A Message from the President
Transcription
A Message from the President
SALEM COLLEGE Magazine Julianne Still Thrift, President Ann McElaney-Johnson, Vice President for Academic and Student Affairs A Message from the President As I welcome young women to the College in my 15th year as president, many exciting events are unfolding. Each day brings a new discovery as we work to improve our beautiful campus and our many historic buildings. Wayne Burkette, Vice President and Academy Head of School Vicki Williams Sheppard, Director of Institutional Advancement Editor Julie Larison, Director of Communications Assistant Editor Sara Butner C’04, Assistant Director of Public Relations The clinking of heavy machinery fills the air as crews work hard to Designer Jane Rudd Hughes install a new chiller plant (and loop) that will provide air conditioning to most of the campus and to the The Salem College Alumnae Magazine is published each summer by Salem College, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27108. This publication is mailed to alumnae, faculty, staff, parents and friends of Salem. Academy. And that’s not all; several projects are underway that will help us recruit students and provide a better Salem experience for all. Digging in a such a historic area occasionally unearths a few surprises, which is exactly what happened one May morning with the discovery of stones and pottery shards (see story page 16 ) next to the Single Sisters House. What a glorious Salem welcomes qualified students regardless of race, color, national origin, sexual orientation, religion or disability to all the rights, privileges, programs and activities of this institution. reminder of Salem’s presence in early America and our role as caretakers of this For additional information about any programs or events mentioned in this publication, please write or call: Alumnae Office Salem College PO Box 10548 Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27108 336-721-2608 E-mail: alumnae@salem.edu tagline Reach within. Shape the future. (see story page 8). This is just one step in a On the cover: Blixt Field celebration distinguished past. Celebrating what makes Salem a special place for women to learn and grow is important for all of us. We invite you to help us build a stronger presence for Salem in your community. Please proudly display the enclosed sticker that launches our new number of initiatives the College will start this year in order to create more awareness and build enrollment. Your help is critical! We appreciate all that you do in supporting the College year after year. Please also remember that one of the greatest gifts you can give is a referral of a prospective College student (or students). A first person endorsement goes a long way in encouraging women of all ages to take advantage of the single-sex education at Salem. I look forward to making my last “official” year at Salem the College’s best! Again, thank you for embracing the College and offering your generous support. We will continue to share with you the important projects being funded through the upcoming campaign and ask that you join us in celebrating these very important milestones. Julianne Still Thrift Contents Magaz ine 20 05 Back Porch News 2 Eileen Wilson-Oyelaran 6 Branding Program Launched 8 Nadia Bakhireva C’08 10 Women in Math and Science 12 Development News 14 Alumnae News 18 Class Notes 21 1 Back Porch News Best-Selling Author Shares Inspiration for Writing writers, McCrumb’s goal is to introduce readers Association her senior year, and as secretary all over the world to this region and its culture. the year before. Prior to this, Brooks was a But Southern writers do struggle co-chair of the Campus Activities Commit- Writers enjoyed a record crowd to gain acceptance outside a regional tee, where the college sophomore managed in March, when best-selling audience, she said. McCrumb, a budget of over $10,000. She was also a novelist Sharyn McCrumb whose books have appeared on the member of Fremdendienerin all four years, gave the inaugural William M. New York Times best-seller list, still offering campus tours, advice and correspon- Hendricks Reading. battles with her publishers over the dence with prospective students. This year she marketing of her novels and the vi- represented the student body on the search from her newest novel, St. Dale, ability of some story ideas. When she committee for the vice president of the insti- a modern “Canterbury Tales” suggested a novel about the world of tution, where her input had a very real impact that features a busload of disparate NASCAR NASCAR one industry player told on Salem’s future direction. The Center for Women At Salem, McCrumb read fans on a pilgrimage to honor the late racecar her to just make six copies, “because that will driver Dale Earnhardt. McCrumb, who has take care of all the NASCAR fans who can read.” a master’s degree in English from Virginia Both the New York Times and the Los Angeles achieved a cumulative grade point average of Tech, has been fascinated with the idea of Times have named McCrumb’s works Notable 3.7 and was a fixture on the Dean’s List from what she calls “secular saints” like Elvis Presley, Books of the Year. The Appalachian Writers As- her first year on. In addition, she qualified for Princess Diana and Earnhardt for some time. sociation has given her two Best Appalachian Novel the College Honors program and the honors Recognizing that Earnhardt remains a folk Awards and, in 1997, honored McCrumb for Out- societies Omicron Delta Kappa (ODK), Mor- hero to many, McCrumb set about studying standing Contributions to Appalachian Literature. tar Board and Lambda Pi Eta. the unique and rich culture of NASCAR fans, In her most recent novels, including Ghost Riders, which was a world entirely new to her. The Songcatcher and The Ballad of Frankie Silver, into her extracurricular pursuits, chiefly in the McCrumb has incorporated real-life Appalachian area of dance, where she chaired the Fall Fest historical figures and her own family’s legends. dance performance each of her four years and To write St. Dale, McCrumb became fluent in the terminology of stock car racing. It Brooks incorporated her academic interests also joined the Wake Forest Danceline and wasn’t the first time she had tackled tradition- McCrumb was the first author to appear at ally masculine subject matter; her novel Ghost The William M. Hendricks Reading. Endowed Salem College Dance Company. Her honors Riders offers frank and intense depictions of by the William M. Hendricks Family Founda- senior thesis, entitled “Women, Athletics and sectarian violence during the Civil War. tion, the program’s purpose is to bring Southern Salem: Why We Need McCrumb said she never felt out of place writers and poets to Salem each year to teach a Each Other,” cre- touring race shops and interviewing NASCAR class and offer a public reading of their work. ated a sample publicity figures. “The key to stepping out of one’s comfort zone as a writer is to respect your subject enough to know it well,” she said. Being prepared is also key, she added. “You’d better show people that you’ve done your homework. Cincia Brooks Named Oesterlein Award Winner Each year at Founders Day, Salem grants the plan for Salem’s upcoming Division III athletic program. Brooks Elisabeth Oesterlein Award to a senior who, dur- excelled in the ing her four years at Salem, has made notable and areas of academ- lasting contributions to the campus’s quality of ics, athletics and life. This year’s award went to Cincia L. Brooks the Appalachian Mountains of Tennessee, service to the C’05, the daughter of Gregory and Wanda Marie North Carolina and Virginia, the area where campus, mak- Dunn Brooks of New Orleans, La. ing her a role You don’t go ask (Civil War historian) Shelby Foote, ‘So, who won that war, anyway?’” Most of McCrumb’s books take place in her family has lived for more than two centuries. Her stories often confront the negative stereotypes of southerners, particularly of mountain southerners. Like other Southern 2 As a communication major with a double minor in psychology and dance, Brooks Brooks was active in all aspects of campus life throughout her four years at Salem, most notably model many times over. as the president of the Student Government Cincia Brooks Salem College Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award This year for the first time Salem honored two people with the prestigious Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award at Founders Day Convocation. The Sullivan Awards, granted annually at 54 colleges and universities in the southeastern United States, recognize the leadership and charity of one college student as well as a non-student member of the college community. Senior Elizabeth Jane Smart A’01 C’05 was the student recipient of the Sullivan Award. Smart attended Salem Academy before enrolling at Salem College, where she graduated with a double major in Spanish and international relations and a political science minor. She is the daughter of Elizabeth D. Smart of Greenville and Tony Smart of Winterville; Alumnae Alert! Elizabeth Jane Smart and President Thrift Pfohl Award At Honors Convocation, Salem presented the Watch your local newsstands for the August 2005 issue of Our State magazine, which features a special article about Salem’s heritage and the Single Sisters House. H.A. Pfohl Award to a longtime faculty member Todd Fay and to graduating senior Mary Ruth Barnhardt C’05. The Pfohl Award, established by her two sisters Catherine C’00 and Mary the children and grandchildren of C’02 also attended Salem. a longtime Salem College trustee, is given annually to a senior who exemplifies strong campus citizenship, Christian character, loyalty and effective service to the college, and to a faculty member who has demonstrated sound service, loyalty, Christian influence and effective teaching. Fay will retire at the end of this school year after teaching psychology at Salem College since 1976. He holds a B.A. from the University of Michigan and a M.S. and Ph.D. from North- John McKinnon The other Sullivan Award was granted to John McKinnon, a longtime Salem Academy and College Trustee whose professional experience in business helped guide the institution to sustained financial security. McKinnon is the former president of Sara Lee Corp. and dean of Wake Forest University’s Babcock School of Management. McKinnon and his wife Grace live in Winston-Salem; his daughters Grace A’86 and Margaret A’84 are alumnae of Salem Academy. The Algernon Sydney Sullivan Foundation endows the annual awards and requires that the award recipients embody the qualities of 19th century businessman Algernon Sullivan, who encouraged personal charity and philanthropy. Magaz ine 20 05 western University. Barnhardt graduated with a double major in arts management and Spanish and a double minor in musical theatre and not-for-profit management. She is the daughter of Roland and Emilie G. Barnhardt of Winston-Salem. Her sister, Sarah, is a rising sophomore at Salem and her sister Christin C’02 is a graduate. Race for the Cure At Salem, breast cancer awareness and prevention aren’t just lofty goals. The students in the campus group C.H.I.C.S. (Creating Hope in Cancer Survival) know that breast cancer is the leading cancer among women and that it has touched alumnae, faculty, their friends and family, and even fellow students. This year, the Susan G. Komen Foundation’s Race for the Cure was staged on Salem’s campus, so the Salem community (which had always fielded teams) was able to participate like never before. After a rousing rendition of “God Bless America” by voice professor Barbara Caprilli, Dean Eileen Wilson-Oyelaran and Academy Head of School Wayne Burkette (left) sounded the starting horns for the “Salem College Mile,” a one-mile fun run through the College campus. The practice field became a sea of hospitality tents clustered around the main stage and finish line. In all, Salem hosted an estimated 8,000 people, including Salem teams of Academy and College students, faculty, staff, alumnae and their families. 3 Back Porch News Variety of Lectures Slated Salem sends its students and alumnae all over has received a Lavan Award from the Academy the world to work and to serve, but this year the of American Poets, four Pushcart Prizes and world will come to Salem in the form of lectures, numerous prizes for her children’s literature, films, and other events. including two Jane Addams Children’s Book Awards. The Center for Women Writers will Iranian-born sponsor a reading of journalist Afshin Back Porch Party poetry and children’s Molavi will give a The year-end Continuing Studies Back Porch Party is always a favorite celebration, bringing together students, graduates of the program and faculty in a unique garden party atmosphere of summery hats and champagne toasts. Continuing Studies students and staff host this annual event as an addition to the College’s graduation festivities. literature by Naomi lecture on Sep- Shihab Nye on Septem- tember 27 in the ber 15. As a Palestin- Fine Arts Center. Molavi covered ian-American living in Texas, Nye’s writing has a unique flavor that the Middle East for the Reuters news agency reflects the growing cultural diversity in the south- from 1998-2000 and has also written for eastern United States. A Guggenheim Fellow, Nye the Washington Post, The Christian Science Monitor, The Nation and The New Republic in the United States and in the widely read Arab news outlets Arab News (Saudi Arabia), Gulf News (United Arab Emirates) and Asharq Al-Awsat, a pan-Arabic daily newspaper. He is the author of Persian Pilgrimages: Journeys Across Iran. Another lecture on March 1 will introduce Paul Rusesabagina, best known as the Kigali hotel manager who sheltered thousands of Tutsi men, women and children during the 1994 genocide in Rwanda. Rusesabagina’s advocacy for his family, neighbors, and even perfect strangers has earned him Amnesty International’s “Enduring Spirit” Award and the Immortal Chaplains Prize for Humanity. His story was recounted in the Oscar-nominated 2004 film “Hotel Rwanda,” which will be screened in conjunction with the lecture. In addition, lunchtime and afternoon lectures scheduled throughout the year will explore a variety of topics. Many of these lectures are organized by individual academic departments and student groups, ensuring that Salem’s yearly slate of public events reflects the wide variety of interests and specialties that abound within the Salem community. Visit www.salem.edu for the latest news on events throughout the year. 4 Salem College McElaney-Johnson Named Vice President Ann McElaney-Johnson has been named Vice President for Academic and Student Affairs, replacing outgoing dean Eileen Wilson-Oyelaran. As associate dean since 1998, McElaneyJohnson worked with faculty and students coordinating the College’s curriculum, and she is eager to take on a greater leadership role in bolstering Salem’s academics. “My guiding principle is to continue to strengthen the value we place on intellectual curiosity on our campus,” McElaney-Johnson says. “I am excited about working with the students, faculty and staff as we move forward.” McElaney-Johnson says she wants to capitalize on the strong foundation on which Salem has built its reputation as an outstanding educational institution. She is particularly focused on the continued success of some of the College’s innovative programs such as the Women in Mathematics and Science Program; the international business program at Oxford University; the Center for Women Writers; new degrees in the School of Music; and the expansion of graduate programs. “I was delighted to hear of Dean McElaney-Johnson’s selection,” says Wilson-Oyelaran. “She brings a passion for Salem’s mission and a commitment to our students that will stand this institution in good stead. I think she will do an outstanding job!” A native of Boston, Mass., McElaney-Johnson holds a B.A. in French from the College of the Holy Cross, an M.A. from Middlebury College and a Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She and her husband, David, live with their three daughters in Faculty News On Friday, April 22, in Shirley Recital Hall, the Salem College Chorale and Chamber Choir, under the direction of David D. Wells, presented “A Memorial Concert” for the victims of the December 2004 Asian tsunami and their families. The program included works by Debussy, Thompson, Copland, Fauré, and Elgar. The evening concluded with The Snow by Elgar, and was dedicated to Dulini DeSilva C’06, a Salem College student from Sri Lanka who lost three relatives and her father and sister’s home. The dedication included a slide show of original photographs of the devastated areas of Sri Lanka. Debra Reuter-Pivetta, flute instructor, will be the featured soloist on the October 15 Western Piedmont Symphony concert performing the Flute Concerto by Christopher Rouse. Go to www.wpsymphony.org/ masterworks.cfm for details. Barbara Lister-Sink, artist-in-residence and professor of piano, will be training various keyboard professionals from around the world this summer, including participants from Iceland, Alaska, New York and Minnesota, in her WINGSOUND International Intensive Technique Training Workshop. She will also attend the 2005 National Pedagogy Conference in Chicago in August to meet with the National Committee on Pianistic Wellness, to which she has just been appointed. Further summer activities will include teaching at the Brevard Music Center, as well as practicing, gardening and painting pastels. Barbara DeMaio Caprilli will sing at Salem October 21 with Richard Heard, tenor and professor at Wake Forest, and with Pamela Howland at the piano. Kernersville. Caprilli Wedding Assistant Professor of Voice Barbara DeMaio Caprilli married Angelo Caprilli July 3 at St. Anne’s Episcopal Church in Winston Salem. Magaz Ma ga zine ine 20 0 05 5 Craig Richardson, associate professor of economics, has been selected to be a Visiting Fellow at the American Institute for Economic Research, in Great Barrington, Mass., for the month of July. During that time, he will continue studying the economic collapse of Zimbabwe, as well as researching how a lack of property rights in Africa keeps most citizens poor. He is also collaborating with Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto in a new book which explores the links between property rights and human rights around the world. Heidi Godfrey, assistant professor of dance, presented her choreography in Washington, DC in June at the Jack Guidone Theatre. The concert was a collaboration with Amanda Kinzer, a faculty member at Old Dominion University. Tasha Rushing, associate professor and chair of the Department of Religion and Philosophy, was awarded a sabbatical leave for the fall. Rushing will be researching paranormal and mystical experiences to determine what they may reveal about the nature of reality. Associate Professor of Communication Carol Dykers is creating a documentary about the restoration of Single Sisters House. She would like to hear from alumnae who have lived in the house. If you lived in the house and will be visiting campus this year, please let Carol know so she can photograph you in the house while you’re on campus. Carol also says, “I will be doing some traveling this summer, so if anyone is amenable to a face-to-face interview of about 30 minutes to discuss memories of living in Single Sisters, I will travel to talk to you and audio tape the interview for historical purposes.” If anyone has a story to share or a photograph you would allow Carol to copy and use in the documentary, please send them to: Dr. Carol Reese Dykers Associate Professor of Communication Salem College P.O. Box 10548 Winston-Salem, NC 27108 336-721-2740 • dykers@salem.edu 5 Dean Wilson-Oyelaran: 10 Years by Rachel Barron D definitely more learned.” At the same time, she knows One of her proudest accom- oug Borwick, professor of arts man- when process has to yield to agement and music, vividly remem- decisiveness, and that’s an in- plishments at Salem was bringing bers serving on the search committee valuable quality in a leader. I more diversity to the campus, to find a new Dean of Salem College in 1995. think that’s why folks respect Wilson-Oyelaran said. Salem’s While reviewing the candidates’ references, he Eileen so much. Even if they student body currently has repre- couldn’t help but be amused at what someone don’t necessarily agree (with sentatives from 38 countries. had said about Eileen Wilson-Oyelaran. “He her decision), they realize described her as ‘one of the few adults I know,’” they’ve been dealt with fairly students and building a greater Borwick recalls with a chuckle. and the process was open to sense of community on the all concerned.” campus has been a major focus of Perhaps the reference was commenting on Encouraging dialogue among her tenure, she said. This included her gift for logical decision-making. Or the way This spring, Wilson- she peers at you over the rim of her glasses when Oyelaran said goodbye to bridging the gap between the you’ve gotten out of line. Or her willingness Salem and prepared for College’s traditional-age students to hear many points of view. Or her profound a new chapter in her life: caring for faculty and students. Wilson-Oyelaran her first college presidency, demonstrated all of those things and much more at Kalamazoo College in during her 10-year tenure as dean. Kalamazoo, Michigan. As spring semester wound much more solidified now. There seemed to be down, Wilson-Oyelaran reflected bittersweetly on some tension between them when I first came. her time at Salem. Now I think we are more of a community. I “I think that one of Eileen’s many strengths is her ability to understand and facilitate the process of decision-making,” said Dr. Wayne Eileen with her husband and father (seated). The things she’ll miss most are the people and the adults in the Continuing Studies program. “The relationships between the two groups are credit Dean (Alice) Patterson (of the Continuing Studies program) for much of that.” Burkette, who served with Wilson-Oyelaran as a – students, faculty and alumnae – as well as the Vice President of the Academy and College. “Of- beauty of the campus, she said. “You can’t spend ten in higher education, the process used to make 10 years at a place and not be deeply impacted. Dean Wilson-Oyelaran: Enrollment in the a decision is just as important as the decision I’ve made wonderful friends, learned a tremen- graduate education program doubled, and other itself. Eileen can manage a process with fairness, dous amount, and I have a deep, deep respect departments are now considering adding gradu- attention to detail, and a willingness to hear dif- for what is accomplished at a women’s college. ate study. Overall enrollment among traditional ferent points of view and learn from all of them. I don’t know that I’d say I’m wiser, but I am students increased 16 percent, and the number of 6 There were many other achievements under Salem College full-time Continuing Studies students also grew. The College completely renovated the science laboratories, developed an international business program at Oxford University, created the Women in Science program and established the Salem College Center for Women Writers and new degrees in the School of Music. Caring for Students and Faculty Rebecca Dunn, associate professor of biology and coordinator of the Women in Science program, said what she will miss most about Wilson-Oyelaran is her deep compassion for Salem students and faculty. Her devotion was especially evident last year when biology lab assistant Donna Holder passed away after being diagnosed with leukemia just two weeks earlier. The dean came to the hospital every day, not Wilson-Oyelaran speaking with international students. only showing concern for Holder and her family, of Growth and Change most prestigious leadership training programs in higher education. She spent her fellowship year working with the President and Provost of Wake Forest University. Other honors included the Kent Fellowship; the Ford Foundation National but also the faculty and students who were keeping will encourage the students to come together for Fellowship for graduate study; the Gender Equity a bedside vigil, Dunn said. “She sat with us, and dialogue. “The world that these students are going Architect Award by the American Association of her presence was such a welcome warmth. When out to is a very, very multicultural world, and Colleges of Teacher Education, and the Salvation she found out the hospital chaplain had only vis- learning with people whose views are very different Army’s Strong, Smart, Bold Award in recognition ited once, she arranged for (interim Salem campus from your own is crucial. I’m concerned that, as of her service to women and girls in Winston-Sa- minister) Laura Elliott to come. She arranged for a culture, we don’t listen well to each other. We lem and Forsyth County. the entire funeral to be at Salem. She went far often only want to talk to people who think the above and beyond a dean’s responsibilities. Not same way we do. What will happen to us as a cul- of her most invaluable experiences at Salem, she many deans would have done what she did.” ture if we don’t listen to each other and rationally said. “I assumed responsibility for Student Affairs think about what a person tells us?” five years ago, and then being named a Vice Wilson-Oyelaran has a lighter side to her as well, Dunn said. “The way she keeps us all in line, looking at us over those glasses, is just precious,” Dunn said. During her first semester of teaching at Salem, Expanding beyond academics has been one President of the Academy and College allowed Expanding Beyond Academics Wilson-Oyelaran came to Salem with many me to impact the campus in a more global way. I have had to step back and see the whole institu- scholarly achievements already under her belt. Born tion, not just the academic part of it.” During Dunn said, she was summoned to the Dean’s office. in Los Angeles, she earned her B.A. in sociology President Julianne Still Thrift’s sabbatical during She went with some trepidation, wondering what from Pomona College, and her M.A. and Ph.D. in part of the 2003-2004 academic year, Wilson- she might have done wrong. “She told me I needed education from the Claremont Graduate University Oyelaran and fellow Vice President Burkette a wardrobe change. She said, ‘I saw you over the in California. She served as associate professor and served as acting presidents. Wilson-Oyelaran has weekend wearing a shirt with another college’s chair of the department of education at Winston- also had a hand in fund-raising, student recruit- name on it!’ The next day, I bought a Salem t-shirt Salem State University and as a visiting scholar in ment and applying for grants – all things she and wore it over to her office for inspection!” education at North Carolina Wesleyan College. She must oversee and participate in at Kalamazoo. At Kalamazoo, Wilson-Oyelaran will once again also taught in the departments of education and She is well equipped to make the transition, be challenged to build community on a college psychology at the University of Ife (now known as President Thrift said. “Eileen is a woman of campus. Although the college has a superb reputa- Obafemi Awolowo University) in Nigeria for 14 extraordinary intellect, unwavering courage of her tion for sending students abroad – more than 80 years, serving as acting head of the department of convictions, passionate dedication to her students percent study overseas during their junior year psychology there for five years. While in Nigeria and her colleagues and undaunted optimism. In – the campus itself is not very diverse, she said. Re- she served as a consultant for UNICEF (Nigeria) in her ten years at Salem, she has created stability and integrating the seniors into campus life after they the area of early childhood development. built high expectations. She has allowed all of us to have been away is a particular challenge, she said. Just as she did at Salem, Wilson-Oyelaran Magaz ine 20 05 Her numerous awards included the American Council on Education Fellowship, one of the dream bigger and to trust our capacity to achieve our greatest goals. She is a shining star!” 7 etermination • D • Le ip • nce Honesty • Fri e n d s h 8 Spirit • C o n fi ct • d e spe n t I egrity • p i • h s r Re da e Salem College S a l e m C o l l e g e L a u n ch e s Branding Program Reach within. Shape the future. By creating a tag line or theme line, we help set Salem apart from its many competitors. T hese days it’s not uncommon to hear people talk about “branding” a business or an organization. No, it’s not as brutal as it sounds: It’s marketing jargon for what busi- Ready, Set, Brand In spring 2004, Salem Academy and College contracted with Cognitive Marketing (of New York) to kick off the branding nesses and organizations are doing to make themselves stand out process. After interviewing more than 177 administrators, current among their competitors. students, alumnae, trustees and parents, CM crafted the essential Salem needs your help to “build our brand” (another marketing phrase). In this magazine we have enclosed a special gift to help you get branding tools: “the position statement,” the “brand promise,” and the “brand theme line.” started: a window cling for your car. Essentially this is what branding is all about: Tell Why is this important? Because by doing some- your story consistently and thoroughly. Over time thing as simple as placing a sticker on your car, people will remember what is best about you, you can show you’re proud of Salem. At the and ultimately, why they should choose you same time, you are “increasing our visibility” over a similar competitor. CM introduced and helping Salem be “top of mind” among — and Salem faculty, staff and trustees prospective students! have approved — the theme line “Reach There are thousands of small, private within. Shape the future.” This is our liberal arts colleges in the United States, way of explaining, in just a few words, that a Salem education will compel a young and several hundred in the Southeast alone. woman to look deeply into herself. Her time Although we would love to believe that being a at Salem will be not only dedicated to educating women’s college makes us an attractive choice for the mind, but knowing herself and how she can make high school seniors, most young women still gravitate toward co-ed institutions. In fact, only 3 percent of graduating high school seniors pursue their educations at women’s colleges. Information about colleges is bombarding today’s talented young women. Salem will be only one of dozens, even hundreds, of schools appealing to each of these prospective students. By creating a “tag line” her own unique contribution to the world. Now it’s time to “move the brand forward.” We will be sharing our progress with you, and we may even ask you to help out from time to time. In the meantime, please put this “sticker” on your car. It may or “theme line” (more jargon that basically means “a brief description seem like a trivial thing to do, but it will go a long way in building of the experience students will have at Salem”), we help set Salem apart the College’s presence in your community. from its many competitors. Oh, and there’s one more catch: your theme line has to be different from every other college’s theme line! This is much more challenging than you might suspect. Magaz ine 20 05 9 ithin .S he Futu Reac hw re. hape t St. Petersburg...Japan... Russian CS student follows her former teacher to Salem’s School of Music It was while working for a ballet company in Japan that Bakhireva began seriously considering taking time off to get more extensive vocal training, which she’d never really had. As the ballet’s When you meet Nadia Bakhireva C’08 on only singer, Bakhireva performed in shows every the Salem College campus for the first time, she day, sometimes more than one, and also did con- seems soft-spoken, even shy. The Continuing certs in other cities. One time, Bakhireva was to Studies student, who just finished her first year give a concert by herself in a distant city. She trav- at Salem, smiles easily and speaks quiet Eng- eled to her destination by bus, and was told that lish with a rich and lilting Russian accent. Few someone would meet her at the station. “They would guess that Salem is only the latest stop of told me the bus had a few stops in the other city, an adventurous life that has taken her from St. and they told me the name of my stop.” When she Petersburg to Japan to Rome, and now to the heard the name of the stop, she got off the bus. practice rooms of the Salem Fine Arts Center. Bakhireva grew up in St. Petersburg, Russia, a world mecca for the performing arts, and somewhere. I didn’t know what to do. Fortu- attended a theatre academy where she says the nately at that time I spoke some Japanese, and I emphasis “was more on acting than music. It was asked some of the people around. They said, ‘You a little of musical theatre, but not much.” After earning the equivalent of a master’s degree, Bakhireva started working know, actually with this name there are three stops. Which do you need?’ I said, ‘Oh my God, I have no idea!’ I had no money. I only came to with professional musical theatres. sing. I had a performance that evening. I had to A natural curiosity about the world be there somehow.” emerged, inspiring her to seek positions all over the world. 10 “I waited, and nobody came, nobody met me. It was my first time in a strange city in Japan Bakhireva began picking her way through the city looking for the correct station. Each person Salem College she talked to got her a block or two farther along lessons. There was only one problem: Caprilli no place to live. “I like this place,” she says. “I heard until finally she found the people who were to longer lived in Rome. By this time, she had taken before that it has beautiful nature, the mountains meet her. “I was on time at least for the concert,” the teaching position at Salem College. Rather and the ocean and everything, but it’s really she says. than giving up on her tentative plans, or perhaps beautiful. People here are very nice, very kind. I finding another voice teacher (“impossible,” would say it’s the most help which I’ve received her lack of vocal training. “I felt like I needed Bakhireva says), she uprooted herself again, this in my life! People just passing by – ‘Oh, you a music education, the voice technique and time destined for Winston-Salem. don’t have a dollar? I have, I can give you’ – I’ve The more she worked, the more she regretted never had it before.” everything,” she says. The ballet company’s pro- The move to America was ducer told her about maestro Joseph Giardina, difficult. Like most of Salem’s a renowned pianist and teacher working out of international students, it took surprised to learn how Bakhi- Rome. Without question, Bakhireva (who says several months for Bakhireva reva came to Salem. Even in a she spoke “about five words” of Italian) traveled to obtain the proper visas. community of driven, adventur- to Rome to meet with the legendary teacher. Figuring out the equivalencies ous learners, she stands out for Other students are often Giardina noted Bakhireva’s self-taught vocal between the American and her nonchalant willingness to technique immediately, and referred her to an foreign educational systems follow her passions, wherever acquaintance with more experience teaching sing- is always a lengthy process. they might take her. Caprilli says ers: an American opera performer living in Rome Eventually Salem granted that’s just who Bakhireva is. “She named Barbara Caprilli. Caprilli, now head of Bakhireva a semester’s worth Salem’s voice department, remembers that “The of credits toward her chosen bachelor’s degree in is interesting to her, and so she’s going to do it. people she’d worked with had gotten her into music. She is a wonderful performer, but she knows that wants to explore something that the more she learns, the better performer she will some bad habits,” mainly Bakhireva’s inclination Caprilli says, “I was a bit concerned because to constrict her throat muscles. “When I started I didn’t know how good her English was. We’d be. She wants to learn as much as she can about working with her, she couldn’t comfortably sing always spoken Italian together.” She was pleas- everything she can.” Rome...Salem? an entire octave,” Caprilli says. “It wasn’t that the voice wasn’t right, it’s always been a good voice. She just didn’t know how to do it. But she got it almost immediately. Right away, she started to change, but it’s very hard to break old muscular habits.” Bakhireva worked with Caprilli for a few months, during which Caprilli says her student made “tremendous progress,” and then returned to Russia to sing for the Moscow Circus. “In Japan I sang mostly Russian folk songs, and some French, and in the circus I sang classical pieces – much harder.” Two years ago, she emailed Caprilli, asking if she could return to Rome to resume her voice Summ er 20 05 Bakhireva learned long ago not to be intimidated by unfamiliar people and places, or even of situations like her blind journey through that unknown Japaantly surprised to find nese city. “There that Bakhireva had are so many scary been working on her things in life,” own to improve her she says. “I was English, in addi- so frightened tion to continuing that I already to practice sing- wasn’t frightened ing. Interestingly, anymore. So many Bakhireva’s focus has emotions, so many im- shifted from musical pressions, people…It theatre to opera. pushes me to express When she myself and to find completes school, something new in Bakhireva says, “My myself.” dream is to live in Italy, just because I love that country very much.” However, she is open to staying in this area, should she find work. She says that her main concern is finding a job doing what she loves. “It’s a second question for me, the where,” she says. The veteran traveler of some of the world’s great cities says that Winston-Salem is a pleasant 11 ithin .S he Futu Reac hw re. hape t Salem Alumnae Defy Harvard President’s Comments About Women in Math and Science By Bernadette Harris C’05 E arly this year, President Lawrence Betsy Smith Menefree C’58, who graduated H. Summers of Harvard University with a bachelor’s degree in chemistry, was initially suggested that because of biological a stay-at-home mother. Then she found work in differences between men and woman, the 1980s as a chemist and data processor at Lan- fewer women are successful in caster Laboratories, Inc. in Pennsylvania, math and science. Ironically, Oy- where she still works. inda Oyelaran C’97, daughter of been honored with many awards, including the 1991 Alumnae Leadership Award from Salem. When Summers made his now infamous comments on January 14, Cramer was working with IBM and the Georgia Institute of Technology to educate middle-school girls from local In the past 20 years Atlanta schools about careers in engineering as Dean Eileen Wilson-Oyelaran, Menefree has seen her com- part of National Engineers’ Week. Noting the received her Ph.D. in synthetic pany grow from 50 employees numerous bright women in engineering who organic chemistry from Har- to its current 750, mostly were at Georgia Tech for the program, Cramer vard just a few months later. female. The company now has found Summers’ comments amusing. Regardless Summers’ comments a daycare center and offers a of whether women choose to pursue careers in were nothing she hadn’t heard family-friendly schedule: 32 these fields, they should not allow themselves to hours a week is considered be deterred from math or science just because of before, Oyelaran says. Though Oyinda Oyelaran she feels that his comments were “irresponsible,” full-time. According to its website, Lancaster she is happy that they have sparked debate and Laboratories has been on Working Mother’s list of Following in these women’s footsteps are changes in thinking. “Best Companies for Working Mothers” 11 times Salem’s class of 2005, with 30 majors in biology, Elizabeth Lynch Lashley C’61, who majored in mathematics, received her master’s degree in gender, she said. since 1989. chemistry, and mathematics. Ann Wilson Cramer C’66, Three of the seniors were education from Clemson University and is now another mathematics major, surprised, but not discouraged, by a Special Projects Development Consultant at has worked with IBM since she Summers’ remarks. Clemson, organizing an “out of the box” math graduated from Salem College. curriculum for elementary-aged students. Today she is director of IBM When she began teaching high school, women were paid less than their male counterparts, and it was hard work for women to prove Maha Kadafour C’05, a chemistry major, will attend the Corporate Community Relations University of California at San and Public Affairs. Francisco to seek a pharmacy She argues that single-sex degree and a Ph.D. in pharma- themselves, Lashley said. Although her male education prepared her to work colleagues accepted her, their expectations for in a mostly male environment. women were lower. They were “willing to accept “Single-sex education not only you as a teacher, but they did not expect you to gave me the confidence to pursue mathematics, have the content,” she said. [but also the] competence,” Cramer says. She credits Salem for her strong math back- cology. Ann Wilson Cramer A campus leader during her education at According to Kadafour, the pharmacy field is now composed of 67 percent women due to the flexible work schedule many pharmacies offer of 12-hour days for four days a week She noted, however, ground, which helped her establish herself in a Salem, she is now active in civic leadership in At- that most of her supervisors during college male-dominated field. In 1983 Lashley was the first lanta, currently chairing Communities in Schools internships have been men. “The number of South Carolina recipient of the Presidential Award — Georgia, as well as the Georgia Chamber’s graduate students that are women are definitely for Excellence in Science and Math Teaching. Education Committee, among others. She has on the rise.” 12 Salem College Edelman Inspires 2005 Graduates S alem’s Class of 2005 was fortunate to host legendary civil rights attorney Marian Wright Edelman as its com- mencement speaker. Edelman, the founder of the Washington, D.C.-based Children’s Defense Fund, was of special interest to many of the graduates, who considered her a role model in their prospective careers and lives. Niya Fonville C’05, a communication major from New Bern, N.C., was on the committee that chose the commencement speaker. When Edelman was named as a possibility, Fonville says she was determined to see the children’s advocate at Salem. “She’s a Kadafour said that coming to a women’s col- trailblazer,” says Fonville, who will concen- lege “strengthened my confidence… Just because trate on children’s rights at the University I’m a woman doesn’t mean I can’t be [in the sci- of Miami law school this fall. “It was so ences],” she explained. meaningful to be able to look up and see Kadafour’s roommate, Nida Rauf C’05, is a someone who is one of the forerunners, in biology major with a chemistry minor. She plans my opinion, to see what she’s done and know to attend medical school at some point and has that I can do it, too, that it’s not impossible.” looked at programs in Virginia, Philadelphia, New York and London. One reason she finds the sciences exciting Edelman, a native of South Carolina, went to Spelman College and Yale Law School, graduating at the height of the Civil compasses to navigate a world that is reinventing itself at an unpredictable pace both technologically and politically. My generation learned that to accomplish is because they are male-dominated, making her Rights movement. She went to work for the success in the field a challenge. Rauf said she likes NAACP in New York and in Jackson, Miss., anything, we had to get off the dime—your gen- to confront “archaic beliefs.” where she became the first African-American eration must learn to get off the paradigm, over woman admitted to that state’s bar. “Think and over, and to be flexible, quick, and smart seems impossible or that difficult. I’m already do- about what that represented at that time,” about it.” ing things [at Salem] I didn’t think I’d do.” says Fonville. “Not only was she the first She appreciates Salem’s influence. “Nothing One of the graduates, Aquita Burrus C’05, African-American woman to practice law in a found those words truly meaningful. “When certain state, but that state was Mississippi.” she said that, I thought to myself, ‘Yes, we really botany. She has held three internships in a neo- Edelman founded the Children’s Defense do.’ That’s kind of the foundation of my heart.” natal intensive care unit, a pathology lab, and a Fund in 1973 with the goal of representing Burrus, a Continuing Students student, earned biochemistry lab. She is now a teaching assistant the civil rights of children in the legal system. a business administration major and sociology in Salem’s biology department. The CDF focuses on helping children mired minor. She had volunteered with youth in her in poverty, disability, or discrimination, and native Brooklyn, N.Y., and since moving to also researches solutions to problems such as Winston-Salem in 1990, but it wasn’t until she poor access to health care and education. As began fieldwork for her sociology classes that the organization’s head, Edelman personally her passion for working with at-risk children lobbies Congress on behalf of children’s issues. emerged. She now plans to get a master’s degree experience. “You have to work just as hard and In her commencement speech, Edelman in sociology and work in the child welfare field. just as long, to prove you know what you’re do- spoke strongly against what she sees as an in- ing (as a woman).” version of traditional priorities and the effect Beth Haymore C’05, also a biology major with a chemistry minor, is concentrating on During her internships, Haymore has worked with more men than women (interns as well as supervisors), but the biochemistry lab at Wake Forest University was evenly divided last summer, she said. Haymore said she enjoyed that Though Summers may have outraged people it has on the weakest members of society. “I Hearing Edelman speak, she says, “gave me something to shoot for.” The class of 2005 included more than 200 tra- across the nation, Salem alumnae defy his com- believe that we have lost our sense of what is ditional and Continuing Studies undergraduate ments every day. As Oyelaran said, “I didn’t take important as a people,” Edelman said. “Too and graduate students. Edelman’s words inspired [his comments] personally, because I’ve done it!” many young people of all races and classes and challenged, a fitting send-off to graduates are growing up unable to handle life, in hard who understand that their education in the wider places, without hope, and without steady world will never truly end. Magaz ine 20 05 13 Development News BLIXT FIELD CELEBRATION: Blixt Field Salem celebrated the much-anticipated opening of Blixt Field in April with a large community celebration, which included free games and refreshments, raffled prizes and an entertaining Academy and College “students vs. faculty” softball game. The new softball, field hockey, and soccer fields also add nearly seven acres to Salem’s campus. The field is named for Chuck Blixt, the Salem Trustee whose family’s gift made the land purchase possible. Chuck and Leslie Blixt’s daughters Allison A’96 and Katie A’00 were both active in sports at Salem Academy. 14 Salem College : Gifts and Grants Richard J. Reynolds III and Marie M. Reynolds Foundation, Inc. The Richard J. Reynolds, III and Marie Mallouk Reynolds Foundation, Inc. of Winston-Salem awarded Salem Academy and College a grant of $235,000 in support of the restoration of Single Sisters House. The foundation awards grants to nonprofit organizations in North Carolina for broad charitable purposes. The Dickson Foundation The Dickson Foundation of Charlotte, N.C. announced a $200,000 grant in support of Salem Academy and College’s capital campaign. Salem requested grant funding for either the Dickson Leadership Fund at Salem or the Single Sisters House restoration project. The Dickson Foundation has awarded the grant as unrestricted in support of Salem’s capital Fitness Center Salem students, faculty and staff joined in the celebration at the unveiling of the new and improved Fitness Center this spring. At the grand opening on March 31, students marveled at the brand new treadmills, stationary bikes and weight training equipment and also signed up for tours, watched demonstrations of the equipment and even tried a few machines themselves. The new Fitness Center, a gift from an anonymous donor, is one part of an on-campus initiative to improve health and wellness at Salem. campaign. Winston-Salem Foundation The Winston-Salem Foundation provided a grant in support of the play “Sojourn to Freedom: An African-American History of Winston-Salem and Forsyth County.” The play was written and performed by Leshea Agnew C’08 and her mother, Sharon Agnew, who directed the production. Summ er 20 05 15 Development News Digging up the Past: Construction Crew Finds Sisters House Artifacts A work crew digging near the Single Sisters stretching down the hill all the way to the pres- served section of the outbuilding wall. Nearby House in May made a surprising discovery ent-day gymnasium. A “necessary” (outhouse) were dozens of chunks of 18th and 19th century – stones and pottery shards that serve as tangible stood behind the wash house; a kitchen garden pottery (often used as land-fill during that era), reminders of Salem’s rich history, even as the grew where Bitting now stands, and the cowshed broken roof tiles that date from the Single Sisters school moves into its third century. occupied the site of the Refectory. The unmar- House’s original 1785 construction and an unat- ried women living in the Single Sisters House tached brick wall that may be part of another asphalt drive that cuts through the center of operated a number of businesses from their outbuilding. campus in order to install a chiller loop that property, including the highly lucrative laundry will bring air conditioning to Bitting Dorm and service for students at the Salem girls’ school and been both a brick road and an asphalt road put the front campus buildings. Looking at a 1787 the community. By the 1840s, the school for girls on top of it,” she said. “It’s one of those incred- map of the area, project leaders realized that the had grown so large that a new wash building was ible, tangible pieces of history that you discover.” construction might unearth parts of 18th and constructed. The smaller wash house may have Taylor says she is grateful that “our community 19th century outbuildings. With that in mind, been torn down at that point, or used for storage. has the records that allow us to know what these A construction crew began bulldozing the the digging proceeded carefully until one day Though Taylor and others suspected that some when the crew struck “gold” – a four-foot long artifacts might turn up during the construction, stack of stones. no one was expecting to find such a well-pre- Based on the loca- “It has been kind of amazing because there has stones are.” Excavation for the chiller loop will continue through the summer, with careful attention paid to the discovery of other tion of the stones, Sisters possible artifacts. The wall House project coordinator and other artifacts will be Gwynne Stephens Taylor removed and preserved, C’72 believes that they are perhaps for display in the part of the foundation for planned museum space in the washing and iron- the restored Single Sisters ing house, which records House. indicate was used between For more news and 1787 and the 1840s. The information about the wash house, behind the Single Sisters House resto- 16,000-square foot Single ration project, visit www. Sisters House, was part of salem.edu/sisters. a complex of outbuildings 16 Salem College T 220th Anniversary of the Laying of the Cornerstone for Single Sisters House hanks to meticulous records kept by the early Moravians, Salem Academy and College recently re-enacted, 220 years later, the original laying of the cornerstone for the Single Sisters House on March 31, 1785. On March 31, 2005, Salem marked the 220th anniversary with a rededication ceremony that included hymns and a parade with the Moravian Band. It was a timely ceremony, given that Sisters is currently undergoing a major restoration. Daniel Crews of the Moravian Archives and Nola Reed Knouse of the Moravian Music Foundation helped Salem plan a fun and historically relevant event. The recorded history shows that on March 31, 1785, the entire congregation of Moravians in Salem gathered in the Gemeinhaus (where Main Hall at Salem College now stands) at 9 a.m. They sang hymns and placed two documents into a leaden box to be placed inside the cornerstone at the southwest corner of the excavation for the Single Sisters House. The first document was a beautifully scripted German certificate acknowledging the importance of this event “in the third year of the thirteen United States according to the Treaty of Paris” and giving the daily Biblical text for the day, along with the hope that the building would and the men. Then, the Elders Conference, Single Sisters, Older Girls and little girls went down into the excavation and formed a circle around the cornerstone. Marshall placed the box into the cornerstone, and a pastor referred to as “Brother Koehler” helped him to cover it with another stone. The members of the Elders Conference and the Single Sisters then participated in the ceremonial striking of the hammer. Standing on the cornerstone, Brother Koehler prayed for God’s blessing upon the erection of the house and on all who would live there. So on March 31, 2005, Salem Academy and College faculty, staff, students, alumnae and friends gathered in front of Main Hall to sing the same hymns and read the cornerstone certificate copy from the Moravian archives. They then marched down Church Street, accompanied by Donna Rothrock and other Moravian brass instrumentalists, to the Single Sisters House in the same order as our predecessors in 1785. Our “Elders Conference” was led by President Julianne Still Thrift, the Rev. (and head of Salem Academy) Wayne Burkette and Dean Eileen Wilson-Oyelaran. Inzer Byers, professor emerita of history, led the Single Sisters choir. shall carrying the lead box), the Single Sisters, After gathering around the southwest corner of Single Sisters House, they sang more hymns, and rededicated the building through a ceremony that blessed the restoration and new life of the Single Older Girls and little girls, the other women Sisters. House. be erected safely and in peace. The second paper contained a listing of all of the church officials and the Single Sisters, Older Girls and Great Girls (younger children) in Wachovia on March 31, 1785. After singing several more hymns, they marched to the site of the new building in the following order: the trombonists, the boys, the Elders Conference (with Frederick William Mar- Summ er 20 05 Congregation Returns Chest to Single Sisters House The Salem Congregation, which includes 12 Moravian churches in Winston-Salem, recently donated an antique blanket chest to Salem Academy and College for the Single Sisters House. The chest was discovered in the attic of the Vosterer’s House on Main Street by Mark Leinbach, the business manager of the Salem Congregation. Charles Hemrick, a member of the Salem Congregation Board of Trustees, and Leinbach noticed the words “Single Sisters” written on the bottom. Wayne Shugart, president of the Salem Congregation Board of Trustees, notified President Julianne Still Thrift that the Congregation wanted to return the chest. “Salem Academy and College is delighted to have this wonderful antique chest, which will be displayed with a plaque commemorating the gift. Records tell us the ‘Salem Congregation made a great gift of the Sisters House to Salem Academy and College in 1910.’ This blanket chest is yet another great gift from the Salem Congregation,” said Thrift. Limited Edition Salem Prints The Salem Academy and College Development Office is pleased to offer these limited edition signed prints to President’s Council members who increase their giving to Salem. Each piece is signed and numbered by the artist. The original textile work was created by Elaine O’Neill of Raleigh, and was given to Salem by Elizabeth Carter Gray C’71 and Caroline Pfohl Carter C’39. For more information, contact the Salem Development office at 336-721-2607. 17 Alumnae News The Quest for the Ring my yearbooks. I wondered if I might have found the ring of a deceased member of the class of ’69. Or maybe it had been lost or stolen. My jeweler friend said it would be a miracle if a stolen ring survived. Jewelry thieves usually pry out or crush the stones, then melt the ring for the gold. When it arrived, it fit me perfectly and I loved it. I knew I had to track down the owner. The initials inside said JWB. I got out the yearbooks. Four girls had the same first and last initial, two had no middle initial and another was JWB. I knew I had to track her down but I enjoyed her ring for the moment. After Christmas, I got out my directory and found her listing, she was now Jannet Wilson Bowers Kramer, with a Florida address. The alumnae office told me she had moved to Wilmington by Sandy Kelley Johnson C’70 calm and show no emotion. “I’ll take it,” I con- (isn’t it nice to have a place to go to find your old President, Salem College Alumnae Board firmed. I now wear the ring of Eleanor Caroline friends and schoolmates?). I sent her a letter so skjohnson01@carolina.rr.com Shaffner Guthrie C’24, who passed away in 1981. that if she had sold it on purpose, she could ignore My yearlong quest for a Salem ring was over. my letter. I gave her my e-mail address. I peered into the jewelry case of an antique jewelry dealer, scanning the filigreed rings, the amethyst and garnet rings, the old signet rings, the large oval onyx rings, so popular late in the 19th and early 20th centuries, when my eyes rested on a ring in the front corner of the case, a gold ring with a gold crest on onyx. This wasn’t the first Salem ring I had pur- A couple of days later: “Ding….You’ve got chased in the past year. I kept asking myself why mail!” “I can’t believe you found my ring….It it was important to me. I didn’t have to have was stolen in 1979 when I lived in Winston- it. But I had been elected President-Elect of the Salem along with my baby cup and some other Alumnae Association at Reunion Weekend in precious pieces…. I’d love to have it back and 2004, a job I would have for a year before I took pay you for it…. Thank you so much.” over the position of President from Gwynne Stephens Taylor C’72. And I wanted a Salem “What’s that?” I asked. ring on my finger. I didn’t have one. I had lost She opened the case and handed it to me. The my ring years ago, who knows how. That’s what sisters do for each other. I have been a Salem Sister since August 1966 when I arrived on campus. I will be one until I die. We do for each other. We help each other. We welcome crest looked familiar. “Can you read the small I would be traveling some as President, meet- letters on the bottom of the crest?” I inquired. ing with individuals, small alumnae groups, and She raised the ring to her eye and peered through And, we have a trust, too, to make sure Salem is alumnae clubs. So, in May 2004 I went to the the jeweler’s loop. “S-A-L”, she said. My eyes there for our daughters, our granddaughters, our Salem Bookstore, where I found I could purchase got huge and my heart sped up, “E-M”, she con- nieces, our neighbors, the next generation and the a 10-karat ring like the one I lost for $450. I tinued. “Salem College”, she announced, “1924, next. That’s what I’ll be working on the next two wasn’t sure I wanted it that bad. years as your president, your sister: keeping those A.B. Degree.” Gwynne Taylor had suggested eBay. I began to each other when we move. We have a bond. bonds between us strong, keeping Salem’s future A tear began seeping from the corner of my check the listings. Not just “Salem College” but sure. Invite me to your towns when alumnae eyes. “Can I try it on?” I asked. It fit as if I had “Salem 1772,” “Salem Class ring,” etc. Then, in gather. Let me bring my Power Point projector ordered it. “What’s your best Sunday price?” I December 2004, I had a “Eureka” moment! There and tell you about what we’ve found and what we bargained, after having seen the $90 price tag. “ it was on eBay. Class of ’69, going for a minimum plan for the Single Sisters’ House renovation and Seventy-five dollars,” she answered. “How about bid of $15. Size 3, a pinky ring. There was one about other improvements at Salem. Why don’t $65? I offered. “I tell you what, I will meet you other bidder. I waited until the last moment and you take the initiative to assemble alumnae in a halfway at $70,” she said, smiling agreeably. The got it for $25. I knew I could find out whose restaurant back room or in your home? Just a little tears may have been visible as I tried to remain ring it was. I was in the Class of ’70 and had all gathering of sisters. 