? John R. Laughlin 4910 Ridge Crest Court, Frederick, MD 21702-3532; jrl@ridgecrestinvestments.com President, Ridgecrest Investments, Inc., 1845 Brookfield Court, Frederick, MD 21701-8700; (301) 695-5736 William R. Leahy 8813 Kensington Parkway, Chevy Chase, MD 20815-6711; (301) 657-4147; williaml@alumni.Princeton.edu Physician, Neurological Medicine, Suite 201, 7500 Hanover Parkway, Greenbelt, MD 20770; (301) 982-7944 Spouse: Christine Miller Leahy 155 Edward E. Leamer 2311 Achilles Dr., Los Angeles, CA 90046; 323-436-5220; edward.leamer@anderson.ucla.edu UCLA School of Management, P.O. Box 951481, Los Angeles, CA 90095; (310) 206-1452 Andrew C. LeCompte Apt. K-201, 802 Elm Croft Blvd., Rockville, MD 20850; (301) 869-7255; andyleco@cs.com Freelance Interpreter Spouse/Partner: Svitlana Novikova Albert G. Lee 106 Greenwood Ave., Rumford, RI 02916-1935; (401) 434-7614; aglee@aol.com Executive Recruiter, Albert G. Lee Associates, 106 Greenwood Ave., East Providence, RI 02916; (401) 434-7614 David B. Lee (Dave) 21 Touro Ave., Medford, MA 02155-7125; 781-395-3030; david_b.lee@tufts.edu CEO/Publisher, Tufts Media, LLC, 200 Boston Ave., Suite 3500, Medford, MA 02155; 617-627-5632 Spouse: Hallie Stephenson Lee (homemaker/volunteer) Children: Bailey, 3/23/95; Steve, 3/23/95 We have been living in the Greater Boston area for three years. We moved to Medford, Massachusetts, from Cincinnati after I took a position with Tufts University. We are renting a historic 1840 Greek Revival house from Tufts in Medford located less than a mile from the undergraduate campus. My position as CEO and publisher of Tufts Media LLC is going very well. We has a total of three newsletters with 250,000 paid subscribers, which has established a very nice consumer publishing base for the university. My unit publishes the Tufts Health & Nutrition Letter, Your Dog, and Catnip newsletters. We are also publishing a six-book series called “The Good Dog Library.” My new company has generated almost $22 million in revenue and $2 million in royalties for partner schools at the university. Our twins, daughter Bailey and son Steve, turned 11 in March and are in the fifth grade at the local K-5 public elementary school, The Brooks 156 School. They will venture off to middle school next year. (Medford has brand new, state-of-the-art elementary and middle school buildings.) They both play the violin and are in a string ensemble at school. They are in the same class and worked hard on their class show, “The Undercity” (Bailey’s idea). Bailey had a leading role as “Auntie Sam,” and Steve was “captain” of the music team. Bailey is in Junior Girl Scouts and is working on her Junior Aide badge by assisting a younger scout troop of 5-and-6-year-old “Daisies.” Steve recently earned his Arrow of Light Award and will cross over from Webelo 2 scouts to Boy Scouts. Our minister presented them their God and Family medallions last year at the Advent Sunday service. Steve is very enthusiastic about sports. He played on a 12-and-under travel soccer team last fall. He plays in a basketball league for fifth, sixth and seventh graders and attended Tufts Baseball Camp. Bailey also played on a 12-and-under travel soccer team and later did Magnus Aquatic Group swim team. Bailey is a member of the Handel & Haydn Society Youth Chorus and sang in New York City at St. Thomas’ Church (in conjunction with the American Choral Directors Eastern Division Conference). Since moving East, we have been spending the entire summer at Hallie’s family home in West Falmouth, on Cape Cod, where Bailey and Steve sail their Optis while we have fun with a J30 racing/cruising sailboat. The twins have participated in a lot of Opti regattas, and both have won our yacht club’s Super Seamanship Award. Steve has really excelled in Opti racing. He has placed in all of the regattas and has won quite a few trophies. Bailey and Steve have also taken courses in oceanography and marine biology at the Children’s Science School in Woods Hole. Hallie volunteers at Bailey and Steve’s school as a classroom coordinator and as a member of the enrichment and after-school program committees. She is a literacy volunteer with the Eastern Massachusetts Literacy Council, based in Medford. She is in her second year as Race Committee Chair of the Chapoquoit Yacht Club. She is playing some indoor tennis in Boston. Edward, our Pembroke Welsh corgi extraordinaire, who spent the last year of his life on a wheelchair, died last April at the age of 14. May he R.I.P. 157 Edward V. Lee 1511 Red Oak Dr., Silver Spring, MD 20910-1550; (301) 589-3408; evl3@aol.com Program Education Manager, American Physical Society, 1 Physics Ellipse, College Park, MD 20740; (301) 209-3245 Spouse: Alice Richey (retired) Children: Kathryn Richey, 1974 After getting a masters degree in physics, I taught in Washington, D.C.–area private schools for 12 years. During this time I got married to Alice Richey and adopted her four-year-old daughter, Katy, who is now teaching English as a second language in the local schools. Backing up a bit, I should add that while in grad school I became a Big Brother. Over the years, I saw my Little Brother on the weekends from when he was in third grade through high school, and we still see each other occasionally. He wound up getting a science degree from the University of Maryland and works as a satellite controller. After I left teaching, I embarked on a series of science education jobs on National Science Foundation–supported projects, including stints at the Capital Children’s Museum (designing exhibits and school activity materials) and, currently, the American Physical Society’s education department (that’s the physicists’ professional society — back to physics education in a big way at last!). I get to put together events that help highschool physics teachers, and I also work on a couple of outreach physics websites, which is also interesting. Looking back over my working life, the most satisfying thing I’ve done has been designing hands-on science activities (and fortunately I get to do that in my present job). As for recreation, for most of my adult life I was an avid sailor, with a 15-foot racing machine in the garage and membership in a club that gave me ready access to a 27-foot cruising boat. So I sailed a lot, quite happily, for many decades, but at age 50 various physical problems began to limit what I could do on the water, and now I go out only occasionally. Fortunately, I have managed to sublimate much of that interest and energy into landscaping the backyard — I had never paid any attention to it before — and that has proven quite enjoyable. I plan to ward off retirement as long as possible, and when it comes, I hope to spent time volunteering to help local physics teachers. 158 Eric Hung Mun Lee Apt. 51, 2222 Q St., NW, Washington, DC 20008-2837 Director of Office of Government Affairs, AT&T Corp., Office of Government Affairs, 10th Fl., 1120 20th St., NW, Washington, DC 20036 William Lehr 3003 N.E. 181st St., Seattle, WA 98155-4113; (206) 361-0913 Writer, 3003 N.E. 181st St., Seattle, WA 98155-4113; (206) 361-0913 Spouse: Ellen Lehr Thomas M. Lemberg 5107 Spyglass Dr., Dallas, TX 75287-7556; (972) 735-0756; tom.lemberg@ugs.com Senior Vice President and General Counsel, UGS Corp., 5800 Granite Parkway, Plano, TX 75024-6614; (972) 987-3356 Spouse/Partner: Marcy Gefter W. Bruce Leslie 54 Park Avenue, Brockport, NY 14420-1927; (585) 637-8285; bleslie@alumni.princeton.edu Professor, Department of History, SUNY at Brockport, Brockport, NY 14420-2956, (585) 395-5691 Partner: Tessa V. Harding (social policy analyst, retired) Children: William Andrew Leslie, Bruce Leslie and Tessa Harding living 11/25/70; Sarah Acton Leslie, the academic good life at Cambridge. 10/17/72 Forty Years On! Five busy, lucky, brief years! “Brief years” may be worthy of Yogi Berra — but truly it’s been a fast half decade! Perhaps time sped by so rapidly because Tessa and I have been blessed with remarkably good health for ourselves and those around us and with some wonderful times together despite often separated by 3000-plus miles. Reunions will be Tessa’s retirement party! After working tirelessly to shape English policies on aging, she retires in May. Two years ago she moved from London to a small Suffolk village near the North Sea. Since 159 then I have watched in amazement as she has turned from a London career woman back into the country girl of her youth. Now, instead of deciding what to say on BBC or to MPs, she’s wrapped up in starting a community store and singing in the parish church. That she is religiously atheistic and ethnically half-Jewish testifies to Bruce Leslie’s favorite Cambridge the modern Church of England’s scene: punters on the Cam with Kings broad tent. It is also testimony to College in the background. the empty seats in Anglican churches — if you’ll sing in the choir, theology matters not, especially if you’re an alto. Academic life continues to fascinate me endlessly. Teaching is an art I’m still trying to perfect — or at least partially master. Every course is different and little compares with the “high” of the occasional successful class, even if others leave me feeling like an amateur. I like the current generation of students, even if I feel the generational chasm growing. In addition, I am blessed to be in a remarkable history department. Seven of us have been teaching together at SUNY-Brockport for over 35 years and we still value and like each other. Now we’re hiring a new generation. Luckily, considerable affection and respect cross the generational divide, despite inevitable differences of sensibilities. Scholarship is a persistent challenge. The last five years have brought me a level of scholarly recognition I never expected after decades teaching in a struggling state college. My work is often cited (including in the recent Excellence and Equity in American Higher Education, by former P.U. president William G. Bowen *58), and I receive numerous requests to read manuscripts for journals and presses and to help other authors. My own scholarship struggles along two parallel tracks: a casestudy history of SUNY-Brockport and a socio-historical analysis of British and American higher education’s interaction across three centuries. Hopefully, at our 45th Reunion I’ll be able to report that each project spawned a book. For now I am taking satisfaction in having played a small role in helping Jim Axtell bring his wonderful history of 20thcentury Princeton to press. The Yalie has told a whopping Tiger’s tale. My endorsement appears on the cover, so buy it! I hope to make a more tangible contribution to Princeton’s historical memory over the next five years. Through Jim Parmentier’s good offices, I joined the Alumni Council’s Princetoniania Committee. Having found, to my amazement, that the Princeton University Archives has few oral histories, I’ve initiated a project to record some Tigers 160 roaring (reflectively) for the benefit of future scholars. Two spells as a visiting scholar at the University of Cambridge brought me near Tessa’s home and let me imbibe an academic atmosphere second only to Princeton’s. In fact it was difficult to keep the two distinct as I walked the dark, wet streets — funny how Cambridge copied Princeton’s architecture! The path between Old Nassau and the Cam is well worn — resulting in solutions to Fermat’s Equation and numerous other intellectual puzzles. My Cambridge sponsor is descended from Macbeth of Shakespearean fame. I never turned my back on him! But his Scottish accent helped a Leslie keep his bearings in the heart of England. How my ancestors on the Catholic side of the family tree must have looked down and laughed seeing me occupying monkish quarters in a Catholic theological institute overseen by a dynamic Irish nun. While Wolfson College provided a social home, King’s College provided the romantic atmosphere. Walking across “the Backs” to Kings College for Evensong became an addictive ritual for this agnostic. Kings also became the setting for an unlikely event far from my academic specialty. An English friend wrote Wittgenstein’s Poker, an unlikely best-seller about a confrontation in which the philosopher legendarily waved a menacing fireplace poker at Karl Popper. Through a series of unlikely coincidences, I wound up organizing a re-enactment in the room of the original event. The Kings College provost supplied his poker, as the original one has disappeared, but fortunately, today’s Cambridge philosophers are a tamer bunch. We then dined in the Provost’s Lodge — a candlelit scene worthy of a C.P. Snow novel. Life at SUNY-Brockport is very pleasant, but more mundane. SUNY’s fat years under Rockefeller ended decades ago in a sea of budgetary red ink occasioned by a declining New York economy. Under Yalie Governor George Pataki, SUNY’s fortunes have improved. We hope that our presumptive next governor, Elliot Spitzer ’81, will be inspired by his Princeton education to make public as well as private higher education a high priority. Our 35th reunion accurately recorded my response to the retirement question as “never.” But with Tessa’s life changing before my eyes and the opportunity cost of workaholism growing with age, who knows. When and if I do retire, we’ve decided to spend part of our life in her 50year-old English village house and the remainder in the Princeton area. My ties to Tigertown and to my native New Jersey grow with every year. 161 Charles E. Letocha 444 Rathton Rd., York, PA 17403-2866; (717) 846-0428; cm.letocha@gte.net Ophthalmologist, Ophthalmology Associates of York, 1945 Queenswood Dr., York, PA 17403; (717) 846-6900 Spouse: Maureen Jordan Letocha Mark D. Levine 5701 Barrett Ave., El Cerrito, CA 94530-1408; (510) 232-6516 Division Director, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab., Environmental Technology Energy Division, Room 3026, Building 90, Berkeley, CA 94720; (510) 486-5238 Spouse/Partner: Irma Delores Herrera Harlan J. Levy 26 Brainard Rd., West Hartford, CT 06117-2201; (860) 231-7234; pweiss@aol.com Reporter and Consumer Columnist, Journal Inquirer, P.O. BOX 510, Manchester, CT 06045-0510; (860) 646-0500 Spouse: Patricia Weiss Levy Clayton H. Lewis 425 Arapahoe Ave., Boulder, CO 80302-5824; (303) 443-5626; clayton@cs.colorado.edu Professor, Computer Science Department, Campus Box 430, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309; (303) 492-6657 Spouse/Partner: Alcinda Cundiff Bernard E. Lewkowicz 328 Marcott Rd., Cottekill, NY 12419-9801; (845) 687-9124 Standards and Compliance Analyst, NY State Office of Mental Health, Poughkeepsie, NY 12607; (845) 452-8000 John K. Leydon P.O. BOX 146, Aldie, VA 20105-0146; jleydon@aol.com 162 Charles J. Libby (Chuck) Unit 2, 15 Adams St., Somerville, MA 02145-2601; 617-623-6217; clibby@att.net Vice President of Engineering, FEI / Micrion Corporation, Peabody, MA Spouse/Partner: Lindsey C. Lawrence (retired) James C. Linville 46 South Beach Dr., Rowayton, CT 06853-1737; (203) 838-5776 Consultant Spouse: Vicky Clarke Linville Andrew A. Littauer 4383 Province Line Rd., Princeton, NJ 08540; (609) 921-2064 Freelance Writer and Poet Spouse: Anya Shetterly Littauer John L. Logan 41 University Pl., Princeton, NJ 08540-5123; (609) 924-7537; jlogan@princeton.edu Literature Bibliographer, Firestone Library, B-13-P, Princeton University, One Washington Rd., Princeton, NJ 08544-2098; (609) 258-3296 Spouse: Jan Heckenkamp Logan Walter G. Lohr 2020 Skyline Rd., Ruxton, MD 21204-6441; (410) 825-0760; wglohr@hhlaw.com Partner, Hogan & Hartson, 111 South Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21202; (410) 659-2764 Spouse/Partner: Elizabeth Grieb 163 Peter S. Longstreth 301 West Gravers Lane, Philadelphia, PA 191183745; (215) 248-2547; plongstreth@pidc-pa.org President, Philadelphia Industrial Development Corp., Suite 2600, 1500 Market St., Philadelphia, PA 19102The Longstreth clan, from left: Courtney, 2100; (215) 496-8181 Clark, Hadley, Anna, Betsy, Jack, Mandy, Spouse: Elizabeth Steel Eliza, Ian, and Peter. Longstreth Children: Hadley, Mandy, Jack Richard A. Low 938 Bay Rd., Hamilton, MA 01936; (978) 468-7619 Spouse: Joan Whitney Low Richard F. Lowenstein 6009 Kingsbury, St. Louis, MO 63112-1303; (314) 721-6009; richlion@prodigy.net Photography Dealer, Richard Lowenstein Gallery, 6009 Kingsbury, St. Louis, MO 63112 John H. Lumpkin 490 Alexander Circle, Columbia, SC 29206; (803) 422-3327; lumpkinj@alumni.princeton.edu Senior Advisor, NAI Avant, P.O. Box 2267, Columbia, SC 29202-2267; (803) 744-9836 Spouse: Emily S. Lumpkin (writer/publisher) Children: Robert Glenn Lumpkin, 7/17/71; Frances Lumpkin John and Emily Lumpkin Webster, 3/9/73; Harriett Rutledge Lumpkin, 11/10/76 Life at 61 is good. A beautiful and accomplished spouse (writer/ publisher). Three children (two married) off the payroll (most of the 164 time). One wonderful, almost two-year-old granddaughter (Frances). My professional life (commercial real estate) has slowed somewhat. I currently serve in an advisory role to a commercial real-estate group headquartered in South Carolina and chair a privately owned southeastern-based firm focused on the development, leasing, and management of non-acute care healthcare-related real estate (i.e. medical/physician office buildings). I have also spent a fair amount of time over the last couple of years assisting the University of South Carolina in pursuing the USC Research Campus initiative (known as Innovista). My community life these last couple of years has included chairing the Palmetto Health Foundation (not-for-profit foundation associated with the largest healthcare system in South Carolina); chairing the Midlands Business Leadership Group (40 or so CEOs/business owners in central South Carolina focused on issues impacting the region); and serving as a member of the South Carolina Competitiveness Council (45 or so business, government, and community leaders charged with charting the economic direction of the state). Our personal lives have included seeing our oldest (Glenn, 35; lives here; pharmaceutical sales) married in April 2005 to a granddaughter of close friends of his grandparents (my parents); our youngest (Harriott, 29; lives in Charleston; associate director of a program serving underprivileged children) purchasing her first house; and our middle child (Frances, 32; lives in Brooklyn with her spouse and our granddaughter) and her husband starting an ad agency in New York (www.walrusnyc.com). We are also building in the mountains near Caesars Head, South Carolina, as well as fixing up another place on the coast near Georgetown, South Carolina. A real highlight of the last 12 months was the class mini-reunion hosted by the Werthheimers (Charley and Nancy) at their gorgeous home near Jacksonville, Florida (on the water no less, with access to the ocean). It was a perfect time! Our hope is that, following our 40th, there will be more minis to follow. Joseph M. Luongo 4338 Thomas Brigade Lane, Fairfax, VA 22033-4274; (703) 591-3322; tiger6653@aol.com President, J. Luongo, Inc., 4338 Thomas Brigade Lane, Fairfax, VA 22033; (703) 591-3322 165 John E. Lupton 2879 Old River Rd., NE, Siletz, OR 97380-9709; john.e.lupton@noaa.gov Oceanographer, U.S. Department of Commerce, NOAA, Hatfield Marine Science Center, Newport, OR 97365; (541) 867-0198 Mark Lurie 8 Ohlone St., Portola Valley, CA 94028-8052; (650) 851-7041 Ophthalmologist, Kaiser Permanente, 39400 Paseo Padre Parkway, Fremont, CA 94538; (510) 795-3030 Spouse: Judith D. Lurie William A. Lutz 112 Worman Rd., Stockton, NJ 08559-1613; (609) 397-5434; wm_lutz@hotmail.com Principal, Deloitte & Touche, Floor 22, 1700 Market St., Philadelphia, PA 19103-3998; (215) 405-7880 Richard A. Lydecker Apt. 706, 101 Westcott, Houston, TX 77007-7031 Henry S. Lynn 2878 Shook Hill Rd., Birmingham, AL 35223-2617; (205) 871-3440 Chairman of the Board, Sterne, Agee & Leach, Inc., Suite 1570, 1901 Sixth Ave. North, Birmingham, AL 35203; (205) 252-5900 Guy F. Lytle 484 Roarks Cove Rd., Sewanee, TN 37375-3024; (931) 598-9220; glytle@sewanee.edu Dean & Juhan Professor of Divinity, School of Theology, University of the South, 335 Tennessee Ave., Sewanee, TN 37383-0001; (931) 598-1288 Spouse: Maria R. Lytle 166 Lewis P. MacAdams Apt. 908, 215 W 7th St., Los Angeles, CA 90014-1966; (323) 662-5880; leweye@aol.com Writer Spouse: JoAnne Klabin MacAdams John B. MacDonald 8 Forge Rd., Monroe, NY 10950-3908; (845) 782-0453; jmacd@alumni.princeton.edu Social Sciences Teacher, O’Neill High School, Route 9W, Highland Falls, NY 10928; (845) 446-4914 Spouse: Ronnee Ellen MacDonald (special education teacher) Children: Melinda, 3/2/79; Josh, 3/25/82; Sarah, 4/16/85 James T. MacGregor Apt. 2-A, 20 Greene St., New York, NY 10013; (212) 343-0818; jtm@abmac.com President, Abernathy-MacGregor Group, 13th Floor, 501 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10022; (212) 371-5999 Spouse/Partner: Claire Montgomery Frank G. MacMurray 8312 North Edison, Portland, OR 97203; (503) 735-3864 Spouse: Eloise Damrosch MacMurray John D. Magenheimer 13 Hermit Lane, Westport, CT 06880-1114; (203) 227-3634; jmagen@us.ibm.com Program Manager, International Business Machines Corp., Route 100, Somers, NY 10604; (914) 766-2733 Spouse: Christine O’Sullivan Magenheimer Peter S. Mager 28 Wimbledon Circle, Waltham, MA 02451; (781) 890-2084 President, PSM Associates, 28 Wimbledon Circle, Waltham, MA 02451; (781) 890-2084 167 Daniel H. Magill (Ham) 270 Red Oak Trail,Athens, GA 30606-1363; (706) 546-0882 Doctor, Athens Cardiology Group PC, P.O. Box 5860, Athens, GA 30606; (706) 546-8510 Spouse: Brenda Ballard Magill Paul Mahlstedt U.S. Embassy, Bogota, Unit 5127, APO AA 34038; 011-616-0823; mahlsted@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Cristina Perez Mahlstedt (business administrator) Children: Douglas Mahlstedt, 1972; Andrew Mahlstedt, 1976; Paul, Christina, and Daniella Daniela Perez, 1994 Mahlstedt, Christmas 2005. There have been any changes in my life, if you go back to our 25th reunion in 1991, but not so many if you only go back to the 35th. Since 1991 I started a second or third career, depending on how you count. After trying some consulting work in Washington, DC, I went back to the “Nation’s Service” with the Department of State in 1994, first in the embassy in Guatemala, and for the past seven years in Colombia. I manage several of the “Plan Colombia” counter-narcoterrorist assistance programs, mostly with the Colombian police, military, and ministry of defense. My first career in the Navy set me up for this — especially tours in Panama and in Washington — as did Latin America studies at Princeton. I was divorced in late 1996. In 2002, I married a wonderful Colombiana, and with her came a step-daughter (now 12 years old); what a change that is — next year she will be a teenager! My grown sons from the first marriage are doing great; one manages a large orchid-growing and wholesaling operation north of San Diego, and the other teaches at an international school in India. We keep in touch with e-mail and visits. We would like to stay in Colombia at least two more years, maybe up to six more. Colombia is key to U.S. relations in the region. Much progress has been made in the last few years — Colombia is no longer in danger of becoming a failed state. But much remains to be done to keep Colombian drugs from killing tens of thousands of Americans and others around the world each year. From one who sees the effects of terrorism on a daily basis here in Colombia, where thousands die each year, the world has certainly changed since our 35th. After Colombia, we plan to retire in Pensacola, Florida, where we are now trying to build a house — if the hurricanes stop interfering. 168 Walter B. Mahony Apt. 18-C, 450 West End Ave., New York, NY 10024-5307; (212) 799-2776; pmahony@vollmer.com Associate, Vollmer Associates, 50 West 23rd St., New York, NY 10010; (212) 366-5600 Victor H. Mailey 22 Channing St., Newport, RI 02840-2127 Richard Edward Malina 20 Breckenridge,Chappaqua, NY 10514-2908; (914) 238-1416; richard.malina@mail.cuny.edu Assistant General Counsel, City University of New York, 535 East 80th St., New York, NY 10021; (212) 794-5430 Spouse: Wendy Malina Stanislaw Maliszewski (Stas’) 809 Sun Valley Way, Florham Park, NJ 07932-3007; (973) 224-4935; stas@maliszewski.org; www.juliaandstas.com Managing Director, GSC Partners, Suite 110, 300 Campus Drive, Florham Park, NJ 079321039; (973) 593-5411 Spouse/Partner: Julia Armstrong Jitkoff (artist) Children: Aleksandra Tatur, 6/29/73; Stanislawa, 8/8/76; Roman, 12/17/77; Rictavia, 5/ 22/83 The big news is that Julia Jitkoff and I will be married over Memorial Day weekend. Would Stas’ Maliszewski and Julia Jitkoff you believe we met through an Internet dating service! Julia replied to a blind e-mail I sent her. After a few more e-mails determined we were equally athletic and diverse in our aptitudes and interests, we discovered that I was in the same Harvard Business School class (1970) and section (E) as Andrew Jitkoff, Julia’s late husband. The e-mails moved on to phone conversations that quickly resulted in a 169 brief meeting in Aspen. During the two days we spent there, Julia took me on a sunlit snowy hike, a romantic dog-sled ride in the back country, and to a tango party. She says I passed these tests with skill and enthusiasm. Several weeks later, to introduce her to friends I organized a multi-city tour that included an evening with a composer, an afternoon fly-casting lesson, a concert, and a limo ride chauffeured by a friend (incognito). The wedding will take place May 28 at a dude ranch in Saddlestring, Wyoming. We’re looking forward to seeing everyone the following weekend at our 40th. Joseph McElroy Mann Apt. 835, 11998 Stoney Peak Dr., San Diego, CA 92128-6473; joemann@adnc.com Hand Surgeon, Suite 400, 488 East Valley Parkway, Escondido, CA 92025-3364; (760) 745-7924 Spouse: Marcia Mann John F. Marino 6 View Dr., Miller Place, NY 11764-2236; (631) 928-2191 Assistant. Superintendent for Business, Miller Place School System, 191 North Country Rd., Miller Place, NY 11764; (631) 474-2700 Spouse: Nina M. Marino H. David Marshak (Dave) 881 Mohican Ct., Walnut Creek, CA 94598-4431, (925) 932-6436; marshak@astound.net; Website: marshakassociateswest.com Chief Executive Officer, Marshak Associates West, 881 Mohican Court, Walnut Creek, CA 94598, (925) 932-6436 Spouse: Suzanna Huff Marshak (teacher) Children: Elizabeth, 7/15/74; Joseph, 8/29/76 Charles F. Martin 3239 Riverview Dr., Triangle, VA 22172-1421; (703) 221-1833 Physics Teacher, Woodbridge Senior High School, 3001 Old Bridge Rd., Woodbridge, VA 22192; (703) 497-8000 Spouse: Linda Thompson Martin 170 Gerald C. Martin 520 Kenilworth Ave., Duluth, MN 55803-2112; (218) 724-0015 District Court Judge, State of Minnesota, St. Louis County Court House, Duluth, MN 55802 Spouse: Beverly Kay Martin Middleton A. Martin 1030 Pine Hill Rd., McLean, VA 22101-2233; (703) 356-5577 Attorney, Patton, Boggs & Blow, 2550 M St., NW, Washington, DC 20037; (202) 457-6000 Spouse: Anne Newhard Martin Children: Ansley, Anne, Ginger, Margot William V. Martin All Saint’s Episcopal School, 2717 Confederate Ave., Vicksburg, MS 39180-5173; (601) 636-7620; wvmartin@aol.com Rector and Head, All Saint’s Episcopal School; (601) 636-5266 Spouse: Carole Wilson Martin Theodore S. Martner 10539 Troon Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90064-4437 John S. Mason 4967 Karen Ray Dr., Antioch, TN 37013-3518; (615) 781-0139; jsmason@alumni.princeton.edu Editor Spouse: Sandra Campbell Mason Owen R. Mathieu 44 Longview Dr., Marblehead, MA 01945-1163; (781) 639-1998; nspedi@earthlink.net Physician, Suite 202, 100 Highland Ave., Salem, MA 01970; (978) 740-0634 Spouse: Eileen Haley Mathieu 171 E. Terry Mattke 9404 Meadow Crossing Way, Fairfax Station, VA 22039-3320; (703) 690-3966 Owner, QNA Services, 9404 Meadow Crossing Way, Fairfax Station, VA 22039; (703) 628-6079 Spouse: Patricia A. Mattke Geoffrey M. Mayo 581 Flanders Rd., Woodbury, CT 06798; (203) 266-4416; glwmayo@aol.com President, Geoffrey Mayo Films, Inc., 58 West 15th St., New York, NY 10011-6808; (212) 645-2848 Spouse: Lynn Stobaeus Mayo James H. Mays 13 Trim St., Camden, ME 04843-1625; jim@micronaut.com President, Micronautics, Inc.,P.O. Box 1428, Camden, ME 04843-1428; (207) 236-0610 Spouse: Nancy Lubin Mays James McAfee (Jim) 1503 Willingham Rd., Richmond, VA 232384727; jmcafee2@comcast.net Senior VP & General Counsel, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, 701 East Byrd St., Richmond, VA 23219; (804) 697-8425 Spouse: Deirdra H McAfee Children: Charlotte, 1977; Andrew, 1980; John, 1984 Jim and Deirdra McAfee with Andrew, Charlotte, and John. Donald L. McCabe 1 Franklin Terrace, South Orange, NJ 07079-1636; (973) 761-6890; dmccabe@andromeda.rutgers.edu Professor, Faculty of Management, Rutgers University, 111 Washington St., Newark, NJ 07102-3027; (973) 