18 Salem College Leadership Banquet Speech 2005 By Margaret Pike C’94 Good evening everyone. It’s an honor and a pleasure to be here with you tonight. Thank you President Thrift for the kind introduction. About 12 years ago at this very event, Dr. Thrift introduced me as the incoming SGA president, and I was asked to make some remarks and to thank the outgoing SGA officers. I was a very nervous junior who had not done a whole lot of public speaking. However, that did not stop Dr. Thrift from pulling a fast one on me, but I will admit I completely deserved it. Back in those days, I had a bit of a reputation for being able to do a pretty decent imitation of the president’s voice and I used that talent to make a few prank phone calls and play a few tricks of my own. That night, she turned the tables on me. I knew I was next on the program and I knew that she was going to introduce me, but instead she took the podium and said my name and then sighed and shook her head – completely exasperated. I did not know whether to go to the podium or run for the door. But after a very long dramatic, butterfly-inducing pause she introduced me as the person she had been impersonating the whole night. I must confess she got a lot of laughs and it’s just a theory but I think the loudest ones came from the people I had played pranks on the most. Just like that night 12 years ago, tonight we gather here to recognize the past year’s accomplishments of Salem’s leaders. And actually, we are celebrating more than just what you have done. I think it is more appropriate to say that we are here to salute you for the difference that you make. By coming together to pay tribute to those who have stepped up and stepped into leadership roles, we recognize the importance of taking responsibility, of taking the lead. Having served as a student leader here in the past, I think it’s safe to assume serving in a leadership role is important to those who choose to do so. It mattered to me and I feel sure it matters to you. You take on the job because you have an interest in an area like campus events or drama or athletics. You step up and take charge because you want to gain experience, you want to see change on your campus, maybe you want to add a line to your resumé – and unless things have changed a lot around here, I know you don’t do it for the pay. In all seriousness, the desire to change or improve Salem and to change or improve yourself are very valid reasons for becoming a student leader. However, I hope you realize that the significance of what you are doing is even greater than the sum of those things. If you are anything like me, when you first Summ er 20 05 arrived on this campus, your main concerns were ‘where do I go for my chemistry lab’ or ‘what is this Pit where I am supposed to park my car.’ In time, you may have decided to become a member of a campus organization and then a little later on you may have decided to take on a leadership role. If you haven’t already noticed this, then I will point out something that the seniors probably already know: Look Out, your time here can fly. Most of you have four years on this campus and on the day you move in, the clock starts ticking. I don’t intend for that to have an ominous tone to it, but it’s important to realize that each of you has about four years to make your mark from within this student body. This is your time; these are your years to play a hands-on role in shaping student life at this college. Tonight, we celebrate the fact that you have taken advantage of this opportunity and part of my message to you is simple — keep it up. What you do has enormous impact. It goes beyond handing down thoughtful honor council or interdorm decisions that set precedents for the future. It’s more than creating yearbooks or a campus newspaper. I know firsthand that the SGA officers must carefully and efficiently allocate funds to campus organizations. That is an important task, but what you officers are doing is bigger than tackling a budget. When the social chairs plan successful and entertaining mixers or formals, it’s vital to making this a dynamic campus, but you are doing more than just throwing a party. In working to accomplish these countless things as leaders or members of campus organizations, you do much more than self-govern and put on events. You set Salem apart and you put Salem on the map. By operating under an honor code that is respected and enforced by students, you create a sense of responsibility shared by every member of this community to make Salem a decent and honest environment in which to live and learn. By hosting social events or speakers on campus, you attract visitors from beyond this community and from other campuses near and far. When many of you hop on planes and jet off to do semesters abroad or at sea or internships around the globe, or when you finally walk away in your cap and gown — you know that you take Salem’s name with you. But because of what you do here — on this campus — you make Salem’s name synonymous with integrity, intellect, and success. It all starts here — with you. So as we pay tribute the efforts made by each of you tonight, I say thank you to every one of you who has volunteered to serve as a class officer, to write an article for The Salemite or take a photo for Sights and Insights, to participate in an academic organization, to captain a sports team, to run for SGA office, to serve on a judicial board, to be a member of any organization on this campus that makes a difference and they all do. I say thanks to you for serving in these roles because as an alum, I no longer can. Sure, I can volunteer my time and support Salem financially. And I do and I believe it is important to continue to do so. But my time as a student leader on this campus is up. Now, I have an eleven-year-old degree hanging on my wall and its value is measured in what Salem represents today. You are in control of that. So, I am so grateful for the opportunity to be here tonight to see all of you face to face and to say thank you because you are the ones who shape Salem now. I want to thank especially the seniors because I recall this point in my senior year and know that each of you can look back over your time here and be proud of what you and your alma mater have become during your tenure. The rest of my message is directed toward those who have a little more time here. To you, I issue a challenge. As you look around and see the faces of the soon-to-be alums, make a commitment to them and to yourselves that you will carry on and keep giving your time and energy to making Salem better. My challenge to you is simple: Leave Salem a better place than she was when you found her. If you do that, you set a new standard. Each of you; each class. You can set the bar higher and higher. And as you do, that degree that will soon hang on your wall will become more and more valuable as you improve Salem’s reputation in the world. If you see a need on this campus, find a way to fill it. If you find a system that does not work effectively, create a better way and implement it. Remember, it’s your campus and it’s your time. If you think your sports team should defeat your competitors, train harder and go out and win. If you believe you deserve a job or an internship or graduate school spot more than any other student from any other school, stand up and show the decision-makers why that is true. By doing your best and achieving all that you can during your time here, you will leave Salem a better place than she was when you found her. And we will all be better off for your efforts. Thank you and congratulations on another successful year. 19 Alumnae News Alumnae Association Welcomes Its New Board Officers Rosemary Hege C’79 Alumnae Relations Vice President The alumnae relations vice president is responsible for coordinating volunteers for Reunion Weekend, something at which Rosemary Hege will easily excel. As senior vice president in business development at Wachovia Bank, she is no stranger to building and working in a team environment. Rosemary has been with Wachovia since 1996. She graduated from Salem in 1979 with a B.A. in history and a second concentration in economics and management. In her free time, Rosemary enjoys volunteering, gardening, antiques shopping, the arts, traveling and going to ACC basketball games. Keesa Schreane C’97 Student Awards Chair Keesa knows what it takes to achieve goals, which makes her a perfect fit for her new role as student awards chair. Currently residing in New York City, Keesa graduated from Salem in 1997 with a B.A. in communication and minor in business administration. She earned a M.A. in journalism and French studies in 2000 from New York University. She joined Smith Barney Citigroup as assistant vice-president of marketing in the asset management division, where her duties range from marketing writing to project management and developing communications strategy. In addition, Keesa has freelanced for various publications. Most recently, she wrote the January 2005 cover story for Black Enter- 20 prise Magazine entitled “My First Home.” She is also an adjunct professor at The College of New Rochelle in Harlem. Mary Salem Thacker C’72 Recording Secretary As the new recording secretary for the Alumnae Board, Mary Salem Thacker will have no problem keeping track of information during meetings. The attention to detail her professional and volunteer work has demanded over the years will make this job a breeze. Mary graduated from Salem in 1972 with a degree in sociology. She is currently the owner of Etiquette Inc., a social and business etiquette consulting group in Greensboro. Mary has worked as director of marketing and communications for KPMG and owned and operated Charles Salem Ltd., a direct mail marketing sales corporation. Her dedication to her community has been constant. Mary has worked with the John Motley Morehead Blandwood Mansion Commission, the Community Foundation of Greater Greensboro and the United Arts Council, just to name a few. Mary and her husband Bill live in Greensboro and have two sons. Theresa Kanter C’98 Student Services Chair Theresa Kanter is known for her energy, ideas and getting things done. As student service chair, this combination will be a great benefit to the students. After graduating from Salem in 1998 with a B.A. in international relations and economics, Theresa received her masters in urban and regional planning in 2003. She has worked for the Institute for Community Health, New River Valley Planning District Commission, Virginia Center for Housing Research and the Japan Exchange and Teaching Program. Theresa is passionate about her community as well, volunteering for Habitat for Humanity, Atlanta Botanical Gardens and Room to Read. She currently resides in Atlanta where she works as a public health program Analyst for the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). Kathryn Wilson Mansfield C’67 Regional Representative Kathryn Wilson Mansfield’s efforts to rejuvenate the Winston-Salem Alumnae Club blend perfectly with her role as regional representative. She graduated from Salem in 1967 with a B.A. in psychology and primary education. Kathryn retired as an early childhood educator from the Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Public Schools after 23 years of service. She has been a constant volunteer for Salem, as class correspondent and member of class reunion giving and planning committee, alumnae weekend volunteer and phonathon caller. Kathryn has been active within her community and her church, volunteering with the St. Paul’s church summer enrichment program, Episcopal Church Women Bazaar Committees and Habitat for Humanity. Kathryn has a long legacy at Salem – her grandmother graduated in 1902, her mother in 1926 and her daughter in 1996. Kathryn and husband Jim live in WinstonSalem. They have two children, Anna Katharine (31) and Haynes (27). Salem College 2005 Alumnae Award Recipients During the 2005 Reunion Weekend, Salem College and the Alumnae Association honored the following alumnae with awards. Please join us in congratulating this year’s recipients. Deana Bass C ’95 Paige French C ’70 Susan Maddox C’65 Young Alumna Award The Salem Col- Distinguished Alumna Award The alumnae Alumna Service Award The Alumna Ser- lege Young Alumna awards committee was vice Award is present- Award recognizes an thrilled to honor Paige ed to an alumna who alumna who, within French C’70 with this has made outstand- 15 years of her year’s Distinguished ing contributions graduation from the Alumna Award, to Salem College in College, exemplifies which recognizes an the areas of leader- outstanding leader- alumna’s outstanding ship, fundraising, ship qualities in her achievements in her admissions recruit- professional and professional endeavors ment, publicity or volunteer services and who demonstrates contin- and/or her volunteer service. other efforts that promote Salem’s mission. This ued service to Salem. There is no doubt that this French graduated from Salem, cum laude, with a year’s recipient has made Salem a priority in a life B.A. in Music and went on to Florida State Univer- that leaves very little time for outside work. sity for graduate studies in music theory. She then year the Alumna Service Award honored Susan Maddox C’65. After earning a B.S. in chemistry at Salem, received her master of arts in education from Wake Maddox taught math and science in junior B.A. in communication and international affairs Forest University in 1977. French started her profes- high school, and later high school algebra. She and went on to earn an M.F.A. in film produc- sional career as a music instructor and department then went to work as the director of laboratory tion at Ohio University. She worked as a grant chair at Forsyth Country Day School. She then services for a chemical company that serves the writer for the Talbot County Interagency Council returned to Salem where she held several positions, oil and gas industry. She is a true volunteer in her and did media relations work for The Chez including director of financial aid and career services; community of Hobbs, N.M., where she serves Group, later working with the Warm Springs executive assistant to the president; dean of admis- on several boards including the J.F. Maddox Institute for Rehabilitation, Mission to the World sions and director of institutional advancement. Foundation and First United Methodist Church. and National Public Radio (NPR). In 1988, she left Salem to start FMS Associates, a In addition, she currently chairs Hobbs Beautiful contracting and consulting services company. (part of Keep America Beautiful) as well as Com- Deana Bass C’95 graduated from Salem with a Bass has worked on Capitol Hill since March 2002, first as press secretary for U.S. Represen- Salem was fortunate to lure her back for a second mittee for Hobbs. tative Howard P. Buck McKeon, then as the time. This time, French covered a few departments Maddox is also a tireless supporter of Salem. director of minority outreach for the House Re- she had missed the first time, serving as director of Since graduating, she has been a Reunion Giving publican Conference. She is currently the deputy academic services, director of administration and Chair for her class, served on the Board of Visi- director of coalitions for the Republican National planning and as chief planning officer. She re- tors and also chaired the Board of Visitors. She Committee. Her work on Capitol Hill obviously mained at Salem officially until July 2004, when she has also had a lasting impact on the College’s keeps her very busy, yet Bass still donates time retired and went back to her consulting business. science department, securing funding for Jan in her community and for organizations close to But she still comes back to campus about one day a Term travel for students and new equipment for her heart. She has volunteered for McLean Bible week to help ‘in whatever way Salem needs.’ the Women in Science program. Church as a hiking leader, and as a Reunion Giv- In addition to her outstanding contributions to In addition to her work in her community, ing Chair for her Salem College class. Bass also Salem, French is an active volunteer in the Winston- Maddox enjoys painting decorative art pieces. founded Media Arts in the Classroom, and she Salem community. She has been involved with the She and her husband The Honorable Don Mad- currently sits on the boards of The Voice Behind Arts Council, Piedmont Opera Theatre, St. Anne’s dox have two children, Ann and Ben. in Washington, D.C. and Salem Academy and Episcopal Church, Hospice, Samaritan Ministries College. and Habitat for Humanity – just to name a few! Summ er 20 05 21 Class Notes What’s in a Name? Please – if your name is listed incorrectly in the Class Notes, please contact the Alumnae Office. We appreciate knowing whenever you have a name change. Thank you! Salem College Alumnae Office PO Box 10548 Winston-Salem, NC 27108 336-721-2608 alumnae@salem.edu 1930 Salem College Alumnae Office P.O. Box 10548 Winston-Salem, NC 27108-0548 alumnae@salem.edu Although no members of the class could attend reunion we did hear from Mary Brewer Barkley, who has been performing as part of a multiyear study examining the health benefits of creativity. The group that Mary sings with, the Levine School of Music’s Senior Chorale, has performed twice at the Kennedy Center. Mary says, “My doctors say I’m an inspiration to us all.” Class of 1935 1937 Elizabeth Gray Sarle, Libby Jerome Holder, Cockey Preston Creech Salem College Alumnae Office P.O. Box 10548 Winston-Salem, NC 27108-0548 alumnae@salem.edu 1939 It is with sadness that we report the death of M. Garnett Saunders in January 2005, husband of Georgia Goodson Saunders. Our thoughts are with Georgia and her family for their loss. 1938 Salem College Alumnae Office P.O. Box 10548 Winston-Salem, NC 27108-0548 alumnae@salem.edu Marianna Redding Weiler lost her husband, retired U.S. Navy Capt. Herold “Hank” Weiler, Jr., on August 22, 2004. Salem College Alumnae Office P.O. Box 10548 Winston-Salem, NC 27108-0548 alumnae@salem.edu Forrest Mosby Vogler lost her grand- son Blanton Miley Vogler, who died unexpectedly at age 34. Josephine Hutchison Fitts and Sanford lost their son Sanford Burton Fitts III on September 25, 2005. And, Catherine Brandon Weidner lost husband Mervin on May 14, 2005. Our sympathy goes out to all these alumnae and their families. 1940 Salem College Alumnae Office P.O. Box 10548 Winston-Salem, NC 27108-0548 alumnae@salem.edu For Reunion Weekend, the class of 1940 was four strong. Katherine Ledbetter Brown brought sister Cora and daughter Priscilla for the weekend, and they had as much fun as Katherine. Katherine keeps busy with projects in her retirement community in Springfield, VA, including starting a wholesale/retail business. Katherine has four children and six grandsons! Ann Watson Coogler and Helen Savage Cornwall, roommates Class of 1940 Mattie May Reavis, Ann Watson Coogler, Helen Savage Cornwall, Katherine Ledbetter Brown 22 at Salem, enjoyed reminiscing about dorm days. Ann lives in an independent living retirement community in Hickory, NC and Helen still lives in her Winston-Salem home. Helen also enjoyed a visit with her goddaughter Alice Coogler, Ann’s daughter. Mattie May Reavis retired in 1979 after 39 years in hospital and school food service. For the past three years she has lived in an independent living community in Winston-Salem. There was news from classmates who could not attend the reunion. Mabel Pitzer Shaw, a retired social worker, lives in Mount Airy, NC. She writes that since she was fortunate enough to attend Salem she appreciates the care and attention given to campus and scholastic improvements. Jane Bennett Mendenhall lost her husband Edwin in January of this year. Our sympathy goes to Jane and her family. Sarah Burrell Jordan writes that despite a bout with congestive heart failure she is doing very well and still in her home in Athens, GA. She doesn’t travel now but son Jim took her to Florida for Christmas. Jim, a theologian, teaches in Russia, Poland, South America, and the U.S. Son Bill is associate dean at the University of Calgary, Canada. Sarah has four grandchildren. The Alumnae Office learned of the death of classmate Helen Lineback Chardwick on January 23, 2005. Our sympathy goes to the Chadwick family. 1942 Marguerite Bettinger Walker 23 Clipper Court Savanna, GA 31410-2104 margueritega@webtv.net Dot McLean McCormick gathered most of this news for me. She works part-time. Dot plans a cruise to Alaska with her niece in August. She checks on Martha Bowman McKinnon regularly. Minnie Louise Westmoreland Smith cruised in March to the Caribbean, is looking forward to a cross country to San Francisco and a cruise to Alaska. She keeps busy and active at Centenary Methodist Church. Mary O’Keefe Miller and Pete enjoy living Salem College at Covenant Towers in Myrtle Beach. They have friends there and plenty activities. Peggy Garth Bissette plans another summer in Blowing Rock. She plays duplicate bridge, paints, and swims. She’s planning a show of her paintings at Blowing Rock Country Club. She reported that Sara Hester Aiken died in April. Lib Weldon Sly and Jack enjoy life at Stonegates Retirement in Greenville, DE. They make several trips a year to Seattle, WA to visit their sons. Alene Harrison Taylor and Pete represented their retirement facility of Brandermills, Midlothian, VA, at a C.R.S. convention in Atlanta this May. Marion Norris Grabarek reports that Wense still works, but enjoys their place at the beach. Dorothy Dixon McAllister plans to go on an Artic cruise in June leaving from Iceland. Phyllis Gosselin Slawter stays busy in her yard, playing bridge, and garden club. Margaret Vardell Sandresky still composes. Alice Purcell is caretaker to her sister and to her brother in Davidson. She has fond memories of her music classes with Mayme Porter, Miss Cash and Dr. Vardell. Jim and I will spend the summer at the farm in Gap Mills, WV celebrating our 60th anniversary in June with a family gathering. 1943 Sara Henry Ward 2206 Barker Street Lumberton, NC 28358-3624 dewardjr@webtv.net I need for each of you to send me a card or letter and let me know what you are doing. The only news received was sad news. Classmate Marjorie Wilson Gardner died Easter morning, March 27, 2005 surrounded by loved ones. Our sympathy goes to her family. 1944 Doris Schaum Walston 1000 West Nash Street Wilson, NC 27893-2910 Erleen Lawson Wheeling writes that 2004 was a year of troubles and joy. Two grandchildren were married but daughter Lynn was diagnosed with lung cancer. Lynn had chemotherapy and radiation and after a year the tests show her cancer free, thanks to many prayers and skillful doctors. Mary Lewis Lawhon lost husband Watson in October 2004, Dot Langdon King lost husband Peter in April 2005, and I lost Stuart in September 2004. Classmate Jacquelyn West Kerr died November 15, 2004. We extend our sympathy to all these classmates and their families. Magaz ine 20 05 1945 Hazel Watts Flack 110 Homestead Hills Circle Winston-Salem, NC 27103-6446 tdfhwf@aol.com Our 60th reunion was great fun. Twelve of us were present: Emily Harris Amburgey-Pidgeon, Molly Boseman Bailey, Mildred Garrison Cash, Helen Phillips Cothran, Josephine McLauchlin Crenshaw, Nell Denning, Jane Strohm Fay, Hazel Watts Flack, Jane Frazier Gray, Luanne Davis Harris, Margaret Bullock Knox and Elizabeth Gudger Williamson. Some of us attended Founders’ Day Convocation on Friday and received our Golden Alumnae Pins from accompanying Salem Ambassadors. At Saturday’s lunch eight of us did a parody of “Those Were the Days” and had a class meeting before returning for the president’s dinner that night. We learned that Nancy Rawlings Baity’s oldest grandson married in March and her granddaughter finished her first year of medical school at Chapel Hill. The ever-vivacious Mildred Garrison Cash brought husband Paul, who looked well after heart surgery. Helen Phillips Cothran and Bill were pleased with his improvement after receiving the pacemaker. Their granddaughter will attend Elon this fall, three miles from their home in Burlington. Nell Denning is a bocce champion at her retirement home in Albemarle. Molly Boseman Bailey enjoys traveling, especially to Charlotte to visit her sons and their families. Jane Strohm Fay enjoys traveling and attending elderhostels. Margaret Bullock Knox, despite rheumotoid arthritis, has accepted a two-year term as regent for the Battle of Charlotte chapter of the DAR. She often travels to Florida to see daughter Lynn Knox Poole ’77 and granddaughter Caroline, almost ten. Josephine McLauchlin Crenshaw continues teaching piano students in Montgomery. She has ten grandchildren and enjoys an annual family gathering each summer at Pawleys Island, SC. Luanne Davis Harris cherishes living in Memphis near her children, Mark and Frances, and her five grandchildren. Emily Harris Pidgeon feels fortunate to have her two children and five grandchildren living near her and Charles in Savannah. She and Charles spend summers in the North Carolina mountains where they see Mildred and Paul Cash. Jane Frazier Gray is active in WinstonSalem and travels to Chicago and Columbia, SC to visit Gianna and Walter. She went to Peru in 2004. For 2005, her family will visit Rolandi Class of 1945 Front row: Nell Efird Denning, Emily Harris Amburgey-Pidgeon, Margaret Bullock Knox, Luanne Davis Harris, Josephine McLauchlin Crenshaw, Helen Phillips Cothran Second row: Jane Frazier Gray, Hazel Watts Flack, Elizabeth Gudger Williamson, Jane Strohm Fay, Molly Boseman Bailey, Mildred Garrison Cash relatives in Italy. She lives next door to Lucile Newman at the Moravian retirement center, Salemtowne. Lucile had knee replacement but still puts out the Salemtowne newsletter by moving around in a motorized wheelchair. Elizabeth Gudger Williamson “Gudge” boasts ten grandchildren and three great grandchildren. Betty Jean Jones Holmes and Jim live at Arbor Acres, the Methodist retirement center. BJ was unable to attend due to a family wedding in Charleston. She proudly boasts of a great grandchild. She hears from Betty Grantham Barnes who lives in a retirement center in Lumberton, NC. Nancy Bean Pitt often sees Molly Bailey in Rocky Mount and reported that she regretted being unable to attend our reunion, as did Nancy Moss Vick. Marguerite Mullin Valdo has five grandchildren aged 22 to 12. She and Alex live in Sun Lakes, AZ. Adele Chase Seligman and Mack moved to a retirement center in Rye, NY. They could not attend since she had knee replacement surgery in January. Marie Griffin Snoddy and her husband live in Summit, NJ enabling them to get to NYC often. Marilyn Strelow Silver happily reported that after being widowed, she reconnected with Dr. John Groel, a widower she knew in her twenties. They were married in March 2003. They divide their time between Madison, NJ and Naples, FL. DeWitt and I enjoy the pleasant lifestyle of our retirement community. I still do volunteer work and am grateful for good health. It is a blessing to keep in touch with Jane Gray, Lucile Newman, BJ Holmes, and Nancy Helsabeck Fowler locally and some of the rest of you by mail. Salem received the sad news that Carrie Day Davis had died. Our sympathy goes out to her family and also to Lucile Newman in the death of her sister Elsie Newman Stampfli ’42 and Elizabeth Gudger Williamson in the death of her brother Lamar. It would be good to be able to report news about those of you who weren’t here. You missed Salem in all her springtime glory and a lot of fun! 1946 “Wink” Wall Cottam 301 Hillcrest Drive High Point, NC 27262-2933 In July 2004, Salemites met in Wilson for lunch and fun. From the class of ’46 were Ann Douthit Curry, Doris Little Wilson, Senora Lindsey Carrow, Betsy Thomas Patterson, Mary Lou Stack Husk, Bet Hancock Hackney, Mary Lib Allen Wood, and Wink Wall Cottam. Ann Curry’s daughter, Winn Currie Ballenger ’74 and May Lib Allen Wood’s daughter joined us. Also attending were Nancy Moss Vick ’45; Jean Moss Fleming ’47; Jean Sullivan Proctor ’47; Bernice “Bunny” Bunn Pell ’47, Mary Hunter Hackney Brame ’47, Becky Cozart Smith ’44; Betsy Schaum Lamm ’49; Mary Patience McFalls Dibrell ’49; and Katherine Manning Skinner ’45. Mary Heefner Whitmire enjoys gardening at her home in Salem, VA. 23 and Jack look forward to the 2005 Pinehurst golf tournament. Peggy Witherington Hester and Elliott moved to a beautiful retirement home in 2004 in Black Mountain. Several of their children live nearby and visit often. Helen Thomas Gulledge lives in Charleston has 13 descendants. Says she feels young, no wrinkles, but has trouble walking. Also says her handwriting was ruined by taking history notes from Dr. Anscomb. Barbara Watkins Hesselman visits their children in Atlanta and Beaufort and travel North to their cottage in July and August to get out of Chapel Hill heat. Jenny Jenkins Todd and Tom are busy with grandchildren graduating, and performing in her son’s productions at ECU, and visiting family in California. Gloria Holmes Long wrote all is well with her in Pinehurst. Senora Lindsey Carrow and Doris Little Wilson get together every few weeks in Greenville, NC for lunch and would love to have anyone join them. Our sympathy goes to the families of Vawter Steele Paull who died in Savannah, GA in December 2004, and, to Hazel Newman Nading whose sister, Margaret Newman Stroup ’48, also died in December 2004. Bob and I are well and enjoy our four granddaughters. The oldest one graduated from Chapel Hill this May. Betsy Thomas Patterson 1947 Carol Gregory Hodnett 2106 Sugar Top Drive Banner Elk, NC 28604 Not much news to report from these almost 80 year-old gals but I surely appreciate all the news I do receive. We lost one of our favorite classmates in November 2004 when Betsy John Forrest Dunwoody passed away after a long courageous battle with cancer. Surviving are her husband Brooke and three sons. Connie Scoggin Nichols and Bill are the proud new grandparents of twin girls born to their son Tony and wife Kimberly. Sara Coe Hunsucker Marshall and Jim’s youngest son Frank was married recently. He and his wife Lauren live in Asheville. Ticka Senter Morrow and John are well and attended their oldest grandson’s graduation for UNC in May. Mae Noble McPhail and Sally Boswell Coffer took a cruise on the QEII together and reported it was fun to be roommates again. Henrietta Walton McKenzie lost her eyesight due to macular degeneration. She and Bill are doing well in spite of everything and she is looking forward to her family’s yearly vacation at the beach. Lucy Scott O’Brien sounds just 24 like she did at Salem. She has health problems but she and Ed are doing well. Hallie McClain Parker and Jim are planning to sell their home in the North Carolina mountains and move to a retirement home in Chapel Hill. Jane Mulhollem Longino always sends a nice newsy letter at Christmas. She enjoys lots of trips with her family and visits to their summer home in Maggie Valley. Margaret West Paul will be spending several weeks at her mountain home at Sky Valley. Jim and I are well and are going to the mountains for the summer. I wish I had more news but at our age I guess this is pretty good. 1948 Barbara Ward Hall 207 John Wesley Road Greenville, NC 27858-1668 colmrsh@geeksnet.com I am sorry to report the deaths of four class members: Jane Morris Saunier on August 6, 2004; Beverly Hancock Freeman on October 27, 2004; Ruby Moye in 2004; and Betty Jean Holleman Kelsey on May 9, 2005. Now, I encourage you ladies to send your news to me or to Salem. Mary Wells Andrews Thomas and Harold looked great when Ellis and I saw them in April at an ECU Alumni Association dinner where Ellis received an award for Distinguished Service for ECU, the first to an honorary alumnus. Our oldest grandson graduated from UMD in May and we were there. Lomie Lou Cooke Bazemore and Carl are renting a small cottage in France for 3 weeks, her fifth trip to Normandy. She says Nancy Lutz Wood and Carver have moved to Sylvania, OH to be near daughter, but still have a house at North Myrtle Beach. “Sal,” Page Daniel Hill and Fred, Margaret Fisher McIver, Barbara Fisher A’48, C’53, and Judy Sampson got together this spring. Genevra “Genny” Beaver Kelly is fine after knee surgery in May and is remodeling her home. She reminded me that Kathryn Wagoner Terry has been ill but is doing better. Her husband died in January 2004. Nancy Carlton Burchard and Preston are moving to a Presbyterian Home in Harrisonburg, VA. Barbara Folger Chatham’s newest great grandchild brings her total 14 “grands” and two “greats”. Her shop is in Roaring Gap, but she lives in Ronda, NC. Elaine McNeely Leight had a grand reunion with Margaret Fisher McIver and Peggy Gray Sharp at Peggy’s daughter’s home at Lake Norman, near Mooresville. I saw Frances Miller Sowers Vogler and Herbert at Home Moravian Church on Easter. 1949 1951 Nell Penn Watt Spencer 3231 Turnberry Court Winston-Salem, NC 27104 Wylma Pooser Davis 7 Estill Street Lexington, VA 24450 Jeanne Dugan Greear and Cal, Nancy Wray White and Gib, along with Candy United Hare and Andy had a Mary Faith Carson visited here over- great get together in Williamsburg, VA in April. The gals had lunch with Janie Fowlkes Lake, who lives there. Betty Wolfe Boyd, Augusta Garth McDonald and I visited Martha Brannock Mickey and husband Mick in Houston, TX in April. Patsy Moser Sumner’s daughter Stacy married John Jesso of Charlotte, NC in October 2004. Saso Morris Jones leads the class with three great grandchildren. Boots Lambeth Hinkle was the first director of Greensboro Beautification in 1976 and continues to lend her expertise. We extend sympathy to Garnet Clairborne Martin whose husband Bob died in September 2004, to Bitsy Green Elrod on the death of her husband Stanley and Molly Darr Messner lost her brother, Ed Darr Jr. Do your exercise, stay well, and SEND ME NEWS!! 1950 Ruth Lenkoski Adams Apt. 245, 300 Valencia Drive SE Albuquerque, NM 87108-3090 Ann Linville Burns and husband Kent live in Raleigh, NC. They have two children and two grandchildren. Susan Johnson Hardage and Frank are in Charlotte, NC where Susan enjoys cooking, traveling, and walking. They have three children and six grandchildren. Connie Neamand Kick and husband Edward live in West Brandywine, PA. Mary Jane Hurt Littlejohn is a piano teacher in Birmingham. She and husband James are selling their home and moving to Aldersgate Retirement Community in Charlotte. Bonnie Stonestreet Sturkey’s husband Lawrence has been in an Alzheimer’s facility for three years in Charlotte and Bonnie is being treated for spinal stenosis. Son Jeff and his wife live in Durham and daughter Beth and family live in Charlotte. Bonnie says it nice having them all close by. Mary Hill Taylor attended Salem 1946-48 then graduated from UNC in 1950 with an AB in English. She and husband John lived in Jacksonville, FL for 23 years and after John retired from SCL Railroad they moved back to Wilmington, NC where they reside now. They have two children and six grandchildren. Sara Hamrick Thompson and husband David live in Columbia, SC. They have two children and five grandchildren, including twins. night on her way to daughter Jamie’s house in Maryland. Jamie is studying toward a degree in early childhood development. Squeaky glows with pride! Clinky Clinkscales Seabrook and Cordes stay busy with community and church. Their oldest grand has her first job at Kiawah. Clinky, Cacky Pearson Moser and Rosalyn Fogel Silverstein are planning a beach trip to Pawleys this summer. Cammy Lovelace Wheless and Jim moved to a house in South Carolina close to daughter Carol. Lee Rosenbloom Fritz and Bill report two delightful grandchildren at Boston University. They skipped their usual London trip this year but are considering sunny Italy instead. Clara Belle LeGrand Barnard and Bob are headed to Russia as well as the mountains and beach with children this summer. They continue their gardening work. Betty Gwen Beck McPherson and Don admit slowing down a bit. Daughter Karen provided the celebration for Betty Gwen’s 75th birthday. My three children, Keith, Anne, and Pete helped celebrate my 75th. WOW! How did we all suddenly get so old? Grandson Stuart is a senior at Wake Forest. Saddest news is of Nancy Lea Florence Rice’s death in June 2003. Her friends rallied around to help with her daughter’s wedding in 2004. Our belated sympathy to daughter Betsy. 1952 Carol Stortz Howells 1446 Riverwood Lane Phoenixville, PA 19460-2620 prpaul1@msn.com Can you believe that most of us in the class of 1952 are, or will soon be three quarters of a century old this year? I’m saddened to report that Bobbie Lee Wilson’s husband Jim died last July. Bobbie lives at Salemtowne Retirement Community in Winston-Salem. Our belated sympathies go to Bobbie and her family. Also, Kitty Burris Felts lost husband John last October. We send our condolences to Kitty and her family. We also send our sympathies to the family of Lahoma Poindexter Gray, a member of our freshman class. She died in February 2005. Our class comedian, Lola Dawson Gillebaard was a “warm-up” for Bill Cosby at a University of California fund-raiser in October 2004. She also serves on the advisory board of their School of Medicine. Martha Thies Winn and husband Salem College John have moved to a condominium in Atlanta. I had a delightful phone visit with Anne Blackwell McEntee recently. She moved to a retirement community in Richmond, VA close to the church where she is very active. I had a letter from Randy Wurr Pleuger who was a German exchange student in the fall of 1951. She has 2 daughters and 4 grandchildren. After many delays our villa in the Frederick Retirement Community will be under construction in the fall, and we hope to move in by year’s end. 1953 Betty Lou Kipe Pfohl 15305 Clover Hill Road Waterford, VA 20197-1413 The Alumnae Office writes to let the class know that Betty Lou was unable to do class notes this year because of her husband’s health. Sadly we have to report that Bruce Pfohl was buried May 13, 2005. Our sympathy goes to Betty and her family for their loss. Sally Anne Knight Seabury lives in Iowa City, IA and would love to hear from classmates. Fae Deaton is working on a B.S. in grapic design and a B.A. in art therapy. She is also on the board of a local not-for-profit program, Artszone. Fae, diagnosed in December 2004 with diabetes type B, is working to control it by diet. 1954 Betsy Forest Jones 9 Maxwell Street Bath, ME 04530 betsydj@juno.com Virginia “Boots” Hudson Beaman and husband John, son Stuart, his wife Christine and daughter-in-law Jane (daughter of Priscilla Hendrich Quinn) and granddaughter Katie took a family vacation to watch son Mike compete in Hawaiian Ironman Triahalon in fall 2004. Mable Taylor Hesmer downsized by swapping her home with a younger couple. Phyllis Forrest Sinclair moved in December 2004 to Cary, NC. Selma Jean Calhoun Turlington, who sent regrets for missing our last reunion, continues her valuable contribution to Clinton, NC with her work on the City Council. Carol Glaser Dewese and Sam celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary October 2004. Sarah Sue Tisdale Ferrell, daughter Sarah, son Vernon III and grandsons (13 and 16) stays fit with her exercise regime beginning at 5 a.m. Marcia Zachary Rendleman is doing well after treatment for small cell lung cancer, which she discovered after our last reunion. Doris McMillan Eller and Jimmy moved into a new home in November Magaz ine 20 05 2004 and continue to enjoy their time in Roaring Gap and their golf trips to St. John’s and Florida and a vacation in Mexico. Jean Edwards Riddick and Royce and Virginia “Boots” Hudson Beaman and John are off in November for Mississippi voyage. Jean and Royce will spend Thanksgiving in West Memphis, AK where Royce was born. Joe and I celebrated our 40th wedding anniversary with a June trip Class of 1955 to London and Greece and a July family weekFront row: Irma Gatewood Goldberg, Bonnie Hall Stuart, Ann Mixon Reeves, Florend in Maine with all ence Swindell Mitchell, Lynn Wilson Robinson, Sue Jones Davis, Sally Reiland five children and eight Second row: Emily Hall Bigger, Barbara White Peacock, Mary Todd Smith Warren, Ann of ten grandchildren. Lang Blackmon, Kay Cunningham Morshead, Emily Gunn Craddock, Audrey Lindley Granddaughter Sarah Norwood, Nancy Florance Benjamin Third row: Gertrude Johnson Revelle, Jane is working in the Peace Little Gibson, Marguerite Blanton York, Sara Outland DeLoache, Pat Marsh Sasser, Corps in Zambia and Lousie Fike, Many Anne Raines Goslen, Pat Noah Jones Fourth row: Rooney Barnes grandson Jesse is studying in Buenos Aires. As Robison, Barbara Kuss Ward Stabile, Francine Pitts Bachman, Allison Long Hughs, always I welcome any Jane Brown Pritchard, Ernstine Kapp Studer, Norma Ansell Hahn, Betsy Liles Gant news so I can keep this column updated. Be sure to send any new traveling. Coming to reunion for the Bob who was recovering from knee e-mail address changes to me. first time in years were Louise Fike and surgery. He, too, has been a frequent Jane Brown Pritchard. Lou drove up reunion attendee all these years. She is from Orlando, spent the night with definitely on the way to breaking her Jane and they came on to Salem. They Mom’s 105 years. Jane had knee Lynn Wilson Robinson both looked like they were having fun. replacement in March and was back 406 Carmen Avenue Ann Mixon Reeves and Ned returned on the tennis courts one month later. Jacksonville, NC 28540-7426 to Salem after being absent from our Sally Bowen Reiland has truly finally How wonderful to be together at gatherings for 25 years. They claim retired after 25 years as a Certified Salem for our 50th class reunion and five children and 13 grandkids. They Addiction Counselor, and prior to that to feel again the closeness we felt for are selling their home in Charleston probably 25 years news media, one another. I know that all who came and have bought land in a retirement newspapers, radio, TV and public cherished the time we had together. center in Maine. They plan to build a relations/information. She is now And my goodness! Didn’t we look settle down spot to which they can pampering age health problems and grand? We carried our years with return after traveling. Their last travel trying to enjoy the time left; we agreed grace, dignity, beauty and a keen eye destination was Trieste; Ned comwe were doing the same. Sara Outland for our futures. I spoke with Freda mented they had been most every DeLoach and Tommy gathered with us Siler McCombs trying to get her to other place. The week following and livened things up considerably. reunion, I even offered to send reunion, Phil and I traveled to Bryn They are such a fun couple and share somebody to pick her up, but she Mawr to visit our daughter Amanda the grandchildren stories with us. They couldn’t make it. She is widowed, and ’79 and family. Our grandson Wilson are proud grandparents of three leads a pretty quiet life. Her three and Ann and Ned’s grandson Timothy beautiful girls and one little boy. children are not too far away. A warm had arranged for Ann, Ned, Phil and I Tommy still sells socks. Emily Gunn note from Jessie Krepps Farrington to have lunch together with Reeves Craddock was “pretty in pink” and says, “I will be thinking of my year at daughter, Disty. Disty and Amanda looked at least 29. Her grandchildren, Salem with fond memories. I attribute became acquainted when one saw the as are ours, are growing up. Emily and following an academic career to other’s Salem car sticker. The John’s daughter Ann Carter graduated attention and nurturing I received at grandsons are good friends….what a from the same year as Amanda. Helen Salem, so it certainly had a profound nice world. Ditsy’s husband is head Carole Watkins and John Thompson effect on my life.” Mary Scott master at Wilson’s school. Bonnie Hall came up for Saturday, and it was Livingston Stegall sent a note saying Stuart and Hal were with us. Bonnie wonderful seeing them. They have two she was not doing well and would be worked very hard as chair of our class grandsons to go with the two fine sons unable to attend reunion. We do hope fund raising. We were so proud when they have. Marguerite Blanton York she is doing better by now. Audrey announcement came to all at luncheon and Mike arrived on Friday like most Lindley Norwood Hart has been retired that our class had donated $50,000 to of our eager classmates. Their two boys for some years so she and hubby stay Salem. Thanks everyone for your gifts. have six children and live close to busy in the community, at the five art Jane Little Gibson made arrangements lucky parents. Kudos to Betsy Liles galleries in St. Petersburg, teaching and for a daughter to check in on husband Gant and her awesome husband 1955 25 Eddie. She was chair of our weekend and did a thorough and fine job. Friday night we held our class dinner at the Rondthaler-Gramley House, with appropriate wines, foods, flowers, and willing guests. We visited in groups all over the house, and enjoyed more of everything. It could not have been a better time. Betsy and Eddie have four children, and ten grandchildren, and a mountain house. After dinner, Betty Carol Johnston Germany, Jane Little Gibson, Nancy Florence Benjamin, Irma Gatewood Goldberg led everyone in a sing-along that was pretty nostalgic, and we knew lots of the words! Irma’s daughter Deborah and husband have returned to North Carolina from Honolulu. She is happy to have them near. Irma is planning a voice recital at Salem, is instructing in piano and is a church organist. Betty Carol and husband Reg are from Tennessee, where she moved after two years at Salem, graduated with a BuMS from Rhodes College, married Reg, had three sons (a doctor, a lawyer, and a computer company owner), taught piano for 45 years – whew! Sue Jones Davis and Roy arrived on Friday, and Sue had to leave on Saturday after lunch to join Roy at Davidson for his reunion. Roy graciously and generously honored Sue and Salem by contributing $500,000 to Salem. Roy’s and Sue’s sons are now running the coffee company, so they will be sailing on the Queen Mary II to London, visiting Paris and Salzburg before flying home. It was good to see Ann Lang Blackmon from Montgomery, AL. Her daughter Lang and her two children are in Montgomery; son Lee is with Ann and Bob and has MS, but gets about and out frequently. Francine Pitts Bachman had to leave husband Jack at home fighting a flu virus. Jack had a rare blood connected transplant in January 2004. He has done quite well, but this virus has been difficult. Kay Cunningham Morshead flew in from California. She has sold the rest of the ranch and really settled in to playing with tarantulas, growing grapes for superb wines, being near her two grandchildren, and chairing the Tarantula Festival in Gilroy, CA. We had not seen Pat Noah Jones in years, but she came Saturday. Pat is retired from medical technology. She and Harry have three children and five grands. Gertrude Johnson Revelle and Guy were present. Guy is a two-time cancer survivor, Gertrude is like many in our class – we are survivors. They are planning a jaunt to Australia and New Zealand. Mary Anne Raines Goslen was back and forth from Greensboro, bringing Nancy Florence Benjamin. Mary Anne gave a good 26 testimonial to life, living and the way God gives what we need. She lost Frank last year, had fallopian tube cancer when Frank was sickest, lost a six-year-old grandson suddenly, has recuperated from the chemo, and is building a new house, and there is a new baby grandson. Life goes on! Jean Jennings has just retired from her various positions, alumni secretary of Bowman Gray School of Medicine, 23 years in public relations at Eastern Airlines, and 10 years in real estate in Winter Park, FL. After some years of not being around for reunion, Pat Marsh Sasser and Dr. Patrick Sasser came to see us again. They retired from medicine five years ago, are playing duplicate bridge and traveling every chance they get. They are based in Goldsboro and have one daughter and 2 sons. Edith Howell Miller sent news of two grandsons, and a son and daughter. Edie lives in Ohio and says she has never forgotten her classmates at Salem and she loved us all. She has had a year of ups and downs, but will think of us during our reunion. Nancy Florence VanKirk came from Sherpherdstown, WV. Bob is in a nursing home, but close enough that she sees him most every day. One of her sons is plagued with back pain caused by a wreck 6 years ago. Norma Ansell Hahn and Bill came from Pittsburgh again. They have four children and 6 grandchildren. One son is recovering from a very rare cancer. They too enjoy traveling. Roonie Barnes Robison came up for the day and she was a delight to be around, as usual and had a good visit with her roommate Bobbie Kuss Stabile. Bobbie has been to most reunions and is still in the hot knitting market. Barbara White Peacock and Ward were here again. I don’t believe she has missed a single reunion. They continue to travel and Barbara is still very active in her church’s adult activities, arranges worship for Alzheimer’s patients, and teaches three courses at her church. She and Ward are taking their 15member family west to celebrate 50 years of marriage; in October they will cruise the Hawaiian Isles for two weeks. Mary Todd “Toddy” Warren and Lindsay enjoy traveling, visiting old friends and their large combined families. Between them, six children and thirteen grandchildren. Another prominent reunion “couple” is Bill and Emily Hall Bigger. Bill toughed out 5 years waiting for Emily to get out of Salem, so they could get married. They will celebrate 50 years of marriage in August. They have two fine sons and two grandchildren. And speaking of couples, I must mention Phil and me. Phil believes he is a Salem graduate, showing up for all our reunions, reading the Alumnae News before he gives it to me, etc. I don’t know how many times he thumbed to Salem on Friday nights along with Bill Bigger, and then they thumbed back to Raleigh on Sunday nights, so they could thumb back to Salem on Wednesday. And did you know they stayed in the Dean of Students apartment on many weekends at her invitation? And do you remember half of our class boarding the plane when Phil and I took off on our honeymoon? Can’t you see that happening now? We are still celebrating our 50th wedding anniversary (I plan to make it a lifelong affair). We have two deaths to report. Virginia Hamrick Millican died in Fort Lauderdale on April 11, 2005. I had spoken with her twice during the past year and hoped that she could make it to reunion. She had told me traveling was difficult for her but she would like to come. Additionally, Emily Heard Moore’s husband Jimmy passed in early April 2005. Jimmy was also a regular at reunions. Although we live very close to Kinston, I did not know of his passing until several weeks later. Bonnie and Hal Stuart attended the funeral. Our sympathy to Emily, Caroline and Suzanne. 1956 Sara Huff Tuck 5029 Crossbow Circle Roanoke, VA 24014 tucksh@aol.com We regret to announce the passing of Sara Pate Chambers’ husband Robert in August, 2004. Bob was a great supporter of Salem and all of Sara’s Salem activities. Two months after his death, Sara was blessed with their fifth grandchild. Daughter Dena graduated from Salem in 1992, and granddaughter Sara Stanley graduated this year. Ann Campbell Dortch is the pastoral care assistant at Holy Trinity Episcopal Church. Many Salem women are members at Holy Trinity, including Ann London Vaughn ’72, who she works with at church. She is also the “surrogate mother” to Marty Pratt Keeton ’79, and her sister Libby Pratt. Other Salem friends include: Lib Prince Wentz ’47 and her daughter Martha Wentz Peete ’75. Ann says, “There is an immediate connection (with Salem women) and a sisterhood which is quite remarkable and for which I am most grateful.” Ann is planning trips to New York, Denmark and Norway. Nellie Anne Barrow Everman enjoys her three grandchildren in Greer, SC. She sees Ann Williams Walker and Roy when they visit their son’s family. Temple Daniels Pearson and husband Joe also visit their son and family there. Both Temple and Joe are great and enjoy traveling. Nellie Anne had lunch with Phyllis Sherwell Froneberger who “is as beautiful as always” after so many years. Nellie would love to see you. Marianne Boyd Gore enjoyed a trip to California to visit daughter Rosemary, an actress. Marianne visited L.A., Catalina Island, Coronado in San Diego and the Joshua Tree desert. Marianne reminds us to reserve April 21-23, 2006 for our 50th reunion. Visitors are always welcome at her new home in Banner Elk, NC. Dayl Dawson Hester still does floor aerobics, water exercise twice a week, and yoga once a week. She enjoys playing the dollar slots at the casino. Sounds like Dayl has enough spunk for all of us! Emma McCotten Latham enjoys her new living room-bedroom addition. Husband Joe has an office at home and still brokers health insurance. Their son Steve and his family have moved back to Charlotte, near Waxhaw. Emma’s arthritis keeps them from traveling much, but they are planning to attend Joe’s 50th reunion at Carolina in May. Our condolences to Patsy Robertson Miller in the passing of her husband John in January 2005. Bible study and the book “A Purpose Driven Life” helped Patsy focus after the death of her husband, as well as the Red Hat Club; “my kind of organization,” Patsy adds. Marian Myers Murphy and husband Jim love to travel. They traveled to the Canadian Rockies, San Francisco and the wine country. This June, they planned trips to Angel Fire and Santa Fe, New Mexico. Betty Cash Smith continues to teach piano and provide piano and organ music in church. She and husband Lloyd are active in their church choir and host Bible Studies in their home. They have three married children and six grandchildren, two families living in North Carolina and one in Indianapolis. Agnes Rennie Smith recently visited her son and daughter-in-law in Hawaii (Navy) and her doctor daughter (also Navy) in San Diego. The visit included a 5-day whale encounter that was the “experience of a lifetime!” She volunteers at a local elementary school, in the church choir and teaches fourth grade Sunday School. Summer plans include helping a vacation Bible school in Russia and an Elderhostel excursion. Dot Tyndal Benner is busy as program chairman of Philanthropy Education Organization. She and Earl travel a great deal and took their 6 grandchildren and families on a cruise. Sara Huff Tuck now has ten grandchildren ages 6 Salem College months to 25 years. In my news, Ken still works full time and serves on the AMPAC board of the American Medical Association and is president of the local Rotary Club. His activities have taken us to several cities including: Portland, MA, New Orleans, LA, Orlando, FL and Osaka, Japan. I hope to see all of you in April 2006! 1957 Jo Smitherman Dawson Apt. 3, 1101 West Fourth Street Winston-Salem, NC 27101 jdawson2@triad.rr.com Several classmates, including Becky McCord King and Juanita Efird, visited Nell Newby Stallings in the months before she died of cancer in February. Nell had a stroke in her 50s and had been in a nursing home in Raleigh ever since. Kate Cobb McGinnis and Bernie were greatly saddened by the death of their grandson Thomas 12 days after his birth in January 2005. Kate writes they are coping and doing well. David and Beverly Brown Stone use their flex-time share to vacation in every state — near Mount Washington, NH, and recently, Wisconsin Dells and Macinac Island. Alaska is next. Home is Cumming, GA where Beverly is the organist in residence at the Lutheran church. Juanita Efird, on the go selling real estate, was honored with a 70th-birthday party. The guest list included Pat Flynt, Peggy Daniel Young, Ellen Summerell Mack and next door neighbor Closs Jennette Gilmer ’54. Juanita’s travel plans include a week at Oxford University to study English country houses. Juanita enlisted Madeline “Sissie” Allen and Pat Flynt to join her on Salem’s Friends of the School of Mucic board. Sissie moved back to Troy eight years ago to care for ailing parents, both of whom have since died. Sissie worked in student development and services at several small colleges, most recently at Shorter College in Rome, Ga., where she was a vice president when she retired and moved back to NC. Sandy and Marcia Stanley Clark spend seven months of the year in Sarasota and summers in Connecticut. Katherine Scales Lethgo and Wayne visited the Clarks for a week this past winter. Nina Skinner Upchurch’s second son Charles was married in August 2004. Nina attended a birthday party that Bren Bunch Cheatham gave in Chapel Hill for her sister-in-law. Nina grew up with the Cheathams in Greenville. Charles and Ann Darden Webb Hill enjoy their 13 grandchildren (ages 5 to 25) and their retirement, except that Ann misses school and is subbing at two high schools. Magaz ine 20 05 Spring plans included a literary conference in Jamaica, a church conference in Fayetteville, and family reunions in July and October. Barbara Durham Plumlee reported all quiet at her household. One granddaughter chose Converse College in Spartanburg and had a happy freshman year there. For Bob and Mary Hendrix Showfety, holidays are major family happenings — five children, five spouses and 10 grandchildren for Thanksgiving in Blowing Rock, Christmas in Atlanta and spring breaks in Vero Beach, FL. Clifton and Carolyn Miller Payne walked among the penguins at Cape Horn during a trip around South America; Chile and Patagonia were tops, Carolyn said. Charley and Toni Gill Horton enjoy Naples, FL, from November through May and then head for their cabin in Boone. Their daughter is in Greensboro; son Chuck and family, in Sammamish, WA. Frances Proctor, with our class for two years (before UNC Chapel Hill and Appalachian State), moved back to her hometown of Marion after retirement from teaching. At Christmas 2004 she moved into a retirement community. John and Meredith Stringfield Oates love their hilltop house in the woods. Two years of physical therapy have almost completed Meredith’s recovery from two broken-bone incidents in two consecutive years. R.E. and Cecilia Corbett Black, retired in Wilmington, were in Winston-Salem for the wedding of their granddaughter, Kristen. A grandson is a sophomore at UNC Chapel Hill. The family gathered at Fearrington House in Chapel Hill for Cecilia and R.E.’s 50th wedding anniversary. 1958 Claudia Milham Cox 600 North Currie Drive Sanford, NC 27330-9349 Sethc@wave-net.net A dear friend and loyal Salemite Judy Golden Upchurch died on April 19. Judy lived with an outpouring of love from family and friends in her new mountain dream house after she learned in January of her pancreatic cancer. Judy loved Salem so much that she requested memorials to Salem. I hope one of you will volunteer to continue in Judy’s roll as reunion fund chair. Barbara Roland Adams’ husband Ralph has had some health problems. Son Will and his family are staying with them while rebuilding their home, which burned. Son Graham and his family just bought a new home on Lake Murray. After attending her 50th high school reunion, Mary Britt Ballard and Marion spent a week in Myrtle Beach with their sons and their families. Their son Paul received his D.M. and lives in Columbia, SC. Anne Fordham Baldridge Cox wrote: “What outstanding contributions Judy made to our world. The children of North Carolina are better for her. I was a bridesmaid in Judy and Fred’s wedding. My late husband, Johnny Baldridge and I had been dating for several months. At the rehearsal party, he told me in all seriousness, but with a twinkle in his eye, that I had seen the last of him if I caught the bridal bouquet. And guess what? I did catch the bouquet; I was the next bride, and we lived happily ever after.” Anne is back at work as a real estate broker after disk surgery. Anne and Charlie each have three children and 18 grandchildren combined. Martha Jarvis Buck said that Judy was Miss Byrd’s best English major and expected Judy to become an author someday. Martha and Jim’s daughter Miggy, an artist in NYC, was married to a Swiss oceanographer who is with Columbia University. The June 23rd ceremony was in Rapperswil, Switzerland. The whole Buck family and some of their friends went. Barbara McMann Daane kept her family’s house in Danville, VA hoping to get there from time to time, but finds it difficult to find time to do so very often. She still spends much time fund raising for various organizations, especially for Park Center, an agency that serves the mentally ill. Her daughter Whitney is a music publisher. Olivia is still in Aspen, CO with Ki-lin (5). She used Dhu Jeannette Johnston’s son’s movie “The Angel Doll” for her literary club program. Dhu still works at her nursing job even though she has had health problems. Amory Marrit King’s looms are singing! She is on her fourth altar cloth this year. Her next project is for the chancel of a church in Winston-Salem where Kale often helps out. It is always a treat to hear from Dianne Byers Button and see pictures of her beautiful family. Seth and I still spend time in Ocean Drive, SC. Daughter Anne has taken over as majority stockholder in the construction business, and she makes sure her dad takes some time off. We spent a week in Spain with daughter Marjorie, her business partner, my cousin and her husband. Marjorie still lives in Prague where her marketing company is doing well. Please step up to take on the job of reunion fund chairman, so we can honor Judy’s memory with a big 50th! Please notify Salem if you now have e-mail or have changed your address. 