353-1409 Spouse: Dorothy Murtaugh McCabe 172 Benjamin W. McCleary P.O. Box 5730, Wakefield, RI 02880; 401-783-6223; bwmccleary@aol.com SeaView Capital LLC, Suite 400, 30 Kennedy Plaza, Providence, RI 02903-2329; (401) 490-4845 Spouse: Jean Muchmore McCleary Children: Benjamin Pierce McCleary, 5/6/70; Katherine M. Walton, 9/1/72 Stephen E. McClymont 250 Edsall Rd., Elbert, TX 76372-5402; (940) 862-5567 Farmer/Rancher Spouse: Judith Edsall McClymont Jeffrey N. McCollum 1302 West Chilton Ave., Gilbert, AZ 85233-4628; (480) 634-1990; jmccollum66@cox.net Spouse: Jennifer McCollum Richard S. McConnell (Rich) 6775 Slash Pine Cove, Memphis, TN 38119; (901) 758-2649; richard.mcconnell@fedex.com Senior Counsel, FedEx Express, Third Floor, Building B, 3620 Hacks Cross Rd., Memphis, TN 38125; (901) 434-8375 Spouse: Joy Meriam McConnell (retired clergy) Children: Jeremy David, 6/21/70; Samuel Warren, 7/3/79 Champe C. McCulloch 217 Ribera Lane, Millington, MD 21651-1482; (410) 928-9940; champe.mcculloch@gmail.com President, Maryland AGC, 1301 York Rd., Suite 202, Lutherville, MD 21093; (410) 974-4472 Spouse: Mary Jo McCulloch (owner, association management company) Children: David, 11/28/64; Kelly, 10/25/65; Andrew, 4/9/70; Meg, 11/21/72 173 John M. McDonough 1407 North Dearborn St., Chicago, IL 60610; (312) 440-1962 Partner, Sidley Austin Brown & Wood LLP, Bank One Plaza, Chicago, IL 60603; (312) 853-7483 Spouse/Partner: Susan J. Moran Jeffrey H. McMahon 25 Mount Pleasant St., Cambridge, MA 02140-2613; (617) 354-4209 Independent Scholar Anthony J. McEwan 3931 Latigo Canyon Rd., Malibu, CA 90265-2802; (310) 457-9830; tony_mcewan@msn.com Manager, Division of Hardware Variabilty Control Richard C. McGinity P.O. Box 562, Crowheart, WY 82512-0562; mcg@sscg.com President, School St. Capital Group, Suite D, 514 East William St., Ann Arbor, MI 48104-2418; (734) 665-9661 Robert B. McGinley (Ginley) 4292 Marquette Dr., Mobile, AL 36608-1838; (251) 342-7826; rbmut@aol.com Orthopedic Surgeon, The Orthopedic Group, P.O. Box 86144, Mobile, AL 36689 Spouse: Kelly Alexander McGinley (talk show host) Children: Rob, 1/1/72; Kathryn, 10/22/75; Buss, 4/2/841 R. David McLaughlin 19745 Peach Ridge Rd., Goshen, IN 46526-9103; rdmcla66@yahoo.com Director of Marketing, International Radio and Electronics Corp., 25166 Leer Dr., Elkhart, IN 46515; (574) 262-8900 Spouse: Linda L. McLaughlin 174 Thomas E. McLaughlin Apt. F1, 96 Main St., Foxboro, MA 02035-1834; tmclaughlin@alumni.princeton.edu Research Fellow, Polaroid Corporation, Building W-4, 1265 Main St., Waltham, MA 02451; (781) 386-1541 Richard McMillan 2 Newlands St., Chevy Chase, MD 20815-4202; (301) 654-4166; rmcmillan@crowell.com Attorney, Crowell and Moring, LLP, 1001 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20004; (202) 624-2580 Spouse: Barbara Ann McMillan Howard McMorris 156 East 66th St., New York, NY 10021; (212) 534-1120; aquathrmny@aol.com Chief Executive Officer, Aquatherm International, Inc., 575 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10022; (212) 605-0322 Spouse: Clare Tweedy McMorris G. Wells McMurray 5346 Willis Ave., Dallas, TX 75206-6435; (214) 827-4442; smcmur@mednet.swmed.edu College Counselor Director, Greenhill School, 4141 Spring Valley Rd., Addison, TX 75001; (972) 628-5455 Spouse: Susan McMurray William G. McPheron 716 Ramona St., Palo Alto, CA 94301-2547; (650) 321-9025 Curator, Stanford University, Cecil H. Green Library, Stanford, CA 94305; (650) 725-1053 Spouse: Elaine McPheron 175 Theodore G. Meeker 47-441 Huinene St., Kaneohe, HI 96744-4640; (808) 239-5876; tgmeek@verizon.net Assistant U.S. Attorney, U.S. Attorney’s Office, Room 6-100, PJKK Federal Building, 300 Ala Moana Blvd., Honolulu, HI 96850; (808) 440-9272 Spouse: Gretchen Marie Meeker James G. Mengert 1155 University Dr., NE, Atlanta, GA 30306-3316; (404) 874-4001; jgmengert@mindspring.com Independent Communications Consultant, 1155 University Dr., NE, Atlanta, GA 30306; (404) 874-4001 Charles A. Merlini 208 Stevens Glen Rd., Richmond, MA 01254-5176; (413) 698-2693 Landscape Laborer, Tom Farley Land Design, 2 Yale Hill, Stockbridge, MA 01262 Spouse: Leigh Ross Merlini 51 N Main St., Pennington, NJ 08534; (609) 818-0168; merritt66@verizon.net Freelance Editor and Writer Spouse: Nancy Russell Merritt (designer) Children: Jennifer, 9/19/69; Melissa, 10/19/72 Since taking early retirement from Princeton University in Jim and Nancy Merritt with their 1999 (in my last job there I grandchildren, Fiona and Malcolm edited PAW), I have been Swope (a.k.a. Buzz Lightyear). working as a freelance editor and writer. For the last seven years, on a part-time basis, I have edited We Proceeded On, the quarterly journal of the Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation. Recent book projects have included Princeton’s James Forrestal Campus: Fifty Years of Sponsored Research (Princeton University, 2002) and an anthology, The Derrydale Press Treasury of Fishing 176 JENNIFER M. SWOPE John I. Merritt III (Jim) 177 JIM MERRITT ’42 (Derrydale Press, 2002). There was also a new edition of Goodbye, Liberty Belle: A Son’s Search for His Father’s War (Cooper Square Press, 2002), a work, first published in 1993, about my dad’s experiences in World War II. With Nancy’s encouragement I devote more time than I probably should to fishing (mainly fly-fishing for trout and surf-fishing for striped bass and bluefish), canoeing on the nearby Delaware River, and tending my vegetable garden, which every year June 14, 1966: Jim Merritt (right) seems to take up a bit more of our back and Lanny Jones in front of the yard. I also bicycle on backcountry fifth entry of Blair Hall, shortly roads, and I continue to run, although after graduation ceremonies. three miles or so is about all I can comfortably manage (and often it’s more walking than running). Nancy works part-time as a designer of office interiors but mostly devotes her time to grandmothering. We’ve done recent trips to Iceland and (accompanied by Adrienne and Terry Seymour ’66 and booked through Country Walkers) to Spain and France. Our older daughter, Jennifer, lives near Boston. She and her husband, Ian, are the parents of our two grandchildren, Fiona (4/19/00) and Malcolm (1/31/02). Jen works one day a week as a curator at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts. Our younger daughter, Melissa, earned her PhD in philosophy at the University of Pittsburgh in 2004 and is now an assistant professor at Georgia State University, in Atlanta. Since my last report, in our 35th-reunion book, both my parents have died (my dad, P.U. ’42, of a brain tumor, in January 2003, and my mom of complications of Alzheimer’s, in November 2004). Dealing with their illnesses was sad, stressful, and at times unnerving, but in hindsight I am thankful for the opportunity I had to help care for them in their final months. My various jobs at Princeton — as media-liaison officer, director of development communications, and editor of PAW — were always interesting and fulfilling. On the one hand I recognized my good fortune at working in the civil and stimulating environment of one of the world’s great research universities. On the other hand I was frustrated by my inability to do what I really wanted — to work full-time as a writer or editor in a field dealing with any of my consuming interests (fishing, the outdoors, natural history, science, the environment). In 1977 I was almost hired as editor of Fly Fisherman magazine, and when the job went instead to a last-minute candidate with better qualifications it was one of the crushing experiences of my professional life. When jobs at other outdoor and science publications proved equally elusive, I settled in at Princeton and pursued my interests avocationally, with reasonable success, writing several books and scores of articles for PAW, Field & Stream, Fly Rod & Reel, and other magazines. In time I came around to the view that things had worked out for the best — that my ties with the university and the community of greater Princeton and the many friends we have here (most of them classmates and their spouses) are far more fulfilling than whatever I might have experienced had fate taken me down some other path. Beware of what you wish for. I am writing this in March of 2006, at our daughter’s home in Winchester, Massachusetts, where Nancy and I have come for several days to take care of our grandchildren while their parents enjoy a skiing respite in Colorado. The kids are prattling in the background as I type on my laptop computer. Beyond the confines of this pleasant suburban setting, the world is its usual mess. For the sake of our grandchildren and their grandchildren I worry about the future of our planet, the direction of our country, and the inability of our government to forge sensible, centrist policies on divisive issues, foreign and domestic. I suppose humanity will muddle through one way or another. Perhaps things will look better by our 50th. Despite these concerns, and at the risk of complacency, I am mindful of the good fortune of all of us to have lived when (and where) we have. As an article in a recent New Yorker entitled “Pursuing Happiness” observes, “A person in good health in a Western liberal democracy is, in terms of his objective circumstances, one of the most fortunate human beings ever to have walked the surface of the earth.” Finally, as long as we’re in a reflective mode, I’ll close with this observation. In the first week of freshman year I recall taking some sort of poll in McCosh 50. I assume it was part of a longitudinal study of youthful attitudes. The one question I remember consisted of a statement — “God hears our prayers” — and two choices, “yes” and “no.” Confronted by this metaphysical imperative, I am fairly sure I answered no. Forty-four years later my response would be unchanged. As a nominal Christian but a confirmed Deist, I take some small comfort, at least, in a view expressed by W.H. Auden in a poem I read in sophomore year: the mortal world is enough. A. James Mettler 39 Cherry Lane, Tallman, NY 10982-0426; (845) 357-6561; jmettler39@aol.com National Accounts Manager Spouse: Ellie C. Mettler 178 Barry Metzger Apt. 2, 153 West 93rd St., New York, NY 10025; (212) 316-0182; barrymetzger@cs.com International Attorney, Coudert Brothers LLP, 1114 Ave. of the Americas, New York, NY 10036-7703; (212) 626-4812 Spouse: Jacqueline Ivers Metzger Robert S. Middleton 27193 Bailey’s Neck Rd., Easton, MD 21601; (410) 822-5937; middleton@goeaston.net Anesthesiologist, Tidewater Anesthesia Associates, Memorial Hospital at Easton, Easton, MD 21601; (410) 822-1000 Michael S. Milder (Mike) 6025 N.E. Kelden Pl., Seattle, WA 98105-2045; (206) 525-2316; msmilder@comcast.net Physician, Swedish Cancer Institute, Second Floor, 1221 Madison, Seattle, WA 98104; (206) 386-2242 Spouse: Sarajane Epstein Milder Children: Jonathan, 10/23/71; Daniel, 11/21/73 Christopher A. Mill (Kit) 300 Riverside Ave., Riverside, CT 06878-2314; (203) 698-3535; christopheramill@aol.com Spouse: Susan Kurtz Mill (homemaker) Children: Courtney Allen, 11/8/79; Edwin Alexander Tate, 1/7/83 Update from 25th ... Overall observation: Everything’s pretty much the same. No change. I guess the only real change is that Clockwise from top: Kit Mill, John Theo’s gone, but I’ll bet if he were Theobald, Sandy Larsen, Dave Van to show up at the 40th, he’d have Horne, and Jake Cartright, Mammoth, “howdys” for us all. California, summer 1995. Same ol’ bones, same fascinating kids — Courtney, Penn ’02, and Tate, Penn ’05. How ’bout dem 179 Quakers! Courtney’s in LA working for Picturehouse, an independent film company, and Tate started working in NYC this spring . I was in San Francisco 15 years ago ... Got thrown out of the ad business in ’93 for the last time, too old and crotchety ... Got lucky. Sandy Larsen and I started a temp services business; it worked like crazy. We rode the Internet boom, sold the company to a Big Board company just before the bust, made a bunch of money, and retired. Larsen’s on a hill overlooking the Sonoma Valley. ... Chasing our kids, we moved back East in ’02, three blocks from where we were in the ’80s — Riverside, Connecticut. Same great pals, same old yacht club — different boat, power versus sail. Sixty-one is old, you know, and sailing’s too much work. Daughter promptly moved back to the West Coast — Santa Monica on the beach, duh — with Main Squeeze, Scott Dore, Princeton and Tiger Inn ’02. As for me, same weight, different distribution, same hair, same face. OK, more chins, same clothes (I’ll wear my Douglas MacDaid jacket to prove it), same friends (no mystery men!), same wife. Guess that makes me dull ... and happy. Jack R. Millard 25 Rocky Pond Rd., Boylston, MA 01505-1511; (508) 869-6027; mil1784@aol.com President, Worcester Radiology, Inc., 121 Lincoln St., Worcester, MA 01613; (508) 753-8151 B. Jackson Miller 34 Crooked Mile Rd., Darien, CT 06820-2001; (203) 655-9987 Vice President, General Motors Asset Management, 767 Fifth Ave., New York, NY 10153; (212) 418-6400 Spouse: Lynsie Schaberg Miller Granville G. Miller 5808 Old Oak Ridge Rd., Greensboro, NC 27410-9265; (336) 294-2752 Physician Assistant, Cardiothoracic & Vascular Surgeons of, Greensboro, 2704 Henry St., Greensboro, NC 27405-3633; (336) 621-3777 Spouse: Sharon Lenore Miller H. Lyman Miller 2558 North Lexington St., Arlington, VA 22207 180 Jeffrey L. Miller 4916 Bay Way Dr., Tampa, FL 33629-4804; (813) 286-8342; doffices@tampabay.rr.com Physician, Rheumatology, 3218 West Azeele, Tampa, FL 33609; (813) 879-1188 Spouse: Nancy Steinberg Miller Shelby C. Miller 40 Maynard St., Northborough, MA 01532-1108; (508) 393-0114; scmiller@post.harvard.edu William L. Miller 7944 Whitburn Dr., SE, Ada, MI 49301-9398; (616) 676-1384; wlmnet@aol.com Adjunct Professor, School of Business Administration, D3257 Bus Administration, Room 1234, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109; (734) 763-9317 Spouse: Janet G. Miller John B. Mitchell 7484 Washington Ave., St. Louis, MO 63130-4048; (314) 725-2519; jbm816@msn.com General Counsel, Wehrenberg Theatres, Inc., 12800 Manchester Rd., St. Louis, MO 63131; (314) 822-4520 Spouse: Joelle M. Mitchell Paul F. Mitchell Apt. 1902, 1460 Ghent Ave., Burlington, ON L7S 1X7, Canada Business Editor, The Hamilton Spectator, 44 Frid St., Hamilton, ON L8N 3G3, Canada; (905) 526-3283 Spouse: Paulene Anne Mitchell 181 William E. Mitchell 223 Atherton Ave., Atherton, CA 94027-5434; (650) 326-0883; bmitchell@arrow.com President & Chief Executive Officer, Arrow Electronics, Inc., Arrow Electronics, Inc., 50 Marcus Dr., Melville, NY 11747-4210; (631) 847-5775; www.arrow.com Spouse: Jan Schreyer Mitchell Children: Alden M. Mitchell, 12/22/75; Amanda M. Mitchell, 10/19/77; Alyssa Mitchell, 4/24/85 William D. Montross 17811 New Mark Ave., Charlotte, NC 28278-8632; (704) 504-9540; mont9853@bellsouth.net SupplyNet Services, LLC, 17811 New Mark Ave., Charlotte, NC 28278-8632; (704) 504-9853 Spouse: Linda Marie Montross John B. Moore 3423 Fowler Ave., Santa Clara, CA 95051-2715 Frank T. Morgan 1530 The Preserve Trail, Chapel Hill, NC 27517; (919) 545-2213; morganf@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Nancy Bishop Morgan George D. Morgan 700 Tiber Lane, Richmond, VA 23226; (804) 287-8577; morganryer@aol.com Vice President Spouse: Cathleen O’Daniel Morgan Richard G. Morgan (Tiny) 314 Palais Verde, Montgomery, TX 77356; (936) 449-4419; rmorgan@fridge-resendez.com Attorney (semiretired) Spouse: Betty Lou Morgan Children: Richard G. Morgan III, 1973; Jonathan R. Morgan, 1976 182 The past five years have been in many ways frustrating, challenging, and, now, fulfilling. I will briefly relate the developments because other classmates may have experienced the same type of roller coaster. Five years ago I was managing partner of the Houston office of a nationwide law firm. After a change in management of the firm, the decision was made to drop energy law (my specialty), telecom law, and administrative law. Unlike race horses put out to stud, I was faced with looking for a position without a “book of business” (reduced because my time had been spent administering firm business). The obvious prospect was an inhouse position in an energy business. After all, I had over 30 years’ experience and a wealth of knowledge and contacts. Hold on, Tiny. Tiny and Betty Lou Morgan on a How old are you? Well, my age recent Celebrity Cruise. doesn’t matter; I will take a lower position regardless of title. Too bad but that position (read all positions) has been filled! Frustrated and, frankly, a bit scared, I joined some young litigators I had hired at my former firm who struck out on their own. They are accomplished commercial litigators and could help me with my few remaining client matters; they are also wonderful young folks. So there I toiled, handling my remaining client matters. The situation was bleak but not desperate. Brian Breuel had long been my financial guru so, together, we planned a strategy that assumed no new clients and a continuing decline in existing client matters. As a result, Betty Lou and I downsized our home, bought a home north of Houston on Lake Conroe, and prepared for a functional retirement at the end of 2005. It sounds easy but it was not! Our Houston home was Betty Lou’s dream home and it was tough for her to part. Getting medical insurance was neither pleasant nor inexpensive. Explaining and reassuring Betty Lou that once I stopped working we would not run out of money in two months was difficult. After all, I had worked from the time I was 14 and she had worked until we moved to Houston. Emotionally, the transition was tough. But we did make the change. For my part, I am convinced retirement is underrated. I enjoy coffee and the newspaper (I use the word loosely in describing the Houston Chronicle) on the patio, playing tennis four times a week, and taking golf lessons with Betty Lou. (Golf must be the devil’s sport; how can it 183 be so difficult to hit a ball sitting perfectly motionless on the ground?) I read two or three books a week, take walks, and really enjoy the slower, more quiet pace. One small downside is the distance from our house to stores for groceries and BL’s shopping. But that simply means we need to be more organized on our outings. Betty Lou and I are having a wonderful time. Of course, now that I am home most of the time (I still go into the office every three or four weeks for a day) Betty Lou has a list of chores for me. We are still sorting through how much I really have to do for my share. We plan to travel a fair amount while we enjoy good health. We are truly blessed, particularly with our dear friends. We have enjoyed immensely visits by the Nahases, D’Avellas, Eastwicks, Plohns, Krosins, Birkelands, Thacher, and von Kohorn. We look forward to more visits from friends. Jonathan S. Morse 1587 Valecroft Ave., Westlake Village, CA 91361; (805) 379-2699; jonmorseathome@aol.com Attorney, Bailey & Partners, Second Floor, 2828 Donald Douglas Loop North, Santa Monica, CA 90405; (310) 392-5000 Spouse: Liane P. Morse Gary B. Mount 330 Cold Soil Rd., Princeton, NJ 085402002; (609) 924-2310; gbmount@alumni.princeton.edu Owner, Terhune Orchards Spouse: Pamela Hasenzahl Mount (mayor, Lawrence Township, N.J.) Children: Reuwai, Tannwen, and Mark I was born at a very young age — no, really, I was! But apart from that, each year since 1966 and since the last reunion book has gotten busier, fuller, and more Pam and Gary Mount with a rewarding. Pam and I were lucky to find a job/lifestyle/passion as farmers. We had basket of their famous apples. returned from three years in the Peace Corps (1967-70) feeling lost and unsure of what to do. Lucky for me also to have a wife/business partner who can sell all the stuff I grow (36 crops-fruits and vegetables of 185 acres) so our farm can be profitable. We sell our crops direct to the consumer on the farm. About 500,000 customers visit each year. As well as supporting us financially, our farming life has allowed us 184 the freedom to be involved in our children’s lives as they grew and to be involved in our community, state, and industry. I have served on various state boards and committees, many agriculture related. The most significant current activity relates to farmland preservation. I am a member of the state committee responsible for all farmland preservation Pam and Gary with daughter Reuwai, in New Jersey, having helped granddaughter Maya, and son-in-law Mike create the program 25 years Hanewald (left) and daughter Tannwen and ago. I also serve on the her fiancé, Jim Washburn (right). county-level preservation board. To date, we have permanently preserved 17 percent of New Jersey’s farmland, the highest percentage in the U.S. In addition to serving on other industry related boards such as the New Jersey Apple Council and the New Jersey State Horticultural Association, and as a New Jersey water commissioner, I am a founding member of a friends organization supporting the Howell Living History Farm. The Howell Farm is operated as a Mercer County park, demonstrating farming and farm life in 1900. It’s a wonderful resource for the community and reminds me of what my grandfather’s farm must have been like. Wife Pam focuses more on saving the world, especially our part of it. She founded the New Jersey Farmers Against Hunger to provide the needy with fresh fruits and vegetables, started the Agricultural Leadership Development Program for young farmers, started a career day called “What’s Next” for local high-school girls, and for the last six years has served on our town counci, including two terms as mayor and five years on the planning board. God bless her — she has more good ideas before breakfast than I do all day long! And then there is rowing. Starting 13 years ago, I joined a local club, rowing from the Princeton University boathouse. Two of my Princeton roommates, Gib Hentschke and John Hamilton, rowed all four years at Princeton, but back then I was more interested in rugby and beer (not necessarily in that order). It took my daughters’ involvement in rowing in high school and at Princeton to get me started. My rowing fanaticism has now far surpassed theirs (although not my skill or fitness). Rowing five or six days a week, rowing the machines in the winter, serving as club captain — it’s the only hobby I’ve ever had. Daughter Reuwai (P.U. ’94) lives and teaches environmental science 185 in Baltimore with husband and former Lawrenceville School classmate Mike Hanewald and our granddaughter, Maya, age two. They settled there after teaching first in El Salvador and then in Côte d’Ivoire. I guess an apple really doesn’t fall far from the tree. Daughter Tannwen (P.U. ’98) works full time with us on the farm, having returned three years ago from working at U.C. Berkley for five years. At the time of her recent graduation from the Agricultural Leadership Program, she announced that she was looking forward to being the 11th generation of our family to be a farmer in central New Jersey. Her enthusiasm and ideas give new vigor to our farm business. She is engaged to marry Jim Washburn, also a Lawrenceville classmate, in June. Son Mark serves in the U.S. Army as a sergeant in the infantry. He is stationed in Germany, has served one stint in Afghanistan and will return there for another year in June. We’ll worry about him while he is there, but are grateful to the Army for providing direction and substance to his life, and we are very proud of his accomplishments and service to our country. He has one son, Justin. Retirement has no allure. We cannot think of anything we would rather do. We also have some indication that Reuwai and Mike will move closer to be more involved in the farm in a few years. Last year I was named National Apple Grower of the Year by American Fruit Grower magazine. That was a thrill and honor that is about as good as it gets in my business. I got no specific training in farming or business while at Princeton. I didn’t gain any particular experience in leadership or public service there, either. But I did learn how to learn. I am grateful for having gone to Princeton and my education has served me well. P. Robert Moya (Bob) 5119 E Desert Park Lane, Paradise Valley, AZ 85253-3055; (480) 991-1906; prmoya@cox.net Of Counsel, Quarles & Brady LLP, 2 North Central Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85004-2391; (602) 230-5580 Spouse: Sara Dreier Moya William J. Moyse (Bill) 401 Rio Dr., Chesapeake, VA 23322; bmoyse341@earthlink.net Teacher, Norfolk Public Schools, Norfolk, Virginia Spouse: Judith Ann Moyse (registered nurse) Children: Jennifer; David Though I’ve never been to a reunion and never been good at keeping up with my Princeton friends, I’ve tried to keep track of the amazing 186 things my classmates have done over these many years. I’m proud of you all for what you’ve done for Princeton, your country, and for your families. Wish I had known more of you. Guess my greatest contribution to Princeton has been my daughter’s being a graduate (Class of 1994). I’ve never been in a position to provide financial gifts of note, but I’m very proud of what she contributed to our great university. Even her grandfather, Nate Moyse ’26, who always believed Princeton should remain an all-male school, was finally made a believer in what females could bring to its ivy halls. He was very proud of her, too. When my son attended American University, I came to know again how different Princeton is. My dealings with the admissions and financial aid offices at Princeton were always professionally and efficiently handled, while at American no one ever seemed to know what was going on. Moreover, where Princeton makes parents seem a part of their children’s college experience, American made no effort to communicate. Even information about graduation ceremonies was forgotten. Indeed, we are part of a very special family, and we should all praise the trustees and those in the Princeton administration who make it so. After grad school, I spent time in the Navy and then began a teaching career at the Buckley Country Day School, on Long Island. After seven years in teaching and as head of the upper school, I left to go into the business world to better suppport my growing family. I spent 22 years away from education. Fortunately, I have had the opportunity once again to teach, a vocation I should have never left. I am in my 14th year, teaching middle-school science and biology. I like to think even I am, in some small way, in the nation’s service. Judy and I have moved to Virginia to avoid the snow shovel. It’s great! Hugs to all I might know at reunions. Robert S. Mueller P.O. Box 77784, Washington, DC 20013-7784 Director, Federal Bureau of Investigation, 935 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20535-0001; (202) 323-3300 Spouse: Ann Standish Mueller David G. Mulock 195 17th Ave. North, St. Petersburg, FL 33704; (727) 823-3424; daves5star@aol.com Lawyer, Carlton Fields, St. Petersburg, FL 33701 Spouse: Lenore Skinkle Mulock 187 John J. Nagorniak 31 Shoreline Dr., Foxboro, MA 02035-1116; (508) 543-9853; jjn@alumni.princeton.edu Chairman of the Board, Franklin Portfolio Associates, 1600 BostonProvidence Highway, Walpole, MA 02081; (508) 660-0088, Ext. 2553 Spouse: Jill Hampton Nagorniak Children: Peter, 1971; Joy, 1975 I have been “retired” since 2000, although I still do occasional consulting along with being involved in a number of charitable endeavors. Jill still works counseling those with mental and/or emotional difficulties. We have been empty-nesters for some time, although with a recent illness in the family we had to relearn some of the skills associated with caring for babies and small children. I still get back to Princeton fairly regularly. I enjoy being the class treasurer (keep those dues and contributions coming!) take pleasure as well as in various fundraising activities. Son Peter lives and works in Maine. His family includes wife Christina and two children, Christopher (5 years) and Alyson (18 months). Daughter Joy (P.U.’97) is a clinical psychologist working in the Washington, DC, area. I remain unconvinced that I was a causal factor for both wife and daughter pursuing careers in psychology. I remain involved in investing activities through the Boston Security Analyst Society and the CFA Institute. We are both looking forward to the 40th! Robert E. Nahas (Bob) 268 Wyckoff Ave., Wyckoff, NJ 07481; (201) 444-9246; bob@herbertmines.com Managing Director, Herbert Mines Associates, Inc., 375 Park Ave., New York, NY 10152; (212) 652-0347 Spouse: Virginia (Virg) Decker Nahas (real estate agent) Children: Josh, 1973; Drew, 1976 John S. Newbold 1705 Walnut Bottom Rd., Carlisle, PA 17013-9151; (717) 243-3949 Teacher Stephen M. Newman Partner, Hodgson & Russ LLP, 2000 1 M&T Plaza, Buffalo, NY 14203; (716) 848-1232; snewman@hodgsonruss.com Spouse: Gayle Emily Newman 