1959 Marcille Van Liere Deane 243 Tranquil Avenue Charlotte, NC 28209-2113 marcilled@earthlink.net Our sympathy goes to Marcille for the death of her sister, Vicki Van Liere Helms ’62, in August 2004. 1960 Outgoing Correspondent Ann Luttrell Burton Incoming Correspondent Nita Kendrick Wall 2155 Commerce Drive, Apt. 103 Monroe, NC 28110-6730 nitawall@hotmail.com Our 45th reunion was greatly enjoyed by 24 class members. We missed all of you who were absent. Hope everyone will make the 50th in 2010! Those who arrived on Friday got together for dinner at a restaurant. Nancy Gwaltney Dennis planned this for us. Thanks, Nancy. Many thanks to Nancy Neese Bragg and husband Nick for a fantastic dinner at their home on Saturday night. We loved seeing Nick’s wonderful artwork throughout the house. Our class meeting Saturday afternoon was held in the Rondthaler Gramley House. President Joan Brooks Troy called us to order, and we elected new officers: Joan agreed to serve as president again. Thank you, Joan! Nita Kendrick Wall will serve as class correspondent. Carolyn Ray Bennett will chair the Reunion Giving committee. A new position was formed, the Sunshine committee, headed by Gwen Dickerson Infantino. She will be the contact person for reporting illnesses of classmates, death of loved ones, etc. After new business was completed, we went around the room giving each one a chance to share their personal news. Mary Alice Powell Adams is acting, trying to find work in films. She has two children, one in Winston-Salem and one in Seattle. Gwen Dickerson Infantino is quite proud of her three redheaded grandchildren. She sees Mary Stewart Moss Darden at church. She is also in touch with Ann Dunn Joyner Randolph, who still works full time. Elizabeth McLean Brice is doing great after suffering a heart attack three years ago. She enjoys her three grandchildren. Suzie Cabaniss Farabow and Butch celebrated their 46th anniversary this year! They stay busy with their nine grandchildren. Katherine Kline Collins retired from the Carlisle Collection after 20 years. She fundraises for Elon Homes for Children and the Regional AIDS Interfaith Network. She has nine 27 Class of 1960 Front row: Joday Litton Blevins, Ann Luttrell Burton, Suzanne Cabaniss Farabow, Jo Anne Hudson Kinnamon, Gwen Dickerson Infantino, Lou Scales Freemon, Nancy Gwaltney Dennis Second row: Joan Brooks Troy, Sally Townsend Hart, Anne Beck Bevan, Joan Currie Yelverton, Nancy Neese Bragg, Carolyn Ray Bennett, Elizabeth McLean Brice, Evelyn Vincent Riley Third row: Mallie Beroth Graham, Rosemary Laney Crow, Caroline Easley Alday, Nita Kendrick Wall, Gene Wagoner, Mary Alice Powell Adams, Anne Thompson Geyer, Betsey Guerrant Arnett grandchildren and enjoys traveling. Our one co-ed, Gene Wagoner, attended all of our events and was great fun. He plays numerous musical instruments and sings, too. He taught public school music for 35 years. Nancy Gwaltney Dennis works part time. She enjoys her reading group led by retired Salem professor Dudley Shearburn and playing bridge. She and retired husband, Bucky, live in a downtown loft just a few blocks from Salem. They have three grandchildren and their daughter is getting her Ph.D. Mallie Beroth Graham has two married sons and one grandchild. She volunteers at Salemtowne and teaches adults to read through the Sunnyside literacy program. She reports that Marie Stimpson Presson and daughter have opened a spa called “Impressions.” We were sorry to learn from Mallie that Geraldine McIlroy Kope lost her husband. She is a member of the choir at the Home Church. Betsy Guerrant Arnett had a successful spinal fusion surgery in 2004, and she’s back in the gardens, fishing with family and friends and working out at the “Y.” Lou Scales Freemon has three children and nine grandchildren. Husband Wally still works, and she spends time between Greensboro and the beach house in South Carolina. Anne Beck Bevan is retired, living one and a half blocks from downtown Lexington, NC. She 28 mentors at a local high school. Her daughter lives in Connecticut and has two children. Nita Kendrick Wall is retired with three sons living respectively in California, Texas and Wisconsin. She has one grandson. She writes a nostalgia column for the Inquirer Journal, which makes her very qualified to be our class correspondent! We were told that Sally Bovard Thompson is planning a trip to St. Louis to visit Frances Adkins Gay. Carolyn Ray Bennett retired after teaching kindergarten for 25 years. She volunteers with civic and charitable groups. After serving two terms as a Thomasville, NC city councilman, husband, Joe was elected mayor last year. Their two children and four grandchildren live nearby. Sally Townsend Hart and Jack live on a farm in Hanover, VA. She is a patient advocate. JoAnne Hudson Kinnamon and Bill volunteer once a week reading to handicapped children. Jody Litton Blevins plays tennis and mahjong. When Bob retires, they plan to travel. Evelyn Vincent Riley still teaches piano in Houston. She loves that her former students are now teachers. She has eight grandchildren. Anne Thompson Geyer enjoys her four children and nine grandchildren. She is the executive assistant at the Institute for Advanced Learning and Research in Danville. She says she is the only senior citizen on the board! Her father (95) dates, drives, is a gourmet cook and dances! Caroline Easley Alday and I traveled to the reunion together and had a wonderful visit there and back. She travels a lot; visits her daughter in Providence, RI, her son in Charlotte and of course, her second home on Pawley’s Island. Rosemary Laney Crow and husband Sam divide their time between Asheville and Boynton Beach, FL, as they have condos in each city. She continues to play tennis and bridge. Betsy Gatling Holmes and Bob enjoy trips to Raleigh and Atlanta to visit grandchildren. Daughter Caroline is getting a second degree in dental hygiene. Bob loves birding, and Betsy visits her mother (93) in Windsor often. Word comes that Harriette Dwelle Powel promises to attend the 50th reunion! Meribeth Bunch Dayne relocated from England to France. Sarah Tesch Salzwedel retired in 2003 after 32 years on the library staff of the NC School of the Arts. She especially enjoys her six granddaughters after raising three sons! Barbara Payne Nanney writes from Florida that they survived three hurricanes last August and September. The house made it through, but the debris clean up continues. She volunteers tutoring children and adults. Harriett Lang Hornthal sold her business in December 2003. She stays busy with grandchildren and loves to garden and travel. This spring she visited Australia, New Zeland and Tasmania. Norwood Dennis Grinalds sent word that after eight years as president of The Citadel, John is stepping down. They will have a sabbatical year until June 2006 when John will become headmaster of Porter-Gauld School in Charleston. As for Norwood, she is trying to settle into their new home and loving every minute of it. She and Bob went to Alaska last year and missed all the hurricanes. Norwood belongs to a garden club, a book club and the Big Canoe Artists’ Group, although her production of watercolors has slacked off a bit. Last, but not least, we all wish to thank Joan Curry Yelverton, Ann Dunn Joyner Randolph and their committee for doing such a great job with the reunion giving fund. We raised over $25,000, with 60% of the class contributing! Thanks to everyone! I’ve enjoyed being your class correspondent and wish Nita the best as she takes over the job. Let’s keep her informed of all our news. See you all at the 50th in 2010! 1961 Joanne Doremus Hooker 3415 Medford Road Durham, NC 27705 jdhooker@earthlink.net The class of 1961 was well represented at the Christmas Candlelight Concert at Salem. Missy Allen Brown, Cynthia Hiatt Kratt, Irene Noell Turner, Suzannah Parker Early, Dotty Thompson Whitlock and I enjoyed the concert after attending the Christmas Putz at the Brothers House. Many of us had not been back for a visit since our time as students. After the concert we also attended a reception at the RondthalerGramley House. What a wonderful way to start the holiday season! In January Cynthia hosted a gathering at Lake Norman. It was great to be able to visit with Velva Whitescarver Woollen, who was anticipating knee surgery, Sara Lou Richardson Rose, who has been building her counseling practice in Charlotte and Jackie Reeves Timms in addition to the group who had gone to campus in December. Marilew Hunter Hord has retired and after living in Texas for 31 years, has moved to Connecticut to be closer to children and grandchildren. She visited with Sally Gillespie Reid during a stop in Winston-Salem in November. Cathy Gilchrist Walser and Joe have had a busy year traveling and visiting family. Missy Brown and Henry spent time with Katie Kochtitzky Ellis and Aaron on the Gulf Coast in October. Missy saw Sally Wood Creech’s daughter during a trip to Raleigh. Mary Oettinger Booe’s daughter and her family live right down the street from Missy. Remember that next spring it will be time for our 45th reunion. It is great to visit on campus and renew Salem friendships. I hope to see all of you then. 1962 Edith Storey Stadler 4415 Gladwood Place Lynchburg, VA 24503-2019 begladwood@aol.com lives in Fort Lauderdale, FL and reports she retired in June 2004 after 14 years as wedding coordinator of Christ Church United Methodist. She and husband Jim took a two-week cruise to Alaska in July 2004. Sadly we report the death of classmate Vicki Van Liere Helms. She died in August 2004 of lung cancer diagnosed in February 2004. Judy Shannon Ambrose Salem College golf. They have 4 grandchildren and say grand parenting is the best! Son, Rob was married on May 14. Carroll spends much of her time caring for her mother (91). Carroll’s gardening is her therapy. She still plays tennis and volunteer work with the Stanley County Agricultural Extension Service along with several other neighborhood community things. Anita Hatcher Helms lives close by so she and Carroll see each other often. Send me your new email addresses! 1964 Pictured above are members of the Class of 1962 who were residents of Sisters House. This photo was taken in the spring of 1960 and was sent to us (with the individuals indenified) by Sally Harris Jurney C’62. Thank you! Seated on grass in the front row: Evelyn Dawes, Susan Lloyd, Beverly Heward, Emily Jennings, Barbara Altman, Cynthia Randolph, Suellen Sample and Ginny Sears. Along the fence in the second row: Dot Smith, Jane Thompson, Sandra Gilbert, Sally Harris, Ann Saunders, Gail Ogburn, Carol King, Peggy Brown and Sally Spangler. 1963 Heather Peebles DeVries 5 Live Oak Amelia Island, FL 32034 jnhdev@bellsouth.net While attempting to gather information for this fascinating column, I was dismayed by all the email returns “user unknown.” Please take a few minutes to send me your new email address; I’ll pass it on to Salem. May I begin by expressing our sympathy to Gigi Saunders Buxton on the loss of her dad, Garnett, in January 2005. Also we are so sorry Virginia Anderson Davis’ dad Easley died in August 2004. Becky Boswell Smith still enjoys editing a trade publication and traveling. She had a recent trip to India and will soon visit handicraft factory owners in Vietnam. Nancy Umberger Gorham has been busy rebuilding and remodeling her Orange Beach condo after the devastating hurricane season of 2004. Nancy and Matt are off to the Norwegian fjords in June as well as Paris, London, Ireland, Scotland and Amsterdam. WOW!! She also found time to join a gourmet club and the DAR. Martha Cole Glenn retired from her job as a lobbyist and is remodeling a “new” home. She is involved with field and obedience competition with golden retrievers. Martha is also involved in Arlington County and Virginia Democratic politics. Catharine Eller Varnedoe lives in Savannah with husband Gordon. They have 2 daughters, Nell and Elise. Catharine, an illustrator, rides her horse Magaz ine 20 05 Sweetpea as much as possible. Loved the short response from Katherine Parrish Shelburn “still working…as a Psycho…40th year, still married to the same guy, 38th year, same house 31 years.” An athlete, she spins 3 times a week, plays tennis 5-6 times. Has 3 national tennis championships and 16 southern championships. Plus Katherine had botanical and biological artwork published. She has one granddaughter. Sylvia Gooding Ray is still director of the Women’s Center of Fayetteville, celebrating 15 years of economic empowerment issues for women and families. Robin Rhodes Browning’s two children are now married. Daughter Christie teaches 4th grade while husband Adam finishes medical school. Robin’s husband, Simms, retired about a year ago and they are having fun in those “new togetherness roles.” Sounds like Johnny and I who have enjoyed almost 5 years of retirement and 40 years of marriage. Julie Johns Allen and Jim enjoy Durham, Sunset Beach, and Blowing Rock. They have a new granddaughter, Charlotte, and I am sure Julie is still enjoying painting. Marsha Ray Sherry reports retirement brings a slower pace and interests of studying oil painting, gardening, yoga, practicing Zen Buddhism, and enjoying her family and friends. She’s excited about a painting trip to Greece in October and then she and E.J. will travel to Egypt in December. Carroll Roberts Sitton and Larry love living at Badin Lake... the country life. Larry continues to practice law and has gotten into Margy Harris Holt 1008 Ridgewood Avenue Reidsville, NC 27320-6030 mholt273@bellsouth.net Travel is a top priority for Donna Raper Stallings and husband Dallas who snorked with sea lions in the Gulf of California and look ahead to Scotland and China. Irene Rose Owen and husband Duncan live in Richmond and enjoy four grandsons. Irene visits with Barbara Gottschalk Wiltshire, Mary Richmond Wilson, and Anne Heath Hardage regularly. Alice Reid Digilio enjoys her work at The Washington Post and is excited about being a grandmother. Anne Romig Decker works with the National Institute of Health focus groups developing a children’s book on aging. She and Jim enjoy traveling to Michigan and Ontario. It was great seeing Frances Bailey Crutchfield in Richmond. Her son Henry is director of admissions at the College of William and Mary. I look forward to full retirement, enjoying eight grandchildren, and going to Wake Forest games where I will surely see Claudia Crawford Fleming and Susie Johnson Stovall. Please e-mail me soon with news! 1965 Daphne DuKate Clark P.O. Box 27506 Panama City, FL 32411-7506 dclarkspcbfl@aol.com Camelia Crowell Bosworth and Rob live in Annapolis, MD and have one son, Michael. Cam works as the assistant to the vice president of communications for the US Naval Academy Alumni Association. Beth Prevost Browne and husband Joe live in Norfolk, VA and have two sons. Son Eric will be married in September and son Keith is studying art education. Husband Joe is retired and working part-time teaching. Beth is an instructor at Tidewater Community College and looks forward to retirement in the next few years. Janet Wales Brown and husband Richard Johnson live in Dur- ham, NC where Janet has her own law firm. They have two children and one grandchild. Robbin Causey Clark has been unemployed since June 2003 and is still looking for work. While looking she has completed courses for AMA certificates in Management and HR Management and has now finished her first semester in Medical Transcription. Daughter Joanna has bought her first house in Wilson, NC where she works for the Economic Development Council. Daughter Katie and her three boys live in Oak Ridge and keep Robbin hopping! Mary Graves Edmundson enjoys living in Wilson, NC where husband Jimmy continues to work. They love visits with children and grandchildren. Barbara Bleakly Freeman and husband Jay are in Nokomis, FL. Jay has retired from his radiology practice; Barbara retired from being a former art gallery owner and free-lance consultant; they sold their beloved North Carolina mountain home; and they travel as much as possible. Their children and grandchildren have moved close by which allows them to baby sit several times a week with grateful pleasure. Chip and Jane Allen Hall live in Richmond, VA and like to spend a lot of time at their river home on the Chesapeake Bay. Jane paints with oils and keeps active with exercise and painting. She occasionally substitute teaches elementary school. They have two children and two grandchildren. Bitsie Richheimer Harwell and husband Tom enjoy life in Greenville, NC with work and church taking most of the time. She and Tom love being with their grandchildren either in Greenville or at their home in Alpharetta, GA. Buz and Betsy Patterson Helms divide their time between Ponte Vedra Beach, FL and Blowing Rock, NC. Their children and grandchildren live in Charlotte, NC. Sandra Corbett Hiatt and husband Larry live in Wilmington, NC but are re-acquainting themselves with Winston-Salem since son Lawrence and wife Mandy live in Kernersville, NC. Sandra says she had a great thrill at Easter attending the wonderful Sunrise Service. It had been 43 years since her first one as a freshman in spring 1962! Dottie Davis LaFar and husband Marshall were sorry to miss reunion because Marshall had a reunion the same weekend. Dottie is planning the wedding of daughter Mary Catherine for September, son Grant and wife live in Columbia, SC, and son Davis lives in Charlotte, NC. Wendy McGlinn Lockwood lives in Macon, GA where she has her psychology practice and plays tennis. Son Frank is a physician in Stockbridge, GA, son Robert is an attorney in Huntsville, 29 and husband Jimmy travel as much as possible and always have a new “plan” in the works. Harriet and Jimmy have two children and one grandson (3). Al and Patty Nash Wheeler live in Blowing Rock, NC and have two small independent bookstores in Blowing Rock and West Jefferson, NC. Patty hopes to retire in 2006 from her job at Appalachian State University as library development director. It is with sadness that we report the unexpected death of Blanton Miley Vogler (34) in December 2004, son of Julia Miley Vogler, and the death of Tyson Bilbro in March 2005, the father of Myrtie Bilbro Davis. 1966 Barbara Mallard P.O. Box 945 Asheboro, NC 27204-0945 Class of 1965 Front row: Susan Smith Taylor, Susan Leigh Maddox, Betsy Patterson Helms, Babs Bodine Reideler Second row: Beth Prevost Browne, Carol Weidner Southerland, Bitsie Richheimer Harwell, Wendy McGlinn Lockwood, Jane Allen Hall Third row: Janet Wales Brown, Doris Cooper McCoy, Linda Lyon Turner, Brownie Rogers Plaster, Catherine Hubbard Newitt AL, and Chris has a full scholarship at Mercer University. Wendy also has two grandsons. Susan Leigh Maddox and husband Don are still in Hobbs, NM. They have two children. Beth Sullivan Matthews is a retired English teacher living in Raleigh, NC. Husband Neil works with Community Properties, the land development arm of FonvilleMorisey real estate. Beth was unable to make reunion due to recent surgery but enjoyed a visit with Mary Graves Edmundson. Doris Cooper McCoy lives in Durham, NC and works part-time as a legal assistant. Daughter Amanda graduated from Duke in 1999 and from UVA Law in 2004 and works for a law firm in Washington, DC. Son David graduated from Wake Forest in 1998 and works for GlaxoSmithKline in the Research Triangle Park. Doris spent several fun days at the beach with Sandra Morgan Perry last fall. Cacky Hubbard Newitt and husband John live in Charlotte, NC. They welcomed their first grandchild in January 2005 and sadly Cacky lost her father in March 2005. Sandra Morgan Perry, a retired school psychologist, and husband Mike live in Boone, NC. They spend time between Charlotte, NC where both children and two grandchildren live, and North Myrtle Beach, SC where they have a home. Knox Bramlette Pierson and husband Drew live in Wilmington, NC where Drew, PGA Master Golf Professional, still teaches. Daughter Sara and husband opened a restaurant in Wilmington – Marc’s on Market 30 while son Drew and family moved to Wrightsville Beach, NC. Knox and Drew have two grandchildren. Brownie Rogers Plaster and husband Bubba live in Shelby, NC. They have two children and two grandchildren. Babs Bodine Reideler retired from FCC in Washington, DC in 2004. She and husband Terry sold their home of 30 years in Alexandria, VA and moved her mother out of a local nursing home and they all moved into her mother’s home in South Dartmouth, MA where they are taking care of her mother. Jerry Johnson Soechting and husband John were not able to come for reunion but reports she retired as a nutrition program manager for Ramsey County in 2003, but went back to work in nursing. She is an underwriter for a company providing support services to the long term care insurance industry. Carol Weidner Southerland and husband I.B. live in Winston-Salem, NC where Carol teaches the academically gifted in 4th and 5th grades for Forsyth County. Jean Olive Snyder Stubbs and husband Allston are still living in Winston-Salem. No grandchildren listed but they have three children. Susan Smith Taylor continues as associate director of libraries at Salem. Linda Lyon Turner is an art consultant in Winston-Salem. Harriet Haywood Warlick is a retired teacher in Whiteville, NC but stays busy as a piano accompanist for several groups and events for her church. She is also active in garden club and Delta Kappa Gamma, an honorary teachers society. She 1967 Kathryn Wilson Mansfield 5124 Rockmont Court Winston-Salem, NC 27104 mansfieldkw@aol.com From the alumnae office came news that Betty Brock Whitaker lost her mother on March 7, 2005. We offer condolences to Betty and her family. In January, Suanne Brooks moved from Vero Beach, FL to Hilton Head Island, SC after escaping unscathed from two hurricanes. She is active in the Girls and Boys Clubs. After five years of bouncing between Lake Tahoe and Santa Monica, Leroy and Peggy Booker Graymer simplified their lives. They sold their Lake Tahoe residence and now reside in Santa Monica, CA. Peggy’s son Bill is earning a Ph.D in archeology at UC Santa Barbara and is engaged. Bebe Moore Harris works in the chaplain’s office at Duke Hospital in Durham and leads a women’s Sunday school class on spiritual formation at Watts Street Baptist Church. She and her sister took a trip to Grenada, MS via Tennessee and drove on the Natchez Trace on the way home. Susanne Bunch Hill’s second grandchild, Hannah Victoria Flannery, was born in June 2004 to daughter Temi and husband John Flannery in San Diego. Susanne and David took a belated honeymoon cruise to Bermuda last fall and travel several times a year to visit both daughters in California. While sailing near New Bern and Oriental they have seen Hunter Gourdon Corbett and Andy several times at their river cottage. She met Louise Marsh Parisier in Chapel Hill for lunch and a fall visit. Louise has been involved in supporting several community non-profit organizations this year. She asks that all Salem classmates keep in touch with Salem. She adds, “we need to gather some steam for our big 40th Reunion in 2007, with high attendance from all our classmates.” Lucy Mills Parsons spent a night with the Hills while bringing her horses to a vet in Mocksville. Susanne also met Lucy one weekend at a large horse show in Virginia in which Lucy’s daughter was competing. Molly Leight is still rescuing wildflowers with master gardeners and became chair of the Old Salem Landscape Restoration Committee. She “continues to butt heads with city and county governments over limiting sprawl, saving parks, cleaning up air quality, and fighting Wal-Mart.” During the early summer she took trips to Ecuador and the Galapagos. Liza White Plaster’s days begin and end with goats. Her dairy, Ripshin Goat Dairy, is just a few minutes from Blowing Rock. She is making chevre, feta and molded cheeses and yogurt, to be sold at the farmers’ market in Boone and restaurants in the area. The actual dairy is to be built in fall 2005 to be operational by spring. Any and all classmates are cordially invited to visit. Mayme Price Tubbs writes that since graduation, she has worked at UNC-Pemboke, taught French to K-4 students and substituted at three elementary schools in the field of music, which she thoroughly enjoyed. Now she is busy with volunteer work at Robeson County Public Library, book clubs, bridge clubs, and as regent of the Lumberton DAR chapter. Mayme and a friend plan a fall African safari. Hopefully, she will travel to Winston-Salem in 2007 for our next reunion. I have been working with Chris Coile Say ’71, and the president of the Winston-Salem Alumnae Club to reactivate interest locally among College and Academy alumnae. I volunteer at Salem often and serve on the College Alumnae Board. Jim and I have taken trips to nearby states and also to visit daughter Anna Katharine and husband, John Emery, in Chaska, MN. For an anniversary celebration we look forward to a fall tour of New England. 1968 Allyson Bullock Sugg P.O. Box 8 Snow Hill, NC 28580-0008 mjmercsabg@aol.com Patsy Mathews Reynolds and Ozzie were busy in 2004 with a mission trip to Zambia, the birth of grandson Chancellor, Prem’s wedding to Susan Manjooran and Christmas in the Florida Keys. Judy Pifer Haverkamp and John have a 1-year-old grandson John Ellis and 3-year-old Brown Salem College who was at our reunion. Daughter Elizabeth received her MBA from George Washington and Matt will get his MBA from UMD next year. Betsy Payne Adams has twin grandchildren. She visited Pifer during one of our hurricanes. Barry Thrift Brown and Clark have two grandchildren now. Sallie Craig Tuton Huber and Doug were in Afghanistan setting up a health care system for the country; but Sallie Craig returned to Boston for breast cancer treatments, which were going well when I last heard. She hoped to return to Afghanistan mid-summer. Susan Jones Satzger’s daughter Casey, Casey’s husband and two children have a new home in Walnut Creek, CA. Son Alan lives in Palm Desert. Susan retired last year. Beth Taylor Steelman and Ben traveled to Antarctica and New Zealand. Beth raised $800,000 for public radio in Wilmington then resigned. Ben writes for the Wilmington Star-News. Son Walker is at Cornell for a post-doctoral fellowship. Daughter Foy and husband Micah are in Portland, OR for her 3rd year of residency in internal medicine. Elizabeth McIver Hinson and Will’s son Evan was married last September. Frances Temple Civils and John have one grandson John David, son of David and Janna who are dentists in Greensboro. Son Worth lives in New York City and works for The Wall Street Journal Online. Daughter Laura works for an event-planning company in Raleigh. Frances and I are still in the college routine, as Grace is a student at Meredith. We enjoyed my 40th high school reunion along with Frances, Holly Wooten, and Cecilia MooreCobb. The class extends its sympathy to Cecilia, whose mother Doris Moore died March 28 at age 102. 1969 Mary Jane Boren Meeker 319 West University Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27516-2922 jmeeker@springmail.com We had a great response from those of you on Salem’s e-mail list. If you aren’t on this list, please send Salem your e-mail address. Peggy Hart Shuping is playing/teaching bridge and enjoys seeing Barbara Keck Blount and Mary Harris Everett ’67 in Greenville, NC. She joined her roommate, Tina Gwaltney Baird, at Canyon Ranch Tucson in January. Susan Shore Schwartz, ED for Action Greensboro, is proud of first grandchild, Eleanor (Ellie) Elizabeth Howard, born in February to son Vince and Janet Howard in Raleigh. Son Andrew is in Greensboro. Susan retired in 1999 from 30 years of teaching high school art. Anne Wyche Magaz ine 20 05 Fowlkes now teaches part time, and Eddie teaches graphic arts. Daughter Martha is a freshman at Auburn. They live in Decatur, but love their Lake Waccamaw house. Frances Breeden Schauss is an English instructor at New York’s Dowling College. Son Matthew (28) graduates in May from the Babson College MBA program; Sarah (25) graduates in June from the Helsinki School of Economics. Kathy Sherrill Slattery and husband just returned from her 40th reunion at Ashley Hall in Charleston and saw Helen Jones, who lives in Lake Lure, NC. Mopsy Stoneburner Patterson and David live in Greensboro where he practices gastroenterology. They downsized their home and bought a beach house, which has been successful in luring their three married children and four grandchildren. She believes Elaine Beavers Hanson lives in Jacksonville, FL. Anticipating her retirement from US Airways Midge (Ena) West Stackhouse started Enaja Safaris, which will allow her to share her love of East Africa with others and have more time to reconnect with Salem. Nancy Taylor Sumner is the new director of development for Urban Ministries of Wake County, a United Way agency. Older son Brian graduated from Duke Law last May, got married in August, and now works in DC. Sarah Ulmer Wade’s grandchildren, Mac (5) and Liddy (3) keep them very busy in Richmond. Al and Candy Stell Shivers’s oldest daughter, Allison (pediatrician), and husband Ed are moving with Patrick Ingram McBride (2) to Winston-Salem in June. Youngest daughter, Amy, loves working as a market analyst in Washington, DC. Anne Plyler Lee’s joys are her three grandsons (5, 16 and 15 mos.). She and her husband are building a condo in Charlotte, and Anne will continue her work there as a yoga therapist. Jeanette Holland works at her real estate company, Copeland & Holland Real Estate, in Beaufort and enjoys her grandchildren…six so far. And says, life at the coast is great. Barbara Keck Blount dotes on her grandchildren. With all boys so far, they welcomed Mary Frances Blount into the family in February 2004, when Barbara began planning Mary Frances’ Salem education! After 17 years of banking, Beverly Lancaster Lindsey entered seminary and was ordained in 1994. She is now pastor of Chester (NH) CongregationalBaptist Church. She tells us that Mary Crawford Booton and Dan live in a wonderful 1700s house, originally an inn, outside Richmond. They have a son in Austin, TX, and one in Richmond. Anne Dukehart Lambkin lives in Towson, MD, with fiancé Bill Tiffany and is the business manager at Notre Dame Prep School. Daughter Beth has started law school. Kathleen “Kas” Stallings, a career and technical education coordinator at Hillside High School in Durham, plans to retire in two years. She cares for her mother (96); her latest obsession is bridge and going to tournaments. Jannet Bowers Kramer and Roger had a great time at our reunion last year and hope everyone plans to attend the next one. Life continues to be good in North Carolina and they love being grandparents! Elisabeth Bosch Biggerstaff’s granddaughter, Emily Claire Ibsen, was born last November to daughter, Lise, and Christopher. Elisabeth and Dan live in Savannah where he practices GYN and she volunteers for the Telfair Museum of Art. Mary Lou Ford Stott and Charlie sold their house and downsized in the same neighborhood. Daughter Louise and granddaughter have moved to Asheville from Seattle after Louise completed her Doctorate of Naturopathic Medicine degree. Susan Hinkle Krissel’s son was married in July. Their daughter teaches kindergarten in Miami. Susan does volunteer work and enjoys sunny south Florida. Mary Bunn Hunter Judge and Curt have settled into their dream home in McGaheysville, VA. Their sons both engaged are in St. Louis and NYC. A breast cancer survivor, Mary Bunn is doing well now. Amy Murray Orser is helping to get the Winston-Salem alumnae club going again. She and Paul recently saw Kristin Jorgenson Oliver and Andy in DC, while visiting daughter Emily in Alexandria. Barbara Smethie Griffin’s and Bennett’s son Bennett Jr. married last May and they finally have a daughter! Son Will graduates from USC in December. Recently, Barbara had lunch with Liza Pond Rainey. Clarine Pollock Powell is finishing her eighth year of teaching tap dance at ECU. Their three children live in Charleston. Joanna McGrath Reynolds went back to teaching in 2001 because of an empty nest. She plans to teach just one more year. Her husband has retired and their daughter is now finishing college. Jeanne Garner Clay still enjoys Raleigh. Her daughter was married last October in a Charleston plantation wedding. Life is good again, says Lili Powers Ouzts who has remarried after the death of her beloved husband 10 years ago. Her three sons live nearby and she likes to garden, bike, hike, and volunteer. Milly Daughtridge Greene continues with her invitation business, and husband Johnny enjoys working at Auburn. Bradford and husband Stephen (minister) live in San Diego, and John is a marketing director at Troy University. Linda Camp McElwee is involved with choir and community activities in Dallas. She and Dixon have planned trips to visit Devon at Darden, Caleigh in Fairfax, VA, and David in Oxford, MS. Mary Jane Boren Meeker and Kristi Scott Boykin had a great visit with Ann Copenhaver Cotton at Ann’s parents’ house at Smith Mountain Lake last summer. Mary Jane and John also enjoyed dinner with Ann and Phil in Charleston last December. 1970 Outgoing Correspondents Lindsay McLaughlin Jordan Sandra Holder Davis Incoming Correspondents Chris Little 4129 Sharon Commons Lane Charlotte, NC 28210 mersee@bellsouth.net Cyndee Grant Martin 8734 Taunton Drive Huntersville, NC 28078 cegmartin@hotmail.com Send notes to: Salem70News@bellsouth.net A third of our class showed up for the 35th (ouch) reunion. Our class gift totaled $90,000+ and is still growing with over 50% giving. Kudos to our class fund-raising chair Barbie Barton. It was great fun catching up with each other. If you missed it, please treat yourself to our next one! We heard lots from our classmates. Lindsay McLaughlin Jordan reported son Ford’s wedding in August, 2004 in DC. Daughter Klugh joined her for camping and hiking in Sequoia and Yosemite National Parks in June. Husband Sandy and she have new bikes and resolve to use them. She enjoys her work with Older Adults (yes, older than we are) at church and tennis with Sandra Holder Davis. Sandra Holder Davis, Nancy Wetzell Albright, Celia Watson Weston, and Sterling Winstead Dougherty enjoyed a fall trip to Sneads Ferry where they wore pink matching clothes in public – all they need now is white hair and an RV, and they’ll be ready for the 4: 00 cafeteria line. Sterling and John cut a mean rumba and cha-cha although they’ll never be another Ginger and Fred. Children Patrick and Sarah are earning graduate degrees, and Kate just accepted a position with Deveroux working with emotionally-challenged children. Celia Watson Weston sends news of travels and filmmaking. She had a wonderful time at Nancy Wetzell Albright’s son Stuart’s wedding in Gastonia with Sandra Holder Davis 31 out with weights and cardio so she can indulge in her creations. She and husband Mike travel, and garden. Netta Newbold Moseley and husband John enjoy the freedoms of retirement— gardening, volunteering, traveling (loved a recent tour through Eastern Europe) and reading. She’s president of Loaves and Fishes, Charlotte’s emergency food ministry, this year. Chylene Ferguson Robinson Class of 1970 Front row: Caroline Boone Alford, Lee Largen Gale, Sandy Kelley Johnson, Paige French, Beth Hunter Graham, Barbara Horney Rodgers, Ferebee Allen Kaleida Second row: Sharon Wendt Spriggs, Cyndee Grant Martin, Sally Rhodes Ahner, Minetta Newbold Moseley, Sandra Pappas Byrd, Sandra Holder Davis, Celia Watson Weston, Chris Little Third row: “Dee Dee” Geraty Squires, Libby Griffin, Martha McMurdo Diffey, Joy Bishop Van Zandt, Debbie Lotz Walker, Karen Park Jennings, Nancy Wetzell Albright, Mary Joyce Beard, Pamela Anderson Hazen Fourth row: Chylene Ferguson Robinson, Lyn Davis, Christine Davidson Cline, Palmer Smith, Annie McLeod Jenkins, Susan Fasse Montgomery, Susan Knee Smith, Lindsay McLaughlin Jordan, Sallie Wilson Ellinwood and Ann Gibbs Blatzer. Celia’s film Junebug, shot in Winston Salem, was selected for the Sundance Film Festival and opens in August. Her experience on location in India this spring defies description. Watch for Celia on Law & Order-Criminal Intent. Nancy Wetzell Albright runs two frame galleries in the Gastonia, NC area. Jane Loftin Hill’s newly-retired husband Doug kept his dental practice in the family. Daughter Caroline, mother of twins, has taken over in Kinston. Beth Cronister Downs directs Ministerial Services for the Virginia Conference of the United Methodist Church. Sons William and Robert graduated and are now working. Matthew is a freshman at Mary Washington College. Lindsay Wheatley Marshall and husband Fray have eagerly embraced their home, Atlanta. While Fray chairs the urology department at Emory, Lindsay is president at the Carlos Museum. Brooks (26) works at SunTrust in Atlanta, and Wheatley (30) is with a PR firm in Chicago. Marilyn Thornton Kiser and husband Tom in Fayetteville, where she’s a school psychologist, dream of retirement at Figure 8 and Lake Norman. Another prospect for the Charlotte alumnae club! Elizabeth is at Carolina; Thomas is graduating 32 from high school. Ginny Herbst Maffitt spends most of her free time riding. She’s a foxhunt whipper-in for the Mecklenburg Hounds, Inc. Ginger Renick Griffin’s boys have all finished school; one is now married. She volunteers and focuses on her church work. Jill Silverstein Gammon consults in capacity building for nonprofits. Daughter Emily works in DC for a research firm. Son Jed married and works for his dad’s real estate development firm in Raleigh. Ferebee Allen Kaleida balances her time between being librarian at Dunwody High outside Atlanta and her mom (91) who lives with them. Bob is busier than ever since GE bought his company. Son David is married and works for Bank of America; Beth’s earning a graduate degree in Landscape Architecture at UVA; Katie’s pursing a doctorate in physics/astronomy at Arizona State. Sandra Culpepper is very busy with two sons’ graduations from NCSU. Janet Burnett McLeskey and husband Jerry celebrated their 31st wedding anniversary in September. Son Jason teaches high school special education; wife Michelle teaches 4th grade. Son Jim graduated from Wingate last spring. Susan Fasse Montgomery still enjoys the culinary world. She works and Roland celebrated their 33rd wedding anniversary amid daughter Christina’s debutante activities. She is finishing her sophomore year at Carolina. Jeanne Ross Patterson is an RN with Hospice & Palliative Care of WinstonSalem. Martha Rankin is a med tech at UNC Student Health Services and also takes care of her ailing mother. We send our deepest sympathies to Barbie Barton, Ann Kraft Woodworth, Sandra Pappas Byrd, and Cyndee Grant Martin whose fathers died last year, and to Louise Brock Pollard and sister Elizabeth Brock Whitaker ’67, who lost their mother Nell this spring. Leigh Harvey McNairy works in Raleigh helping save and promote military bases. Cam Voss Dillard teaches English as a Second Language in Huntington Beach, CA. Wendy Yeatts Kinlaw stayed with daughter Mallory at Wake while at the reunion. She’s retired from her ESL career. When The Reverend Barbara Horney Rodgers attended the annual Sprunt Lectures at Union Theological Seminary in Richmond in January, she visited Union’s Dean of Students, The Reverend Edna Jacobs Banes, D.Min. ’71. Edna and Barbara both held leadership roles at the conference. Martha Rasberry Sherman sells portraits and co-chairs Historic Garden Week in Richmond for 2006. John is vice chairman, Scott & Stringfellow Investments. Daughter Julie is a family counselor in San Francisco; John III is in UVA law school. Louise Sherrill is in her final year teaching reading in Englewood, CO. She and husband Neil Sullivan are renovating a home. She feels lucky having Barbie Barton so near through all this. Her tennis team scrapped its way to playoffs. Louise heard from Linda Larkin Boyer, an environmental educator, potter and painter in Washington, NC. She and Ross have been married 37 years and have two children. Barbie Barton travels and designs from the Colorado sunshine. Church and fundraising keep Barbie busy! Palmer Smith practices law in Montgomery as a partner of Capell & Howard. Susan Knee Smith’s son Claude negotiated a Salem merger when he married Saunders Campbell, daughter of Muffin Saunders Campbell ’74 and sister of Winters Campbell ’05. Susan has a thriving real estate business in Charlotte. Susan Ryburn Sofia travels worldwide including a trip to France this summer and a visit to China in the fall. She’s presently chair, Ohio Arts Council. Debbie Lotz Walker survived yet another wedding, this time for daughter Sue. Her family and Sharon Wendt Spriggs gathered for their annual tradition at a Moravian Love Feast Christmas Eve in Kernersville. Sharon holds certification as an International Board Certified Lactation Consultant and is breastfeeding program coordinator for WIC at the SC Dept. of Health and Environmental Control in Mount Pleasant. After 10 years there, she and Charles are calling it home—the longest either has lived in one place. Son Kenny is in Evanston outside Chicago. Sharon is happy to report she is currently healthy and thanks everyone for supporting her during difficult times. Dee Dee Geraty Squires and family are moving to husband Patrick’s home state of Missouri. Their sons have obviously inherited Mother’s artistic talent: Louis is in college, Chris has been accepted at Juilliard in NYC for study in dance; and Jonathan is a junior percussion major at Charleston College School of the Arts. Joy Bishop VanZandt still loves a challenge. Daughter Kimberly was married in September on Beech Mtn., NC during Hurricane Ivan and now lives in Seattle where her husband is earning a Ph.D. Son John is a high school Spanish teacher in Winston-Salem. Beth Hunter Graham is leaving her position as college counselor at Boys’ Latin School to assist husband Gary in his law practice. Daughter Charlotte (25) is a financial advisor for Legg Mason in Baltimore. Hunter (20) is a sophomore at College of Charleston. Beth enjoyed the mini-reunion and hurricane celebration at Joy VanZandt’s daughter’s wedding last fall. Kathy Rose Kobos has started a business printing personalized stationery. Son John-Thomas graduated from Houston Baptist University. Melinda Yarborough works at NC Baptist Hospital in W-S and plays clarinet for her church band. Sally Rhodes Ahner Salem College trained extensively in the Alexander Technique and healing work and teaches at Vanderbilt and Belmont and is in private practice. She is also establishing a healing ministry and is cantor/worship planner for services in the Taizé style at her church. Cordelia Parks Bergamo and husband Fred missed the reunion to be with daughter Elizabeth for her crew team banquet at Colgate University. Son Thomas works in Charlotte and lives with wife Michelle-Marie in Cornelius. A classical music teacher to preschoolers for three decades, Cordy was the musical advisor for Disney’s movie The Little Einsteins due out this summer. Marty Dickerson and husband Doug Fox also had parental duties reunion weekend at West Point where son Alex is a junior. Marty and Doug are West Point Parent Leaders in Colorado. Mary Wiggins Joyce Beard’s husband Hoyt retired from R.J. Reynolds after 43 years. Son Randy graduates in May from Princeton. Alice Cline Rullman and Andy moved home to Hickory from the West Coast. She earned her masters in reading education and special ed certification at Appalachian State. Her son graduated from UNCCharlotte and works in Charlotte. Her daughter and her husband met at Wake Forest medical school and are both ENT-Head and Neck surgery residents in San Antonio. Sally Stowe Bashant retired to North Carolina from Florida. Reunion weekend she sang in Charleston with Nova Voce, a Charlotte women’s chamber choir. Son David and Amanda live in Belmont, and Michael is in Tampa. While visiting DC with daughter Catherine, a sophomore at Wingate, they saw Elaine Spicer Friebele, Sally’s Salem roommate. Caroline Boone Alford and husband Roy digitally documented our reunion and captured some priceless photos. They continue to stay busy with work and volunteer activities and travel every chance they get. Meme Harper Asserson and Bo enjoy retirement at Folly Beach, SC and extended an invitation for all to visit. Meme has two wonderful daughters-in-law. Walker and Betsy live in Bozeman, MT, and Bowen and Liza are in Greensboro. Karen Park Jennings made her first reunion! As CEO/owner of Park Seed Co., she has traveled to China to set up production of hard goods. She serves on the SC Council on Competitiveness and in her spare time sings in the Presbyterian Church choir, gardens, and visits her children. Kathy Wilson Bell and Ellen Ford Terry enjoyed their children’s wedding as mothers of the bride. The newlyweds discovered their moms Magaz ine 20 05 knew each other when they noticed a Sights and Insights at Ellen’s while they were students dating in Chapel Hill. They work with Young Life in Rock Hill. Kathy and George’s daughter Laura and husband Brandon are Young Life counselors at Wildhorse Canyon, OR. Sandra Pappas Byrd recently received UNC-Asheville’s Ruth and Leon Feldman Professorship, in recognition of outstanding scholarship and university service. Lyn Davis and partner Jannit Rabinovitch are restoring a 1910 Victorian house by the water in Victoria, Vancouver Island. Lyn teaches at the University of Victoria and is writing a novel. Doree Koontz Fisher and Richard are in Rockport, ME where Doree teaches child development in high school. Their son Ben is at Carolina. Paige French runs a management consultant business, FMS Associates. We’re so proud of her recognition as recipient of Salem’s Distinguished Alumna Award at the reunion. Annie McLeod Jenkins’ daughter Sarah is in New York City beginning the “long hard row” of finding work as an actress. Celia Watson Weston has been a fairy godmother for Sarah, advising and encouraging her, and taking her to wonderful events. Annie’s son Gordon is a junior at the University of Richmond where he’s majoring in theater and rowing with Richmond crew. Annie keeps busy with the usual community and church activities, and is transcribing her great grandfather’s diary of travel in Europe in 1851. Lee Largen Gale is an early intervention service coordinator for the Children’s Developmental Services Agency of the Smokies. Husband Russ is the president and CEO of Nantahala Bank and Trust, a newly formed community bank headquartered in Franklin. Both daughters live in Winston-Salem. Meredith teaches English at Forsyth Country Day and daughter Casey is a corporate event planner with Quantum Events. Son Russell is a sophomore at Appalachian State. Pam Anderson Hazen and husband Robert are still in Brooklyn Heights. Pam commutes to MorrisJumel Mansion in Harlem Heights, putting her skills as librarian and archivist to work on an exciting research project. Wedding bells rang for Libby Griffin and new husband Lee Chambers in Charlotte. Libby was recently recognized for over 20 years teaching math (and also coordinates the Distinguished Guest Series) at Charlotte Country Day. Cyndee Grant Martin and Doug married in the fall in Asheville, where they grew up together. Doug is a partner with Poyner-Spruill in Charlotte and an independent filmmaker. They and three teenagers live in Huntersville, NC. Chris Little’s son Geoff and wife Susan had a baby boy named Cooper in January. Son Tom and wife Andi are expecting a boy in August. Chris has moved to Charlotte where she coaches tennis and helps run summer camp at Olde Providence Racquet Club. Sallie Barham Nolan and husband Clyde live in Greensboro where he is a dermatologist and Sallie is an operatic casting director and raises horses in Kentucky. Many thanks to Sandra Holder Davis and Lindsay McLaughlin Jordan for serving as class correspondents these many years! We hope you all will continue to update us with your life happenings for this next year. The new e-mailbox was created just for you: Salem70News@bellsouth.net. Use it! 1971 Anne Berger Salisbury 102 West Gerrell Court Cary, NC 27511-5882 anneeb49@aol.com Thank you for all your cards and letters at Christmas. Hard to believe that next year will be our 35th reunion! I hope everyone will make an effort to come; the last one was fabulous! Gay Murrill is back in Charleston and has opened a yarn shop with daughter Mollie. Gay recalls classmates knitting in math class at Salem and having a sweater at semester’s end. Beth Carter Gray’s daughter Carter married in Chapel Hill. She also welcomed her first grandchild to daughter Allison. Beth goes to the Pit on the UNC campus daily to check out the action. Melene Tuton Patchel attended Dencie Reynold’s wedding in February 2004. Dencie and Melene make an annual holiday trip to Winston-Salem to shop and stay at the Rondthaler-Gramley house on campus. Pam Hardison Braxton traveled to the Czech Republic and British Columbia and joined the Red Hat Society. Sandra Bartholomew Greene de-stressed from her daughter’s wedding by going to Paris with her older daughter who finishes law school this year. Cil Miller Cooney bravely chaperoned the eighth grade school trip to Europe. She and husband Jim also went to Panama and the Pearl Islands. Helen Massey Randall’s daughter got married and Helen took off to Cozumel the week after to relax. She is the plans examiner for the City of Aiken and does architectural house plans on the side. Nancy Rives Sams is supervisor for two counties’ welfare benefits departments. She helps with her toddler granddaughter while her son finishes his CPA requirements. Anne King Silver spent six weeks in the winter in Puerto Aventuras, Mexico. She also traveled to Bermuda, Canada, Alaska, Hilton Head,\ and the Bahamas. Anne lost her mother in June 2004. Marilu Pittman Schnitzer makes beaded necklaces and key chains for sale on line and in specialty shops. She also volunteers at a public charter boarding school for atrisk youth. She is learning to knit from Fran Hicks. Fran took daughter Bailey to New York for her 16th birthday for shows and shopping. She still works part-time as a psychologist. Congratulations to Edna Jacobs Barnes who finished her Doctor of Ministry and teaches a bit at the seminary in addition to her duties as Dean of Students and chaplain. Allison White Parker welcomed her first grandchild in February. Her daughter clerked in our office while in law school and is now an attorney in Atlanta. Lynn Gayle Caputo was planning to move from Arizona back to North Carolina. Louise Wilbur Caldwell teaches at the Waldorf School where she says she is a little “suspect” as a mainstream educator. Lynn Jones Ledbetter and Rhette have a new grandson and all the children live nearby in the Atlanta area. I understand that Mary Fuller Propes’ husband Daschiel suffered a mild stroke but is recovering well. Martha Howe Thorne continues to be a leader in real estate sales in the Tampa area. My year has been busy at work as the caseloads keep growing and the resources shrinking. I have enjoyed serving as a vice-president of the North Carolina Bar Association this year and despite what the media would have people believe, I am very proud to be a lawyer as I see the worthwhile contributions the members make to their communities. From your cards and letter I see what we have in common at 55: empty nests, weddings, new grandchildren, aging parents, losing parents, travels put off too long and a spirit of adventure that we nurtured together. See you in the spring of 2006! 1972 Beth Bencini Iskander Apt. 613, 531 Main Street New York, NY 10044-0156 BBIskander@aol.com Peggy Williford Murray writes from Durham. She and John still work at the Duke University Medical Center. Daughter Margaret, a junior at Durham Academy, is beginning her college search. Peggy will be a docent at the new campus museum and attributes her knowledge of art history basics to roommate Sandy McGlinn Fetter. Debbie Burdick Drozen and 33 husband Mel reports that daughter Allison is a freshman at St. Joseph’s in Philadelphia and daughter Sarah is a high school freshman. Pelham Lyles Spong is executive director of Fairfield County Museum in Winnsboro, SC, where she lives with younger daughter Shelby. Daughter Pelham, a student at the College of Charleston, will attend the Sorbonne next year. Pelham is regularly in touch with Vernessa Riley Foelix ’73 and Sarah Dorrier McMaster ’73. Corinne Little Nicholson is very busy at St. Andrews Presbyterian College, where she is cochair of the department of business and economics, associate professor of management, and director of the Academic Internship Program. Eleanor Harrell Blakely and husband Jerry are on the faculty at WV University in Morgantown, where Eleanie is Associate Professor of Social Work. They will enjoy their second summer in Asolo, Italy, where Jerry will be teaching. Writing from Sanford where she lives with husband Michael Mason, Nancy Watkins manages her real estate and volunteers for civic and non-profit organizations. Children Whitney, Bradford, and Martha Simpson are an accountant, a general contractor, and an elementary school teacher, respectively. Marcia McDade is a busy artist traveling between her studios in Cedar Grove, NC coast and Stuart, VA. Marcia was part of Jim Moon’s annual show at Lincoln Center this year, and she and I had a good visit in New York. In July, her show ‘Tails of Domestic Bliss-Dogs and Their People’ will be at the New Elements Gallery in Wilmington. Marcia also creates rag dolls and had a February show at the NC Crafts Gallery in Carrboro. Joining her and husband Bill McMann at dinner following the opening were Suzanne Wyatt Higgins and husband John. Suzanne has a new studio and continues to paint, draw and exhibit her work. Elder daughter Elizabeth, a film major, has just graduated from the University of Michigan and younger daughter Rachel is starting her college search. Marcia hears from Patty Key Williams, who lives in Nashville, where she, husband Buck and son Hunter are involved in the music business. Daughter Sarah works in graphic design and marketing. The family spends as much time as they can during the summers at Figure Eight Island. Shelley Castleberry Dembicks and husband Andy live in Raleigh, spend time with their granddaughter (13) and travel to Hong Kong where their other two grandchildren live. They see Margaret Bramham Nicholson and Gilliam 34 often. Two weeks ago, they attended Nancy Warren Dixon’s son’s wedding in Atlanta. Nancy and her husband live in Roanoke. Their daughter Nancy Elizabeth was married last year. Also at the wedding was Ann Cadenhead McNutt, who lives in Dallas. Lisa Chiles lives in Islamabad, where she is the director of the $1.5 billion U.S. foreign aid program to Pakistan. A truly global family, Lisa’s husband Austin Pulle teaches law at Singapore Management University. Daughter Roshani is getting a master’s degree in law, having graduated last year from the London School of Economics. Son Julian is majoring in biochemistry at the University of California, Santa Barbara. In May, Leigh Wood Pate’s daughters all graduated, Virginia from the University of Georgia, Elizabeth from UNC law school, and Scottie from UNC medical school. Virginia will enter the PhD program in biostatistics at UNC in the fall. Elizabeth is looking for a job in Washington. Charlie still enjoys teaching at Salem, and Leigh teaches math at Forsyth Technical Community College and just received her real estate license. Katharine Manning and husband Thomas Mueller live in Pasadena, CA with her daughter Christiane Weis (16), and stepdaughters Julie (17) and Lisa (10). Kathy is a psychotherapist and minister and writes, studies, and teaches about alternative health and spirituality. Judith Simpson White is now president/executive director of Higher Education Resource Services, an educational non-profit organization offering management and leadership development programs for women in higher education. Husband Syd Nathans will teach this fall at Duke, and will then move to Denver, retiring to become a full-time researcher and writer. Judith would love to hear from any classmates heading to Denver. Karen Peterson McKinnon and Hunt live in Hillsborough. Karen works at the Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center at UNC, and Hunt, an architect, teaches in the undergrad and grad programs at ECU and the graduate school of design at NCSU. Daughter Krista (18) loves Oberlin College. Carol Hewitt Melvin’s son “J,” a doctoral student at the University of Pennsylvania, married a fellow student. Carol is a trustee of the Rockingham County Public Library system and continues her community service work. Margee Beeler Gunter teaches secondary school English in Martinsville, VA, where she and husband Robert live with daughter Elizabeth, who will attend Wofford College this fall. Outgoing Salem Alumnae Association president and classmate Gwynne Stephens Taylor is leading the restoration/renovation of Single Sisters House. She taught a January term course about the Single Sisters House and enjoyed getting to know the 18 students who took the class. She asks anyone who lived in Sisters to send photographs, stories or momentos of years in Sisters to her at 700 Arbor Road, Winston-Salem, NC 27104. Gwynne and Dan’s sons Winslow and Brinson are rising senior and freshman, at UNC-CH. Gwynne sees Mary Salem Thacker and Ann London Vaughn, both in Greensboro, every month or two. Mary’s etiquette business is going well, and Ann is busy with her job at Holy Trinity Episcopal Church and her floral business. Daughter Caroline teaches nursery school, and son Worth loves ASU. Gwynne reports that Mary Davis Holt does an excellent job as chair of the Salem Academy and College Board of Trustees. Mary and I had an enjoyable catch-up lunch together in January. Mary and David just moved again– into another historic house in Old Town Alexandria, reminding me of the constant re-arranging of furniture in Mary’s dorm rooms at Salem! They have a new grandson, Samuel Charles. Mary loves freedom from full-time work and looks forward to spending the summer at their house in Duck. Laura Huddleston Snyder and Bill live in Cary. Laura is coordinator of State Improvement Grants for the NC Department of Public Instruction in Raleigh. Son Will graduated from NYU and is an associate editor with Outdoor Life magazine, and daughter Elizabeth is at ASU. As I write this news in May, Anne Burckhardt Clauss and daughters Elizabeth, a law student at USC, and Salem seniors and soonto-be grads Kate and Lauren are planning an all-girls’ trip to Italy in June. Errol will hold down the fort at home. Janet Ward Duffy and husband Ed also plan travels to Alaska for their 30th anniversary. Janet teaches kindergarten in Rock Hill, where daughter Elizabeth (21) is a student at Winthrop. Son William is a graduate student at UNC-G. Amy Arendell and partner Robert Anders live in Asheville where she is an educational consultant and instructor for Brain Gym Consulting. Son Louis, is an artist/ singer-songwriter, graduated from Bard College and daughter Wheeler is studying furniture making at College of the Redwoods, CA. Margaret Earle (Vernon) Mondul writes from Williamsburg, VA, where she and husband Steve have lived since her retirement from the Navy. She is busy with her new business, Household Document Organization. Not much new to report in our household. I still love my job at Sotheby’s, where I am an assistant vice president and photographs specialist. Son Peter (19) is crazy about Dickinson College and son Michael (16) attends the UN School. Celia Watson Weston, Sallie Barham Nolan, both ’70, and Sallie’s husband Clyde recently had dinner with Farid and me. I would love to hear from those of you for whom I have no email addresses. Please send email to me at the address I’ve indicated, and I will happily include any news you send. 1973 Linda Kelly Flunker 7424 SE County Road 234 Gainsville, FL 32641-1608 jjflunker@att.net Margaret Rose Faust and husband Rick are busy remodeling after 25 years in the same house. She works part time as a physical therapist. This spring Margaret ran in the Boston marathon but was injured and could not finish so she plans to try again next year. She has one son at Appalachian State and one at Western Carolina. Alden Hanson lives outside Wake Forest, NC and has taught elementary art in the area for 20 years. She is married and has two sons. Within a few years she hopes to move to the mountains. She’d especially like to hear from Cori, Jan and Jorie. Melinda Vick Wilson moved her dad to Charlotte so she can care for him. She and husband Bill are going to Italy in the fall to see their daughter during her semester there. Her middle child moved to Chattanooga in real estate development for a shopping center firm. Her oldest son is in the real estate business in Charlotte. Catherine Cooper Williamson is with the city attorney’s office in Charlotte, NC, but dreams of all the possibilities now the children are out of the nest. Daughter Alice graduated form Duke this spring, and will teach special education with Teach For America in Los Angeles. Son Sam will be a junior at Furman, majoring in business. Husband Lane has a litigation firm, Garlitz and Williamson. Carol Franklin works in telecommunications management for Tollgrade Communications, Inc. often traveling to Pittsburgh, PA and Sarasota, FL. She still enjoys horseback riding. Susan Gravely appeared in the February 2004 issue of Business Leader magazine. The magazine named her Entrebizneur of the Year for her role as CEO of Vietri, Inc., which is the business she started after an Italian vacation. Lynne Cannady has lived in Sacramento, CA since 1983 and Salem College keeps in touch with Kristen Danbury Whatley as well as other former classmates in the Atlanta area. Lane Crawford is director of development at the Paramount Theater in Charlottesville, VA. Daughter Elizabeth is almost done with her masters degree at Longwood University, and son Paul graduated from UVA in 2004. Paul is also the father of Lane’s two grandchildren, Quentin and Asiah. Lisa Herron Bankoff had a busy year with son Christopher graduating form Savannah College of Art and Design then moving to Dallas to start his first job with Reel FX Studios. Daughter Margaret a junior at University of San Diego, chose a study abroad program that had her sailing around the world. Lisa traveled to Kenya to visit her daughter for “parent’s weekend” and made a whole vacation of it. Lisa’s husband Joe keeps busy with his legal work and traveling with Lisa. Laurie Daltroff Triplette and other Salemites are putting together a comprehensive list of all the residents of Sisters House and start an outreach program centered around social gatherings of these women. Contact her if you have an interest in this and want more information. Ruth Powell Campbell lost her father in January. Son Kyle was married in December. She is in her fifth term as president of an 800 player Little League. Sally Pinto Krapf hopes to graduate in 2006 with a masters degree for Community Counseling. Her internship will be done at the VA in Wilmington, DE working with combat vets suffering PTSD. Older son Tom is married. Younger son John is a student at Ohio Wesleyan University in Delaware, OH. Sally had lunch with Charlene Sewell Fisher for “take a Salemite to lunch day” and they had a great time. Jess Roper McLamb has finally moved her business out of her home and hired an employee. Marsha Wood Joyce operates her Eldercare business and is a distributor for Clever-ring. Daughter Melanie and son-in-law live in Kansas City, KS and recently made Marsha a first time grandmother. Son Mark runs his father’s farming business in south Florida. Peggy Melvin Perkins and husband Tom recently moved. They have two children: Andrew is district manager for Abercrombie and Fitch, and James is a student at Appalachian State College. Vernessa Riley Foelix, an artist and teacher is married to an university professor in Switzerland, and mother of Pascal (17). Sarah Dorrier McMaster is director of county libraries in Winnsboro, SC. Linda Kelly Flunker regularly rides horses with daughter Kelly. She still fences Magaz ine 20 05 also. Her daughter will be a junior in high school and hopes to land a college scholarship for competitive horseback riding. Husband Jerry retired from food sales, but keeps busier than ever with a field mowing business, and driving the school bus for Kelly’s school field trips. 