188 John S. Nicholas 310 Turrill Brook Dr., Southbury, CT 06488-1064; (203) 264-7360 Software Developer, Sound Software Development, 200 Railroad Ave., Greenwich, CT 06830; (203) 661-4933 Philip T. Nicholson 2215 Mesa Dr., Boulder, CO 80304, (303) 546-6921; philipnicholson@comcast.net Writer Spouse: Elizabeth Markham Nicholson (environmentalist) Children: Virginia S. Nicholson; Noelle I. Nicholson; Melina N. Willinger James A. Nix 1937 38th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20007-2102; (202) 965-1506; jimnix@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Ann Nix John S. Nixdorff 6132 Allwood Court, Baltimore, MD 21210-1141 Roger B. Nold 1 Park Ave.,P.O. Box 1527, Hampton, NH 03842-2113; (603) 964-7726 President, Noldesign Incorporated, P.O. Box 1527, Hampton, NH 03842; (603) 926-3909 Tom R. Norris 2521 Broadway St., San Francisco, CA 94115-1113; (415) 922-6835; trnorris@alumni.princeton.edu Orthopaedic Surgeon, California-Pacific Medical Center, Suite 510, 2351 Clay Street, San Francisco, CA 94115-1931; (415) 392-3225 Spouse: Margaret Swierbutowicz Norris 189 Francis E. Nuessle (Frank) 103 Camelot Lane, Newtown Square, PA 19073-4412; 610-356-0936; fnuessle@earthlink.net Consultant, Strategy Arts, 103 Camelot Lane, Newtown Square, PA 19073-4412 Spouse: Eileen O’Brien Nuessle Ord Elliott, Frank Nuessle, Krist Jake, and Tom Hanks celebrate the 2005 opening of Krist’s Ocean Film Festival in San Francisco. Edward C. Nykwest 1120 Anderson St., Alexandria, VA 22312-3014 David T. O’Dell 8181 Berry Dr., Evansville, IN 47710-4951; (812) 867-6725 Owner, 60 Minute Photo, 8181 Berry Dr., Evansville, IN 47710; (812) 477-3805 Spouse: Virginia F. O’Dell W. Sean O’Donoghue 315 East 56th St., New York, NY 10022-3730; (212) 753-1153; seanodon@alumni.princeton.edu Robert T. O’Keeffe 111 North Magnolia St., Pearl River, NY 10965; (845) 735-5346 Wilson Chukwunwike Obi Apt. 10-E, 320 South Harrison St., East Orange, NJ 07018-1326; (973) 677-7152; wilsonobi@verizon.net M. Kenneth Oboz 249 Old Hollow Rd., North Ferrisburg, VT 05473-6005; mkoboz@sover.netConsultant Spouse/Partner: Nina Falsen 190 Ross A. Odell Center for Bio-Medical Engineering, P.O. Box 1, Kensington, 2033, NSW, Australia Daniel K. Okereke Apt. 1-G, 560 Lefferts Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11203-1038; (718) 953-6842 Charles J. Okstein 8585 South College Ln., Tempe, AZ 85284-2342; (480) 491-3720; okstein@cox.net Physician Strategist, Eclipsys Corporation, Hospital Information Systems, 8585 South College Ln., Tempe, AZ 85284-2342; The Oksteins, Thanksgiving 2005. Charlie is (602) 524-6956 in the back, at left, behind daughter Linda Spouse: Nancy Kornetsky and her son, Nate. To Charlie’s left are Okstein Linda’s husband, Dave Shaffer, and their Children: Linda (P.U. ’91); daughter, Julianne; wife Nancy; and Susan daughter Susan and her husband, Scott Life: In 1995, after Wallace, with their daughters Emily (top) working in a pediatric and Chloe. Seated in front is Nancy’s mother, Sylvia Kornetsky, and Charlie’s emergency department in father, Reuben Okstein. Phoenix, I joined CyCare Systems in Scottsdale as their first medical director, and I was responsible for helping to sell their image-based electronic medical record (EMR) to group practices around the country. It was an eye-opening experience for this country doctor who didn’t realize that there were so many large groups (> 100 physicians) in existence, especially in the Midwest and South. I learned to do business travel and had the pleasure of working with many great salesfolk and non-physician techies. Within a year, CyCare was acquired by HBOC, a 2,000-person company headquartered in Atlanta. My responsibilities were similar, demonstrating HBOC’s EMR to hospital customers and acting as a technology evangelist. In late 1999, I was laid off from HBOC during a periodic company RIF. Getting laid off was a new experience for me as a physician, who was accustomed to self-employment. I was fortunate in that I was soon 191 hired back by HBOC to do custom development work. After that work was completed, I retired, content to indulge myself in my interests in photography, computers and amateur radio. Then in 2002, the phone rang, and it was an old friend who asked, “What are you doing?” I replied, “Just hanging out.” He asked if I wanted to go back to work and without even knowing which company he was representing, I responded, “Sure.” And with that call began my three years of employment with Eclipsys Corp. (Boca Raton, Florida), a purveyor of EMRs (electronic medical records) for hospitals and hospital-based physicians. Traveling around the country, I represented the company in sales opportunities, and I have probably visited your home town or one nearby. Let me say a word about EMRs: I am absolutely convinced that they represent the way forward for better medical care. I am just not sure when they will have matured to the point where they will represent a time-efficient way for physicians to practice. It’s taking a lot longer than I ever would have hoped. Love: I’m still married to the love of my life (Nancy) and soul-mate of over 40 years. I can’t imagine a more compatible spouse, and I can only hope that I have brought her a little bit of the happiness and fulfillment that she has brought me. My two daughters, Linda (P.U. ’91) and Susie, have been pretty close to being the ideal adult children and have blessed our family with four grandchildren. Health: I have been pretty health until recently! Last summer I developed renal failure — my kidneys stopped working after several rather benign episodes of nephrotic syndrome, which had been previously successfully treated with prednisone. I spent a month in the hospital and after discharge was forced to rely on dialysis three times a week. I remain on this regimen to the present time, although I am now awaiting a kidney transplant. I’m told that a transplant is not a “cure” but rather another form of treatment for renal failure. If all goes perfectly, this might occur in the next several weeks, and if I recover well, I might even make it to Reunions. It’s been a very difficult experience for me and for our family. When people say “kidney failure,” you should understand that this is a full-body disease with ramifications to the patient’s musculature, nervous system, digestive system and more. In fact, it seams that almost everything in one’s body is negatively affected. Happiness: With a serious illness, it’s difficult to give too much thought to the future. The old saw about “taking it day by day” seems true. It’s very hard to get too excited about planning trips, vacations, etc., until I have a greater sense of certainty about my health. It seems unlikely that I’ll go back to work at Eclipsys after my leave of absence ends, so we’ll have to take it a little bit at a time. Meanwhile, I am trying to make the best of a tough hand that has been dealt me. Nancy has been most 192 supportive, both physically as well as emotionally. I feel most fortunate to have her in my corner. We regret to report that Charlie died on March 26, 2006, not too long after posting this essay. —ED. Charles McM. Oman (Chuck) 5 Highland Terrace, Winchester, MA 01890-1318; (781) 729-7625; cherryoman@comcast.net Director, Man-Vehicle Laboratory, Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Room 37-219, Cambridge, MA 02139; (612) 253-7508 Website: mvl.mit.edu Spouse: Cherryl Huested Oman (homemaker, administrator) Children: Katherine M. Oman, 2/12/78; Peter S. Oman, 5/18/82 The Omans: Katie, Chuck, Cherry, and Peter William C. Osborn 22 Emerson St., Brookline, MA 02445-6846; (617) 734-1221; wosborn@aol.com Managing Director, Commons Capital Management, LLC, 320 Washington St., Brookline, MA 02445; (617) 734-1047 Spouse: Lynn Osborn Arthur E. Osborne 262 Princess Palm Rd., Boca Raton, FL 33432-7514 Executive Vice President, United National Bank, 1645 Palm Beach Lakes Blvd., West Palm Beach, FL 33401; (561) 688-9400 Spouse: Marilyn Wilhelm Osborne Marshall B. Otwell P.O. Box 1328, Boulder Creek, CA 95006-1328; marshall@surfnetusa.com Systems Engineer, Electronic Data Systems, Suite 300, 500 North State College, Orange, CA 92668 Spouse: Rowanne Mark Otwell 193 Edward L. Overtree 407 Glenchester St., Houston, TX 77079-7135; (713) 932-1317; eovertree@calpine.com Attorney, Calpine, 700 Louisiana, Houston, TX 77002; (713) 830-8934 Spouse: Edith Hough Overtree Kenneth A. Owen 6119 South Joplin, Tulsa, OK 74136-2107; (918) 496-3681 Manager, Oklahoma Mobil Concrete, Inc., 10313 East 48th St., Tulsa, OK 74146; (918) 622-3930 Economics 176 Los Trancos Circle, Portola Valley, CA 94025; (650) 851-2867; lsowen@alumni.Princeton.edu Managing Director–Real Estate Investments, Stanford Management Company, 2770 Sand Hill Rd., Menlo Ron Landeck, Larry Owen, and J.D. Park, CA 94025-7020; Askew in their Patton Hall suite (650) 926-0209 freshman year. Spouse: Joan C. Owen Sener Ozsahin 25. Sokak No: 12/2, Yildizevler, Cankaya, 06550 Ankara, Turkey; 90-3124422099; s.ozsahin@tr.net Children: Selim Ozsahin, 11/28/78 Anozie A. Ozumba 10964 139th St., Jamaica, NY 11435-5500 194 COURTESY J.D. ASKEW Larry S. Owen James A. Papa 3945 Walnut Grove Lane, Beavercreek, OH 45440; (937) 429-4380 Director of Engineering, Air Force Materiel Command, Room N-145, 4375 Chidlaw Rd., Wright Patterson AFB, OH 45433-5006; (937) 257-0066 Spouse: Regina M. Papa William B. Parent 1831 Main St., Glastonbury, CT 06033-2943; (860) 633-6265; william_b_parent@fleet.com Vice President, Fleet Retirement Plan Services, One Constitution Plaza, Hartford, CT 06115; (860) 756-1131 Gordon A. Park 11 Rothmere Dr., Toronto ON M4N 1V3, Canada; (416) 481-5801; gpark@Borden.com Attorney and Partner, Borden Ladner Gervais, LLP, Suite 4200, 40 King St., West, Toronto, ON M5H 3Y4, Canada; (416) 367-6018 Spouse: Mary A. Park James L. Parmentier (Jim) 175 South Great Rd., Lincoln, MA 01773-4112; (781) 259-0798; jparmen@aol.com Associate Professor, Clinical Investigation Program, MGH Institute of Health Professions, 36 FirstAve., Charleston Navy Yard, Boston, Top: Jim MA 02129; (617) 724-6327 Parmentier Spouse: Elizabeth Fowler (biochemist) heads the On Stumbling into the Sixties. I Iolanthe prepped for this essay as I did five toward years ago, by reading my comments in Cuttyhunk. Left: In his our class reunion books from our 15th, workshop. 25th, 30th, and 35th. Princeton has been a small but compelling part of my activities for many years now, and when I look for themes I see a brightly colored orange thread woven longitudinally into my life’s tapestry, right there alongside the ones for science, for sailing, and for singing that have 195 been in place since my childhood. And since I see little of error or embarrassment in those past writings, and since neither the wife nor the sailboat mentioned there has changed in the past five years, I will simply commend them to the interested reader and pass on to more recent events. This past year I fulfilled a long-held dream of my mother’s, which was that I return to academic life as a full-throated member of the faculty ... any faculty would do, but one that got to wear robes and march in graduation processions would be nice. For several years now I’ve held an adjunct professorship at the MGH Institute of Health Professions, a graduate school associated with Massachusetts General Hospital, in Boston. The Institute trains nurses and other medical specialists, including therapists in physical, speech, and hearing disorders, as well as in clinical investigation. I taught part-time in the CI program to train students to carry out clinical research work in hospital settings or in the biotech or pharmaceutical industries, and worked pro bono for an NGO in Boston that focuses on improving healthcare in India (www.ihousa.org). This past winter I was appointed associate director of our Masters Degree Program in Clinical Investigation and given the faculty rank of associate professor, a corner office, and a long list of the usual new-faculty committee Jim Parmentier and Stas’ assignments. After 15 years of grantMaliszewski share the Geezer supported medical school research Award as the oldest attendees appointments, and 15 more of managing at the 75th anniversary dinner research in the drug industry, I can say of the Princeton Rugby Club, quite honestly, “I’m happy to be here.” I confess it wasn’t just Mom’s dream. It was December 3, 2005, at the Princeton Club of New York. my own as well. During my 20-year research career I worked on three major medical problems: the mechanisms of anesthesia, the transdermal delivery of drugs using iontophoresis, and the development of a treatment for multiple sclerosis. None of these projects was successful, and it is small comfort to realize that no one else has been able to do them, either. But there are advantages to working on difficult problems. Those basic, applied, and clinical research experiences help me now explain research procedures to a new generation, and the Institute provides a community and a platform from which to contribute to another unsolvable problem. For some time now I’ve been working with colleagues to develop didactic and clinical training programs for H.I.V./AIDS care and manage196 ment for nurses working in low-resourced settings. Some of our programs involve on-site courses, but most use distance-learning Internet technologies to deliver ideas and information of local and district hospitals in South Africa. I, and many others, believe that teaching care and management skills to nurses will result in the greatest improvements in medical infrastructure in the shortest periods of time. By not having kids, Beth and I have been able to trade some forms of fulfillment and frustration for others. There won’t be children to care for us in our old age, and we don’t meet our neighbors at local school associations, but we have sailed the Maine coast alone, across the Bay of Fundy to Canada’s Grand Manan and back. In the cold New England winter I build small boats in the garage. (Pictures of some of the successes are up on the class website. Failures go into the wood stove). We continue to dabble in community theater. I’ve produced one Gilbert & Sullivan show, played in the orchestra for another, sung a few leads and done chorus roles in a few more, and finally, this year, I got a chance to direct. The Sudbury Savoyards’ production of The Grand Duke is in rehearsal as I write this, with Beth in the chorus and yours truly as the assistant director. Ask us about it at Reunions — that way I’ll know who read this far into my bio. This year I begin another five-year stint as your class secretary. I tried to resign last fall but was asked, with much more sincerity than I ever expected, to remain. I was touched. I do enjoy it. It connects me to people I’d never otherwise know. From my biweekly perch on the PAW I’ve watched as classmates have taken on more and greater responsibilities, coped with stunning successes and tragedies, and contributed steadily to the good in the world around us. Now, as we move through our seventh decade, I predict the pace will slow, the cruises will shorten from weeks to weekends, and the address list will finally stabilize as we enter our dream homes before reaching our nursing homes. I figure we’ve got about 10 years left to move about freely, and then maybe another 10 when we’ll find most of our entertainment within arms reach, either through a book, a remote, or a telephone. The projects will change from kayaking to gardening ... from managing other people to, perhaps, writing about them ... and from earning a living to giving it away. Now, as the tapestry thins, the orange thread can be seen more brightly. Cobbled together artificially in 1962, we as a class are now connected by a shared post-Princeton history as much as we ever were connected on campus. As one of the first Princeton Internet generations, we can use these connections to learn, to laugh, and to stay alive. (Incidentally, are you on Bob Nahas’s joke list?) Our class website, PAW, and Reunions all help to keep these links alive, and many thanks are due to Mike Barrett, Lanny Jones, and Jim Merritt for putting together this 40th-reunion book, and the rest of the Reunions 197 Committee for putting everything else in place for the rest of us. Let’s enjoy the next 10 years and, at our 50th, face together what may be coming after that. Robert Dial Parrott (Dial) 684 Main St., South Glastonbury, CT 06073-3115; (860) 633-2908; dparrott@uks.com Partner, Updike Kelly & Spellacy, P.C., One State St., P.O. Box 31277, Hartford, CT 06103-1277, (860) 548-2618 Spouse: Sally Wister Parrott (homemaker) Dial Parrott, (center, arms folded) with Children: Sam, 9/8/86; Max, 6/9/89 sister Patricia, nephews Robert and Nelson, brother Charles, and sons Sam and Max, standing where Kershaw’s South Carolina Brigade charged Union forces at the Battle of Chickamauga. Dial’s great-great grandfather was wounded in the fight. David T. Partridge Box 435, Five West Main St., Brookside, NJ 07926-0435; (973) 543-4996 Spouse: Mary Burke Partridge Lex Allen Passman 11545 W 72nd Pl., Arvada, CO 80005-3506; (303) 423-1771; l.passman@comcast.net Eric G. Pearson 701 West Gravers Lane, Philadelphia, PA 19118-4140; (215) 247-1287 Spouse: Virginia R. Pearson 198 Charles J. Peischl 46 North Fairview St., Nazareth, PA 18064-1617; (610) 759-7062 Attorney, Peters Moritz Peischl & Zulick, Center Square, Nazareth, PA 18064; (610) 759-1530 Spouse: Gwyneth A. Peischl Daniel A. Per-Lee 1517 Hiddenbrook Dr., Herndon, VA 20170-2809; (703) 471-8218 Spouse: Elaine Shepherd Per-Lee Alan Pestronk Six Forest Ridge Pl., Saint Louis, MO 63105-3006; (314) 727-0573 Professor, Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Box 8111, 660 South Euclid, St. Louis, MO 63110; (314) 362-6981 Michael A. Peterman 7-H Magie, 2 Faculty Rd., Princeton, NJ 08540; (609) 924-2492; mpeterman@trentu.ca Visiting Professor, English Department, B53 McCosh Hall, Princeton, NJ 08544; (609) 258-1850 Spouse: Caroline Willmott Peterman Ronald G. Peters 121 Stone Bridge Square, Chappaqua, NY 10514-3717; (914) 238-9557; peters@cloud9.com President, Government Law Systems, LLC, 500 West Putnam Ave., Greenwich, CT 06830; (203) 861-9100 Lawrence C. Petrowski 1809 East Nicolet, Phoenix, AZ 85020; (602) 870-9210; lcpetrowski@moheck.com Partner, Morrison & Hecker LLP, Suite 2100, 1850 North Central Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85004-4584; (602) 279-1600 Spouse: Paula R. Petrowski 199 Michael Wolf Pflaumer 6 Summit Lane, Berkeley, CA 94708-2213; (510) 549-3449; pflash@aol.com Electrical Engineering Consultant Spouse: Ann Adams Pflaumer Paul S. Pilcher P.O. Box 77, Wellfleet, MA 02667; (508) 349-5114; paulpilcher@aol.com Attorney George J. Pilicy P.O. Box 20955, Wickenburg, AZ 85358-5955; (928) 684-3358 Arizona Public Service Company, 5801 South Winterburg Rd., Tonopah, AZ 85354; (623) 393-5969 Spouse: Carol L. Pilicy Charles J. Plohn 162 Library Pl., Princeton, NJ 08540-3018; (609) 683-1488; cplohn@aol.com Managing Director, Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc., North Tower, Fifth Floor, Four World Financial Center, New York, NY 10080; (212) 449-4577 Spouse: Dorothy Yost Plohn (community volunteer) Children: Chandler Fay Plohn Dektas, 11/18/77; Charles Raymond Plohn, 6/8/79 Our daughter, Chandler, is married to Michael Dektas, lives in Cincinnati, and is completing her Master of Art Education degree at Xavier University. Our son, Charles, works for the New York Yankees, has my dream e-mail address (cplohn@yankees.com), and lives in New York City. Dorothy continues to be very active in various state and local community organizations and remains my trophy wife after more than 35 years of marriage. I continue as a managing director and head of special equity transactions at Merrill Lynch; for the past year and a half I have been very active as chair of the steering committee for the 75th anniversary celebration of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. Dorothy and I are looking forward to some international travel, time with our grown childre, and hosting Class of 1966 events at Plohn Hall. 200 Thomas J. Pniewski 117 Avenue A, New York, NY 10009-5809; tompkf@aol.com Director of Cultural Affairs, The Kosciuszko Foundation, 15 East 65th St., New York, NY 10021 Paul Ponomarev 346 Chatham Rd., Columbus, OH 43214; (614) 481-0837 Professor of Mathematics, Ohio State University, 231 West 18th Ave., Columbus, OH 43210-1101; (614) 292-9853 David W. Ponthan 4354 Wooddale Ave. South, Saint Louis Park, MN 55424-1061; (952) 920-4343; swededave@peoplepc.com Middle Manager, Ford Motor Company, 966 Mississippi Boulevard, St. Paul, MN 55104; (651) 696-0509 Don C. Porter 2525 Briarcrest Rd., Beverly Hills, CA 90210-1821 Architect William L. Pressly (Bill) 6135 31st Street, NW, Washington, DC 20015-1515; (202) 244-8530; wpressly@umd.edu Professor, Department of Art History and Archaeology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742; (301) 405-1493 Bill and Nancy Pressly with son Spouse: Nancy Lee Pressly David and his wife, Megan. Children: David, 3/27/74 After stints at Yale, the University of Texas at Austin, and Duke, I have been teaching since 1987 at the University of Maryland, where I have also served a term as chair of the Department of Art History and Archaeology. My first book, The Life and Art of James Barry, was published by Yale University Press in 1981, and it led to an exhibition at the Tate Gallery in 1983, the catalogue for which is James Barry: The Artist as Hero. This year the Crawford Art Gallery in Cork, Ireland, the artist’s hometown, put on another significant exhibition 201 “James Barry, 1741-1806: ‘The Great Historical Painter,’ ” in which I was a major participant. Currently I am working on a book entitled Writing the Vision for a New Public Art: James Barry’s Murals at the Royal Society of Arts, devoted to his series of six large canvases on the theme of the progress of human culture executed from 1777 to 1783. While the paintings’ surface narrative traces the rise of civilization in classical Greece, the book will argue that these murals in the heart of London offer an encoded message enshrining the Roman Catholic Church as the embodiment of humanity’s finest cultural expression. In addition to Barry, I have published numerous articles and essays on other artists of the British school, including Romney, Copley, Stuart, Wright of Derby, Mortimer, Fuseli, Blake, and Zoffany. I also published a book on this last painter entitled The French Revolution as Blasphemy: Johan Zoffany’s Paintings of the Massacre at Paris, August 10, 1792 (University of California Press, 1995). In 1993, Yale published my book A Catalogue of Paintings in the Folger Shakespeare Library: “As Imagination Bodies Forth”; this study has led to another book on which I am now putting the finishing touches entitled The Artist as Original Genius: Shakespeare’s “Fine Frenzy” in Late-Eighteenth-Century British Art. Over the years I have benefited from the support of a number of institutions, including the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, and most recently a Paul Mellon Senior Fellowship. My wife, Nancy, (we married in 1970) is also an art historian, but she has enjoyed three careers rather than just my one as a professor. As a curator for the Yale Center for British Art in 1979, she wrote the exhibition catalogue The Fuseli Circle in Rome, a ground-breaking study of a group of international artists working in Rome in the 1770s, and for the San Antonio Museum of Art in 1983 she mounted the exhibition Revealed Religion: Benjamin West’s Commissions for Windsor Castle and Fonthill Abbey. In her career as an administrator, she served as assistant director of the Museum Program of the National Endowment for the Arts, where she was an active participant in the cultural wars fought around such artists as Robert Mapplethorpe and Richard Serrano. Resigning when the censorship became too stifling, she started her own museum consulting firm, where she has helped with strategic planning such institutions as the Menil Collection in Houston, the Phillips Collection in Washington, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Barnes Foundation, the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the Rhode Island School of Design. She has truly made a difference: the museum profession is a better place for her efforts. Our son, David, is flourishing in Atlanta, where he is a stockbroker with Merrill Lynch. In November 2004, David married Megan Contner, who had the good sense as an undergraduate to major in art history. The 202 photograph of the four of us was taken shortly before the wedding. Nancy and I are looking forward eventually to retiring to Atlanta, where we can babysit our anticipated grandchildren. Our first is due in August. This past May I had my third open-heart surgery (the first was in 1975 and the second in 1987). Amazingly, all three operations spread over 30 years have been performed by the same surgeon, Dr. Larry Cohen at Harvard University Medical School. I would not have made it this far without him. Endocarditis was the initial cause of my heart problems, and in August I had a defibrillator implanted as backup. While in 10 years I may not be the most fit at our 50th, I am very much looking forward to attending. Seymour Preston 49 New St., Katonah, NY 10536; Managing Director, Goldin Associates, LLC, 10th Floor, 400 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10017; (212) 593-2255; seymourp@earthlink.net Spouse: Suzanne G. Preston Children: Eliot, 3/4/83 In 1991 Suzanne and I lived in the house I grew up in (Bedford, New York); our daughter Elly (then 8) was at a wonderful Montessori school; we played most weekends with our best friends (Converses); summered in the Adirondacks; and I worked for Equitable Capital. A lot of water’s over the dam in 15 years since! In 1998 we moved to a huge Victorian in Grand-View-On-Hudson; last October we moved back, downsizing by half to a contemporary in Katonah, New York. We also have rebuilt as loft a collapsed barn on our property in the Adirondacks, a second second home. Suzanne and I have six new kitchens together; three since 1991 — we’ve got it down good! We’re still adding to our collection of “exuberant art” — a recent favorite by one of few well-known artists (Rosie O’Donnell) — a big partial collage of a white-faced flapper with beautiful coloring. We lost our best friends of 20 years: she died of cancer, he collapsed dead on a tennis court. Lost another to alcohol. But we found Paula and Julie, great neighbors in Grandview, and the golfing Fogs. Five years ago, after a medical exam, I chased Suzanne down the scales, both losing over 30 pounds. That summer I climbed a high peak deep in the Adirondacks (Dix). I took up daily exercise at the sports club, Suzanne walks and golfs, and we’ve kept it off. Now I keep up with Elly hiking and bicycling — what fun! And I have golf to play together with Suzanne — what fun! Now when we dance to the Stones, etc., it’s nonstop and not out-of-breath! Other notables: I went back for St. Paul’s 40th after 35 years and enjoyed it immensely — an inspiration for our Princeton 40th. Also, I 203 survived two auto “incidents” and think of this good fortune often. Elly is still the apple-of-our-eye. Schooled (mostly honors) at Montessori, Greenwich Academy, Madeira, Miss Porter’s, and Franklin & Marshall ’05, she’s graduated to the world. Waiting tables in Park Slope, Brooklyn, freelance photographer and writer for Fine Arts magazine, looking for a full-time media-journalism-photography job. Camping or traveling summers, she’s had great girl friends, survived frats, had a fine first love, and is living with a fine second. She does daily crosswords with Suzanne on the phone, but otherwise she’s out of the roost and we miss her! At the end of 1991 I left a good job at Equitable Capital as head of corporate-loan recovery for the risks of investment banking (“loan restructuring”) with Furman Selz Incorporated (mid-sized NYC investment bank). In two years I was jobless — months and months, and months, of jobsearch — until in 1994 I joined Goldin Associates (Harrison J., the magician chief financial officer of NYC’s financial rehabilitation — P.U. ’57). Here I work principally in the arena of business distress: as financial consultant to lenders, investors, and managers contending with bankruptcy or close; as litigation-support expert providing valuation and solvency analysis and testimony; and as fiduciary-resolving claims, disposing of assets, bringing cases to closure. Absolutely fascinating work, a firm with great camaraderie, and rewarding (most years!) Michael L. Pribyl 132 Fort Greene Pl., Brooklyn, NY 11217; (718) 624-7796; mpribyl@paulsegalassociates.com Partner, Paul Segal Associates Architects, 545 Eighth Ave., New York, NY 10018-4307; (212) 631-9200 William G. Price (Bill) 41 Harriet Dr., Princeton, NJ 08540-3934; (609) 924-6185; wprice@theradex.com Vice President, Theradex Systems, Inc., CN 5257, Princeton, NJ 08543; (609) 799-7580; Spouse: Diane Garbaccio Price (university administrator) Updating my life story since the 25th reunion — there’s not much of note. In 1993 Diane and I moved a few blocks from Princeton Township into Princeton Bill and Diane Price in Panzano (Chianti), Italy, 1999. 204 Borough proper, and I switched employers, but not jobs. (The latter because I followed a project that had been contracted out, in the process solidifying my evolution from nuclear engineering to health-care informatics.) Meanwhile, Diane switched from the Princeton’s politics department to the Woodrow Wilson School, so I’m still more acquainted than most in our class with what goes on at the university. We are now on the cusp of retiring. We want to be able to sleep in when we feel like it, and travel when the mood hits, and get farther afield than Italy and France. Our jobs are less interesting through familiarity, and our retired friends assure us that retirement will be even better than promised. We may drop in on them for some proof! Joel R. Primack 575 High St., Santa Cruz, CA 95060-2642; (831) 425-1194 Professor, Department of Physics, University of California at Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA 95064; (831) 459-2580 Spouse/Partner: Nancy Ellen Abrams Carlos J. Quijano 4 Amy Lane, Cumberland Foreside, ME 04110; (207) 871 4668; carlosq@coastofmaine.com President, Coast of Maine, Inc., 145 Newbury St., Portland, ME 04101; (207) 879-0002; www.coastofmaine.com Spouse: Jean McCloud Quijano (office manager) Children: Lisa Q. Wolfinger, 11/18/65; Alexandra Q. Grippando, 1/22/73; Jennifer Q. Sax, 3/24/74 Thomas C. Ragan Carlos, Jean, and grandson Owen, Christmas 2005. 271 Flying Point Rd., P.O. Box 2807, Southampton, NY 11969-2807; (631) 287-9383; tragan@rf-law.com Partner, Ragan & Freeman LLP, 400 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10017-1909; (212) 204-3505 205 Jon D. Raggett 26226 Camino Real, Carmel, CA 93923-9240; (831) 624-0886; mail@schools3.org Executive Director, Schools Ecoles Escuelas, Box DD, Carmel, CA 93921; (831) 883-1534 Spouse: Victoria Campion Raggett Richard J. Raskin Attorney, Suite 601, 155 North Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60601; (312) 938-0380; richraskin@aol.com Spouse: Cynthia S. Raskin W. Lee Rawls 4105 Dana Court, Kensington, MD 20895-3651; (301) 946-5259 Vice President, Van Scoyoc Associates, Suite 600W, 101 Constitution Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20001-2147; (202) 638-1950 Spouse: Linda M. Rawls Robert H. Rawson 21300 Brantley Rd., Shaker Heights, OH 44122-1936; (216) 321-4869 Partner, Jones Day, North Point, 901 Lakeside Ave., Cleveland, OH 44114-1116; (216) 586-7216 Spouse: Judith Harris Rawson Montfort S. Ray 429 Penlands Indian Trail, Hayesville, NC 28904; eagle76@grove.net Attorney Spouse: Cathryn D. Ray John S. Redpath Senior Vice President and General Counsel, Time Inc., 1271 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020-1300; (212) 522-1180; john.redpath@hbo.com Spouse: Suzanne Allen Redpath 206 William T. Reed P.O. Box 3065, Westport, MA 02790-0701; wtr@sscg.com Partner, School St. Capital Group, P.O. Box 3065, Westport, MA 02790; (610) 892-8059 Spouse: Heather Heath Reed Louis H. Reich 14 Guthrie Place, New London, CT 06320-4206; (860) 443-8781; lhreich@myeastern.com Psychiatrist, Louis H. Reich, M.D., PC, 292 Montauk Ave., New London, CT 06320; (860) 443-1200 Spouse: Susan Dion Reich (rentier) Children: Trude, 1/21/72; Samuel, 1/16/75 Steven D. Reich (Steve) 202 Stratford Park Circle, Del Mar, CA 92014-3255; (858) 755-6321; steve.reich@sbcglobal.net Chief Medical Officer & Sr. VP, Attenuon, LLC, Suite 401, 11535 Sorrento Valley Rd., San Diego, CA 92121-1309; (858) 720-8797, ext. 106 Spouse/partner: Constance E. Gonczy Steve and Constance (general manager) Children: Blair Justin Fire Reich, 12/2/77; Blair Jesse Ellyn Reich, 9/18/79 John Reichel (Jeff) 1060 Congress Valley Rd., Napa, CA 94558-5306; (707) 252-7075; jeffreichel@comcast.net Spouse: Linda Zwick Reichel (registered nurse) Children: David, 7/5/73; Lauren, 7/18/77 Linda and I were married the day after I graduated from medical school and left from the reception for California (Stanford). What a change for a young couple from the East Coast! After six years at Stanford we were converted into Californians, and stayed, with muchappreciated support from our families in the East. We both find family and friends the major source of joy and support in our lives as we grapple with our reactions to the changes in society and the world. Still looking for clear answers to murky questions (would love to return to Princeton 207 courses). Retired almost two years from the practice of medicine, dabbling in local government, traveling, and trying to become a carpenter (what great simple satisfaction!). The world may be burning up and societies may be collapsing, but we are personally very lucky and try to focus on that. Thomas R. Reid (T.R.) 3090 S. Madison St., Denver, CO 80210;(303) 504-9807; trreid@twp.com Rocky Mountain Bureau Chief, Washington Post, (202) 309-1060 Spouse: Margaret Mary (Peggy) McMahon (Regional Director, Invest Northern Ireland) Children: Homer, 8/16/75; Penelope, 4/22/82; Willa, 1/30/84 Geographically, financially, professionally, and spiritually, my life has changed considerably since our 35th reunion. This is partly because our family has moved back to the USA and settled — permanently, I suspect — in Peggy’s homeland, Colorado. We loved our years of globetrotting, but it is even better to be home. The bigger change followed the publication of my latest book, on the transformation of Europe. To my amazement, the book (The United States of Europe) became a best seller. At the age of 61, I was an overnight success, It’s surprising how much satisfaction I get from this. Having produced countless flops over the years, it feels good for a writer to have a book out there that people are actually buying and reading. (I know that many classmates have bought my earlier books, and I am deeply grateful. Except for you guys and my mom, though, hardly anybody was buying my stuff — until this Europe book came along.) Beyond the emotional reward, the book’s success has kicked us into a different financial orbit. Strangely, I’m working less and earning more. I’ve cut way back on my work for the Washington Post. This has given me time to get going on the next book, to make some documentaries for PBS, to hit the lecture circuit, and to work on several civic and educational boards. I had a marvelous term as a trustee of Princeton and came away convinced that our alma mater is in better shape today than at any other time in its 260 years. Peggy McMahon, too, has a job she greatly enjoys. So we have a few more years of work ahead. But we can feel ourselves moving toward retirement, and a different pattern for the last third of life. It would help a lot if we could get our kids to join us in Colorado; for now, though, all three are on the East Coast, finishing school and starting careers. We still go to mass most Sundays, but the Roman Catholic Church in the U.S. is a less comfortable spiritual home than it used to be. I can’t decide whether that is the church’s fault, or mine. 208 Geoffrey George Reinhard 1 Harvard Circle, Berkeley, CA 94708-2206; (510) 704-1932 Professor, Department of English, City College of San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94112 Richard G. Reinis 288 North Saltair Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90049; (310) 472-0774; rreinis@greatcirclefamilyfoods.com Chief Executive Officer, Great Circle Family Foods, 26th Floor, 300 South Grand Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90071; (213) 489-2340 Spouse: Lois Barbara Reinis J. Frank Remley 16 Old Farm Way, Newbury, MA 01951-1732; (978) 465-0922 Managing Director Spouse: Cheryl E. Remley Victor M. Reusch 9995 West 85th Pl., Arvada, CO 80005-1203 Research Professor, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Denver, Denver, CO 80208; (303) 871-3661 William B. Rhoads (Bill) 34 Plattekill Ave., New Paltz, NY 12561-1920; (845) 255-0253 Professor Emeritus, Department of Art History, State University College, New Paltz, NY 12561 Spouse: Sally Miller Rhoads Bruce S. Ribner 2276 Fairoaks Rd., Decatur, GA 30033-1200; (404) 417-0225; bribner@emory.edu Epidemiologist, Emory University Hospital, Suite B-705, Emory University, 1364 Clifton Rd., NE, Atlanta, GA 30322; (404) 727-1580 Spouse: Barbara Sue Ribner 209 David A. Richardson 1020 Casiano Rd., Los Angeles, CA 90049-1610; (310) 476-0764 Spouse: Carol Carfango Richardson Richard L. Riemer 553 29th St., Oakland, CA 94609-3512; (510) 835-8575 Psychotherapist, 3871 Howe St., Oakland, CA 94611; (510) 547-1738 Richard F. Riesenfeld 2685 East Eagle Way, Salt Lake City, UT 84108-2802; (801) 583-2815; rfr@cs.utah.edu Professor, Sch. of Computing, 3190 Merrill Engrg., University of Utah, 50 South Central Campus Drive, Salt Lake City, UT 84112-9205; (801) 581-7026 Spouse: Elain Cohen Riesenfeld Charles J. Riggi 9068 Linwood Rd., Le Roy, NY 14482; (585) 768-7215 Spouse: Michele James Stevens Riggi Douglas B. Ritter 44 Blackberry Lane, Berwick, PA 18603; dbritter@pplweb.com Mechanical Engineer, PPL Susquehanna, LLC, P.O. Box 467, Berwick, PA 18603; (570) 542-3547 G. Harry Robinson 27W280 Birch St., Winfield, IL 60190-1041; (630) 682-4670; harryandreetrobinson@msn.com Allstate Insurance Company, RK03, 2150 East Lake Cook Rd., Buffalo Grove, IL 60089-2196; (312) 822-3750 Spouse: Reet Reinberg Robinson 210 Mike Robinson 1300 Douglas St., Big Spring, TX 79720; (432) 263-0042 Engineer, Robinson Drilling of Texas, P.O. Box 311, Big Spring, TX 79721; (432) 267-5277 Spouse: Monika Robinson Alan G. Rockhold Apt. 203, 106 Washington St., Petaluma, CA 94952-2930; agrock1@aloha.net Donald J. Rodenbach 2850-2 Farr Rd., Emmaus, PA 18052; (610) 967-6673 Attorney, Zumas and Rodenbach, 65 East Elizabeth Ave., Bethlehem, PA 18018; (610) 866-7716 Philip D. Rodenberger 2012 Evergreen Court, Yakima, WA 98902-1200; (509) 453-2256; pkrodenberger@charter.net Psychiatrist and Medical Director, CWCMH, 402 S. Fourth Ave., Yakima, WA 98902, (509) 573-3629 Spouse: Karen M. Rodenberger (retired) Children: Wendy, 8/27/71; Tim, 6/16/73; Drew, 10/6/75 Richard D. Rogers 371 Indian Harbor Rd., Vero Beach, FL 32963-3510; (772) 231-2187; rd-rogers@sbcglobal.net Chairman of the Board, Hobie Cat Company, 4925 Oceanside Blvd., Oceanside, CA 92056-3099; (760) 758-9100 Spouse: Julie Grote Rogers Andres Roomet 15 Lewis Creek Rd., Hinesburg, VT 05461-9705; (802) 482-2769 Physician-Neurologist, Neurological Associates of Vermont, 89 South Williams St., Burlington, VT 05401; (802) 862-5759 Spouse: Louise Bentley Roomet 211 Barnett Rosenberg 15 Hillcrest Manor, Rolling Hills Estates, CA 90274-4884; (310) 377-7631 Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary, Mattel, Inc., Suite 700, 1100 Glendon Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90024; (310) 209-5440 Spouse: Sharon C. Rosenberg Paul D. Ross 441 Dusty Rock Rd., NW, Riner, VA 24149-3514; (540) 763-3730; pdross@swva.net Engineering Consultant, Alum Ridge Associates, 441 Dusty Rock Rd., NW, Riner, VA 24149-3514; (540) 763-3730 Robert S. Ross 4603 Kenmore Drive, NW, Washington, DC 20007-1914; (202) 338-0951 President, RS Ross Associates, Suite A, 417 Walnut St., Harrisburg, PA 17101; (717) 236-0111 Spouse: Louise P. Ross David K. Rubenstein 1220 East 22nd St., Minneapolis, MN 55404-2945; dkrube@aol.com Business: 1602 Selby Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104; (651) 642-9144 Ira Henry Rubenzahl 12 Fort St., Northampton, MA 01060-4208 President, Office of the President, Capital Community College, 61 Woodland St., Hartford, CT 06105; (860) 520-7801 J. Dennis Russell P.O. Box 2082, La Mesa, CA 91943-2082; (619) 698-8172 Consulting Engineer, NCR, 17095 Via del Campo, San Diego, CA 92127-1711; (858) 485-3365 Spouse: Janis Russell 212 James L. Russell (Jim) 6121 Havenhurst Pl., La Jolla, CA 92037-6805; (858) 454-9277; russell996@aol.com Chief Financial Officer, DR Technologies, Inc., 7740 Kenamar Court, San Diego, CA 92121; (858) 677-1235 Spouse: Candace Edwards Lewis P. Rutherfurd Room 2509, 25th Floor, Harcourt House, 39 Gloucester Rd., Wanchai, Hong Kong; 852-2528-5717; iavmhk@netvigator.com Managing Director, Inter Asia Venture Management, Ltd., 14/Fl., China Hong Kong Tower, 8 Hennessy Rd., Hong Kong,, Hong Kong, 852-5285717 Spouse: Katharine Sanger Rutherfurd Henry M. Rutledge 450 Rolling Rd., Salisbury, MD 21801; (410) 742-2450 Attorney, Department of Labor, 1100 North Eutaw St., Baltimore, MD 21201; (410) 767-2973 John McG. Rutledge 11727 Flintwood Dr., Houston, TX 77024-5110; (713) 464-3902; rutledge31@aol.com President, Rutledge Resources, 11727 Flintwood Drive, Houston, TX 77024, 713-464-3902 Spouse: Helen (Sue) Schliem Rutledge (realtor) Children: S.Courtney Rutledge Burkett, 8/20/66; Helen Tiffany Rutledge Wilten, 10/3/67; Dorsey Paige Rutledge Prince, 5/27/69 William H. Sachs 3 MorganPl., Princeton, NJ 08540-2609; (609) 688-0314 Research Scientist, Union Carbide Corporation, 171 River Rd., Piscataway, NJ 08854-7518; (732) 563-5821 Spouse: Iliana Ingeborg Bjorling-Sachs 213 Carl P. Sahler 5125 Wyffels Rd., Canandaigua, NY 14424-8365; (585) 394-3827; cpsahler@aol.com Physician, Canandaigua Medical Group,PC, 335 Parrish St., Canandaigua, NY 14424; (585) 394-3827 Spouse: Olle Jane Elizabeth Sahler B. Lance Sauerteig 130 Edgehill Rd., New Haven, CT 06511-1320; (203) 562-0842; blsau@snet.net President, BLS Strategic Capital, Inc., 61 Witten Rd., Westport, CT 06880; (203) 221-3240 Spouse: Robin S. Sauerteig G. Paul Savidge (Red) 249 Foreside Rd., Falmouth, ME 04105; (207) 781-2168; redsvdg@aol.com Clinic Medical Director, Family Planning Association of Maine Spous/Partner: Mary Doherty Children: George, 9/67; Sarah, 6/9/69; Jonathan, 7/71 Alvin A. Schall (Tony) 103 Grafton St., Chevy Chase, MD 20815-3425; schall@cafc.uscourts.gov U.S. Circuit Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, Federal, 717 Madison Pl., N.W., Washington, DC 20439; (202) 312-5510 Spouse: Sharon LeBlanc Schall (volunteer) Children: Amanda L. Schall, 5/25/77; Anthony D. Schall, 4/16/81 David R. Schatz 3204 Jessie Harbor Dr., Osprey, FL 34229-8995; (941) 918-2107; avidread@comcast.net Associate Professor, Humanities Department, New College of Florida, 5700 North Tamiami Trail, Sarasota, FL 34243-2197; (941) 359-4360 or 4316 Partner: Robert C. West (administrative manager, software company) Children: Sarah Deschenes, 11/9/71; Elizabeth Schatz, 1/5/77 Happily, many of the positive aspects of my life as it was 15 years ago 214 remain as before — I am still present on the planet; I am grateful for my sobriety and for the personal enrichment it has afforded me; I continue to teach Russian literature and language at New College of Florida, where I joined the faculty in 1969, and where working with intelligent and engaged young men and women has kept me from slipping faster into my dotage; and I am in rather astoundingly good health, especially for one so casual about diet and exercise. And, since the new ought always to augment the enduring, I now have some wonderful additions to this list — I have three terrific grandsons (Jack, Michael, and Andrew Deschenes, the sons of my daughter Sarah, P.U. ’92); two new hips, which have returned mobility and comfort to my daily life; and one new partner, Rob West, whose love, goodness, and support have made the past 10 years the happiest period of my life, a time of adventure, growth, challenge, and, above all, optimism. I hope that others have found or will find the joy that my relationship with Rob has brought me. I have been given so much; I hope that I have somehow given back in fair measure. Henry J. Scherck (Terry) 290 North Ahwahnee Rd., Lake Forest, IL 60045-2067; 847-234-3621; tscherck@alumni.princeton.edu VP Global Practice Leader, Healthcare/Life Sciences, A.T. Kearney, Inc., 222 West Adams St., Chicago, IL 60606; (312) 223-6520 Spouse: Denise O’Leary Scherck (amateur athlete) Children: Amanda S. Elbing, 2/24/78; John Henry Scherck, 5/20/86 There have been a number of excellent events since last attending a Princeton reunion in 1996. Most important is that I met Denise O’Leary (thanks to Googan Bunn) and after a wonderful commuting relationship between New Jersey and Chicago we were married in Cabo San Lucas in December 2002. I moved to Lake Forest and have met a great group of new Terry Scherck, left, with son John Henry, friends who we enjoy. daughter Amanda, son-in-law P.J. Elbing, Denise and I also have and wife Denise; St. John’s, Virgin Islands. become part-time west coasters since joining Mayacama Golf Club in Sonoma, which caters to our love of golf and good wine. We have invested in a place there and plan to spend more time in California, dodging the Illinois winters. Professional life has been very rewarding and fun, as I am our firm’s 215 leader of its life-science and healthcare executive search practice. We are in the process of taking ourselves private with the aid of equity investors, so 2006 should be interesting. Reflecting on what has transpired leads me to give deep thanks that I met this wonderful woman who I am excited to introduce to all at Reunions, that my daughter Amanda is married to a super young man (P.J. Elbing) and that John Henry (Denison ’09) is thriving and bringing back a few memories of some of our adventures. My only fear, which some of you may share, is that, while there have been a few noteworthy “speed bumps,” overall I feel incredibly blessed and am mindful that it all can change quickly. So I guess the message is live for today and enjoy each day to the fullest. Sorry for the philosophy, and looking forward to June 1-4. John E. Schleh 3026 North Broad St., Philadelphia, PA 19132-2406; (215) 226-2050; jschleh@juno.com Director, Teen Haven, 3026 North Broad St., Philadelphia, PA 19132; (215) 226-2050 Eric W. Schneider 3191 1/2 Domich Rd., Ely, MN 55731-8405; (507) 261-4513; ewschneider@frontiernet.net Programmer and Analyst Spouse: Sharon Ann Schneider F. G. Schonenberg P.O. Box 467, Wynantskill, NY 12198-0467; (518) 283-2858; schonenberg@alumni.princeton.edu Attorney Spouse/Partner: Midge Rogers (retired) Children: Kathy; Lisa; Cori; Fred Stephen J. Schreiber Apt. 12-E, 444 East 82nd St., New York, NY 10028-5946; (212) 535-1346; sjschreiber@pbwt.com Counsel, Patterson, Belknap, Webb & Tyler, 1133 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10036; (212) 336-2556 Spouse: Aileen E. Schreiber (retired teacher) Children: Jason Schreiber, 1979 216 Of my family’s threesome, I have been the one whose life has changed the least in recent years. After a quarter century as an elementary-school teacher in the New York City public-school system — a truly heroic tour of duty — Aileen retired in 2004. She no longer arises at 5:30 each morning. She spends more time at the health club and enjoying the company of friends, but, as do many members of our generation, she also spends more time helping her parents. Our son, Jason, who attended Brown, is now at Harvard Business School after working for the past four years at Goldman Sachs. Jason outshines his father in every way. He has a finer analytical mind (one reason I opted for Princeton was that I could fulfill coursedistribution requirements without enrolling in even one mathematics course). He is far more handsome and, at 26, in better physical condition than I Steve Schreiber at ease was at that age (I weighed nearly 30 pounds more at graduation than I do now). And he is much more adventuresome (in 2005 he went on a rather rugged safari in East Africa, vacationed in Croatia, and organized a trip of 12 HBS students to Uruguay and Argentina). I am now in my 28h year at the law firm of Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler LLP, where I continue to help clients buy, sell, and lease real estate. In our 35th Reunion Book, as to retirement I said, “No plans to do so.” Although I still haven’t targeted a retirement date, I expect to cross over to the promised land before the class convenes for our 45th reunion. I look forward to spending more time indulging my favorite pastime, reading, and hope I will have the resolve to volunteer my time (though not as a lawyer) in some worthwhile community activity. Health and finances permitting, Aileen and I would also like to continue traveling. Since, in a time of terrorism, travel abroad has become less attractive, we have had wonderful experiences visiting Charleston and Savannah, Vancouver and Seattle (where we spent an enjoyable evening with Monty Gray and his wife), and, a mere four months before Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans. As to offering a reflection: For the past several years, I have pestered friends by repeating that “None of us had anything to do with the fact that he or she was born when or where he or she was born or as to the circumstances into which he or she was born.” That’s a cumbersome way of saying that our lives are subject to events and forces beyond our control. But for me, at least, stating the point in such a manner serves a 217 chastening purpose — it causes me to confront truths that it would be comforting to ignore. Forty-four years ago, for instance, I’m sure I thought I had been admitted to Princeton because I was a bright, hardworking guy. Now, at a time when half of each entering class is composed of women, I am compelled to recognize that the emphasis all along should have been on the fact that I was a guy. Rufus K. Schriber 6558 Saucon Valley Dr., Fort Worth, TX 76132-5466; rufus1088@aol.com Executive Vice President of Marketing, La Quinta Corporation, Suite 600, 909 Hidden Ridge, Irving, TX 75038; (214) 492-6600 Spouse: Kathy Hill Schriber James R. Schueler Apt. 1, 251 Bradley Pl., Palm Beach, FL 33480-3742; (561) 655-1511 Lawrence T. Scott 134 Langdon St., Newton, MA 02458-1983; (617) 630-0626; lawrence.scott@BC.edu Professor, Department of Chemistry, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467-3860; (617) 552-8024 Spouse: Dawn Scott Thomas R. Scott (Tom) 10758 Puebla Dr., La Mesa, CA 91941; (619) 334-8984; trscott@sciences.sdsu.edu Vice-President for Research, San Diego State University, 5500 Campanile Dr., San Diego, CA 92182-1010, (619) 594-5142 Spouse: Bonnie Kime Scott (professor and department chair) Children: Heather Sheila Scott, 3/20/70; Ethan Kime Scott, 9/10/74; Heidi Cathryn Molly Scott, 6/16/78 218 John H. Scully Suite 3215, 591 Redwood Hwy., Mill Valley, CA 94941-6000; (415) 383-6600; john.scully@spopartners.com Managing Director and Investment Counselor, SPO Partners & Company (same address and phone number as above) Spouse: Regina Kulik (public relations and marketing executive) Children: Brian P. Scully, 5/31/71; Kathryn S. Peterson, 12/22/74; Peter V. Scully, 2/23/76; Elizabeth M. Scully, 3/29/78; Johnny L. Scully, 9/9/82; Shannon C. Scully, 6/4/87 Robert F. Seely 207 Lake Ave., Metuchen, NJ 08840-2316 Of Counsel, Grunfeld, Desiderio et al, 25th Floor, 399 Park Ave., New York, NY 10022 Spouse: Rebeccah S. Seely Paul Segal Apt. 11-C, 127 West 79th St., New York, NY 10024; (212) 799-7304 Architect and Partner, Paul Segal Associates, 545 Eighth Ave., New York, NY 10018; (212) 631-9200 Spouse: Christine A. Flynn (real estate, law) Children: Emma, 1986; Sarah, 1984 Sami Sehayik 1983 PGA Blvd., North Palm Beach, FL 33408-3037; (561) 627-3327 Physician Eric G. Sellix 660 Tichenor St., P.O. Box 1109, Clatskanie, OR 97016-1109; (503) 728-3769; egsellix@clatskanie.com Owner and Manager, Hump’s Restaurant, Inc., P.O. Box 1109, Clatskanie, OR 97016; (503) 728-2626 Spouse: Pamela Sellix 219 Michael R. Serwatka 720 Pine St., Boulder, CO 80302-4742; (303) 444-6483 David F. Sexton Apt. 1-B186 Field Point Rd., Greenwich, CT 06830; (203) 661-2621; dfsexton@earthlink.net President, The Farrington Group, LLC, Suite 1150, 230 Park Ave., New York, NY 10169 Spouse: Ann Hemelright Sexton 2310 Ballybunion Rd., Center Valley, PA 18034; (610) 882-8256 (summer) 13994 Royal Pointe Dr., Port Charlotte, FL 33953; (941) 624-6496 (winter) Financial Planner; (908) 236-8188; tseymour@ptd.net Spouse: Adrienne Seymour (retired) Children: Scott, 1972; Linda, 1974; Jane, 1978 In our sophomore year, during an otherwise formulaic English lecture, I had what is called a defining moment. The professor, whose identity now escapes me, paused in the middle of his Terry and Adrienne Seymour prepared text to ask the somnolent in Les Eyzies, France, on a audience for an opinion. My comrades walking tour in 2005. were startled from their stupor by this distinctly rare occurrence. Normally our English Department lectures were delivered ex cathedra without interruption, and dialogue with the audience was almost unheard of. That’s what precepts were for. But for once this august man wanted our opinion. He intoned: “We have seen how other ages embraced the mythic voices of their poets laureate. But is there anyone today within the venerated air of the English-speaking peoples who could be called our greatest living poet?” I don’t know what he expected, but one rather disheveled student immediately shouted out: “Bob Dylan!” Passing over the face of our professor was an expression commingling disgust and bewilderment. Clearly he had never heard of Bob Dylan and might well go to his grave, never having hummed “It ain’t me, Babe.” 220 JIM MERRITT ’66 Terry Seymour In truth, I was somewhat taken aback by the youthful audacity of this nomination. But now I see it was right. The answer was blowin’ in the wind. Bob Dylan spoke to our generation, informed most of the other popular musicians, and captured what was about to happen to our society, a society only beginning to emerge from its post-Eisenhower lassitude. Forty-some years later, Bob Dylan as a poet and a composer is trapped in a time warp, partly of his own imposition. Although still alive and performing, he refuses to deliver his songs as originally recorded, to the frustration of many fans. It’s almost as if he is denying that voice, that poet, that message. They lived in the 1960s and are no longer the same. So as I read over the lives of my classmates, I will always wonder what lurks beneath their measured recitations of achievement and wisdom. Will any of them tell us about their unfulfilled dreams or even be able to remember them with any reliability? Poets, particularly young poets, are dreamers. Dreams are soon shown to be impractical and so we move on with life. And many dreams, if pursued, must be chased by the young. What if Keats had not died young? He might have continued to write valuable work. But could he still have written more odes at the age of 60, those ethereal monuments to beauty and immortality and feeling? Such were my musings as I prepared to record the last five years. My current state is as follows: Still running. As of this writing I have completed 440 road races and over 36,000 miles since 1979. One highlight was a first-time running of the Long Beach Island 18-mile run in 2004. Still book collecting. I focus largely on the circle of Samuel Johnson and James Boswell. Recent acquisitions include original letters by each of them. My Everyman’s Library collection is without equal, now comprising some 7,000 items. I finally finished my book on the subject, A Guide to Collecting Everyman’s Library, and published it in March of 2005. Still golfing. I am not prepared to reveal handicap or scores. Still working. I continue in business with my son, Scott, as we provide financial planning to many clients. I still dabble with the piano for my own amusement. For the future, I plan more of the same for as long as I can and with perhaps a bit more travel added to the mix. Perhaps the most significant news is that Adrienne and I decided to try Florida in the winter. Snow and ice on our 45-degree-angle driveway in Pennsylvania were eventually going to do us in. We now have a home on the Myakka River in Port Charlotte. I sit in my shorts and flip-flops, gaze across the mangroves, and resolve to write one true sentence each day before one drop of the wine of the province passes my lips. All sixtysixers are welcome to our finca on short or no notice. 