1974 Julie Barton Collins 309 North Street Anderson, SC 29621-5814 harperh@carol.net Many thanks to those who have sent or e-mailed news. In 2004, our class suffered the loss of one of our favorite and most unique classmates. Martha Anne “Mopsy” Nesmith passed away at her home in Wilmington, NC on December 4, 2004. We celebrated her individuality and contribution to our class with a memorial gift toward the renovation of Sisters. Julieanne Kidd Angel performed with son John’s (15) choir for High Mass at the Salzburg Cathedral during summer 2004, an indescribable experience she writes. Harriet Willson Bosiak’s Christmas photo featured grown children Willson, Ann, and Sarah. Beth Pollard Buechner e-mailed of lunch with Becky Hewit Rauenhorst in Tampa, with Ellen Rucker Plyler at their mothers’ retirement community, and then again with Margaret Brinkley Sigmon, Peggy Bullard, and Chris Minter Dowd in Washington. Carol Perrin Cobb and Nancy Adams Quinn joined me for lunch in Greenville, SC. Mary Ann Campbell Davis’ 2004 was filled with weddings and travels to Gulf Shores, AL, San Antonio, TX, Wild Dunes, SC, and the Homestead, VA. Her children both live in WinstonSalem. In 2005, Trey will complete Divinity studies, and Chrissy begins a 2-3 year MA in Teaching at Salem. Congratulations to Dee-Dee Anderson Dietrich who celebrated both children’s weddings in 2004 as well as the birth of grandson, Ethan Anderson Ralls. Le Newell Erwin sent a Christmas photo of her four college kids! Clark (26); Margaret (24); Leila (23); and Ginny (20). Le and Ginny traveled to Italy in mid-December with a Salem group to study the arts, architecture, cuisine, etc. Kudos to Frere Sands French who’s back in school to study nutrition/sports medicine. Son Lee (24) is an investment banker for Wachovia in Charlotte; Marshall (19) is following his father’s and brother’s footsteps at Washington and Lee. Bill consults with several East Coast companies. Beth Perry Granger survived a 5-month home renovation project to create living space for husband Gary’s mother. Daughter Julie has shoulder surgery in 2004 and hopes to return to competitive swimming for Duke University. Daughter Elizabeth, graduate of the University of Georgia, will continue her education in the doctor of physical therapy department at Emory University. Beth continues to teach English to speakers of other languages. Karen Johnson Hillman’s son David is engaged, and plans to attend law school at his father’s alma mater Washington and Lee. Son John, a Dean’s List student, plays soccer for UNC-Asheville. Karen teaches Spanish at NCSU. Cathy Hunsucker and I joined Becky Hewit Rauenhorst with daughter Rebecca, Winn Currie Ballenger, Nancy Adams Quinn, Betsy Hester, and Mary Dashiell for the traditional Asheville lunch in October. In early December we were joined by Lynne Mappus, Nancy Boyd, and Kim Royster for the Christmas Candlelight Service at Salem followed by the Christmastide drop-in at the Rondthaler-Gramley House. Julie Kidd Angel and Clark Kitchin Larson joined us for dinner. My favorite husband Robert, joined us to celebrate. Also at the Candlelight Service were Muffin Saunders Campbell with her mother and daughter, Winters ’05. If I’ve omitted anyone, please forgive. Congratulations to Camille Murphy Jones, associate director of public relations for the NC School of the Arts. Laura Turnage McNair and husband Frank wrote that their parents are well. Laura organized the restructuring of several non-profits, and Frank published You Can Sell It! They serve at First Presbyterian and St. Paul’s Episcopal respectively as lay persons. Many thanks to Lynne Mappus who hosted a S.A.L.E.M. (Salem Alumnae Lunch Event in March) in Columbia. Get well wishes to Jean Wetzel Nance who underwent an emergency appendectomy in early April. Susan Noble reports that with family, two nieces and nephews, and church activities, she has no time to work! She plans to retire from the Extension Service in three years. She and her mother enjoyed a trip to Italy in November 2004. Sally Phillips regretted missing our 30th reunion, but reported a successful prom. Chris Minter Dowd showed her reunion photos. Nancy Adams Quinn’s Christmas photo featured grown children Liza, a kindergarten teacher in Guilford County, NC, and Woody, CNN executive by day; jazz musician by night in New York City! Condolences to Becky Hewit Rauenhorst whose father passed away in April. Gin-Gin Bruce Scott’s daughter Lillian will attend University of Kentucky as an invited walk-on in soccer. Gin-Gin plans to reconnect with freshman roommate and current Lexington resident Janet Ross Ockers. Anne Manly Smith and Grant enjoyed the holidays at home with daughter Janna and son Grant Jr. They visited Grant Jr. in Cape Coral, FL and stopped in Tampa for a Josh Grobin concert. Bebe Gravely Sullivan’s youngest son Charlie was in a production of the “Christmas Revels” in Washington, DC while Will busied himself with college applications. Caroline Gaver Trefzger wrote from Hickory that son Hunter attends the Citadel; daughter Eleanor, Davidson, and that her husband and son Henderson did a 70-mile trek to Philmont Scout Ranch in New Mexico. Her family celebrated the New Year on Sullivan’s Island. Condolences to Deborah Warner on the sudden death of her mother on March 30th. On my home front, rising Sewanee junior Harper will assume full proctor duties for a co-ed dorm (gulp!) this fall while pursuing a double major in Anthropology and French, and participating on the Equestrian Team. Robert and I garden, cook, and entertain. I close with best wishes to the Class of ’74. 1975 Incoming Correspondent Susan Wooten Gaines 2325 Woodrow Drive Raleigh, NC 27609-7626 swgaines@bellsouth.net sgaines@us.ibm.com The “Virgin Trees of 75” were well represented at our 30th class reunion. After the events on campus, we had a wonderful class party at the home of Leigh Thurston Myers on Saturday evening and had lots of time to catch up and visit. Lynda Casanova Lumpkin, a lifelong Presbyterian, is chairman of the Deacons at Louisburg Baptist Church. In the last year Lynda was fulltime caregiver to her father who recently passed away and to her mother-in-law. Ann Tillett works for the Winston-Salem Foundation and is planning her annual summer getaway to Wyoming along with several other exciting jaunts to visit family and friends. Also working at the WinstonSalem Foundation is Annette Perritt Lynch who works to build assets and provide good donor services. Husband John is a residential real estate appraiser. Daughter Caroline is working in architectural services in Charlotte, and son John is a junior at UNC majoring in economics. LuAnne Chadwick Wood is director of admissions at Forsyth Country Day School. She and Jeff have three children: Ben, finishing his second year of medical school at 35 Class of 1975 Front row: Peggy Fulghum Matthews, Susan Wooten Gaines, Ann Aultman Johnston, Carolyn Edris Shultzaberger, Lee Simmons Bernstein, Elaine Foster Behl Second row: LuAnne Chadwick Wood, Lynda Casanova Lumpkin, Ann Tillett, Leigh Thurston Myers, Katie Allen Allen Third row: Cindy Lovin McArthur, Sarah Longino, Annette Perritt Lynch, Julie Smith Sparks, Tricia Daniel Nimocks, Mary Dorsett Salem, Leslie Bass Walker WFU; Chris, a rising senior at UNC; and Leslie, is a rising sophomore at UNC-G. Leslie Bass Walker has gone back to high school! She is working with handicapped students and finding it very fulfilling. Ann Aultman Johnson is executive vice president of human resources for Reynolds American in Winston Salem. She took classmates Lee Simmons Bernstein, Elaine Foster Behl and Katie Allen up to check out life on the executive floor at work. Sarah Longino teaches science at Timber Creek High School in Orange County, FL where she is science department chair. Cindy Lovin McArthur works for NASA facilitating live events with crews in orbit and helping with the educational payloads. Husband Bill is slated to be on a Russian Soyuz launch in September 2005 headed for a six month stay in the International Space Station. If you head to Manteo, NC look up Mary Dorsett Salem who recently moved there. She works at The Christmas Shop and enjoys the life very much. Tricia Daniels Nimrocks plays golf regularly and owns and operates a flower shop, The Greenery, in Charleston, SC. Peggy Fulghum Matthews graduated from WFU Divinity School in 2002. She completed a two year residency as chaplain at Moses Cone Hospital in Greensboro, was ordained in the fall of 2004 and now serves as parish chaplain and director of pastoral care for First Presbyterian Church in Greens36 boro. Peggy’s granddaughter graduated from Salem in 2005. Carolyn Edris Schultzaberger combined her love of horses and education with a career as a therapeutic riding instructor, working with handicapped children and adults to enjoy the mobility of the horses while learning life coping skills. She and husband Rick’s son Matt will graduate soon from NCSU. Leigh Thurston Myers opened her home to our class Alumnae weekend. Daughter Elizabeth is working with dad Brad at Salem Electric and daughter Katherine is a rising senior at Furman University. Leigh enjoys playing bridge, working in her garden, and volunteering in Winston Salem. To help Leigh prepare for the weekend, Julie Smith Sparks arrived several days early from northern Virginia. Her oldest daughter Laura is at UVA. Emily (9th grade) loves lacrosse and basketball. Leigh credited Denni Hill Peebles with help for our party, but Denni missed the fun as she was ferrying dates up to Woodberry Forrest. Together Terry LaPrade O’Donohue and husband have eight children keeping them busy. If that is not enough, Terry is the proud proprietor of her own service station which she assumed running several years ago to help her father. Her daughter is a proud member of the Salem College Class of 2005. Betty McCollum Isaacs stopped by our class gathering. She lives in Richmond and has an exciting new person in her life. Unable to attend but sending news for us were the following: Cabell Smith Longan is in Richmond with husband Bill. Daughter Molly is a rising senior at UNC-W where she is on the dive team, and son Robert recently graduated high school. Lee Dalton Hanes and husband Bill live in Winston-Salem where Lee is a senior vice president at Calibre, a division of Wachovia. Lee travels back and forth to Kinston several times a month taking care of her mother there. Claire McCommon Smith and Boone are working to keep up with their children. Boone, IV, graduated from WFU and is in law school at Mercer. Ginny graduated from the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts with a degree in drama. Claire and Boone recently traveled to NYC to see her stage debut. Leigh McDonald lives and works in Charlotte as an artist. Daughter Katie Jordan enjoys Salem Academy and all of the activities there. Bethlene Clark is retiring from Yadkin County Schools after teaching 30 years of world and U.S. history in high school there. Now she is looking forward to time on the golf course. Pam Ritter Patton runs the kidney and pancreas transplant program for the Department of Surgery at UF as is the associate clinical director. She could be seen atop a 2004 Victory Vegas driven by husband Tom, at Daytona’s Annual Bike Week. Mary Lou Cunningham Dodd continues to work as a physical therapist for Wake County Schools. Son Michael is a rising junior at Furman. Anna is a rising senior in high school and Margaret is a rising 7th grader. Cyndy Patterson Chapman and her family spent two weeks in the Philippines reconnecting with their son’s past while enjoying the natural beauty there. She has seen Taylor Bidgood Randolph several times in the past few months and they have exchanged parenting tips and updates on Salem friends. Katherine Franklin Shapinski had the best excuse for not attending the reunion: she is busy raising twins Olivia Irene and Ariana Iris (3). Since our last reunion, she and Ian have gotten married, and have obviously been very busy. Katherine still works for Hormel Foods but put being church organist on hold for now. Congratulations, Katherine and Ian. I still work for IBM and living in Raleigh. Daughter Kate will be a freshman at Duke this fall. After a trip to Africa, she and I plan to enjoy the summer taking care of the horses and getting her ready for school. I hope her new skydiving venture is just a passing fancy. I look forward to being our class correspondent. Please send me any updates on yourselves and your families or our classmates either by conventional or email so I can keep everyone posted. 1976 Cindy Cothran Unit 6, 1121 Sherwood Drive Burlington, N.C. 27215-3595 mlc1121@netpath.net According to all the e-mails, many in our class have been busy with high school and college graduations this spring. Sarah Johnston Hudson’s son Greg will go to Clemson. He was a member of the state championship band, and Sarah loved all the football games and band competitions. Brandon Boyd Chapman’s son Chris is a freshman at NCSU; son Will graduates from Davidson, and son Matt is finishing a masters degree at Georgetown. Brandon is a real estate agent, volunteers, plays tennis, and has a new puppy. Linda Judy Martin, in her 28th year of teaching hearing impaired children, is in her eighth year with a cochlear implant which has helped her hear much better. One son (WFU 2002) will soon graduate from the University of Georgia School of Law. Her other son graduates from the University of Tennessee in December. Daughter Carrie, a high school freshman, also benefited from a cochlear implant. Linda ran into Lori Furches Thrailkill at Myrtle Beach last October and found she hasn’t changed a bit since Salem. Anne Copeland Pittard is less than a year from possible retirement as US probation officer in Charleston. She enjoyed great trips to Europe in the past few years and is going to Canada this summer. Her younger daughter graduates from Columbia College, and will pursue a master’s degree at the Medical University of SC. Elizabeth Foust Mason’s oldest child graduates from UNC-CH and youngest is a high school senior. Elizabeth began teaching children who fall behind in reading skills and loves it so much she is looking for a full-time position. She received flower arranging tips from Carolyn Davis Anderson, and visited with Dee Stout Pence, Sally Burnett Sweeney and Estelle McElwee Stinchcomb at the home of Laura Keith Brown in Charlotte. Laura celebrated twenty years with Bank of America; she is a SVP, Curriculum Design and Development Manager in Consumer Skill Building. Husband Tony and son Thomas (14) capture what time Laura has left available. Salem College Marti Russell Byrum is in Greenville, NC where her husband practices medicine. Her daughter works for Senator Burr in DC, and her son is a walk-on relief pitcher for WFU. Her youngest son is a freshman at UNC-G. She recently saw Scottie Boardman House who teaches at Reynolds High School, and also Beth Gayle Clough who is beginning the college search with her son. Sally Jordan Patterson helps children of military personnel in her position as school liaison officer for the Army at Fort Jackson in Columbia, SC. Her oldest son graduated from Davidson in 2003, and is a Lieutenant in the Air Force in Albuquerque, serving as a physicist. Son Jonathan is a junior at Clemson, and daughter Sarah is a high school junior and plays on the varsity soccer team. Bebe Aycock Krewson still loves teaching fourth grade at Summit School. Daughter Liz (17) recently made the National Honor Society and Mu Alpha Theta Math Honor Society, and also achieved her Girl Scout Gold Award. Daughter Emily (14) is also an honor student, and was voted MVP of basketball at Summit School. Husband Scott is business administrator for radiology oncology at Wake Forest Medical Center. Marilyn Turner Hedgpeth has a two-pastor family: she serves as associate pastor at First Presbyterian Church in Durham, and Hedge is pastor at Mt. Bethel Presbyterian Church in Durham. Their oldest, Emily, graduated from WFU this May. Laura Sutphin Brouse-Long continues fundraising for the Smithsonian in Washington. She and husband Bill enjoy their two granddaughters who live in Maryland. Laura was grateful for the care and concern of Salem friends following her mother’s death in November. Jane Howell Sharpe began her fifth year in the Office of Academic Affairs in the College of Engineering at NCSU. Daughter Ellie is a senior at NCSU, and son Wynne graduated from Washington and Lee in 2003. Mary Hoffman Inglis has four children and works as communications coordinator for her Catholic church in Beaufort, SC. Beth Zobel Small is busy as co-chair for 2005 for the Symphony Guild of Charlotte ASID Showhouse. Nikki Pratt Wilson is serving as a nurse practitioner in the Air Force Reserves. Last spring, she transferred from Headquarters Surgeon General Building AFB to Little Rock AFB in Arkansas. They live near Memphis. Daughter Sarah (14) keeps her busy driving to activities. Kathy Gedeon Soza is pleased that son Michael excels in violin as well as art. Husband Mark enjoys teaching the fifth grade. I hope that everyone will have a wonderful summer, and we’ll see each other at the Magaz ine 20 05 big 30th next year. 1977 Kathy Watkinson Ivins 9900 Kingsbridge Road Richmond, VA 23233-5714 kathy.ivins@thalhimer.com I can’t write any news if I don’t receive any. Come on ladies I need to hear from you. 1978 Anne Piedmont 2102 Wycliffe Avenue, SW Roanoke, VA 24014-1729 anne@roanoke.org Betty Shull Butler recruits for BB&T Bank in Winston-Salem. Work and teenage girls (17 & 14) keep her busy. Our sympathy goes to Betty, who lost her father in January, 18 months after the death of her brother. Julia McMillan Fallon and husband Denis have moved to Blacksburg, VA. Daughter Jill is at Tulane and son Archie at University of Tennessee Law School. Jenny Eury is in her 24th year at IBM in Raleigh. She recently cruised to the Bahamas for a nice vacation, volunteered last October for Sally Ride Festival, and taught 300 young girls binary math. Susan Leonard Fonville is in Raleigh. Her son graduated this year from Broughton High School, heading to Carolina. They joined a school group over spring break for a trip to Europe and hosted an exchange student from France last fall. Stell Snowdon Brown flew with Piedmont/US Airways for 21 years and has been selling real estate in Lake Norman/Charlotte area for 5 years. She is married to Sayle and has two grown step-daughters. Sarah Parsons Davis and husband Mike celebrated their 25th anniversary with a long weekend at The Homestead. Daughter Bess finished her freshman year at Elon where she is a North Carolina Teaching Fellow. Belle Maloy Fosbury and husband Michael moved from Louisville, KY to Binghamton, NY. Michael is with Columbian Finance Group and Belle has been busy settling in. She took up tennis again, but tore her Achilles tendon! Marie Camp Hansen works at Northern Trust Bank in Ft. Lauderdale as a wealth strategist and was promoted to the regional sales manager. She and husband Leo moved into a new house. Lynn Hill Blankenship and husband Dan have become DINKs (double income no kids!). Jason graduated from High School; Alex from community college. Janet Kaduck Sawyer’s son Will was accepted into the 5 year Masters of Accountancy Program at Wake Forest. Adrienne Warren Northington’s daughter Grace finished her first year at UNC. Two other daughters are in 9th and 8th grades. She is christian education director for St. Stephen’s Episcopal in Goldsboro, NC. She says that Ann Fidler has moved to Goldsboro. Kathy Kirkpatrick Oates’ oldest son Hunter graduated from Georgia Tech, is heading to M.I.T. on a fellowship to get his Ph.D in chemical oceanography! Campbell survived his first year at Wofford. Idalyn Stoll Brown still has a pediatric neuropsychology practice in Mt. Pleasant, SC. She and her husband are raising three grandchildren while their parents open a medical practice in Kentucky. Liz Rhodes Perritt lives in Wilmington, NC and stays busy with three teenagers. Jennifer Coe lives in Mt Pleasant, SC, where she teaches history and travels quite a bit with her free summers. Ann Beidleman lives in Winter Park, FL and is an integration project manager for The Hartford. She recently was certified as an open water scuba diver and dove the reef off of West Palm Beach. Lee Hackney Ingram lives between Rocky Mount and Cedar Island, NC. Daughter Mary Wesley is a high school junior. Husband Larry builds sport fishing boats and has a charter boat out of Atlantic Beach. Bettsy Edgar Heggie is in Richmond. Son Tom teaches sixth grade English and daughter Caroline is a high school junior now is looking at colleges, playing travel volleyball. Julie Hettiger is commuting from Houston to San Diego where her husband works. She’s still doing food styling and consulting, media tours, recipe testing and development. Rebecca Lasley paints seriously these days, getting up at 4:30 a.m. to put in hours before work. She played the female lead in a murder mystery produced for Friends of the High Point Theatre. Jane Dittmann Atkins recently got together with Laura Benfield Thompson, Betty Shull Butler and Betsy Brooks Custer. Jane passed along the following news: Laura, an empty nester with one daughter at Davidson and the other at NCSU, teaches English at the local community college and works in a bookstore. Betsy has two girls as well and teaches part-time since moving to Raleigh from Rocky Mount. The move was necessitated by husband Scott becoming the CEO of RBC Centura Bank. Sally Lowndes Long works in development. Her one daughter Sarah will begin her freshman year at the American University in London in the fall. Libby Shull of Greensboro, NC and Sally Bason of Reidsville, NC went to Daytona Beach, FL for Biker’s Week in March 2005. They wanted to do something very different this year for their Salem Alum March get together. Libby, known as Tangerine on her bike, reports a good time was had by all! I am still in Roanoke, busy with work (traveling too much!), doing projects around the house and throwing pots at pottery. I spent a week in February skiing at Lake Tahoe. Nothing broken! 1979 Susan Miller Brink 1118 Cedar Ridge Drive Mebane, NC 27302 brinkfamily@mindspring.com Ann Miller Pardue has 3 daughters, Jessica, at Tulane University, Hannah, a high school senior, and Blythe, a sophomore. Connie Caldwell Breeser’s children Robert and Hayley are 4 . Connie is in-house counsel at PRGSchultz International and is finishing her 6-year term as a Salem College trustee. Our sympathy is extended to Jennie Mauney Hinshaw on the deaths of her brother and mother in 2004. Daughter Catherine is in the fifth grade. 1980 Outgoing Correspondent Mishew Williams Paynter Incoming Correspondent Marsha Sanders McNamara 1501 Farmington Court Raleigh, NC 27615-5402 marshamc@nc.rr.com Wow! What a year! Katherine Knapp Watts has a new job as director of development for Salem College. Ellen Newton Auten’s daughter Mary Ellen is a junior at Salem majoring in math and working toward a secondary teaching license. Her other daughters, Laura and Rebecca (11th and 6th grades respectively), continue to keep Ellen very busy. We extend our deepest sympathy to Martha Walker Fullington whose mother died in April 2004. Martha is writing grants, directing the restoration of her historic church in Biltmore, NC, editing non-fiction and historical fiction, and serving on the State Historic Preservation Advisory Committee. Her daughter Katie is a junior at UNC-CH. Rebecca Baggett recently had poems published in several publications. Daughter Morgan graduates in May, and daughter Emma plans to transfer to UGA as a history major. Mary Lynnette Delbridge and husband Andrew Meckstroth have adopted their second daughter, Carol Linnea Fuliang Delbridge. She says life as a pastor continues to be very fulfilling. Mary Foster Beisswenger 37 Groot Erdtmann ’87. Meggins read a newspaper article about Harriet Calhoun Stephens Class of 1980 Front row: Martha Walker Fullington, Nancy Haynie Cheatham, Giselle Thompson, Katherine Knapp Watts, Rebecca Baggett, Betsy Bryan Blair, Mary Elizabeth Barnes Sells Second row: Leigh Padgett, Jean Fleming Harris, Laurie Johnson Inabinet, Cherry Baity Greene, Susan Maley Rash, Arie Tubb Motschman, Ellen Newton Auten, Pam Snyder Corum Third row: Stephanie Porter-Cavender, Anne Carter Craddock, Marsha Sanders McNamara, Cameron Frey, Mary Bryant Elliott, Elizabeth Toney Melvin, Mary Foster Beisswenger, Elizabeth Whitehurst Turner, Carol Crawford keeps busy with church activities and helping at daughter Sara’s school. She is a “barn mom” with Sara’s horseback riding and showing in the hunter/ jumper class. Paula Young Chamblee married Mack Roebuck December 31, 2004 at the Single Brothers House in Old Salem. She is the director of annual giving for Old Salem. Nancy Haynie Cheatham teaches at an “inclusive” preschool – special needs children are incorporated into each classroom. Twins Blake and Sarah are at Furman and Wake Forest, respectively. Daughter Elizabeth is in high school. Pam Snyder Corum is busy keeping up with her two daughters’ (16 and 2) schedules. She is also the owner of her family business, Snyder Photography. Susan Peele Crofton lives in Durham, NC, and is on the cooking school staff at A Southern Season. Mishew Smith Edwards still enjoys life in the country. She and husband Chip run Rock Cabin Farm in Bahama, NC. Catherine Fuller is a physician in private practice in Los Angeles, CA. She is also an associate clinical instructor at UCLA. She invites all to come see her on the West Coast. Caroline Cella Marker really enjoys being a family practice physician in Midlothian, VA. Husband Daryl stays at home with their 2 sons, Michael and Robert. Jane Hatley Smoak lives on Edisto 38 Island, SC where she is the property manager for vacation rentals at Edisto Sales & Rentals Realty. Husband Bill is a commercial fisherman. They have a daughter, Sarah and a son, Wightman. I’d like to extend a special “thank you” to Carol Crawford and Betsy Bryan Blair for their fabulous work as our co-class presidents. As for me, Mishew Williams Paynter, I have thoroughly enjoyed being your class correspondent. Thanks to everyone who sent news each year. You made my task very easy. Marsha Sanders McNamara will be taking over this endeavor. I look forward to seeing everyone in 5 years (if not sooner). Have a great summer! 