221 Jeffrey R. Shafer (Jeff) Jeff Shafer testifying on trade negotiations at a Senate meeting. Apt. 6-C, 35 North Moore St. New York, NY 10013; (212) 226-8530; jeffrey.r.shafer@citigroup.com Vice Chairman, Citigroup Global Banking, 388 Greenwich St., New York, NY 10013; (212) 816-1246 Spouse: Mary Louise Terenzio Shafer (art museum docent) Children: Lara Bruhn, 1971; Karen Peltier, 1974 J. Kearney Shanahan 2035 Chestnut Hills Dr., Cleveland Heights, OH 44106-4601; (216) 791-3982; kearnshan@aol.com Attorney, The Shanahan Law Firm, LLC, 1750 Kearney Shanahan and family Huntington Building, 925 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, OH 44115; (216) 363-1700 Spouse: Karen Flynn Shanahan Charles S. Shaver P.O. Box 11063, Station H, Ottawa, ON K2H 7T8, Canada; (613) 825-1147 Physician, Suite 205, 3029 Carling Ave., Ottawa, ON K2B 8E8, Canada; (613) 726-8865 Spouse: Elizabeth Shaver Mark J. Shensa 2538 San Marcos Ave., San Diego, CA 92104; (619) 282-5011; shensa@nosc.mil SSC-SD, 49590 Lassing Rd., Code D0299, San Diego, CA 92152-6146; (619) 553-5702 222 Hamilton L. Shields Bottom Farm Barn, Holtspur Bottom, Beaconsfield, Bucks HP1 9BS, United Kingdom; 44-1494671284; ham.shields@gmail.com Senior Banker Spouse: Sarah Robinson Shields Robert M. Sigler 3560 Eastbourne, Troy, MI 48084-1108; (248) 643-0868 Delphi Automotive Systems, 5725 Delphi Dr., Troy, MI 48098-2815; (248) 813-2000 Spouse: Julie Sigler Richard H. Siller P.O. Box 157, Fairfax, VT 05454-0157; (802) 849-6803 Engineer, COMPAQ, 115 Kimball Ave., South Burlington, VT 05401; (802) 657-4900 Spouse: Joyce Ann Siller Richard A. Singer 6042 South St., Halifax, NS B3H 1S7, Canada; richard.singer@dal.ca Professor, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Department, Tupper Building, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS B3H 1X5, Canada; (902) 494-8847 Spouse: Christine A. Barnes G. William Sisley (Bill) Apt. 1303, 150 Southfield Ave., Stamford, CT 06902; wsisley@spotonusa.com Children: Amanda; Andrew E. Lemoine Skinner 1334 Eighth Ave., San Francisco, CA 94122; (415) 566-1365 Of Counsel, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati Profess, 650 Page Hill Rd., Palo Alto, CA 94304-1050; (650) 565-3977 Spouse: Kathleen Malley Skinner 223 Peter G. Skinner PO Box 267, Gaylordsville, CT 06755 Executive Vice President, General Counsel, and Secretary Spouse: Elissa Skinner Daniel J. Skvir 109 Rollingmead, Princeton, NJ 08540-4067; (609) 924-7368 Orthodox Chaplain, Murray Dodge Hall, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544; (609) 924-6700 Spouse: Tamara Turkevich Skvir John C. Slaybaugh 9412 Pamlico Lane, Great Falls, VA 22066-3808; (703) 759-5027 Spouse: Barbara Lamon Slaybaugh William L. Slick P.O. Box 2184, Las Vegas, NM 87701-2184; (505) 425-9635; wid_slick@hotmail.com General Manager, Plaza Hotel, 230 Plaza, Las Vegas, NM 87701; (505) 425-3591 Spouse: Katherine Ann Slick John B. Slidell (Slides) 15 Taney Ave., Annapolis, MD 21401-2711; (410) 268-4868; jslidell@bozzuto.com Co-owner, Bozzuto Group, 7850 Walker Dr., Greenbelt, MD 20770; (301) 446-2212 Spouse: Mary Elizabeth Slidell (store owner) Children: Mark, 1/7/72; Duncan, 7/27/74; Tara, 2/16/82 Walter Smedley 605 Railroad Ave., Haverford, PA 19041-1221; (610) 642-4912; wsmedley@bmtc.com Banker, Brynmar Trust Company, Bryn Mawr, PA 19010; (610) 526-2330 Spouse: Kathleen Cortright Smedley 224 Albert E. Smith (Al) 1772 Hearthglow Lane, Charlottesville, VA 22901-1272; (434) 978-4402; saylr@alumni.princeton.edu Veterinarian, Village Animal Hospital, 3050 Berkmar Dr., Charlottesville, VA 22901; (434) 973-4341 Spouse: Julia Finlay Smith (teacher) Children: Adam Royall Smith, 7/29/83; Douglas Michael Smith, 9/29/86 It’s been busy: Two boys in college (wouldn’t send either to Princeton because of my dispute with the views of faculty member and ethicist Peter Singer), merging my veterinary practice with another, designing and building a new and much large building for the business, fighting with city fathers, etc. Also sailing and motorcycling in my (our) spare time. Still happily married to Finlay, my wife of 25 years, and hope to spend more time with her. Bruce P. Smith 2420 Margolin Lane, Clearwater, FL 33764; (727) 536-8786; bpsmithmd@aol.com Internist, Suite 103, 9555 Seminole Blvd., Seminole, FL 33772; (727) 393-5428 Spouse: Marilyn R. Smith Howard G. Smith 78 Pilgrim Rd., West Hartford, CT 06117-2243; (860) 233-3765; hgsmd716@aol.com Pediatric Otolaryngologist, Pediatric Ear, Nose & Throat Associates, Suite 101, 345 North Main St., West Hartford, CT 06117; (860) 236-3277 Spouse: Judith Smith Macklin Smith 1304 Iroquois Pl., Ann Arbor, MI 48104-4636; (734) 995-0741; macklins@umich.edu Professor, Department of English, Angell Hall, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109; (734) 764-6330 Spouse: Lynette Andrea Smith 225 Marschall I. Smith 344 Fremont St., Woodstock, IL 60098; (815) 337-7702; msmith@brunswick.com Vice President and General Counsel, Brunswick Corporation, 1 North Field Court, Lake Forest, IL 60045-4811; (847) 735-4700 Spouse: Debra Mitts Stephen H. Smith 945 Tarragon Lane; Milford, OH 45150-5508; (513) 831-1157; steve2486@aol.com Certified Financial Planner, Capital Ideas, 945 Tarragon Lane, Milford, OH 45150-5508 Spouse: Donna Smith Children: Camilla, 5/12/79 Timothy C. Smith 945 Bay St., San Francisco, CA 94109-1141; (415) 346-3220; timothy.c.smith@marshmc.com Vice President of Casualty Group, Marsh, Inc., Three Embarcadero Center, San Francisco, CA 94111; (415) 743-8245 Spouse: Ilia Salomone Smith W. Lamar Smith 2760 Woodley Pl., NW, Washington, DC 20008-1517; (202) 234-0429; lasmith@visa.com Senior Vice President, VISA USA, Suite 900, 1300 Connecticut Ave., Washington, DC 20037; (202) 296-9230 Thomas A. Snell 501 South 16th St., San Jose, CA 95112; (408) 279-2976; sbelltom@concentric.net Director of Finance, Software SETT Corporation, 233 Oak Meadow Dr., Los Gatos, CA 95032; (408) 399-1804 Spouse/Partner: Sarabelle Hitchner 226 David A. Sonnenberg (Dave) 1509 Calhoun Lane, West Chester, PA 19380-6712; (610) 692-1996; dasp66@alumni.princeton.edu Retired Spouse: Carol McAfoos Sonnenberg Children: Laura, 6/27/67; David Jr., 3/3/69; Christy, 12/29/74; Jenny, 12/29/74 I retired from Bell Atlantic, now Verizon, in 1999. Before then, retired friends would often say that they wondered how they had had time to work. Now I know what they meant. For the last seven years, I have had the privilege of working almost full time in volunteer positions. Most of them have been related to my church in different capacities, from teaching classes to serving as treasurer to cutting the grass. I have heard it said that a volunteer is an unpaid servant. That’s a good way to describe my situation. Dave and Carol Sonnenberg with children, Since the last reunion, spouses, and grandchildren at daughter we’ve had two weddings in Jenny’s wedding. our family and I new grandchild. Two of our daughters were married and the new granddaughter brings the total number of grandchildren to four. What a blessing they have been. My volunteer jobs are flexible enough to permit golf and racketball on a regular basis. The amount of time spent on these sports has not translated, however, into the kind of improvement that I might have expected, but I continue to enjoy them. In addition, Carol and I get back to see many Princeton football games and watch the Steelers whenever possible. Needless to say, this was a good year for watching them. A few weeks after Reunions, Carol and I will celebrate our 40th anniversary. She has been a great blessing to me for all of these years. 227 Mento A. Soponis (Chuck) 4730 S.W. 103rd Way, Gainesville, FL 32608-7180; (352) 336-1698; msoponis@yahoo.com Spouse: Gaylin Gramse Soponis (law professor) Children: Justin, 12/25/73; Trevor, 2/11/77 Highlights in the past five years? First, my love for Gaylin continues to thrill me every single day. I have played a lot of golf, got three aces, and played with Annika Sorenstam (these thrills offset by always losing to a hacker like Charley Werthheimer). The Jacksonville mini-reunion was a real pleasure. I took one of my startup biotech companies public in a somewhat unorthodox fashion, then had the fun of ringing the opening trading bell on the AMEX. Then I retired last July, fully ready to recreate full time. After six months of lots of golf and other recreation, I came to a sad realization. There is a serious difference between golf and sex (my two passions). In both endeavors you strive to reach your peak level of performance. With sex, that is wonderfully satisfying. Who is ever totally satisfied with his golf game? Well, since Gaylin would not agree to sex four hours a day (she still teaches at the UF Law School), I went back to work this January heading up another baby biotech company. I love the interaction with creative and bright people, and I feed off the energy and diversity of the human spirit I encounter every day. (Young companies always need money, so please feel free to send your spare change my way.) Life continues to be a rich experience and a rollicking good time. Michael Spence 768 Mayfield Ave., Stanford, CA 94305-1044; (650) 856-4909; amspence_98@yahoo.com Professor of Management, Graduate School of Business, Room 140, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-5015; (650) 724-5444 Spouse: Monica Cappuccini Spence Jamie Spencer 923 Ridgetree Lane, St. Louis, MO 63131; (314) 965-4057; jspencer@alumni.princeton.edu Associate Professor of English, St. Louis Community College, 3400 Pershall Rd., St. Louis, MO 63135; (314) 595-4445 Spouse/Partner: Anna Ahrens Children: Jamieson Spencer, 1974; Kate Spencer, 1977; Chip Reichardt, 1969; Eric Reichardt, 1971; Anna Ruth Kratky, 1982; Mary Beth Kratky, 1985 228 Stephen P. Spielberg 21 Mulherrin Farm Rd., Hanover, NH 03755; (603) 643-5330 Janssen Pharmaceutica Inc., 1125 Trenton-Harbourton Rd., Titusville, NJ 08560; (609) 730-3448 Spouse: Laurel Axelrod Spielberg Jolyon C. Sprowles (Jol) 80 Boyer Rd., Stafford Springs, CT 06076; (860) 870-9713; jols0706@hotmail.com Process Engineer, TYCO Electronics Printed Circuit Div., 4 Old Monson Rd., Stafford, CT 06075; (860) 684-5881 Spouse: Alice L. Sprowles (retired Girl Scout) Children: Amy, 7/18/73; Karen, 5/23/76; Christie, 4/29/81 Still building printed circuits, as I was 15 and 20 years ago. The industry is contracting in this country, but it looks like my current employer will be around for awhile yet. We have a large customer base involved with military and other high-reliability stuff. Also, we specialize in building boards that other shops are too smart to try. I’ve had six previous employers — five out of business now and one that should be. I’ve now lived and worked in five New England states. Alice and I found each other at church, around the time my second printed-circuits job was failing in Rhode Island. We’ve been quite happy and plan on staying here in Connecticut, with frequent use of her cabin on a lake in Maine. My daughters are all independent and moved to California — her brood are also independent and scattered. Here’s my bid to be the first class member to have a golden anniversary. Her first marriage was 20 years. Mine was 18 years. We’ll have been married 12 years in June, so that makes 50 years total. Still model railroading, gardening, playing English handbells, working on improving the house, and visiting with offspring. Theodore M. Stanger 1 place de l’Estrapade, Paris 75005, France Spouse: Virginia Benson Stanger Barry R. Steinberg 722 Palisades Dr., Pacific Palisades, CA 90272-2800; (310) 454-3923; bsteinb@alumni.princeton.edu Producer and Director Spouse: Madeline Jaffe Steinberg 229 Stuart G. Steingold 5211 Partridge Lane, NW, Washington, DC 20016-5338; (202) 686-5716; (202) 686-6321; sgsteingold@yahoo.com Spouse: Celia Newburg Steingold Children: Marissa Leigh; Alison Clare I recently attended a screening of Stu and Celia Steingold at the Munich sponsored in part by the Getty Museum in LA. Below: Stu Woodrow Wilson School and met an at the finish of the Tour de Canal alum from the 1980s. Stronger in in Washington, DC. WWS than math, he exclaimed, “Wow! Class of ’66. You’re gonna have your 50th!” So maybe our 40th is not so bad. The charm of my life is my wife, Celia. Several of you may remember her from freshman year. We were married in 1968 and have had fun in New York, Paris, and now Washington. Celia is a leader in the docent programs at the National Gallery of Art and the Hillwood Museum, where she has become enamored of Russian decorative arts. Our older daughter, Marissa (P.U. ’98), is in the music biz in Los Angeles. She is a jazz vocalist and composer, does movies and commercials, and gives voice lessons. You can see her in the film Raise Your Voice and you can hear her in the upcoming movie Edison. She is married to a cutting-edge music composer and producer from Sweden. Our younger daughter, Alison (Penn/ Georgetown ’02), is in the writing biz in Los Angeles. Her focus is life style, food, and travel. She is coauthoring a cookbook for a trendy LA chef (aren’t they all) to be published by Random House. You can see her work in C magazine. Her faithful companion Nixon (a pug, not a politico) is looking for his big break in Tinseltown. Retirement is fun! I recommend it highly! I recently bid adieu to my New York law firm, Paul Weiss Rifkind, where I headed the worldwide Project Finance practice. In the long course of my private law practice I did deals in over 75 countries. They were immensely satisfying. I now engage primarily in pro bono projects in the international arena, complemented by a private legal practice and business activities. But the main attraction for me is outdoors. I have enjoyed a lot of tennis and running over the years. I have become an enthusiastic endurance cyclist. I recently participated in a 185-mile cycling event that raised a considerable sum for the Alzheimer’s Association. Marissa and I plan to run the 230 LA Marathon together this spring. I wish my classmates and their families all the best for a memorable 40th. Paul M. Stella 18945 Blackhawk St., Northridge, CA 91326-3332; (818) 368-6303; paul.m.stella@jpl.nasa.gov M.T.S., Jet Propulsion Laboratory, MS 303-308, NASA/Caltech, 4800 Oak Grove Dr., Pasadena, CA 91109; (818) 354-6308 Spouse: Nancy Dellecese Stella Edward J. Steube 313 Central Park, Mount Vernon, NY 10552-1118(914) 664-0611 Home Federal Savings Bank, 241-02 Northern Blvd., Douglaston, NY 11362 Spouse: Joan Daly Steube David P. Stewart 1101 North Gaillard St., Alexandria, VA 22304-1607; (703) 461-7233; dpsjlk@aol.com Assistant Legal Adviser, U.S. Department of State, Office of the Legal Adviser, 2201 C St., NW, Washington, DC 20520-6310; (202) 776-8420 Spouse: Jennifer Lynn Kilmer (OB/GYN) Children: Jason, 6/23/97; Jonathan, 7/10/79; Daniel, 12/30/86; Mary, 5/25/90 Emil Stipanovich 4039 Burton Dr., Cambria, CA 93428-3001 Owner, Oliver’s Twist, 4039 Burton Dr., Cambria, CA 93428-3001; (805) 927-8196 Spouse: Frank Tafelski J. David Stitzer (Stitz) 827 Nathaniel Trail, Warminster, PA 18974-6145; sailingjds@aol.com Business: President, Industrial Nameplate, Inc., 29 Indian Drive, Ivyland, PA 18974; (215) 322-1111, Ext. 120 Children: John D. Stitzer, Jr., 9/30/74; Jamie S. Cahill, 8/7/71 231 James W. Stoops 1618 Carriage House Dr., Suffield, OH 44260-9648; (330) 628-1569; mickybitzko@aol.com Clinical Psychologist, Child Guidance Centers, 312 Locust St., Akron, OH 44302-1878; (330) 762-0591 Spouse: Bonnie Shears Stoops Eugene C. Struckhoff Dogford Rd., Etna, NH 03750 Attorney, Struckhoff Law Office, P.O. Box 759, Lebanon, NH 03766-0759 Kenneth K. Stuart 6124 South Cherrywood Circle, Littleton, CO 80121-2410; (303) 797-3004 Chief Judge, 18th Judicial District, 7325 South Potomac St., Englewood, CO 80112; (303) 649-6332 Spouse: Barbara Stuart Gerald A. F. Sumida Apt. 701, 1015 Wilder Ave., Honolulu, HI 96822;(808).587.7048; gasumida@aol.com Of Counsel, Carlsmith Ball LLP, ASB Tower, Suite 2200, 1001 Bishop St., Honolulu, HI 96813; (808) 523.2500; www.carlsmith.com Spouse/Partner: Heidi Karin Wild David S. Swayze Apt. 208, 1704 North Park Dr., Wilmington, DE 19806; (302) 654-3488; swaz44@aol.com Attorney, Parkowski Guerke & Swayze PA, Suite 203, 800 N King St., Wilmington, DE 19801-3544; (302) 654-3300 Spouse: Sally B. Swayze Hugh B. Sweeny 265 Second St., Jersey City, NJ 07302-2827; (201) 798-4480 Attorney, City of Jersey City, New Jersey, Old Courthouse, 280 Grove St., Jersey City, NJ 07306; (201) 547-4309 232 Norman G. Tabler (Norm) 313 Millridge Dr., Indianapolis, IN 46290-1117; (317) 929-3306; ntabler@clarian.org Senior Vice President and General Counsel, Clarian Health Partners, Inc., 1701 North Senate, P.O. Box 1367, Indianapolis, IN 46206-1367; (317) 929-3306 Spouse: Dawn Martin Tabler (banker) Children: Rachel, 1/3/76 I’m a trophy husband. My wife married me because I am an attractive (what the hell? stunning) arm-piece. When we enter a room, heads turn. Other women look at Dawn through narrowed eyes that silently hiss, “I want to scratch your eyes out and have my way with that hunk. I want to have his Norm Tabler with wife Dawn, daughter grandchildren.” Other men Rachel, and granddaughter Masi. suck in their stomachs and stand straighter. They look down at their shoes. Dawn makes no apology. She says, “Look, I work my ass off as a senior banking executive. Why shouldn’t I have a boy-toy who makes me feel like a woman? Who cares if down deep, he’s shallow? He’s an escort — not a lab partner.” I have retired from the all-male chorus line in Las Vegas. Too many of my colleagues in the revue hung on too long. Nothing is sadder than a oncehunky chorus boy performing for an audience of women who sit politely, but silently — mentally dressing him. To fill the days, I serve as general counsel of a health system with hospitals throughout Indiana. Our downtown Indianapolis hospital is the third-largest in the country. For a lawyer, it’s a dream job: the ambulances come to me. Plus, we have nine thousand nurses. (When you see Dawn at Reunions, don’t mention that; also, try to avoid the term “Head Nurse.”) We have a beautiful daughter, whom we see every day, and a beautiful granddaughter, who makes us laugh until our stomachs hurt. My daughter calls me “Trophy Dad,” but I’m pretty sure she’s kidding. As I write this, my devoted English bulldog, Victor, lies at my feet, snoring. When I got him, I was worried that people would associate him with Yale — especially after he was fixed. So, I chose a brindle — striped like a tiger — and gave him the middle name “Madison,” after James Madison. Victor has never called me “Trophy Owner.” True, he once used 233 the term “Leash Ornament,” but he was smiling at the time. If you don’t have an English bulldog, I recommend that you put this book down and go get one. My favorite extracurricular activity is leading the board of directors of Central Indiana Public Radio and Television. I play squash, and in the summer I kayak and row. For the past couple of years, I’ve written the PAW memorials for our class. Sad to say, business increases each year. When you see me at Reunions, remember that I will have the last word. Looking back over the past 40 years, I have few regrets. I can’t think of any serious ambitions that haven’t been fulfilled, except one involving Annette Funicello. (You may recall the discussion in my autobiography, Working Without Annette.) Life is good. In fact, it’s great: wonderful family, rewarding career, excellent health, and good friends. My life has been so good that I think maybe Lincoln was wrong: you can fool all the people all the time. I have no complaints. Frederick W. Talcott 8602 Irvington Ave., Bethesda, MD 20817-3604; (301) 493-6199; talcott@erols.com Operations Research Analyst, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W., Washington, DC 20460; (202) 566-0062 Spouser: Carolyn L. Talcott (domestic mediatior, D.C. Superior Court) Children: Monica Catherine, 1977; Lauren Christina, 1978 Webster G. Tarpley 115 Goucher Terrace, Gaithersburg, MD 20877-1265; tarpley@radix.net President, Washington Grove Books, P.O. Box 1486, Washington Grove, MD 20880 Rockwell C. Tenney II P.O. Box 5, Westborough, MA 01581; (617) 731-1740 Theodore R. Tetzlaff (Ted) 1845 North Lincoln, Chicago, IL 60614; (312) 951-0211; tedt@mycingularblackberry.net General Counsel, Peoples Energy, Chicago, IL 60601; (312) 977-4150 234 John H. Thacher (Turk) 154 Beaumont Rd., Devon, PA 19333-1849; (610) 687-6591; jthacher@alumni.princeton.edu President, Baker Industries, Inc., 184 Pennsylvania Ave., Malvern, PA 19355; (610) 2969795 Spouse: Carol Saam Thacher (realestate sales person) Children: Ashley B. Thacher, John, Ashley, Carol, Kim, and Turk 3/20/72; Kimberly B. Thacher, Thacher, 2005; Vero Beach, Florida. 5/19/73; John H. Thacher III, 1/21/81 Richard E. Thomas 14 Wells East Dr., Hilton Head Island, SC 29926-2024 Consultant, The Millennium Consulting Group, P.O. Box 516, Madison, NJ 07940; (973) 822-2249 Degree/Department: East Asian StudiesSpouse: Suzanne Thomas Kenneth L. Thompson 4 Napier St., Cambridge CB1 1HR, United Kingdom; 44-1223-363846 J. Mills Thornton 206 Seminole Dr., Montgomery, AL 36117-4027; jmthrntn@umich.edu Professor, Department of History, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1003; (734) 764-6305 Spouse: Brenda Booth Thornton John D. Thorpe P.O. Box 900, Bolinas, CA 94924 235 Michael C. Tice P.O. Box 1650, Ft. Myers, FL 33902-1650; (239) 334-0051; mctice@alumni.princeton.edu Attorney Spouse: Susan Brennan Tice Theodore D. Tieken 2430 Lakeview Ave., Chicago, IL 60614; (773) 477-9785 Chairman of the Board, Babson Farms, Inc., Suite 1120, 400 North Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60611-4104; (312) 661-7055 Spouse: Charlotte Head Tieken James P. Timbie (Jim) 4608 Merivale Rd., Chevy Chase, MD 20815-3708; (301) 657-8326; jtimbie@att.net Senior Advisor, State Department, Office of the Under Secretary, Washington, DC 20520; (202) 647-4404 Spouse: Janet A. Timbie (professor) Children: Anna, 3/2/80; Clare, 12/23/84 Robert M. Tobin 611 South Irena Ave., Redondo Beach, CA 90277-4356; (310) 540-8267; tobin@zynx.com Physician, Zynx Health, Inc., Beverly Hills, CA 90212; (310) 846-0266 Spouse: Julie Harris Tobin Henry H. Tomlin 33 Charles Lane, Cherry Hill, NJ 08003-1415 Attorney, Tomlin, Clark and Hopkin, 20 East Redman Ave., Haddonfield, NJ 08033; (856) 429-0333 Spouse: Virginia Elizabeth Tomlin Michael K. Tooke 100 Mount Vernon St., Boston, MA 02108-1201; (617) 720-0786 Private Investment Banking, 100 Mount Vernon St., Boston, MA 02108; (617) 523-0423 Spouse: Nancy Briggs Tooke 236 Preston McC. Torbert Apt. 1502N, 4800 South Chicago Beach Dr., Chicago, IL 60615; (773) 538-3566; preston.m.torbert@bakernet.com Partner, Baker & McKenzie, 2800 Prudential Plaza, Chicago, IL 60601-6384; (312) 861-8000 William T. Torgerson 975 Melvin Rd., Annapolis, MD 21403-1315; (410) 268-8956; wtorgerson@pepco.com Vice Chairman and General Counsel, Pepco Holdings Inc., 701 Ninth St., NW, Washington, DC 20068; (202) 872-2590 Spouse: Maureen Torgerson Philip C. Tower 30 East Glendale Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85020-4822; (602) 371-8997 Attorney, Suite 200, 706 East Bell Rd., Phoenix, AZ 85022; (480) 596-7473 Spouse: Sherilyn Rose Tower R. Edward Townley Apt. 22-D, 3150 North Sheridan Rd., Chicago, IL 60657; (773) 525-8939; reved@unitychicago.org Senior Minister, Unity in Chicago, 1925 West Thome, Chicago, IL 60660-1005; (773) 973-0007 M. Jay Trees 704 S Ridge Rd., Lake Forest, IL 60045-2754; (847) 234-3628; jtrees@trees-invest.com President, Trees Investment Counsel, Suite 640, 70 W Madison St., Chicago, IL 60602; (312) 368-8150 Spouse: Susan Smith Trees Thomas N. Tureen 143 Foreside Rd., Falmouth, ME 04105; (207) 781-2701; tntureen@gwi.net Chairman of the Board, Monument Way, Inc., One Monument Way, Portland, ME 04101-4078; (207) 773-7166 Spouse: Susan Albright Tureen 237 Thomas E. Unterman 1451 Amalfi Dr., Pacific Palisades, CA 90272; (310) 573-9701; tom@rusticcanyon.com Managing Partner, Rustic Canyon Partners, Suite 6050 W, 2425 Olympic Blvd., Santa Monica, CA 90404; (310) 998-8002 Spouse: Janet M. Unterman (retired) Children: Rebecca, 6/12/81; Amy, 4/24/85 Peter N. Upton 2 River Rd., Unionville, CT 06085-1064; (860) 673-4709 Attorney, Tarlow Levy Harding Dloney, P.O. Box 887, 10 Talcott Notch Rd., Farmington, CT 06032; (860) 676-3110 Spouse: Lisa M.E. Upton Ronald Van Buskirk 104 Tananger Springs Dr., Denison, TX 75021; 903-818-2650; rvanbk@hotmail.com Physician, Republic Hospitalist Services, 600 N. Highland, Sherman, TX 75092, 903-870-4609 Spouse: Karen Ann Van Buskirk Children: Bryan, 2/14/74; Benjamin, 6/18/76; Anna, 11/15/84 David W. Van Horne 525 Picacho Lane, Santa Barbara, CA 93108-1222; (805) 969-6767; dvh@rain.org Partner, Price Postel and Parma, L.L.P., Suite 400, 200 East Carrillo St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101; (805) 962-0011 Spouse: Polly Hills Van Horne Nicolas A. Vargas Vice President, Grupo Popular, Torre Popular, Ave. John Kennedy, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic 238 Stephen G. Vlastos 1346 East Bloomington St., Iowa City, IA 52245; (319) 338-8337 Professor, Department of History, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242; (319) 335-2221 Spouse: Mary Ann Rasmussen Robert P. Vogel 1463 Huntington Rd., Abington, PA 19001-2103; (215) 885-3362; vogelbobvogel@cs.com Vice President and General Counsel Spouse: Jean Jackes Vogel John K. Von Daler Ingemannsvej 28, 1964 Frederiksberg C, Denmark; vondaler@mail.tele.dk Henry Von Kohorn 2 Tierney Lane, Westport, CT 06880-5420; (203) 255-8563 President, Von Kohorn & Associates, Inc., P.O. Box 1079, Greens Farms, CT 06838; (203) 259-8000; hvk@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Meredith Von Kohorn Children: Isabelle Von Kohorn, 9/15/75; Emily Kotzen, 12/21/78 The Kohorns, from left, at daughter Isabelle’s wedding, November 5, 2005: Emily Kotzen; Henry; Isabelle Von Kohorn ’98; Isabelle’s husband, Josh Rising; Meredith; Emily’s husband, Matt Kotzen.’ With Emily at her wedding, June 13, 2004: Henry, second from left, and classmates Stas’ Maliszewski, Norm Tabler, and Walt Bliss. 239 Jonathan K. Waage 72 Ash St., Rehoboth, MA 02769; jonathan_waage@brown.edu Professor, Division of Biology & Medicine, Brown University, Box GW 208, Providence, RI 02912; (401) 863-2435 Spouse: Gabriele Mucha Waage Addison C. Waid Apt. 612, 1800 Huntington Blvd., Hoffman Estates, IL 60195-2743; (847) 882-1649 Attorney James A. Walker 43895 Calle Las Brisas West, Palm Desert, CA 92211 Real Estate Developer, Princeton Developments, 36 Eleftherias Voula-Pigadakia, Athens 16673, Greece; 30-1895475 Spouse: Anastasia Fermonaelou Walker Douglas C. Walters 730 Pleasure Ave., Ocean City, NJ 08226-3400; (609) 399-8913; dwalters@sureperformance.com Chief Information Officer, C.N.A. Plaza, Chicago, IL 60686; (212) 918-5248 Stephen Lee Walthall 22 Cheyenne Crescent, Whitesboro, NY 13492-2926; (315) 736-2482 Attorney, Penberthy, Kelly and Walthall, 400 Mayro Blvd., Utica, NY 13501; (315) 724-3158 Spouse: Lynn W. Walthall Edward Z. Walworth (Ted) 8 Manning Ave., Lewiston, ME 04240-5921; (207) 782-1011; ezwmd@aol.com Surgeon, Androscoggin Clinical Association, 710 Main St., Lewiston, ME 04240; (207) 783-1449 Spouse: Candace Cooper Walworth (physician — nephrologist) Children: Elizabeth (Liza), 7/31/75; Nancy, 10/25/77 My wife and I, both physicians and in practice together since 1977, 240 intend to retire in 2010, when we both are 65 years old. Retirement may come sooner, since the private practice of surgery is in peril, at least in these parts (Lewiston, Maine). Every day we come up with another reason to retire — electronic medical records (EMRs), taking emergencyroom calls when we don’t really have to do so any more, feeling like old curmugeons instead of young whippersnappers, and so forth. All of us have similar feelings as our careers wind down and all of us have heard the same sentiments from those who have gone before. Psychologically, we are ready for retirement because we have led parallel lives outside of medicine. I have contiued playing in orchestras wherever we landed — medical school, residency, Navy, and here in Lewiston. My ticket is the bassoon and my ace in the hole is a contrabassoon, a monster that I have just purchased with proceeds from my day job. “Have contra, will travel” will keep me busy and happy for years to come, at least until I can no longer carry the monster around. Bates College is in Lewiston, and it has been a second home of sorts. We know many of the faculty members, and our daughters grew up with their children. I play in the college orchestra, where bassoons are usually in short supply. (I am probably not good enough to play in the current P.U. Orchestra.) The lectures, concerts, and art exhibits just down the street keep us nimble. It has been fascinating to observe and participate in the postindustrial development of this old mill town. I can hardly bear to go back to the town of my youth, New Canaan, Connecticut, which seems artificial and over-the-top from my current perspective. We are very happy to be in Maine and have no intention of leaving for Florida, the Southwest, or anywhere else. Francis B. Ward (Frank) 761 Delaware Ave., SW, Washington, DC 20024; (202) 453-8358; wardf@state.gov Principal Deputy Coordinator, U.S. Department of State, IIP/FO, 301 Fourth St., SW, SA-44, Washington, DC 20547, (202) 453-8358 Spouse: Bonnie S. Gutman (Foreign Service officer) Children: Hillary L. Ward, 3/1/75; Andrew M. Ward, 1/3/79 I paid no attention, to the people learning funny languages in the basement of Firestone Library in the early ’60s. They were “wombats” and I had sworn never to leave the New York–New Jersey area. But “Princeton in the Nation’s Service” was inscribed in several locations around the campus when we were there. It took. Law School at NYU, teaching high school in New York, a PhD program at Columbia. Something was missing. So I wrote textbooks in Afghanistan in 1973-75, joined the U.S. Information Agency in 1978, and promoted the USA as a press or cultural officer at embassies in Egypt (twice), Saudi, Yemen, El 241 Salvador, India, and Turkey. A first marriage produced Hillary (Skidmore ’97, who has worked on films that won Oscarsand DVDs that won BAFTAs, and who now wants to teach) and a son, the Rev. Andrew Ward (completing a PhD in International Development at Tulane). I proposed at the Taj Mahal in Agra and in 1998 married fellow Foreign Service officer and 1970’s Princeton resident Bonnie Gutman (Douglass ’72; El Salvador, Mexico, Bosnia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Turkey). We are now at the State Department in Washington facing the bureaucracy together. They call me a Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Equivalent. I don’t know what that means, but I get a parking pass and run a bureau that uses speakers, print, and electronic media to engage, inform, and influence foreign audiences about American policy, society, and values, ... something called public diplomacy. We live in South West Washington, and when we can we hike, snorkel, read, attend Jimmy Buffett concerts, and look for Princetonians. Robert S. Warwick 11126 Big Canoe, Jasper, GA 30143; (706) 268-2108; rswarwick@tds.net Spouse: Susan Warwick Livingston V. Watrous (Vance) 62 Fairfield St., Buffalo, NY 14214-2006; (716) 832-5588; watrous@acsu.buffalo.edu Professor, Department of Art History, 605 Clemens Hall, SUNY, Buffalo, NY 14260; (716) 645-2435 Spouse: Harriet Blitzer Watrous Gates J. Wayburn 213 Augusta National Court, Franklin, TN 37069; (615) 646-3501; Ophthalmologist, Suite 300, 4306 Harding Rd., Nashville, TN 37205-2205; (615) 383-0468 Spouse: Martha Haxthausen Wayburn R. Randolph Weast 397 Vanderbilt Rd., Asheville, NC 28803-3039; (828) 274-2461 Radiologist and Vice President, Asheville Radiology, P.O. Box 2959, Asheville, NC 28802; (828) 253-3322 Spouse: Donna Smith Weast 242 George B. Weiksner 164 East 81st St., New York, NY 10028-1804; (212) 628-4666; george.weiksner@credit-suisse.com Vice Chairman, Credit Suisse First Boston Corporation, 23rd Floor, 11 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10010; (212) 325-2361 Spouse: Sandra Smiley Weiksner (lawyer) Children: Michael, 1973 (P.U. ’95); Nick, 1975 Gary W. Weimer 298 Tinkers Trail, Aurora, OH 44202; 330-562-8112 Senior Director of Principal Gifts, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, 9500 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, OH 44195; (216) 445-7076 Spouse: Mary Elizabeth Weimer (educator) Children: Inga Elizabeth Walker; Kirk Ayleston Weimer Ronald Weinstein 2355 Hillhurst Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90027-2955; (323) 666-8939; rw@jmbm.com Partner, Jeffer, Mangels, Butler & Marmaro, LLP, 10th Floor, 2121 Ave. of The Stars, Los Angeles, CA 90067; (310) 785-5313 Spouse: Diane Kanner Jeffrey M. Weiss 778 Steuben Dr., Sunnyvale, CA 94087-2246; (408) 735-7946; weiss@unix.sri.com Program Director, SRI International, 333 Ravenswood Ave., Menlo Park, CA 94025; (650) 859-4638 Spouse: Carol Weiss Richard P. Welcome 643 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, IL 60202-2533; (847) 332-1981; welcome643@comcast.net Principal, The Welcome Group, Suite 400, 5750 Old Orchard Rd., Skokie, IL 60077-1061; (847) 494-2848 Spouse: Marcia Banas Welcome Children: Christopher, 12/17/80 I’m writing this from Park City, Utah, while attending the 25th Sundance Film Festival. In this venue, a 30-year-old filmmaker is one of 243 the “old guys,” and who knows how they would classify someone contemplating his 40th reunion? I’m having the same problem. Subtract 10 years for grad school, the military, etc. and that still leaves 30 years. The first 20 were spent developing regional shopping centers throughout the United States. That ended abruptly in 1995 with a corporate liquidation and a decision not to try to replay the first 20 years. Since then, I’ve been combining my time between working part-time on different real estate investments and pursuing some of the fun activities that I hadn’t had time to pursue. Perhaps the most enjoyable and interesting year was the 12 months that Marcia and I spent on our boat circling the eastern United States. We left Chicago in August 2002 and returned a year later, having cruised the inland rivers to Mobile Bay, the Intracoastal Waterway around Florida, and north to the Hudson River, the Erie/Oswego canals to Lake Ontario, the Trent Severn Canal across Ontario to Lake Huron, and then back to Chicago. It’s time for something new but we’re still undecided. Stephen Brent Wells (Steve) 57 Pepper Lane, New Canaan, CT 06840-3829; (203) 966-8857; wellssb@hotmail.com Founder and Managing Director, The Solaris Group, LLC, 598 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10022; (212) 582-5029; www.solarisgroupllc.com Spouse: Andrea E. Wells College: Columbia, 1967 Children: Christopher Coyle, 1/14/71; Amanda Smith, 1/15/74; Peter Wells, 12/10/77; Amy Wells (d.), 3/10/71 Thomas L. Wenger 1114 Watts St., Durham, NC 27701; (919) 682-9026; twenger@mindspring.com Theodore P. Werblin 2301 Bland Rd., Bluefield, WV 24701-4156; (304) 327-5444 Ophthalmologist, 1115-C Stafford Dr., Princeton, WV 24740; (304) 487-6123 Spouse: Sara Michele Werblin 244 Charles E. Wertheimer (Charley) 13604 McQueens Court, Jacksonville, FL 32225-4912; 904-221-1927; werthce@aol.com Spouse: Nancy Matson Wertheimer Children: Kristin, 1/6/73; Brian, 1/20/75; Jeffrey, 1/20/75 I retired from Procter and Gamble in the summer of 2002 after 36 years — of which 22 were spent in manufacturing and, as a result of a fortuitous “broadening assignment,” I had an intracompany career change and finished the last 14 years in finance. After moving around the country throughout my career, we spent the last nine years in Cincinnati (P&G’s headquarters). Nancy and I moved to Jacksonville, Florida, immediately after retiring and built a house on a lot we bought in 1997. We both are enjoying the city and our community — and all that they have to offer (with a disproportionate amount of time spent on the local golf courses!). When not searching for lost golf balls in the woods, marshes, or ponds, we are typically busy with community activities (social and administrative). We recently purchased a boat that we plan to “exercise” up and down the Intracoastal Waterway. About six months into retirement, I was recruited to join a consulting group that provides training in various aspects of internal controls for professional organizations (e.g., Institute of Internal Auditors), and government and corporate senior management and staff groups. My specialty is contract auditing, which is based on the knowledge and experience acquired during my last assignment with P&G. It requires only two to three days a month on average, and I have pangs of conscience when I refer to it as work. I plan to keep doing it until it is no longer fun … or it substantively interferes with my golf and boating time! Against all odds, retirement was an easy adjustment for me — due in large part to actively pursuing many of the interests forgone during the corporate years. While back surgery last fall slowed things down for awhile, it only reinforced the desire to continue to do it while we can. A brief update on the next generation: Kristin is a pharmaceutical sales rep for Novo Nordisk and is totally entrenched in Chicago. Brian recently moved from Jacksonville to Chicago to begin working for True Value as a product manager. Jeff moved to Jacksonville this past year when his wife, Fiona, for a three-year residency at Wolfson Children’s Hospital. Jeff is a neuropsychologist on the staff at Jacksonville’s Brooks Rehabilitation Center. 245 James L. West 100 May Apple Lane, Middlebury, VT 05753-8574; (802) 388-1627; west@middlebury.edu Professor, Department of History, Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT 05753; (802) 443-5758 William G. Wetzel 1802 Ball Mill Court, Dunwoody, GA 30338; (770) 394-5935 Independent Consultant, 1802 Ball Mill Court, Dunwoody, GA 30338-2938; (770) 394-5935 Spouse: Pamela Fitch Wetzel Richard B. White 506 Crockett St., Seattle, WA 98109-2135; (206) 283-4584 Transit Operator, King County Metro, 821 Second Ave., Seattle, WA 98104; (206) 223-5555 Spouse: Joan Emily White (professor of epidemiology) The Whites on the maiden voyage of Children: Rebecca, 2/17/77 their sailing kayak. Emily and I are settling into a new phase with daughter Rebecca successfully married off last summer. We hope to escape Seattle’s waterlogged winters and spend more time at our North Palm Beach condo — if hurricanes would stop wiping out the docks and threatening the roof! We’ve taken up kayak sailing, a geriatric form of windsurfing, which we practice with delight in a 22-foot outriggered tandem in Florida and two singles in the Northwest. It’s hard to believe that I’ve been driving city buses and trolleys fulltime for Metro Transit almost as long as I worked as an architect. Think of participating in a timed SCCA rally driving RVs full of demanding relatives in a rolling intergroup socialization project and you’ve just about got it. Am I using my Princeton education and my PhD to the fullest? You bet! It’s hard to keep a 60-foot hybrid on schedule in rush hour traffic without a working knowledge of nonlinear dynamics and a good dose of amour fati. 246 John E. Whitman 1570 Sixth Ave. North, Long Lake, MN 55356-9593; (952) 475-3748 Freelance Writer and Photographer Spouse: Donna Nichols Whitman Thomas H. Wickenden Apt. 305, 520 E St., NE, Washington, DC 20002-5247; (602) 570-7504; tom.wickenden@asu.edu Spouse: Beth Helene Wickenden Jonathan M. Wiener 10615 Blythe Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90064-3313; (310) 558-0132 Professor and Historian, Department of History, University of California, Irvine, CA 92717; (949) 856-6521 W. Bradford Willauer 8 Sanctuary Lane, Prouts Neck, ME 04074-9475; (207) 883-7025; bwillauer@headinvest.com Headen Associates, 121 Middle St., Portland, ME 04101; (207) 773-5333 Spouse: Ann Willauer David L. Williams Apt. 24F, 2 Avery St.Boston, MA 02111-1015; (617) 423-5575; dwilliams@msada.org Executive Vice President, Massachusetts State Auto Dealers Association, Suite 505, 59 Temple Place, Boston, MA 02111; (617) 451-1051 Spouse: Lynn Stoess Williams Children: Gwyn Williams, 1967 John B. Williams School of Education, 2115 Benjamin Building, University of Maryland at College Park, College Park, MD 20742-1165; (301) 405-3589 247 Sankey V. Williams 307 Brentford Rd., Haverford, PA 19041-1718; (610) 649-4244; sankey@wharton.upenn.edu Sol Katz Professor of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, 1220 Blockley Hall, University of Pennsylvania, 423 Guardian Dr., Philadelphia, PA 19104-6021; (215) 662-3795 Spouse: Constance Hess Williams (state senator) Children: Elizabeth, 7/14/75; Jennifer, 8/17/78 Roblin J. Williamson 17253 Agate St., NE, Bainbridge Island, WA 98110-1064; (206) 842-3119 Attorney, Davies Roberts & Reid, 101 Elliott Ave. West, Seattle, WA 98119; (206) 285-3610 Russell R. Willis 12 Carrington St., Millner 0810 NT, Australia; 61-889852134; walkabout@ais.net.au Proprietor, Willis’s Walkabouts, 12 Carrington St., Millner 0810 NT, Australia; 61-889852134 Spouse: Lynda D. Prior Where does time fly. I’ve been thinking about writing something for months but never seem to have made the time. Now, two days before leaving for dog sledding in the Yukon expedition, it’s time to do something. Sorry I didn’t do it sooner. Russ Willis at Solea Falls, Since 1974, I have lived in Darwin, a Australia, on a walk he led in small city of about 100,000 (less than June 2004: “Typical of where 40,000 when I arrived) on the northI do most of my work.” central coast of Australia. By road, it is about 1,000 miles to get to another city of equal or greater size. We are closer to Singapore and Jakarta than Sydney or Melbourne. Australia is almost as big as the USA, but it is a lot emptier. Darwin is a tropical place. We have a wet season, a dry season, and a rather uncomfortable build-up to the wet season. The temperature rarely goes much below 70 degrees Fahrenheit; there is no month where the average daily maximum is less than 85; but the temperature had never reached as much as 100. Not a lot of variation. I like it. 248 Since 1986, I have been running my own business, Willis’s Walkabouts, taking people bushwalking (Americans would call it backpacking or hiking) in the North Australian wilderness. It doesn’t pay particularly well but it does give me a chance to get out into the land I love and to educate people from around Australia and around the world about the natural environment in the region where I live. It’s also given me the opportunity to travel, leading trips in places as far apart as Patagonia in South America, the Canadian Arctic, and southern Africa — the latter being new in the last five years. All but one of the non-Australian trips have been since our 25th reunion, in 1991. The biggest change in my life occured on a three-week hike in Drysdale River National Park in the Kimberley in May 1992. I didn’t even know it at the time. One of the single women on that trip thought I was an interesting character. She managed to get herself seated next to me at a farewell dinner the night we got back to the town where the trip finished, but I remained oblivious to her interest. The following night, there were only two of us. We went out to dinner and one thing led to another. She lived on the other side of the country — about 1,500 miles by road — so the courtship was mainly by mail. (Does anyone write letters any more?) I recall sitting down over many days while leading another trip and penning a letter of 20-plus pages. Ten months after we first met, she moved to Darwin and moved in. Thirteen years together isn’t a long time compared to some people, but when one of the people concerned had been happily single until the age of 47, it isn’t a bad effort. In 2004, we celebrated by going on a two-week walk, retracing a part of the trip where we’d first met. Back in Princeton days, I was one of the more mediocre members of the track team. I’ve never given it up. I had two brief moments of glory in 2005 — both helped by small fields. I came first in the over-50 division of the Darwin Cross Country Championships in April and first in the over-60 division of the City to Surf, our biggest race of the year. After that, things fell apart more than a little. I’d had a back problem on and off for some years. In August, four days before I was due to head off leading a trip to South Africa, I spilled some hot water on my foot, jumped and threw my back out completely. An MRI scan showed that a piece of disc had broken off and an operation was in order. A few more scans showed that I needed work done on a knee and a shoulder as well. The three operations took place in a week beginning on September 30. As Darwin is too small to have many neurosurgeons, I flew across the country to Adelaide, where I spent 22 weeks before returning home. The back and knee have recovered well, probably better than I should have expected. My shoulder still won’t move in some directions, but I 249 had no trouble doing a one-week walk just after Christmas. I tried jogging again in mid-January, and on Australia Day (January 26 — think 4th of July for the American equivalent), I went in a 5-km fun run. My time wasn’t brilliant, but it was good enough to beat at least two thirds of the starters. Not bad for an oldish fellow who had had surgery 32 months earlier. So now it’s off to southeastern Alaska and the Yukon, combined with brief visits to friends and relatives in the Lower 48. Then back home, where I’m scheduled to lead a three-week walk celebrating the 20th anniversary of Willis’s Walkabouts. That’s getting into my peak season and that’s when Reunions are, so once again I’ll miss out. I hope to make it some day, but I’ll have to get old first. Best wishes to all. Donald F. Willson-Broyles 2795 North 67th Ave., Eau Claire, WI 54703-9797; (715) 833-0950 Psychotherapist, Luther/Midelfort Behavioral Health Clnc., 1221 Whipple St., Eau Claire, WI 54701; (715) 838-5369 Spouse: Marnee Willson-Broyles Peter A. Wilson 4616 47th St., NW, Washington, DC 20016-4437; (202) 686-0808; peter_wilson@rand.org Senior Research Staff, RAND Corporatiion, 1200 South Hayes St., Arlington, VA 22202-5050; (703) 413-1100 Peter L. Wilson 186 Nearwater Lane, Darien, CT 06820-5717; (203) 655-9335; pwilson722@aol.com Spouse: Carolyn McCurdy Wilson Martin J. Winch 19300 Innes Market Rd., Bend, OR 97701; (541) 330-6241 250 Michael C. Witte (Mike) 12 Voorhis Point, South Nyack, NY 10960; (845) 358-9095; macaroni3@aol.com Cartoonist Spouse: Sally Schaum Witte (psychologist and family therapist) Children: Griffin Schaum Witte, Andrew, Spencer, and Griffin Witte 9/18/78; Spencer Charles Witte, 6/15/82; Andrew Philip Witte, 7/31/87 I have thus far been enormously blessed, both professionally and personally. Forty years ago, as I write this, I had just flunked out of Princeton after a Dexedrine crash in the middle of my English final. The apparent tragedy, however, serendipitously turned out to be the opportunity of my life; I moved to New York for the year and a half I was required to stay out of Princeton. There I found both my profession (cartoon-illustration) and, eventually, my wonderful wife, Sally. Since finally graduating from Princeton in 1968, I have published more than 8,000 drawings in national publications. My professional life has been creatively challenging and rewarding from day one, and I have no intention of retiring as long as I can pick up my drawing pen. Sally and I have been happily married now for 33 years. For the last 25 years, we have lived in a lovely Hudson river town, South Nyack, New York, where we have enjoyed the company of many interesting friends. We have been joined in our home by three fine sons. The eldest, Griffin, is a 2000 graduate of Princeton and a journalist with the Washington Post. He is married to a beautiful, brilliant Princetonian, Emily Bliss ’00, who is a novelist. At present, Griff is the Afghanistan bureau chief of the Post, stationed in Kabul. In 2002, he traveled to Afghanistan to research and report for Ghost Wars, a book by former Post managing editor Steve Coll which won the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction. Our middle son, Spencer, graduated from Penn in 2005. He traveled to Baghdad prior to the Iraq war and was a leader of the Penn antiwar movement. He recently held an internship at The Middle East Institute in Washington, DC, where he continued the study of Arabic that he began at Penn. He has worked two summers for Seeds of Peace and traveled widely in the Middle East, from Israel to Syria. In February he left on a yearlong trip to Syria in order to attain fluency in Arabic. He also played baseball for Penn, hit a three-run homer against Yale, and went four for eight in a double header against his dad’s alma mater. Our youngest son, Drew, is a talented artist, writer, animator, and 251 aspiring filmmaker freshman at Emerson College in Boston. Needless to say, our children’s activities have left us thrilled, fascinated, and occasionally anxious. Never, however, are we bored. Speaking of which, in order to avoid boredom, I have also begun simultaneous second and third careers. For the last year, I have been a mechanics consultant to the St. Louis Cardinals, speaking at spring training, advising on the amateur draft, and traveling to the Dominican Republic to reconfigure pitching instruction in the Cardinals’ Latin program. I’m also an official golf guru. (See chapter 45 of The Secret of Golf: A Century of Groundbreaking, Innovative, and Occasionally Outlandish Ways to Master the World’s Most Vexing Game, by George Peper.) In the coming year I hope to publish a book, The Pinch, that I think will revolutionize the theoretical model of the golf swing. Not bad for a guy who doesn’t play golf. Forty years. Sally and I are blessed, and we know it. Guy G. Woelk 346 Snowden Lane, Princeton, NJ 08540-3632; (609) 683-1899; gwoelk@alumni.princeton.edu CFO, UNX, Inc., 175 East Olive Ave., Burbank, CA 91502, 818-333-3309 Spouse: Nancy S. Woelk Children: Galen, 9/8/69; Megan, 1/14/72 Guy and Nancy Woelk It’s hard to believe that my children are beginning to enter middle age while Nancy and I still think of ourselves as rapidly maturing adolescents. In another few years, if this pattern holds, we will be asking our children for advice; if we graduate to asking for financial assistance as well, the wheel will have come full circle. In the meantime, Nancy and I continue to lead enjoyable and meaningful lives. In the last five years we have seen both Galen and Megan happily married and gainfully employed, Galen as an attorney in Laramie, Wyoming, and Megan as an account manager with Intuitive Surgical, manufacturers of a laparoscopic robotic device, in Boulder, Colorado. And since September 2004, courtesy of Galen and wife Cara, we’ve learned what it’s like to become addled grandparents charmed by unintelligible baby babble over the telephone. Finally understanding the Chinese warning to be careful what you wish for, I discovered after retiring in September 2000 that the freedom to not get out bed at 5 a.m. and commute 90 minutes to the office loses its magic after a few months. Who would have thought that retirement would create its own set of problems? To make matters worse, I have been lucky 252 enough to spend my life living with a woman who is actively and continually engaged with her children, her home, her community, and a small home-based business, and so it became increasingly difficult to respond appropriately to a well-meaning “Honey, tell me about your day,” especially since too often there was nothing interesting to share. After more than two years of increasing discomfort, the not terribly creative solution was to get back into harness. Last February I returned to full-time work as CFO of an electronic broker-dealer, and am now mulling over what the next step should be. I’m torn between the need to stay actively engaged, on the one Megan, Galen, Nancy, and Guy Woelk in hand, and the desire to do so Centennial, Wyoming, July 2005. many things I’ve never had the opportunity to do. But meaningful activity that requires only sporadic commitment has so far eluded me. If you’re going to engage and make meaningful contributions, you can’t be running off every few months to hike in Nepal or Patagonia, explore India, climb Mtount Kilimanjaro, or scuba dive off the Great Barrier Reef. Thankfully, one of the very few good things about growing older, other than the early-bird special and discounts at the movies, is that advancing years periodically provide flashes of rational introspection, and so I understand that my problem, if it deserves that title, is a petty annoyance at worst. After all, I’m showing up for my 40th reunion at the best old place of all in the company of my lovely wife and children and their spouses, looking forward to trading stories, problems, and perhaps solutions, with so many friends. And on Saturday, we’ll all march yet again in that P-rade that only the initiated can understand and appreciate, with my 20-month-old Lina Rose in a Tiger outfit with a Class of 2024 Tshirt, and roaring like a tiger. Josiah O. Wolcott 21400 Locust St., Willits, CA 95490-4639 253 Charles B. Wolfe 1022 Briar Ridge, Houston, TX 77057; (713) 461-9692 Attorney, Suite 200, 3820 West Alabama, Houston, TX 77027; (713) 871-1144 Spouse: Margaret Feagins Wolfe Jeffery H. S. Wood Penthouse Apt., 19 East 79th St., New York, NY 10021-0122; (212) 249-1119 Freelance Writer Michael LeB. Wood P.O. Box 4008, Taos, NM 87571 Spouse: Barbara Wood Brian R. Wright 2621 Pine Bluff Dr., Vestal, NY 13850-2909; (607) 797-5934 Special Counsel, Hinman, Howard and Kattell, LLP, 700 Security Mutual Building, P.O. Box 5250, Binghamton, NY 13902-5250; (607) 231-6856 Spouse: Josie B. Wright Peter C. Wylie 8634 Gateshead Rd., Alexandria, VA 22309-4041; (703) 780-3028 Secretary and General Counsel, The Retired Officers Association, 201 North Washington St., Alexandria, VA 22314-2539; (703) 838-8167 Spouse: C. Clair Wylie Mark A. Yeoman 219 Heritage Oaks Lane, Houston, TX 77024-7309; (713) 781-0492; jyeoman@houston.rr.com Physician and President, Cardiology Associates of Houston, PA, Suite 323, 909 Frostwood, Houston, TX 77024; (713) 467-0605 Spouse: Jacqueline Gilman Yeoman 254 Tom Chi Tien Yin 5109 Tomahawk Trail, Madison, WI 53705-1370; (608) 231-1142; yin@physiology.wisc.edu Professor, Department of Physiology, Medical School, University of Wisconsin, 290 Medical Science Building, Madison, WI 53706; (608) 262-0368 Spouse: Lillian Tong Children: Eric, 1978; Laura, 1983 William E. Young 606 N.W. 11th Ave., Portland, OR 97209-3260; (503) 525-8847 Social Worker Spouse: Rachel Young E. Anthony Zaloom 502 Homat Virginia, Minato-Ku 4-11-2, Tokyo, Japan Attorney, Mori Sogo Law Offices, NKK Building, Marunouchi 1-1-2, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 100-0005, Japan; 81-352237700 Spouse: Vivian Wong Zaloom Anthony Zee 1011 Via Bolzano, Goleta, CA 93117-1801; (805) 967-0803; zee@itp.ucsb.edu Professor of Physics, Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106; (805) 967-2274 Spouse: Gretchen Gallagher Zee Andrew W. Zimmerman 120-A Cross Keys Rd., Baltimore, MD 21210 Pediatric Neurologist Spouse: Lenore Nelson Zimmerman 255 Our 25th-reunion logo 256 In Memoriam NAME DATE OF DEATH Nicholas Bachko, Jr. Robert Q. Baker F. Martin Belmore Alden S. Blackstone W. Randolph Brundage, Jr. Ronald E. Burns Charles M. Cannon Randall M. Chastain Arthur F. Davidsen Mark L. Davidson Richard D. de Camp M. Richard Doublier Robert D. Dreiss Richard J. Dzimiszkiewicz Michael J. Evans Richard M. Farrell Franklin H. Frederick Theodore M. French Joseph C. Graddy James Roby Green Robert E. Greenlaw Joseph G. Greenleaf M. Brooke Halsey William N. Havener Donald P. Hubbard George L. Humphrey Stephen K. Ingersoll Roger Wesley Jones William E. Kane Tajudeen Abiodun Kasim Edward L. Katzenbach Edwin A. Keeble Stephen Rice Koller Robert E. Lamberton Gilbert Lea, Jr. David Lawrence McCarroll George W. Miner Jeffrey Michael Norton February 5, 1967 September 18, 2002 September 5, 2004 1988 July 13, 1966 July 25, 2003 June 7, 1966 May 20, 2004 July 19, 2001 June 18, 1998 March 19, 1994 September 27, 1993 October 10, 1970 September 16, 2001 January 20, 1975 March 1984 November 3, 1970 September 23, 2001 July 15, 1990 March 10, 1993 March 3, 2004 April 14, 1972 July 21, 1969 August 22, 1993 September 28, 1963 April 1, 1996 November 1, 1966 December 27, 2005 October 30, 1991 1982 August 12, 1997 February 28, 1969 March 22, 1991 April 22, 1985 May 15, 1992 December 6, 2002 July 23, 1986 May 5, 1985 257 Edward Charles Nykwest Charles J. Okstein Robert H. Purrington Gregg E. Rice Ronald Albert Rogerson (h) Andrew N. Sears John J. Secondi John W.H. Simpson James E. Swan Jordan Taylor Dag Tellefsen John O. Theobald Bruce P. Vanda James C. Westfall Edward B. Whitman Richard I. Wile Daniel A. Winterbottom Austin A. Wright October 13, 2005 March 26, 2006 February 27, 1971 January 19, 2003 August 8, 1987 November 9, 2002 May 28, 1985 September 19, 1993 November 2, 1986 January 6, 2001 September 12, 2000 May 1, 2003 February 9, 1996 October 17, 2003 July 27, 1995 November 17, 2005 October 28, 2004 February 11, 2005 Missing classmates EDITOR’S NOTE: If you are on this list or know the correct address of someone who is, please contact either our class secretary, Jim Parmentier (175 South Great Rd., Lincoln, MA 01773-4112; 781-259-0798; jparmen@aol.com ) or our official Tiger Tracker, Jon Holman (The Holman Group, 1592 Union St., San Francisco, CA 94123-4505; 415751-2700;jsf@holmangroup.net). James R. Aikens Rajaona Andriamananjara Edward L. Bailey Stanley Barry Borup Bruce W. Boyer John S. Burns Christopher Conly Martin E. Cummings James H. Dashow Michael H. Davis David C. Garlow Michael E. Gillespie Rolf N. Gulbrandson Charles C. Hewitt III 258 Gerald M. Horton Wendell Yin You Ing Warren S. Kafer George B. Kaplan Robert A. Karasek, Jr. Robert M. Klein George Klints Frederick T. Koyle Leland D. Lafont Franklin Peter Lawee Larry A. Lindsey William C. McEwen Peter C. Miller Lynn M. Moak Richard T. Muller Theodore William Nicholson Antony Papert John N. Peabody, Jr. Arthur D. Randall Richard Charles Randall Richard J. Smith John H. Smolens Gordon Bentley Steven Walter E. Stockman, Jr. William Francis Thompson III Thomas Payton Towler Reginald F. Ungern William G. Warburton Peter Dana Waring Hiroshi Watanabe Charles R. Whaley Jeffrey Steven Willner Stephen H. Wilson Richard A. Zeis Joseph John Zizzi, Jr. Class officers Carl Eastwick, President Michael L. Barrett, Vice President Brian Breuel, Vice President and AG Class Agent James L. Parmentier, Secretary John Nagorniak, Treasurer Bernard J. D’Avella, Jr., Immediate Past President Regional Vice Presidents Thomas R. Armstrong — New England Michael G. Janis — Mid—Atlantic Nelson Hendler — Southeast John A. (Rocky) Barrett, Jr. — Southwest Barry M. Fisher — Mid West Glen P. Goltz — Far West Overall Officers John H. (Turk) Thacher, Jr, co-Reunion Chairman Richard G. (Tiny) Morgan, co-Reunion Chairman Charles J. Plohn, Jr., Extraordinaire Planned Giving Chair John J. Nagorniak Class Memorialist Norman G. Tabler Class Associate Chair Elaine B. D’Avella 259 Class Executive Committee Daniel F. Adams John T. Beaty, Jr. Dennis B. Davis Jonathan T. Dawson John A. Edie Lawrence S. Horn Krist A. Jake Landon Y. Jones, Jr. Stephen Krum William R. Leahy John H. Lumpkin, Jr. Donald L. McCabe Honorary classmates Robert F. Goheen ’40 *48 Fred Hargadon Harold T. Shapiro *64 William Tierney Shirley M. Tilghman 260 John I. Merritt III Gary Mount Robert Nahas Larry S. Owen Robert H. Rawson, Jr. John H. Scully G. William Sisley J. David Stitzer Richard E. Thomas II Michael K. Tooke Guy G. Woelk Brian R. Wright Geographical index ALABAMA Birmingham Henry S. Lynn, Jr. Fairhope Henry M. Bostwick Mobile Robert B. McGinley Montgomery O. Seaburn Eaton III Tuscaloosa James D. Askew ARIZONA Carefree Robert N. Chester Gilbert Jeffrey N. McCollum Paradise Valley P. Robert Moya Phoenix Lawrence C. Petrowski Philip C. Tower Wickenburg George J. Pilicy III CALIFORNIA Alba William J. Brauer Berkeley Philip M. Brooks Jay C. Cross Clinton A. Johnson Michael Wolf Pflaumer Geoffrey George Reinhard Beverly Hills Don C. Porter, Jr. Bolinas John D. Thorpe Boulder Creek Marshall B. Otwell Burbank John P. Classen Cambria Emil Stipanovich Carmel Jon D. Raggett Corona Del Mar Fredric J. Forster Davis John D. Hamilton Del Mar Steven D. Reich El Cerrito Mark D. Levine Indian Wells Richard H. Eisenhart, Jr. La Jolla Robert S. Edelman James L. Russell La Mesa J. Dennis Russell Thomas R. Scott Livermore Thomas F. Adams Long Beach Joel M. Cherlow Los Altos Philip J. Faillace Los Angeles Frank J. Biondi, Jr. Viggo Boserup James F. Carter Howard S. Fredman Guilbert C. Hentschke Edward E. Leamer Lewis P. MacAdams, Jr. Theodore S. Martner Richard G. Reinis Los Angeles Ronald Weinstein Jonathan M. Wiener 261 Malibu Anthony J. McEwan Menlo Park Larry S. Owen Merced Richard L. Harriman Mill Valley John H. Scully Mission Viejo Hazen G. Hunt Napa John Reichel III Nicasio William J. Harrison, Jr. Northridge Paul M. Stella Oakland Frank W. Eighme Oakland Richard L. Riemer Orinda Stephen R. Harwood Pacific Palisades Barry R. Steinberg Thomas E. Unterman Palm Desert James A. Walker Palo Alto John H. Black Thomas C. Hanks William G. McPheron Pasadena Graham G. Berry, Jr. Petaluma Alan G. Rockhold Portola Valley Mark Lurie Rancho Santa Fe Richard E. Fitzpatrick Redlands Robert W. Heinze Redondo Beach Robert M. Tobin 262 Rolling Hills Estates Barnett Rosenberg San Diego Linton Ware Batten Glenn P. Goltz David W. Ingraham David H. Kidd Joseph McElroy Mann III Mark J. Shensa San Franciso Robert F. Darling Jonathan S. Holman Krist A. Jake E. Richard Jones Tom R. Norris E. Lemoine Skinner III Timothy C. Smith San Jose Thomas A. Snell San Mateo John W. P. Cartwright, Jr. San Rafael Neil J. Bloomfield San Rafael Henry N. Hulter Santa Barbara Foster H. Corwith David W. Van Horne Anthony Zee Santa Clara John B. Moore, Jr. Santa Cruz Joel R. Primack Sausalito Henry J. Larsen Sonoma William G. Larsen, Jr. Stanford John W. Haeger Michael Spence Sunnyvale Edwin W. Aiken Jeffrey M. Weiss Venice Charles A. Lagreco Walnut Creek H. David Marshak Westlake Village Jonathan S. Morse Willits Josiah O. Wolcott III Woodside Ord Elliott COLORADO Arvada Lex Allen Passman Boulder Victor M. Reusch, Jr. Melvyn C. Branch Clayton H. Lewis Philip T. Nicholson Michael R. Serwatka Centennial Floyd R. Everhart, Jr. Denver John H. Caldwell, IV Charles O. Cook III Charles F. Dewey Stephen S. Dunham Kent E. Johnson Thomas R. Reid III Englewood Kenneth K. Stuart Las Animas David W. Barber CONNECTICUT Avon Richard J. Kates Canton William M. Duncan Darien Richard B. Harding, Jr. Darien B. Jackson Miller, Jr. Darien Peter L. Wilson Gaylordsville Peter G. Skinner Glastonbury William B. Parent Greenwich David F. Sexton Groton David G. Burnett New Canaan Stephen Brent Wells New Haven B. Lance Sauerteig New London Louis H. Reich Old Saybrook William A. Childress Riverside Christopher A. Mill Rowayton James C. Linville Roxbury John M. Friedman, Jr. South Glastonbury Robert Dial Parrott Southport Jonathan T. Dawson Stafford Springs Jolyon C. Sprowles Stamford Theodore S. Hoster G. William Sisley Unionville Peter N. Upton Washington Edward S. Bent West Hartford Harlan J. Levy Howard G. Smith Westport Michael A. Forastiere III John D. Magenheimer Henry Von Kohorn 263 Woodbury George H. Largay Geoffrey M. Mayo DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Jeffrey A. Burt Juan M. Castro Leroy Eakin III H. Bartow Farr III John D. Firestone Warren Anthony Fitch James K. Holman Rufus G. King III Frank L. Langhammer Eric Hung Mun Lee Robert S. Mueller III James A. Nix William L. Pressly, Jr. Robert S. Ross, Jr. W. Lamar Smith, Jr. Stuart G. Steingold Francis B. Ward III Thomas H. Wickenden II Peter A. Wilson DELAWARE Wilmington Seth N. Braunstein Stephen E. Herrmann Robert J. Klahn, Jr. David S. Swayze FLORIDA Boca Raton Arthur E. Osborne III Bradenton Alexander L. Kirkpatrick Clearwater Bruce P. Smith Ft. Myers Michael C. Tice Gainesville George L. Dawson Mento A. Soponis 264 Hollywood Stephen A. Goscin Jacksonville Charles E. Wertheimer, Jr. Jupiter Brian R. Wright Lutz John S. Nicholas III Miami John R. Kelso North Palm Beach Sami Sehayik Osprey David R. Schatz Palm Beach A. Faxon Henderson, Jr. James R. Schueler Palm Beach Gardens Stephen M. Newman Port Charlotte Terry I. Seymour South Miami James C. Beverley St. Petersburg Paul E. Culley, Jr. David G. Mulock Tampa Jeffrey L. Miller Venice Eric W. Schneider Vero Beach Richard D. Rogers GEORGIA Athens Daniel H. Magill III Atlanta H. Burton Gay III John W. Glasser James G. Mengert Decatur Bruce S. Ribner Dunwoody William G. Wetzel Jasper Robert S. Warwick Tybee Island Montfort S. Ray HAWAII Haiku Isaac D. Hall, Jr. Honolulu Russell L. Ching Lawrence J. Eron Gerald A. F. Sumida Kaneohe Theodore G. Meeker Kihei, Maui Paul C. Kepler IOWA Iowa City Stephen G. Vlastos IDAHO Ketchum Carl B. Feldbaum Moscow Ronald J. Landeck ILLINOIS Chicago Thomas M. Anderson, Jr. Louis Michael Bell Henry A. Dwyer Irving C. Faber Barry M. Fisher Peter B. Freeman Allan Horwich John W. Kalmbach John P. Kretzmann John M. McDonough Richard J. Raskin Theodore R. Tetzlaff Theodore D. Tieken, Jr. Preston McC. Torbert R. Edward Townley M. Jay Trees Evanston Richard P. Welcome Hinsdale Frederick L. Hartmann Lake Barrington Addison C. Waid III Lake Forest Willard Bunn III Andrew J. Goodwin III Henry J. Scherck III Oak Park Curtis L. Clay Rapids City Richard G. Bowers, Jr. Wheaton Gordon D. Heaton Winfield G. Harry Robinson Woodstock Marschall I. Smith INDIANA Bloomington Jeffrey C. Graf Evansville David T. O’Dell Goshen R. David McLaughlin Indianapolis Stephen M. Craig John Paul Godich Norman G. Tabler, Jr. Muncie Lathrop P. Johnson KANSAS Lenexa Wayne B. Hewitt KENTUCKY Louisville Bruce S. T. Chang 265 LOUISIANA New Orleans A. Peyton Bush III MASSACHUSETTS Boston Richard B. Greenberg Edward C. Joyce Michael K. Tooke David L. Williams Boylston Jack R. Millard Brookline William C. Osborn Cambridge Daniel R. Goldenson Jeffrey H. McMahon Chestnut Hill Richard A. Goldfine Chilmark Graeme L. Flanders Jay J. Lagemann Cohasset Michael P. Equi Dedham William J. Ducas Charles P. Gogolak Dover J. Wade Kennedy Foxboro Thomas E. McLaughlin John J. Nagorniak Hamilton Richard A. Low Hardwick John C. Goodrich Hopkinton David B. Dollenmayer Lincoln James L. Parmentier Marblehead Owen R. Mathieu, Jr. Medford David B. Lee 266 Newbury J. Frank Remley III Newton Timothy M. Barrows Lawrence T. Scott Northampton Ira Henry Rubenzahl Shelby C. Miller Richmond Curtis A. Hicks Charles A. Merlini Somerville Charles J. Libby, Jr. Waltham Peter S. Mager Wellesley Bruce Furie Robert V. Greco Wellfleet Paul S. Pilcher West Newton Robert L. Evans, Jr. West Roxbury Carl W. Corey Westborough Rockwell C. Tenney II Weston Thomas R. Armstrong Johnson M. Hart Westport William T. Reed, Jr. Winchester Charles McM. Oman Hussein M. Adam MARYLAND Annapolis Anthony F. Christhilf John B. Slidell William T. Torgerson Baltimore Kenneth A. Bourne, Jr. John C. Corckran, Jr. David E. Kern John S. Nixdorff Andrew W. Zimmerman Bethesda John T. Beaty, Jr. Michael B. Feldman Kenneth E. Krosin Frederick W. Talcott Chevy Chase David M. Corcoran Kenneth R. Harney William R. Leahy, Jr. Richard McMillan, Jr. Alvin A. Schall James P. Timbie Church Hill Gordon S. Bjorkman, Jr. College Park John B. Williams Columbia David A. Boetcher Darnestown Andrew Butz Easton Robert S. Middleton Frederick John R. Laughlin Gaithersburg Lawrence P. Cook Wallace P. Judd Webster G. Tarpley Kensington W. Lee Rawls Lutherville Carl E. Eastwick Millington Champe C. McCulloch Parkton John J. Ghingher III Potomac John A. Edie Rockville Andrew C. LeCompte Ruxton Walter G. Lohr, Jr. Salisbury Henry M. Rutledge V Severna Park David H. Bonnett Silver Spring Edward V. Lee Stevenson Nelson H. Hendler Takoma Park Richard S. Beth MAINE Biddeford R. Craig Johnson Camden Anthony P. Grassi James H. Mays Cumberland Foreside Carlos J. Quijano Damariscotta William E. Bausch Falmouth John P. Kipp, Jr. G. Paul Savidge Lewiston Edward Z. Walworth Peaks Island William E. Hall, Jr. Portland Dallas P. Dickinson Thomas F. Eismeier Thomas N. Tureen Prouts Neck W. Bradford Willauer Topsham Henry F. Cygan, Jr. Yarmouth Charles C. Emmons, Jr. MICHIGAN Ada William L. Miller Ann Arbor Joseph D. Greulich 267 Richard C. McGinity Macklin Smith J. Mills Thornton III Montague Christopher B. Bedford Troy Robert M. Sigler, Jr. MINNESOTA Duluth Gerald C. Martin Long Lake John E. Whitman Minneapolis Stephen L. Bakke David K. Rubenstein Saint Louis Park David W. Ponthan MISSOURI Saint Louis Alan Pestronk John F. Adam Charles E. Coco Anthony Kulczycki, Jr. Richard F. Lowenstein John B. Mitchell, Jr. Jamie Spencer MISSISSIPPI Jackson Rexford T. Brown Vicksburg William V. Martin MONTANA Billings William D. Elliot East Glacier Park James M. Cooper NORTH CAROLINA Asheville R. Randolph Weast 268 Chapel Hill John A. Carlson John H. DiLiberti John S. Kizer Frank T. Morgan Charlotte John E. Davenport C. Dana Hershey, Jr. William D. Montross Durham Thomas L. Wenger Greensboro Granville G. Miller Pisgah Forest Robert R. Brooks NEW HAMPSHIRE Concord James O. Barney Durham Roger A. Evans Etna Laurence D. Cromwell Hampton Roger B. Nold Hanover Stephen P. Spielberg Hollis Gary W. Gilbert Keene Carl B. Jacobs, Jr. Lebanon Eugene C. Struckhoff North Sandwich Stephen J. Gaal NEW JERSEY Basking Ridge Douglas A. Greene Belle Mead Stephen S. Cook Blackwood Jack A. Cohen Bloomfield Michael G. Janis Bridgewater Mikk Hinnov Brookside David T. Partridge Burlington N. Kenneth Boudwin, Jr. Burlington Bruce E. Constant, Jr. Cherry Hill Henry H. Tomlin III East Orange Wilson Chukwunwike Obi East Winds Leighton Chen Essex Fells Bernard J. D’Avella, Jr. Florham Park Stanislaw Maliszewski Hopewell Ernest Cruikshank III Jersey City Hugh B. Sweeny III Metuchen Robert F. Seely Millburn David K. De Longe Morristown Lawrence S. Horn Nutley Stuart S. Ball Ocean City Douglas C. Walters Ocean Grove David M. Kinard Pennington John I. Merritt III Princeton Roderick W. Bass Philip J. Berg Walter R. Bliss, Jr. Brian H. Breuel Robert Haydn Jackson Landon Y. Jones, Jr. Andrew A. Littauer John L. Logan Gary B. Mount Charles J. Plohn, Jr. William G. Price, Jr. William H. Sachs Daniel J. Skvir Guy G. Woelk Roseland Mark L. Fleder Skillman Burton A. Ford III South Orange Donald L. McCabe Spring Lake Dennis B. Davis Stockton William A. Lutz NEW MEXICO Albuquerque Lance A. Chilton John Graham Findlay Corona Daniel F. Adams Dulce Thomas E. Greacen Las Vegas William L. Slick Taos Michael LeB. Wood NEVADA Henderson Russell T. Hurlburt Las Vegas Michael D. Case NEW YORK Alba Philip E. Hansen Amherst James R. La Fountain, Jr. 269 Brockport W. Bruce Leslie Brooklyn Ernest W. Hutton, Jr. Daniel K. Okereke Buffalo Livingston V. Watrous Canandaigua Carl P. Sahler, Jr. Chappaqua M. Davis Johnson Richard Edward Malina Chatham John H. Heminway, Jr. Corning John F. Marino Cottekill Bernard E. Lewkowicz Essex Robert A. Harsh Jamaica Anozie A. Ozumba Katonah Seymour Preston, Jr. Le Roy Charles J. Riggi Manhasset Hills Arthur Cohen Melville William E. Mitchell Monroe John B. MacDonald Mount Kisko Kenneth L. Kreidmann Mount Vernon Edward J. Steube, Jr. New Paltz Sunday C. Chikwendu New York William B. Rhoads Robert L. Amdur Douglas W. Crase Joe Erlichster Paul E. Friedman 270 Thomas S. Gilbert Robert H. Goldie David Y. Hinshaw William C. Koplovitz, Jr. James T. MacGregor Walter B. Mahony III Howard McMorris II Barry Metzger Robert E. Nahas W. Sean O’Donoghue Thomas J. Pniewski Michael L. Pribyl Stephen J. Schreiber Paul Segal Jeffrey R. Shafer George B. Weiksner, Jr. Jeffery H. S. Wood Oneonta Ronald G. Peters Orient W. Marshall Johnson, Jr. Pearl River Robert T. O’Keeffe Pelham Edward Groth III Poughkeepsie Peter G. Huenink Ray Brook Mitchell J. Goroski, Jr. Smithtown Michael A. Herships South Nyack Michael C. Witte Southampton Thomas C. Ragan John S. Redpath, Jr. Stephentown Brian C. Baker Tallman A. James Mettler Waccabuc M. Warren Browne Whitesboro Stephen Lee Walthall Wynantskill F. G. Schonenberg, Jr. OHIO Aurora Gary W. Weimer Beavercreek James A. Papa Canal Winchester Alan R. Dahl Chagrin Falls Dieter Bloser Cincinnati Michael J. Burrill Cleveland Robert H. Rawson, Jr. Cleveland Heights J. Kearney Shanahan Columbus Bruce McA. Draudt Paul Ponomarev Elida James McCabe Adams Gambier James V. Davis, Jr. Massillon Robert C. Clendenin Milford Stephen H. Smith Piqua Daniel P. French Suffield James W. Stoops Wooster Francis G. Larkin OKLAHOMA Edmond Daniel H. Carmichael Shawnee John A. Barrett, Jr. Tulsa Michael L. Ayling Kenneth A. Owen, Jr. OREGON Amity David P. Beck Bend Martin J. Winch Clatskanie Eric G. Sellix Corvallis James A. Folts Eugene Richard O. Buck, Jr. Mt. Hood Carl B. Harper Pleasant Hill John L. Hardwick Portland Frank G. MacMurray, Jr. William E. Young Salem Bruce L. Gates Siletz John E. Lupton PENNSYLVANIA Abington Robert P. Vogel Allentown James A. Bartholomew Beaver J. Lauson Cashdollar Berwick Douglas B. Ritter Berwyn David R. Baraff Blue Bell Tony Carroll Carlisle John S. Newbold III Chadds Ford George R. Hansen, Jr. Devon John H. Hodge John H. Thacher, Jr. 271 Doylestown C. William Kaiser, Jr. Emmaus Donald J. Rodenbach Greencastle Chalmers L. Ensminger Haverford William G. Adamson Walter Smedley III Sankey V. Williams Kennett Square Bert G. Kerstetter Kintnersville Charles A. Fritz III Macungie David A. Butler Malvern John H. Chidester, IV Spencer W. Franck, Jr. Narberth Robert D. Hochberg Nazareth Charles J. Peischl Newtown Square Leonard F. Hirsh, Jr. Francis E. Nuessle Philadelphia Edwin B. Bronstein Jack D. B. Coleman Archibald C. Elias, Jr. Donald M. Friedman David B. Harwi Peter S. Longstreth Eric G. Pearson John E. Schleh Pittsburgh Ralph A. Davies Radnor Barrie L. Hurtubise Sewickley Robert Y. Kopf, Jr. Warminster J. David Stitzer 272 West Chester David A. Sonnenberg Wynnewood John S. Bildersee Keith S. Jennings York Charles E. Letocha RHODE ISLAND Newport Victor H. Mailey Providence Jonathan K. Waage Rumford Albert G. Lee, Jr. Wakefield Benjamin W. McCleary SOUTH CAROLINA Columbia John H. Lumpkin, Jr. Hilton Head Island David W. Ames J. Robert Bedell Robert N. Haarlow Richard E. Thomas, II Okatie John B. Folts Sheldon William R. Barrett, Jr. TENNESSEE Antioch John S. Mason Chattanooga Albert J. LaMontagne Franklin Charles G. Burr III Knoxville Clay S. Davis, Jr. Memphis Eric A. Berman Richard S. McConnell, Jr. Nashville R. Walter Hale III Gates J. Wayburn, Jr. Sewanee Guy F. Lytle III TEXAS Austin Frederick N. Bradstreet Edward R. Durkee Philip C. Friday, Jr. Big Spring Mike Robinson Dallas John L. Fischer, Jr. William E. Johnson III John G. Lamb, Jr. Thomas M. Lemberg G. Wells McMurray II Elbert Stephen E. McClymont Fort Worth Rufus K. Schriber III Houston Lloyd M. Bentsen III W. Douglas Ensminger Robert L. Johnson III Richard A. Lydecker, Jr. Edward L. Overtree John McG. Rutledge Charles B. Wolfe Mark A. Yeoman Kingwood Peter L. Andrus Montgomery Richard G. Morgan Round Top David J. Keetley, Jr. Sherman Ronald Van Buskirk UTAH Salt Lake City Michael L. Goldstein Richard F. Riesenfeld VIRGINIA Aldie John K. Leydon, Jr. Alexandria Stephen H. Chertock David P. Stewart Peter C. Wylie Arlington Richard L. Berger Stephen G. Krum H. Lyman Miller Charlottesville Robert D. Jordan Albert E. Smith, Jr. Chesapeake William J. Moyse Crozet Michael Z. Booth Dumfries Lawrence W. Brown Fairfax Peter A. Cary Paul E. Hudak Joseph M. Luongo Fairfax Station E. Terry Mattke Great Falls John C. Slaybaugh Herndon Daniel A. Per-Lee Leesburg William J. Bethune McLean John Webster Bowman, Jr. Wilfried E. Kaffenberger Middleton A. Martin Mechanicsville Ralph R. Chasteen Middleburg John W. Burke III North Garden Thomas P. Carter Reston Michael L. Barrett 273 Richmond Richard W. Hogan James McAfee George D. Morgan III Riner Paul D. Ross, Jr. Roanoke John Saul Edwards Triangle Charles F. Martin II Virginia Beach Colin W. Hamilton Waterford William B. Baine VERMONT Fairfax Richard H. Siller Hinesburg Andres Roomet Middlebury James L. West North Ferrisburg M. Kenneth Oboz WASHINGTON Bainbridge Island David C. Bothell Douglas R. Hansmann Roblin J. Williamson Bellevue Donald P. Delisi Bellingham Ronald Beall Seattle Bruce H. Adee Paul Berton Birkeland Marvin L. Gray, Jr. John K. Hoerster William Lehr Michael S. Milder Richard B. White Woodland William N. Kelley, Jr. 274 Yakima Philip D. Rodenberger WISCONSIN Eau Claire Donald F. Willson-Broyles Madison Frank W. Kilpatrick Tom Chi Tien Yin Milwaukee Steven R. Duback Oregon William C. Cummings III WEST VIRGINIA Bluefield Theodore P. Werblin WYOMING Laramie George S. Haight III NON-U.S. AUSTRALIA Adelaide Paul Edward Corcoran Kensington Ross A. Odell Millner Russell R. Willis Mosman Lynn R. Anderson BRAZIL Sao Paulo Richard G. Carlson CANADA Burlington Paul F. Mitchell Halifax Richard A. Singer Ottawa Brian H. Dickson Charles S. Shaver Peterborough Michael A. Peterman Sidney Ralph E. Bodine Toronto Robert S. Bruser Peter Hatch Francis U.L. Kwok Gordon A. Park COLOMBIA Bogota Paul W. Mahlstedt DENMARK Frederiksberg C John K. Von Daler DOMINCAN REPUBLIC Santo Domingo Nicolas A. Vargas, Jr. FRANCE Grenoble Cedex Andrew E. Greene Paris Theodore M. Stanger JAPAN Tokyo E. Anthony Zaloom MALAWI Zomba Z. D. Kadzamira SWITZERLAND Gstaad John C. Brunner Lausanne Zdenek J. Kubes TURKEY Ankara Sener Ozsahin UNITED KINGDOM Bristol P. Thomas Benghauser Beaconsfield Hamilton L. Shields Cambridge Kenneth L. Thompson London Paul Elmer M. Fine HONDURAS Tegucigal Edward M. Coe, Jr. HONG KONG Wanchai Lewis P. Rutherfurd ISRAEL Jerusalem Jeffrey M. Green 275 The Princeton Prize in Race Relations By Henry Von Kohorn T he class has kindly given me this page to describe an initiative sponsored by the university and being undertaken by a committee consisting of primarily of alumni together with administrators and undergraduates. Now completing its third year, the Princeton Prize seeks to identify and recognize high-school-age students who have done notable work in advancing the cause of race relations. Our hope is that the Princeton Prize will evolve ultimately into an important, nationally recognized awards program. The mission of the Princeton Prize is: Despite the best efforts and intentions of many people over many years, race relations continues to be arguably the most contentious domestic issue facing this country. Continual education is needed in order to resolve racial tension and misunderstanding. Where better to start than with young people, recognizing and rewarding those who are already making a difference? By reinforcing the good work of these students, the Princeton Henry Von Kohorn and Norm Tabler with Prize hopes to promote better their wives, Meredith and Dawn, at the race relations now and to May 24, 2005, Princeton Prize ceremonies encourage others to work for in Washington, DC. racial understanding in the years to come. Program description Applications for Princeton Prize recognition are initiated by the student and call for a description of the activity, together with a supporting statement by a responsible individual from the student’s school or 276 MIKE BARRETT To promote harmony, respect, and understanding among people of different races by identifying and recognizing high school age students whose efforts have had a significant, positive effect on race relations in their schools or communities. MIKE BARRETT Prize winners with Senators Barak Obama s’85 and Paul Sarbanes ‘54. community/religious organization who is familiar with the activity. Applications are judged based upon the impact of the activity on the advancement of race relations and the significance of the student’s role. The Princeton Prize in Race Relations, together with a cash award of up to $1,000, is offered to those applicants doing the best work in each city/ area. In addition, we intend to honor everyone who is doing good work with a “Certificate of Accomplishment.” Current status Beginning in the 2003-04 academic year, the Princeton Prize Committee, along with alumni groups in Washington, DC, and Boston, implemented two pilot projects. Application forms, brochures, and posters were sent to schools, community groups, and religious organizations in both the Boston and Washington, DC, metropolitan areas. In addition, a web site (www.princeton.edu/PrincetonPrize/) was established. In the spring, the local committees met and selected their honorees who received their awards at school assemblies. The winners were also honored by the local Princeton Club in each community at a city-wide reception. Using the results of these two pilot efforts, we have developed a template which is being used to replicate the program in other areas of the country under the aegis of the local Princeton club or association. In the 2004-05 school year we added Atlanta, Houston, and St. Louis; in 200506, Chicago, Los Angeles, Miami, Philadelphia, and San Francisco; and plans are well underway to add 10 more cities in the 2006-07 academic year. Our goal is to have an awards program to which any high school student in the country can apply. When the program expands sufficiently, we expect to initiate some form of symposium on the Princeton campus to which Prize winners from across the country would be invited. We also hope to become an information resource for those seeking to improve the state of race relations in their schools or communities. 277 In September 2005, we hired our first (part-time) employee, Marguerite Hadley Vera ’79, who is the administrator of the Princeton Prize in Race Relations and is a member of the Alumni Council staff. Marguerite has been an active Princeton volunteer for many years — as class agent, class secretary, schools committee interviewer, and as a past president of the Association of Black Princeton Alumni. A modest request We are very pleased with our progress thus far, but much work remains to be done. We have many more cities into which we want to expand, and we need to raise considerable funding to sustain the program. I am hopeful that the Class of 1966 might consider becoming involved in the Princeton Prize program as a form of community service and as a legacy to Princeton. If you are interested in becoming involved in the program, and/or if you feel that this is an activity that the class should formally sponsor, please contact me at hvk@alumni.princeton.edu. I look forward to hearing from you! 278 Bob Goheen h’66 on Princeton EDITOR’S NOTE: In February 2004, the Class of 1966 inducted Bob Goheen as an honorary classmate. A shorter version of this interview with the former president appeared in the Winter 2001 With One Accord, published by the university’s Office of Development. The interview was conducted by Jim Merritt on November 21, 2000. obert F. Goheen ’40 *48, Princeton’s president from 1957 to 1972, led the university through a period of revolutionary change. His 15 years in office stand out for the opening of Princeton to minorities and women and campus protests against the Vietnam War — a tumultuous era from which Princeton, in no small measure due to his patience and grace under pressure, emerged relatively unscathed. His presidency was also marked by new initiatives in teaching and scholarship and a strengthening of the faculty in response to what Goheen called Goheen displays the ’66 bow tie (cour“an exploding, booming, tesy of Lanny Jones) presented to him at shifting world or knowledge the class dinner in February 2004. and ideas”; new undergraduate dining and social options, including Woodrow Wilson College and Stevenson Hall, presaging today’s system of residential colleges; and — thanks largely to the success of Princeton’s first modern capital campaign, which ended in 1963 with the then-astonishing total of $61 million — an 80-percent increase in the university’s physical plant. (Observed a volunteer at the time, “It takes guts to look a man in the eye and ask him for a million dollars. President Goheen has that kind of guts.” Of his role as Princeton’s chief fund raiser, Goheen says today, “I enjoyed the people I met, but I found asking for money very hard.”) After retiring from the presidency at age 52, Goheen headed the Council on Foundations. In 1977 he was appointed U.S. ambassador to India, where he had spent his childhood as the son of a Presbyterian medical missionary. Since his return to Princeton in 1981 he has been a 279 MIKE BARRETT R senior fellow in public and international affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School. His spartan office in Robertson Hall is lined with books on southern Asia and nuclear proliferation, two subjects he taught in the 1980s. Although now emeritus, the 81-year-old Goheen stays current on foreign affairs and continues to serve on the boards of several organizations, including the National Humanities Center (headed by a former Princeton professor, W. Robert Connor *61), the Indian Cultural Center, Princeton Future (a local urban-planning advisory group), and the Village Charter School in Trenton — “a bold experiment to see what can be done to make a difference for inner-city kids overwhelmed by the publicschool system.” Asked to cite some of the accomplishments of his administration, he mentioned, among others, the diversification of the student body and a liberalizing of student rules. “In the early 1960s I woke up to the fact, which I’d been shamefully oblivious to, of the way blacks were treated in this country, especially in the South. The civil rights movement had a terrific impact on me. Princeton by then was admitting some black students, but I knew we had to make a more determined effort to find and recruit many more qualified minorities. Thanks to strong support from my faculty and administrative colleagues, we were able to do so.” Coeducation, which many alumni opposed but most trustees eventually supported, “came about more quickly and easily than I thought it would.” In the early years of his administration, he said, Princeton was “a very socially conservative, paternalistic institution,” with rules “more appropriate for a prep school than a university,” including parietals (restrictions on visiting hours for women on the all-male campus), a ban on cars for undergraduates, and required chapel for freshmen. Goheen, then as now a “nondenominational Christian,” said that as president he “liked going to Chapel — and I still go,” but attending services there, he often observed students “asleep or reading the paper” while nominally fulfilling their religious obligation. “I had to go very slowly on these matters because the board of trustees was made up of men much my senior, including quite a number who did not readily see things my way. It took a good number of years, but bit by bit these various restrictions were removed, and we began to treat students as young adults rather than as boys.” In one way or another — as student, professor, president, and alumnus — Goheen has been associated with Princeton for 64 years. What hasn’t changed since he entered as a freshman in 1936? “Well, in spite of the filling in of some green space, it remains a very beautiful place; I hold to the sentimental notion that the beauty of the campus helps shape the character of Princeton and has affected genera280 tions of its graduates. And while the importance of research has grown enormously, the faculty remains devoted to teaching — I’m impressed, for example, by the number of senior professors who teach freshman seminars.” Harold T. Shapiro *64 recently announced his retirement and the trustees, led by Robert H. Rawson ’66, have begun a search for a new president. What qualities should they be seeking? “I have no great wisdom on that, but at a place like Princeton I do believe it’s very important that the president have academic credentials which the faculty can respect. Administrative experience is not absolutely necessary when you have, as there is here, a strong administrative structure with experienced and able people to help you out. A candidate should be committed to maintaining the strength and special quality of undergraduate education and to nurturing the liberal arts and humanities, which need sustaining in this fast-moving and materialistic age. Finally, I think some association with Princeton — as an alumnus or faculty member — is desirable; it creates an emotional tie to the place which keeps you going when things get rough!” Recalling the recent departure of an Ivy League president (of Brown) to head another university that offered him more money, he shook his head — “There’s no bond there.” [The presidential search committee, headed by Bob Rawson ’66, chairman of the executive committee of the board of trustees, eventually chose Professor of Molecular Biology Shirley Tilghman as Shapiro’s replacement.] Goheen and his wife, Margaret, count themselves fortunate that most of their six children, 18 grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren live within a few hour’s drive, so they can see them regularly. A former professor of classics, he still thinks of himself an “Augustinian optimist.” Saint Augustine, he said, “thought that man, because of his self-centeredness, was basically sinful and prone to error. His criteria were love of God versus love of yourself — amor dei or amor sui. I hold the view that we are always in danger of favoring ourselves over others. That leads to all sorts of cruelty and injustice. My optimism lies in believing that dei sub numine — which is to say, with God’s help — we can do better by our neighbor, who in Christian terms is everyone other than oneself. We can perhaps bit by bit even leave the world a little better than we found it.” 281 Can a Bulldog tell the Tiger’s Tale ? By Bruce Leslie T he answer is yes — and a long tale it is! Just in time for Reunions, Princeton University Press will publish the 608-page The Making of Princeton University: From Woodrow Wilson to the Present by James Axtell, Yale ’63. How appropriate that it will be published just in time for our 40th Reunion. Rather than just become history, the Class of 1966 is shaping Princeton’s “mystic chords of memory” as few classes have ever before. Jamie Spencer has chaired the Princetoniania Committee and only ’66 has two members. Jim Merritt edited the massive The Best of PAW, a centenary look at our favorite biweekly, with the assistance of Lanny Jones. Has any class ever matched our role on the Board of Trustees? And over the last two years I’ve been privileged to have the task of keeping this Bulldog from desecrating the wrong fire hydrants But why a Yalie? Well, this history has its own long history. Bizarrely, Princeton’s last history was published in 1946 for the university’s bicentennial. We were barely out of diapers, President Dodds was hosting President Truman at the celebrations, and Albert Einstein was still roaming the campus. Of course, Princeton has not lacked for historical attention. From books turned into movies (A Beautiful Mind), and more scholarly studies (Who Got Einstein’s Office?), and fiction such as This Side of Paradise, The Rule of Four, and The Princeton Murders, Princeton has not lacked chroniclers. And we are blessed with the best history of any graduate school (The Princeton Graduate School: A History, to which Axtell also contributed). But surprisingly we rank poorly in comprehensive colleges. The bicentennial volume, Princeton 1746-1896, was written by a renowned historian of colonial America, the appropriately named Thomas Jefferson Wertenbaker. Note the subtitle: “1746-1896.” Given the author’s scholarly interests and pressures for completion in time for the bicentennial, for decades it was assumed that Wertenbaker ran out of steam. Then Axtell discovered four unpublished chapters in Firestone’s Rare Book Collection that carried the story to World War II. One explanation is that Princeton University Press didn’t want to add to the 424 pages that it published and simply omitted those chapters. The more conspirato- 282 rial interpretation is that the university wanted to avoid blowing air on the still- smoldering embers of Wilson-era battles. The failure to tell Princeton’s early 20th-century history was compounded by our 250th anniversary in 1996. The celebrations had lectures on Princeton’s history and launched the fireworks tradition that lit up our 30th Reunion. But Princeton’s history from Wilson onward remained unwritten — while anniversaries have inspired new histories of Harvard, Yale, and Columbia. Then Clio smiled on Princeton. Axtell, an incurable bibliophile, stopped in Princeton en route to a Maine vacation. At a Firestone Library sale he purchased five bound volumes of PAW in which he spotted a picture of Woodrow Wilson striding to his last commencement that had intrigued him as a high school student. So this William & Mary professor and author of eight books on colonial Indian-European relations returned to an old fascination with the only American President to have apprenticed as a college president. The rest, as they say, is history — our history. Wilson is the book’s touchstone. Axtell believes that Wilson set Princeton on the path toward becoming a distinctive university that combines a liberal arts college with international research excellence. Wilson inherited a comfortable “country club” of little distinction and left it with restored reputation and new energy. Although the picture that inspired Axtell portrays a defeated Wilson, in the long run victory was his. The rest of the book examines Princeton’s evolution since Wilson strode out of Nassau Hall and onto the world stage. This volume not only fills a void in Princeton’s history, it should reshape how college histories are written. Rather than a chronological narrative organized around presidents, Axtell’s chapters are devoted to students, faculty, the graduate program, the library, the art museum, and the Princeton University Press. Turning the anthropological gaze that he formerly applied to colonial Iroquois and Jesuit missionaries, Axtell examines the educational process and tribal customs of 20th century Princeton. You will especially enjoy the very long chapter on students, which not only stirs memories but fills in information to which mere undergrads like us were not privy. Who admitted us and why? What did John F. Kennedy say on his application? When did ballpoint pens begin to be used? Why were we the last to have a chapel requirement? And most importantly — which of our names are in the text? Axtell is a scholar and a Yalie. So his affectionate history has a few stings in the tale. He shares Wilson’s skepticism of the clubs and applauds the slow move toward a college system resembling Yale’s. Although a successful college athlete (Axtell held Yale’s long-jump record before Calvin Hill and broke the British universities’ long-jump record held by Harold Abrahams of Chariots of Fire fame), he is concerned about 283 favoritism in admissions for athletes and their subsequent academic underperformance. Thus, this is no sanitized “official” history, but it is a labor of love that belongs in your library. Jim is coming to Reunions to discuss his tale in the Tiger’s lair. After the Reunions hangovers subside and nostalgia for your alma mater rages, Dr. Leslie prescribes a chapter before bed. Our 20th-reunion logo 284 FROM THE ARCHIVES The following items — the New York Times account of our graduation exercises, university press releases about the graduating Class of 1966, and selections from the 1962 annual report by Director of Admission C. William Edwards ’36,were collected by Lanny Jones on a visit to the University Archives. From The New York Times, June 15, 1966: Goheen Tells Princeton Class a Sense of Humor Is Needed By Henry Raymont PRINCETON, N.J., June 14 — Dr. Robert F. Goheen, the president of Princeton University, told the graduating class today to strive for a better sense of humor — “that precious sense of the incongruous” — when faced by the increasingly complex problems of the modern world. “If you can spot yourself posturing or assuming a self-righteous stance and promptly be amused, your balance is probably assured,” he declared. The president’s informal remarks ended the university’s 219th commencement exercises at which he awarded 719 baccalaureate and 534 graduate degrees as well as nine honorary degrees. He also provided a cheerful counterpoint to the solemn, traditionbound annual graduation rites held on the tree-shaded greensward in front of the historic, ivy-walled Nassau Hall. Most of the serious-looking faculty members, wearing orange and purple academic gowns, broke into smiles and joined some 5,000 guests in giving Dr. Goheen a loud ovation. Seated in the front row on the stage were the recipients of the honorary degrees, among whom were Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, the physicist, and Comdr. Charles Conrad Jr., the astronaut. Warning by Valedictorians Despite a sweltering heat, the assembly had listened intently to the traditional Latin salutatory oration and to the valedictorian, Joel R. Primack, a bespectacled physics major from Granada Hills, Calif., who 285 sounded a grim warning about “the dark side of the scientific and technological revolution.” as the “deliberate misuse” of scientific knowledge he cited the development of nuclear weapons and psychological research, which, he said, has opened “the most chilling prospect of mind manipulation.” Dr. Oppenheimer, who had pioneered in the research for the atomic bomb and in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy, leaned forward on a cane and smiled faintly as Mr. Primack appealed for a greater humanization of the sciences. “I wouldn’t have made such a speech unless I had had a lot of preparation,” Dr. Oppenheimer commented later. But he said he was “very encouraged” to find that the new generation had abandoned “the Spencerian cheer” and the implicit faith in progress scientists held 40 years ago. Princeton University’s honorary degrees, with excerpts from the citations, were presented to the following: CHARLES CONRAD Jr., Master of Arts — “From the dreams and toys of childhood, through undergraduate years in the Flying Club, when he few over this campus with the greatest of ease to his historic eight days in orbit around our planet, airplanes and flying have been his passion …” CHARLES SCRIBNER Jr., president, Charles Scribner’s Sons. Master of Arts — “As the present head of a great dynasty in American publishing, he has kept its leadership fresh after 120 years by his youthfulness of mind and sheer hard work.” OTTO ECKSTEIN, Professor of Economics, Harvard University — “ … He has demonstrated the virtue of the mind that recognizes no narrow boundaries, achieving within a decade and a half of his graduation from Princeton, eminence as teacher, as adviser to the President of the United States, and as one of the world’s leading experts in public finances … ” PHILIP KHURI HITTI, Professor Emeritus of Semitic Literature, Princeton University. Doctor of Letters — “A few days less than 80, an historian of repute since the publication of his monumental ‘History of the Arabs’ and long before President Johnson called public attention to the duty of universities to promote regional studies, he built such a ‘center of excellence’ on this campus for the emulation of the academic world.” NORTHROP FRYE, Professor of English and Principal of Victoria College, University of Toronto, Canada. Doctor of Humane Letters — “As anatomist of the systematic and comprehensive development of literary criticism, he has left his mark on a whole generation.” JOHN COLEMAN BENNETT. president, Union Theological Seminary. Doctor of Divinity — “His leadership in the ecumenical movement encourages his fellows in the progress from brotherly love of men of 286 distant lands to the more difficult love of those close at hand.” DR. ROBERT OPPENHEIMER, Doctor of Science — “Combined with the austerity of mind of one of the foremost theoretical physicists of his generation is great sensitivity of spirit and personal magnetism … ” JOHN W. GARDNER. Doctor of Laws — “He heads our search for new solutions for the age-old problems of illness, ignorance, and indigence, supported in his great work by a quiet faith in the infinite potentialities of the human intellect … ” NICHOLAS deB. ELLEVILLE KATZENBACH. Doctor of Laws — — “His scholarly understanding of the law and a confident courage born of thorough knowledge of the ways of government have been his guides in difficult decisions illuminating both the realities of the law and the spirit of justice in the land.” University press release, June 14, 1966: Princeton University conducted its 219th Commencement today, conferring 1,262 degrees on recipients hailing from all parts of the world. In a tradition filled ceremony in front of historic Nassau Hall, President Robert F. Goheen conferred seven different kinds of degree in course and awarded nine honorary degrees. Among the degrees were 624 bachelors of arts, 95 bachelors of science in engineering, 209 masters of arts, 50 masters of science in engineering, 31 masters of public affairs, 21 masters of fine arts and 223 doctors of philosophy. Included in the total was the B.A. degree with honors awarded posthumously to Charles M. Cannon III of Scarsdale, N.Y. Mr. Cannon, who was killed by lightning a week ago today, was also elected posthumously to Phi Beta Kappa. The number of Ph.D.’s was the greatest for a year in Princeton’s history, 16 per cent above the previous high of 192 awarded two years ago. The number of M.P.A.’s also represented a new high, reflecting an expansion in the graduate program of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. In the Class of 1966, 44 states, the District of Columbia, the U.S. administered West Caroline Islands in the Pacific and 15 foreign countries are represented. The largest number — 125 — comes from New York. The list also includes 106 from New Jersey, followed by Pennsylvania with 77, Connecticut 36, Ohio 32 and Illinois and Maryland with 31 each. Two students who achieved academic distinction during their undergraduate careers delivered formal addresses at the exercises. Joel Robert 287 Primack of Granada Hills, Calif., delivered the Valedictory and Curtis Livingston Clay of Westport, Conn., gave the Latin Salutatory Address. Dean of the College J. Merrill Knapp presented to President Goheen the undergraduate candidates; Dr. Colin S. Pittendrigh, Dean of the Graduate School, presented the candidates for advanced degrees; and James F. Oates Jr., Charter Trustee and University Orator, presented the candidates for honorary degrees. Honor graduates were recognized by Dean of the Faculty J. Douglas Brown. Four teachers were also cited as the recipients of the eighth annual Princeton Prizes for Distinguished Secondary School Teaching in New Jersey. Class Day Awards University press release, June 13, 1966: PRINCETON, N.J., June 13 — Ronald J. Landeck of Cleveland and Robert H. Rawson, Jr. of Shaker Heights, Ohio, Princeton University seniors, were named joint recipients today of the Class of 1901 Medal, an award by their classmates to the men who, in their judgment, have done the most for Princeton during their four years here. Landeck and Rawson received the Medal at the 1966 Class Day Exercises on Cannon Green. Landeck, a 21 year old student in the Department of Religion who is planning to attend law school following graduation, was ranking tailback on last fall’s Princeton football team and captain of this spring’s baseball team. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Landeck of 7659 Alan Parkway, he also received the William Winston Roper Trophy, Princeton’s highest athletic award at today’s Class Day ceremonies. Rawson, also 21, is a Dean’s List student in the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. As a Rhodes Scholar he will read philosophy, politics and economics at New College, Oxford for the next two years. Earlier this year he was awarded the M. Taylor Pyne Honor Prize, highest general distinction Princeton can confer upon an undergraduate. Rawson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Rawson, 2956 Manchester Road, Shaker Heights. Also at the Class Day ceremonies, John M. McDonough of Winnetka, Ill., chairman of the Class Day Committee, was awarded the W. Sanderson Detwiler 1903 Prize. A silver bowl, it is given annually to the senior who, in the judgment of his class* mates, has done most for his class. McDonough is the son of Mrs. John J. McDonough, 446 Sunset Rd., Winnetka. 288 The Harold Willis Dodds Achievement Award was given jointly to Stuart G. Steingold of Norfolk, Va. and David P. Stewart of Princeton. The award goes to the senior who “best embodies the high example set by Harold Willis Dodds during his tenure as fifteenth President of Princeton University.” Steingold is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Meyer Steingold, 6070 Newport Pt., Norfolk; Stewart’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. James P. Stewart, 132 Mercer St., Princeton. Presentation of these awards highlighted the Class Day ceremonies during which Dean of the College J. Merrill Knapp and Dean of Students William D’O. Lippincott conferred general, academic and athletic prizes for the 1965 66 college year. Phi Beta Kappas University press release, June 13, 1966: Princeton, N.J., June 13 — Joel Robert Primack, of Granada Hills, Calif., a senior in Princeton University’s Department of Physics, was honored today as the ranking academic member of the Class of 1966, which will be graduated tomorrow at the University’s 219th Commencement. At the initiation ceremony for members of the Class of 1966 elected to Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary society, Primack — who was elected to the Society in his junior year and is also Valedictorian for his Class — received the $100 prize established by the Society’s Princeton Chapter as “the member of the graduating class who, on the basis of the Phi Beta Kappa ranking system, shall have achieved the highest academic ranking in the class.” Among those named to Phi Beta Kappa in today’s ceremonies was Charles M. Cannon, III, who was elected to the Society posthumously. Cannon the son of Dr. and Mrs. John Cannon, of Scarsdale, N.Y., and a biology major who would have received his degree tomorrow, was killed when struck by lightning on June 7. Of his death, a member of the Princeton faculty stated: “It was a one in a million accident to a one in a million boy. Cannon was one of the finest students I have ever had.” Joel Primack, a graduate of Gardena High School, Gardena, Calif., is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Primack, 17939 Tribune Place, Granada Hills, Calif. A University Scholar, he was awarded the Albert G. Milbank Memorial Prize in the fall of 1965 as the undergraduate who, on entering his senior year, had achieved the highest average grade for all preceding college work. At the ceremonies held in Whig Hall, 77 members of the Class of 1966 289 were inducted into the Society, including eight members who were elected during their junior year. The complete list of Phi Beta Kappa electees follows: Amdur, Robert Lawrence Andriamananjara, Rajaona Armstrong, Thomas Robert Barrows, Timothy Manning Beaty, John Thurston, Jr. *Bell, Louis Michael Beth, Richard Sprague Bloser, Dieter Bonnett, David Huntington Boudwin, Norman Kenneth, Jr. Burt, Jeffrey Amsterdam **Cannon, Charles Madison, III Chikwendu, Sunday Chukwuka 9281 Shore Road, Brooklyn, N.Y. Tananarive, Madagascar 362 Hamilton Place, Hackensack, N.J. South Bristol, Me. 111 Lake Avenue, Greenwich, Conn. 70 Bowers Street, Jersey City, N.J. 8 Leisurely Lane, Bellport, N.Y. 4216 Stary Drive, Pama, Ohio 90 Arnold Road, Wellesley Hills, Mass. 58 Church Street, Beverly, N.J. 9704 Saxony Road, Silver Spring, Md. 78 Walworth Avenue, Scarsdale, N.Y. St. Andrews C.M.S. Church, Via Nsukka, Nigeria *Classen, John Pierce 1282 Sheridan Road North, Lake Forest, Ill. *Clay, Curtis Livingston, III 8 Sturges Commons, Westport, Conn. Cohen, Jack Arnold 133 Hollywood Avenue, Hillside, N.J. Crase, Douglas Ward Route 4, Battle Creek, Mich. Duback, Steven Rahr 2206 E. Kensington Boulevard, Milwaukee, Wisc. Eaton, Oscar Seaburn, III 441 Maple Lane, Sewickley, Pa. Ensminger, W. Douglas 534 Tammery, Talmadge, Ohio Eron, Lawrence Joseph 731 Ridgewood Road, Millburn, N.J. *Faillace, Philip J. 2533 South Clarion Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Freeman, Peter Burns 247 E. Chestnut Street, Chicago, Ill. Godich, John Paul 5405 Indianola Avenue, Indianapolis, Ind. Goldenson, Daniel Robert Sunny Ridge Road, Harrison, N.Y. Goscin, Stephen André 605 Cottonwood Drive, Richardson, Texas Green, Jeffrey Martin 29 Washington Square West, New York, N.Y. Jones, Ebon Richard 3418 Chapel Drive, Toledo, Ohio Kaffenberger, Wilfried Ernst 353 Park Avenue, Glencoe, Ill. Kane, William Everett 802 Hines Street, Albany, Ga. Katzenbach, Edward Lawrence, III 2222 48th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 290 Lagemann, Jay John Tuthill Lee, Eric Hung Mun Lemberg, Thomas Michael Levine, Mark David Logan, John Lowe Lupton, John Lydecker, Richard Ackerman, Jr. Lytle, Guy Fitch, III McDonough, John Michael McMahon, Jeffrey Hill McPheron, William Graves, Jr. Mengert, James Grant Mitchell, William Edmund Odell, Ross Alexander *Ponomarenko, Paul Pressly, William Laurens, Jr. Price, William George, Jr. *Primack, Joel Robert Raggett, Jon Dana Rawson, Robert Hey, Jr. Reich, Louis Henry Reid, Thomas Roy, III Ribner, Bruce Steven Rogers, Richard Donnell Rubenzahl, Ira Henry Schreiber, Stephen Jay Secondi, John Joseph *Shensa, Mark Jonathan Smith, Yiacklin Spence, Andrew Michael Spielberg, Stephen Paul Steingold, Stuart Geoffrey Steven, Gordon Bentley 2395 Palisade Avenue, New York, N.Y. 839 Onaha Street, Honolulu, Hawaii 18451 Fairfield, Detroitg Mich. 1896 Brookside Drive, Wooster, Ohio 372 Massapequa Avenue, Massapequa, N.Y. Edward Buellton, Calif. 48 Lincoln Street, Glen Ridge, N.J. 5012 Clairmont Avenue, Birmingham, Ala. 446 Sunset Road, Winnetka, Ill. 35 Sutton Place, New York, N.Y. 924 East Sanger, Hobbs, N.M. 485 Tara Trail, N.W., Atlanta, Ga. 7731 E. Mariposa, Scottsdale, Ariz. I43 Fremd Avenue, Rye, N.Y. 155 East 99 Street, New York, N.Y. 1424 W. Paces Ferry Road, Atlanta, Ga. 38 Hercules Bel Air, Villmakati Rizal, Philippines 17939 Tribune Place, Granada Hills, Calif. Carmel, Calif. 2956 Manchester Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio 275 College Road, Riverdale, N.Y. 229 River Lane, Dearborn, Mich. 158 YiacKenzie Street, Brooklyn, N.Y. 420 Yorkshire Place, Webster Groves, Mo. Neversink, N.Y. 32 Oak Lane, Scarsdale, N.Y. 704 Schuyler Apartments, Spartanburg, S.C. 1066 Turquoise Street, Pacific Beach, Calif. 3514 Rodman Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 166 Lytton Boulevard, Toronto, Ontario, Canada 336 Wellington Avenue, Chicago, Ill. 6070 Newport Point, Norfolk, Va. 1120 Minisink Way, Westfield, N.J. 291 Stewart, David Pentland Sumida, Gerald A. Tarpley, Webster Griffin Tetzlaff, Theodore Robert Thompson, Kenneth Lloyd Thornton, Jonathan Mills, III Timbie, James Peter Torbert, Preston McCullough Weiss, Jeffrey Martin West, James Lawrence White, Richard Borden Zaloom, Edgar Anthony, Jr. *Zee, Anthony *Elected in Junior Year **Posthumously 292 132 Mercer Street, Princeton, N.J. 520 West Hind Drive, Honolulu, Hawaii 144 25 33 Avenue, Flushing, N.Y. 1906 E. Madison Street, South Bend, Ind. 616 Edgewood Avenue, Waco, Texas 3610 Thomas Avenue, Montgomery, Ala. 13 Goldthwait Road, Marblehead, Mass. 952 Plymouth Street, Pelham, N.Y. 1408 Mellon Road, Wyncote, Pa. 4713 Park Lane, Siiitland, Md. Koror Palau, W. Caroline Islands 16 Knollwood Avenue, Douglaston, N.Y. Caixa Postal 5644, Sao Paulo, Brazil Admissions 1962 A report of the Office of Admission for any given year is largely a matter of statistics and figures, with an attempt to point out items of significance which are thus highlighted. The figures used here are as of August 1. While there will be a few changes by the time of registration in September, they are close enough to make certain comparisons, findings and reports at this time. The number of applications initiated, and therefore the number of folders., was down to 5068 from 5334 in 196 1 and 5615 in 1960. The number of completed., fee paid applications rose to 3928 as against 3661 in 1961 and 3883 in 1960. This was, then., the largest number of completed cases to come before the Admissions Committee. The decrease in two years of some six hundred in the number not completing is presumably another example of growing sound college counselling in the schools. The target for the size of the class was 800. 1246 were admitted on April 16 with an alternate list of 105. Returns by early May indicated that, unlike a year ago,, there was little if any possibility of admission from the alternate list. Some 14 end of year and special cases were subsequently admitted. In 1961 55 were taken from the alternate list. As of August 1 the number expected to matriculate was 812. 71% of the boys admitted from independent schools plan to enter as do 60% of those admitted from high schools. THE CLASS OF 1966 Total number application folders Completed applications Admitted % completed applications admitted Deferring matriculation Matriculating % matriculating of those admitted Independent school graduates admitted High School graduates admitted Independent school graduates matriculating High School graduates matriculating % of class High School graduates Independent schools represented in class High Schools represented in class A.B. candidates B.S.E. candidates 5068 3928 1260 32% 12 812 64.4% 507 753 358 454 55.8% 133 358 638 174 293 Standing in school by Quarters High Prep 448 6 0 0 242 95 17 4 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q Valedictorians Presidents of School or Class 135 144 Approximately 35% of the preliminary applicants applied from 587 independent schools and 65% from 1561 high schools. There are 8 independent schools with ten or more boys in the class (Lawrenceville 19, Andover 14, Exeter 14, St. Paul’s 13, Deerfield 11, Hotchkiss 11, Choate 10, Hill 10) and 6 high schools with four or more (New Trier 10, Evanston 7, Lower Merion 7, Scarsdale 7. Columbia (Maplewood) 4, Shaker Heights 4). Three hundred and seventy of the 491 schools represented in the class are sending only one boy. TRANSFERS AND FOREIGN STUDENTS Eleven foreign students were admitted and will enter in September. Six of them will presumably receive advanced standing. In addition 12 students, of whom 8 are coming, were admitted on a transfer basis from colleges in this country. PRINCETON SONS Princeton sons completing application Admitted Not accepting admission Deferring Entering % of class 288 167 23 3 141 17.3% —C. William Edwards ’36 Director of Admission (Excerpted from full report) 294 A GALLERY OF ’66ERS Stu Steingold in Singapore, November 2004. Bruce Furie atop Cook’s Look, Lizard Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia. Laurie and Krist Jake, Kenai Fjords National Park, July 2005. George and Shiela Largay and family. Francis and Nancy Kwok on a cruise to Antarctica. 295 Scenes from our 39th reunion (photos by Mike Barrett) P-raders Bob Rawson (top trustee) with President Shirley Tilghman (h’66). Stas’ Maliszewski and Julia Jitkoff (Chris Leahy in the background). Jeff Shafer and John Nagorniak. 296 Turk Thacher and Betty Lou Morgan. Viggo Boserup and daughter Mia (’05). 2005: A Campus Odyssey: Bud D’Avella and Bob Nahas inspect monolith/ sundial in front of Wu Hall. Tiny Morgan leads a Locomotive for Rawson and Tilghman. 297 Our 10th-reunion logo 298