1981 Mary Allen Waller 6709 Wessex Lane Richmond, VA 23226-3405 sammaw@aol.com I saw Julia Owen Baker last fall. She and husband Phillip have two children: Marsh (13) and Marjorie (10) and are immersed in the kids’ tennis, dance, baseball, basketball, Girl Scouts, and guitar. I also saw Meggins Reinhardt Tuchmann. She and husband Tom have two girls who keep them busy. Meggins, still in Portland, OR, recently met with Morgan Stanley colleague, Nanette de and husband Warren hosting a large art exhibit, “Tabriz” in Little Rock, AK. Holly Dyer met Sarah Sledd Glenn and husband Reese, and Ellen Culler in Las Vegas in Oct. 2004 to celebrate Sarah and Reese’s 20th anniversary. They had front row seats to see Gladys Knight who recognized the big anniversary! Ellen and Holly shared a room and it was just like old times. Holly commutes to Cincinnati for Delta. A big thanks to Liz Lee Lacy for helping get updates from everyone. Liz and husband Ray still enjoy Atlanta. Liz is a sales rep with DHR & Company. Liz heard from Ann Appich Harrison whose family went to Czechoslovakia for Christmas then went to New Orleans for the Sugar Bowl. Ann keeps busy with her three children, one already in college at SMU. Liz also visited Betsy Walker Grimball in Charleston last summer. Betsy is busy with her husband and three girls and in her spare time is quite the gourmet chef. While in Charleston, Liz and Betsy ran into Stephanie King Wright and Ruthie Clark Alig who were vacationing with their families in Seabrook. Liz also heard from Frances Gregg Johnson. Frances and husband Les just sold their house in Colorado and look forward to spending more time in Murrell’s Inlet. They recently got together with Missy Akien Ascik and her husband Mark in Florida. Missy enjoys her nursing career. I just moved to a new house out in the country and was promoted to CFO of Markel Insurance Company. I would love to hear more alumnae updates from everyone. 1982 Allison Buice Askins 4619 Furman Avenue Columbia, SC 29206-4447 aaskins@thestate.com Carol Ann Moorhead, husband Luke, and son Hunter (7) traveled to China last summer to receive their adopted daughter, Ai-Li Ann. All are “smitten,” she writes. Garrett Ross Clark’s oldest daughter, Cameron is headed to Vanderbilt, where she was recruited to play lacrosse. Maryanne Tuggle Payne continues to do well selling real estate in Atlanta. She traveled to Germany, Las Vegas and Jacksonville in the past year, and recommends seeing Cirque de Soleil. Kimberly King-Burns splits her time among her Los Angelesbased news media consulting agency, Briland.com, and her Bahamas-based community technology foundation. Kimberly periodically enjoys a Krispy Kreme doughnut with Julie Singletary, who works in the digital world in Burbank. Betsy Hasty Gustafson of Charlotte has been active with the local autism society for whom she has served as community events coordinator. Melanie Mann wrote from Japan, where she has lived for three years. She would love to have a student board with her for a January Term. She teaches at Sullivan’s Base in Yokosuka, Japan. Gail Moore is doing well in Arlington and welcomes guests anytime as does Allison White Unnerstall, who is entering into her family’s third year in the Surrrey area of England. The family will travel to Italy, Egypt, Turkey and Greece this summer. Kathy Glover and Rob Robison married in December. She’s also been busy with a mentoring program she initiated last year with Salem’s Board of Visitors. You may be hearing from her as she seeks more mentors for Salem students. Jamie Credle is the director of the Davenport House in Savannah, GA. She was recently recognized by President Bush and the First Lady at the White House. I recently enjoyed a visit with Ann Biswell Leibel of Chapel Hill and husband Kevin who joined my husband, Bob and me in hosting an international dinner at our house in Columbia. Among our guests were men from Jordan, Tunisia and Baghdad. Jerry Pubantz would have been proud! Please send news and updates to the address or email above. 1983 Vicki Estes Lucas 2503 Anne Terrace Wall, NJ 07719-3837 vickilucas@optonline.net It has been a whirl of a year for many of us! Children are growing up quickly and jobs are filling our lives with obligations. Karen Farmer Brannan teaches preschool. Husband Wyatt graduated last September from the Kenan-Flagler MBA program and she’s enjoyed having him home more often. She takes daughters Hannah and Miriam on “girls weekend” to visit with Sarah Helen Hinkle, Shari Salem College White Dallas, Ellen Brown Meihaus and Beth Koontz White in Charleston. Thanks to Jo Stephenson Brown for sending us those amusing Salem ’83 Reunion postcards and news blurbs. Seems they always arrive just when we need a dose of Salem sisterhood! Julia Councell Roberson and Joe are celebrating 22 years of bliss in Palo Alto, CA with Caitlin, a sophomore at UCLA; Baxter, a high school junior; and Haley, starting high school in the fall. Julia is happy to be a wife, mom and teacher in a BSF class. Johanna Miller Lewis and Michael send word from Little Rock, AK, that his mother passed away last December from a battle with pancreatic cancer. Our heartfelt condolences go out to Michael and Johanna. Johanna is with the University of Arkansas as a historian. Liz Denton Baird has changed positions at the NC Museum of Natural Sciences and is now the director of school programs, delivering programs to schools and teacher across the state. Daughter Madeline and Liz enjoyed a visit to Salem during the Junior Open House last December. Amanda Mays Budd enjoys living in Winston-Salem and seeing Salem alumnae everywhere, from the carpool line to church to garden club. Sarah (14), Richard (12), Alex (9), and Mary Grace (9) keep Joe and her busy, although they still find time to walk their 3 dogs and shoot sporting clays. Claiborne Miller-Davis sends word that Mike, Elizabeth (4) and puppy Penny reside in beautiful, historic Frederick, MD. Claiborne is with NIH in Bethesda as a researcher on quality of life issues, pain and palliative care and relaxes by riding and showing her horse. Daughter Elizabeth is developing that same love for horses and riding! I have recovered from a nasty bout with double pulmonary emboli last year. My boys and husband Steve are all doing well in health and activities. Add me to your holiday card lists and be sure to send your news! 1984 Kathy Little McCormack 164 Terry Road Hartford, CT 06105 kathymac@snet.net Thanks to those of you who responded so promptly to my plea for news. It made me realize why I volunteered for this job again! Kim O’Brien moved back to the DC area where she will be a physician assistant at the Children’s National Medical Center. She spent a week there last June serving on President Reagan’s funeral events staff, which was an incredible experience Magaz ine 20 05 for her. Elise Brigham Wall is busy in Newport News with her family and working with youth at church. She speaks to Susan-Britt Murphrey Macon frequently. Sumner Brown, at her job of almost 20 years, is busy with her family and is a radio DJ on the weekends. Lee Heffernan has moved to Hilton Head after seven years in NYC. She started her own marketing/advertising agency specializing in the television/media industry. Susan Greenberg Jones is going on a mission trip to the Dominican Republic with 40 seniors from the high school where she teaches. She will also go to India in July with her daughter (16) to help the tsunami victims. Paula Blanchard married Larry Pressnell in August 2004 and is a faculty member at Chowan College. She is also a church organist and choir director. She got to visit with Mary Ellen Wilkerson Radford and Pat Philips Caviness while recently on a choir tour. Neal McArthur Orgain stays busy with her family, church, and other volunteer work. She enjoys watching daughter Anne (10) ice skate. Catherine Ghoneim Whitney is in Charlotte designing kitchens. Daughters Annie and Hunter will both attend Camp Seafarer this summer, while Frank and Catherine sail the Outer Banks. She had dinner with Valerie Reibel Portugal, Bonnie Lewis Clark and Elizabeth Carver Morrow ’83 while Valerie was visiting from Peru to look at colleges with her daughter. Bonnie purchased a stationery business called Southern Stationers. She is using the calligraphy that she learned Jan Term freshman year! She is busy as taxi driver to Elizabeth (13) and Will (9). Kelly Carpenter stays busy with her farm and tutoring. She bought a pony aptly named Shorty! Deborah Bradford, in Richmond works as a trader for Wachovia Securities Fixed Income and says all is well. Jeanelle Hamilton Lovett says all is well with her gang. Her oldest child is getting ready to start high school and driver’s ed. Mary Anne Craven Moldenhauer is media director at Bojangles while juggling son Henry (5) and John (3). She tried to see as much of the Charlotte Salem crowd as possible. Lee Ann Manning is putting us all to shame with her running. Last summer she competed in an Ultimate Runner event and finished, but it was only for the t-shirt, she says! She enjoys her job as a personal assistant to a local businessman and still helps at Salem Class of 1985 Front row: Terri Rushatz Dussault, Marjorie Riggs Pike, Kendra Casto Kidby, Lyn Turner Hardway, Dove Brown, Beth Ann Cosby Brown, Laura Arrowood Gibbs Second row: Mary Risher Osteen, Angie Bostrom Smith, Mona Motz, Ellen Anastasi Patterson, Molly Harrover Lane, Mary Catherine Furst Jones, Suzanne Edwards Hayward Third row: Cathy Bernheisel Barkley, Leigh Flippin Krause, Anne Prather, Carla Litaker Hearst, May Sherrod Reed, Beverly Bradford Serral, Angie Dixon Wilson, Kate Weatherman Brown reunion weekend. Paula Corbett Simmons enjoys staying at home with Trevor (5) and Wilson (2) as well as consulting on some interior design projects. She sees Elise Brigham Wall and Chris Marks Suit every now and then. I had a phone call from English Ray Rand who is thrilled to be moving from Michigan back to North Carolina in June. English and her husband have three girls (10, 8, and 4) and all are looking forward to being in Asheville where they have family. I was so happy to get an update from Tord, widower of our dear late classmate Janet Niblock Eide. Tord, Alexandra (14) and Amanda (11) are in Norway and doing well. The girls spend their summers in Concord with Janet’s family, enjoying the farm. Many of us have great memories of Janet’s farm parties! Laura Vincent Camp keeps busy attending WFU sports events with Rob and the boys. As for me, and my family, we are a little busy with the usual activity of two jobs and four kids. My oldest will be a junior in high school and am trying desperately to talk her into going to Salem. Jim and I will celebrate our 20th Anniversary this August and once again I am a rugger hugger as Jim is playing rugby with an old boys league! Remember to send me, and Salem (fill out a bio updated on the website) any new e-mail addresses and also Christmas cards so I can see those cute family photos! 1985 Outgoing Correspondent Holly Fowler Strauss Incoming Correspondent May Sherrod Reed 12624 Hidden Oaks Lane Richmond, VA 23233 mayreed@hometownrealtyservices.com It seems like just yesterday we were waiting patiently for the refectory to open for lunch and now we celebrated our 20th reunion! Terri Rushatz Dussault has settled into married life with husband and son Adam. Laura Arrowood Gibbs attended the wedding of Angie Dixon Dalton-Wilson in the spring of 2004. Lyn Turner Hardway has remarried and lives in Greensboro. Suzanne Edwards Hayward is home-schooling two sons while her twins keep her just as busy. Mary Catherine Furst Jones is remodeling her home in Maryland. Congratulations to Kendra Casto Kidby on completing her MBA at Wake Forest. Mona Motz lives in Florida where she and husband operate an animal rescue shelter. Mary Risher Osteen is busy outside Charlotte with volunteer work, car pool, and home-schooling her children. Kudos goes to Ellen Anastasi Patterson on her promotion to Juvenile Probations Supervisor. Beverly Bradford Serral relocated to Hilton 39 Head Island and formed Carolina Realty Group. Beverly has two daughters active in dancing and horse shows. Angie Bostrom Smith remarried and lives in Apex. It was great to see so many at reunion. Marjorie Riggs Pike, Cathy Bernheisel Barkely, Dove Brown, Molly Harrover Lane, Carla Litaker Hearst all were there. Meg Wendt Holden made it for late day activities. She is busy with children, horses, and raising Labrador retrievers in Charlottesville. Congratulations to Betsy Jones who married Dr. Warren Ludwig in January 2005. Vicki Gaines Ahnrud, Jin Jin Garrett Davis, Cindy Leonard and Jennifer Matney Rucker hosted a bridal shower for Betsy. Leigh Ann Goodwin Butts sends her best and was sorry to have missed reunion. Frances Buist Byars hosted a mini reunion at her home in Charleston with a limo to lunch and shopping on King Street. Leigh Flippin Krause, Marilee Eagles Reed and I drove down for the weekend. We had a grand time catching up with Libby Glenn Lanier, Jennifer Matney Rucker, Sherri McMillan Hambright, Nina Anderson Cheney, Liza Robinson Hart, and Madeline Gilbert. Anna Lane Tatum Swing has started a personal furniture shopping company, annadesigns resources, while her husband has stared a residency in pathology. I am busy with my twins (9) and selling real estate. I am looking forward to keeping up with our class and keeping you informed of what everyone is doing since graduation. Please keep the information coming. 1986 Colbert Lashley Trotter 4 Westminster Court Greensboro, NC 27410 colbert@triad.rr.com Hope this edition finds all our classmates doing well! If you did not receive a note from me, please send me your e-mail address. Lisa Councilman and husband Kevin live in Westlake, TX with Tristan (8), Heath (6), and Sage (3). She’s been with Sprint 14 years and is responsible for the business market in 5 states. For Lisa’s 40th birthday, Kevin hosted a surprise party and guest included Lewis Lum, Sydma Hatzopolous, and Debbie Harrell, who came from Oregon, West Virginia and Winston-Salem wearing shirts that said “Everything Lisa knows, she learned from us at Salem College.” Lisa said it was a marvelous surprise! Susan Muncy Hildebrandt re-married in 2004 to Donald Hildebrandt, and they live in King, NC with her son, Bradley (11) who is active with Boy Scouts. She works part-time in an insurance agency in Winston-Salem 40 and serves as executive secretary for the Winston-Salem Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors. Charlotte Daves Benson and Craig are doing well in Austin TX, and enjoying their children. Thomas Garland was born December 14, 2004 and Christiane (3) loves being a big sister. Charlotte is a full time mom, and Craig runs a biotech company based in Austin. Patti Haste Chiacchiero lives in Hilton Head Island where she started two businesses about 5 years ago: a real estate company and a company that sponsors visas for students to come to the U.S. to train in their field of study. She and John have been married for 14 years. It was great to hear from Emily Mitchiner Knuckley who lives in Wendell, NC with husband George, twins Edward and Samara (10), and James (3). She works part time at her husband’s family clothing store. She keeps in touch with Kathryn Ferrara Fleming in Smithfield, NC and Jill Haly Owen in Dunwoody, GA. Jill stays busy with her sons (3, 5, and 7). Emily also occasionally gets to visit with Lisa Austin Moseley. Margaret Hasty Elliott and husband Jeff have been in Jackson, MS for the past 15 years. She loves teaching kindergarten at a private K-12 school. She also writes freelance for The Education Center in Greensboro, which publishes teachers’ magazines and resource materials. Lisa Farrior Chappell is busy with Ben (12) and Matthew (6) and their baseball games, church, school and volunteer work. Julie Hight Nickens enjoys her career as a senior account rep at the News and Observer in Raleigh. Husband Eddie, a magazine writer, often travels to exciting places. Daughter Markie (9) has been on a year-round swim team for two years now. Jack (6) is involved in soccer, basketball and now tee-ball. Jack and Eliza Krause (Leigh Flippin Krause’s daughter) were in the same kindergarten class this year. Rachael Pickus Hamilton still practices environmental law in Louisville, KY, and is the proud mother of Aron (7) and wife of Bill. I enjoyed hearing from Penny Fowler Westmoreland who started a faux painting business, “Faux Show.” She and Greg live in WinstonSalem where Greg is at United and the boys are in 1st and 3rd grades. She is on the PTA Board at their school and the Homeowners Board in her neighborhood. She always enjoys the annual beach gathering with Nancy Allen Carlton, Elizabeth Booke Vaughn, Beth Perry Bullock, Mary Dixon Presbey Smith and Ellen Taylor. Rene Ivey sends greetings from WinstonSalem where she teaches 3rd grade and works in the media relations office at Wake Forest. Maryanne Downs Liscio has lived in Orange County, CA for 6 years. Henry (9) and Andrew (5) keep her on the go for baseball, basketball and swimming. She also works on the STYLE network show Modern Girls Guide to Life. Cathy Duckwall Dupont warns all Forsyth County, NCD drivers to beware: she has a teenage driver!! Elizabeth had a great first year of high school and started on her JV basketball team! Ben (11) had a great 5th grade year, and Sarah (10) is the forever princess of the family. Cathy is a kindergarten assistant at at Meadowlark Elementary School. Our thoughts go out to Julie Trabue Hanes, husband Scott and family. Their beautiful daughter Madeline suffered a stroke in December 2004. Please pray for Madeline as she continues the recovery process. Julie is also staying busy with Cory (12) and sends her love to everyone! Marcy Svoboda Doak announced the arrival of Maxwell Greer on September 8, 2004. Marcy, Travis and sister Abby are thankful for his addition to their family. Tripp and I have had a very busy year managing the activities of Susanna (11), Logan (8) and Garrison (3). My organizational development consulting business, Southern Services Group, has hit its 5 year anniversary. Tripp and I enjoyed a wonderful visit to Boston last spring to see Carla Blakley McDonough ’85 and husband Paul. It was a pleasure to hear from you this year. I hope that I will see many of you next April as we celebrate our 20th reunion! Keep the news coming and don’t forget to send me your e-mail address. 1987 Ziana Wiemer Clinton Subbing for Susan Gillespie Elliott 6605 Horseshoe Bend Court Summerfield, NC 27358 selliott4@triad.rr.com First, to answer your question why is Ziana Wiemer Clinton is doing the classnotes… Susan Gillespie Elliott asked me to substitute for her this time. Susan celebrated her 40th birthday by taking a girl’s trip to Santa Fe, NM with her mother and sister in April. Then in May, a routie mammogram found breast cancer, so Susan is undergoing treatment right now. Her prognosis is excellent, and Susan encourages everyone to give themselves the best 40th birthday present, a mammogram. She appreciates your thoughts and prayers. In my family, my oldest Ryan will enter kindergarten and Zachary starts preschool. We are involved at our church in Gastonia, NC. Mom is still going strong and keeping my kids in line. My 40th birthday involved a surprise party, black flowers, and a black birthday cake. Nannette de Groot Erdtmann is still in California working as an investment broker. Cindy Tarrant loves her life in Texas. Kelly Barnes Lathan has three children, and I spoke to Brett Ashcraft Pesce, who seems as a bright as ever. Jamie Jabbarpour Via has added a new son to her family. Robinnette Turner Wrobel lives in Richmond, VA. She and her husband are home schooling their sons (kindergarten, 2nd, and 4th grades). Laney Frick just bought a house on the golf course in Easley, SC and says visitors are always welcome. She works in radio advertising sales and was named salesperson of the year, 2004 for Entercom Greenville. Suzanne Via Dillon will celebrate her 40th birthday with a trip to Hawaii. Her sons (11, 13) will go to Camp Seagull this summer. They both love to play baseball. Suzanne, Mary White Rights and Amanda Shute Sullivan have dinner each month to catch up. She also keeps up with Sterling Talley Wheless who is very busy with three small boys. Sissy Mebane Schoettelkotte celebrated turning 40 with a spa trip to Barnsley Gardens with friends. Sissy, Bill, and the twins are excited to be moving back to Wilmington. She looks forward to catching up with Laura Shearin who also lives there. Beth Salsbery Gebhart and her mother went to Italy last fall for Beth’s 39th birthday. Daughter Amanda starts high school next fall, and Beth’s son (13, and 6’4!) plays basketball and eats her out of house and home. Lucy Cheshire Minter and Sterling Talley Wheless surprised Posey Meanor Stitcher at a dinner party in Charlotte in honor of Posey’s 40th Birthday. They later joined Posey, Beth Rankin Sherrill, Stephanie Shannon Mannen, and Claire Lashely Bryant for a weekend in Pinehurst to celebrate their birthdays. Elizabeth Spencer Hood and husband Frank both resigned from Krispy Kreme. Frank has taken a job with Quizno’s, headquartered in Denver. Once they move, Elizabeth will be able to spend quality time with Spencer and stepson Ethan will live with them. Andrea Barbian is planning a trip to England for her 40th birthday. She visited Bali in January. She is still a patent paralegal at Coke. Catherine Miller Pappas spent her 40th with Bill Clinton, who happened to be at the same restaurant in the Bahamas as Catherine! Catherine’s friends made their way to the former president and explained the celebration. To Catherine’s horror, Clinton motioned her over to have her photo made with him! Ann Winfree Nugent and husband Todd welcomed their 3rd Salem College daughter, Emily Peyton, on September 27th. Ann reports that big sisters Kate and Sarah help keep them busy. Elizabeth Hill Gulley plans to celebrate her birthday with husband John, Cecelia (9), and Marcus (7), on a trip out west this summer. Molly Riley Buquo writes that Molly Moore Green and Jessie Tomlinson Jones are working on a weekend together to celebrate their 40th. She doesn’t see a lot of Salemites living in Cincinnati. In closing, I am including Marlene Welte Fraehmke’s letter to the class. Thank you to everyone who responded with pages and memories for the scrapbook we prepared and sent to Marlene. It was great fun, and as you’ll see, means much to Marlene. Marlene writes, “Thank you for your prayers – I know God is listening – just waiting for how He is going to answer them is hard. I am doing well – not going to give up the fight. I was officially diagnosed with ALS about one year ago. So much has happened this past year. We bought a ranch in August, did extensive renovation to make it handicap accessible and moved in December. We hope to finish our addition next month – adding a bedroom, bathroom, laundry room, and family room. Everything is on one floor. This has kept me rather busy. In September I appeared, with my family, on the Jane Pauley Show. I contacted them asking for help in documenting my life – they were wonderful. It reaired in March. We were working on a follow-up show on ALS right before it was cancelled. There is always Oprah! I am living everyday and not looking to far into the future. I spend my time being a mother – what I have always wanted to be. I had wonderful jobs and did well – but looking back it was all so unimportant. My last job was with Bloomberg as a Foreign Exchange Sales Specialist. They have been so good to me – even still paying my bonuses and insurance. Physically, I have gotten weaker since the airing of the show. I am typing this with pencils and recently bought myself a scooter. The scooter has given me back some mobility that I have lost. I just use it outside to go to the library with Christian, take him to school, and go for walks. I spent my 40th birthday on surprise vacation with my family in Florida. It climaxed when I was surprised by my sister, Janet Welte Rusyniak ’93, and her family along with my parents on a Disney Cruise. I spent my birthday on Castaway Island in the Bahamas surrounded by family. It was wonderful. Turning 40 is great – I cannot wait until I am 50, then 60 and then 70!! Getting old is great – gray hair is wonderful; wrinkles, I will take them – it means you are livMagaz ine 20 05 ing and life is good. This past year has also lead me one many spiritual journeys – Lourdes, France and Calabrua, Italy. The Blessed Mary has appeared in both places – I am putting much of my hope in God for a miracle. I will be returning to Italy with my family in September. God will guide us through our sadness – I just hope get the response I am looking for. Family and friends have been fundraising for ALS. There are many walks starting this month – www.alsa.org. ALS is considered an orphan disease so it does not get the funding we need. As many people are diagnosed with ALS as MS every year – but people with MS live longer therefore there are more patients and drug companies want to invest. I would like to thank my fellow Salem Sisters for the beautiful scrapbook put together by Ziana – you touched a nerve and I cry just thinking about your kindness for my son. He is everything to me. My husband has put a website together: www.marlenesangels.org. Please pass it on. Also, I ask my class to keep my family and me in your prayers and on prayer lists. God WILL help, I just know it and that keeps me going. In love and friendship. – Marlene” 1988 Catherine Penry Rhodes 2632 Westminster Avenue Dallas, TX 75205-1503 cprhodes@charter.net It was so fun to hear from all of you by email and telephone; thanks for all the exciting news. Kathleen Braff Brown stays busy with her business, husband and 4 kids. Twins Carson and Parks (11) will be in middle school in the fall. Davis is 8, and Grace (5) will start kindergarten in the fall. Carolyn Phillips Breese enjoys her work with The Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation where she serves as board president for The North Carolina Triad affiliate. The 6th annual Komen NC Triad Race for the Cure was held at Salem on May 7th. It was exciting for her to watch the campus on Race day be transformed into a venue of hope and celebration of breast cancer survivorship. On her home front, her children Megan (13) and Matt (10) keep her busy and entertained. Ellen Mincer bought a house in Forsyth County and moved from downtown Winston-Salem to the “country.” She still teaches first grade at Speas Elementary. Mary Hollis Bowman Reyes’ son Nicholas is in the 2nd grade. She is working as an LD specialist at Forsyth Country Day School. Last year, she won an award for Professional of the Year from the Autism Society of North Carolina. She enjoys traveling, working on the computer, reading, and shopping, especially on ebay! Joanna Winecoff Wells shared lots of news after enjoying a mini-reunion at Bald Head Island, NC with all of her Salem friends including Hopie Derby Carmichael, Sarah Grantham Williams, Molly Allen Grady, Toccoa Powell Mayhew, Dawn Oatman Ellis, Muzette Fitts Kiger, Laura Connelly Springs, Caroline Hines Batten. Caroline and husband Curt celebrated the birth of their son, Raike Curtis Batten, born June 23, 2004. Besides spending time with Raike, Caroline is busy with her appraisal business and remodeling houses. Muzette has moved with her family away from Raleigh to Weldon, NC. They are renovating an older home, and her business with her brother continues to grow. Sarah, husband Peter, and sons Nicholas and Grantham have moved back to Raleigh. Hopie is most happy to have her back because Sarah is working for Hopie as a part-time legal assistant! Joanna also reports that Hopie’s mother, Anna Potter Derby A’62 passed away May 19th, 2004 after a brave fight with lung cancer. We extend our deepest sympathies to Hopie and her family. Judy Diane Fungaroli works as a mental health senior practitioner at The Guilford Center in High Point and is raising two of her four grandchildren. She expressed that Salem College was one of the best experiences of her life. Debbie West loves working for Our State magazine! She sees Ellen Smallwood Peete around town and at church. She is active in the community including the United Arts Council, Junior League, and a new project with the Natural Science Center and Animal Discovery. Melissa Haneline Hall and husband Howard live in Morganton, NC. Melissa stays busy with church, Bible Study Fellowship and home schooling her two sons, Hayes (7) and Leighton (5). Melissa keeps in touch with Rosemary Finger Routszong and Emily Miller Kirkpatrick. Rosemary lives with her husband Steve in Dallas, NC. They have two daughters Kathleen (4) and Hope (2). We would like to also send our sympathies to Rosemary and her family as her father died last year. Emily and Ron live in Gastonia, NC. She is also home schooling her three boys Will, Ian and Neil. Janice Poe Brantingham and Dave are living in Winneconne, WI where Janice is the director of operations for UW Oshkosh. Ann Meyer recently published a book entitled Medieval Allegory and the Building of New Jerusalem. She is an associate professor of literature at Claremont McKenna College. Emily Johnson Kellar, husband Dave, and their three children Emma (14), Edward (12), Ross (10) moved to Boston, MA. Robin Riach McGlade lives in South Queensferry, UK. Elizabeth Mullins Gamble and husband James live in El Paso, TX with their children Charles (13) and Callie (9). Mary Martha Whitner Beecy and husband Steve stay busy with their three children, Elizabeth (9), Mary Catherine (6), and John (4). She volunteers with her church, the children’s school and the Charlotte Children’s Theatre. Mary Martha hosted Stacy Little Gourlay, Kelly Zappa Thompson, Lynn Turpin, Elizabeth Carmichael Burton, Laura Arndt Fladeland and Margaret Mays. Stacy lives in Asheville. She has two sons, Cy (10) and Mac (6). She volunteers for many organizations and competes in sprint triathlons, century bike rides and 5K runs. Kelly and husband Dean live in Mountain Lakes, NJ with their three children, Davis (8), Kelsey (6), and Harrison (4). She loves cooking, entertaining and volunteering. Elizabeth is associate director of citizenship and ServiceLearning at Missouri State University. Her three children, Martha Scott (12), Will (10) and Elizabeth Campbell (9), keep her busy with school, sports and music activities. In October 2004, she completed her first marathon in Des Moines, Iowa. Laura works in the Office of Student Academic Affairs at Franklin and Marshall College. She has two boys, George (9) and Ross (7), and they live in Millersville, PA. Margaret lives in Charleston, SC and has been working in pharmaceutical sales for Pfizer over the last 10 years. Ironically, Lynn Turpin and I have both ended up in Dallas, TX, living one mile apart, and we see each other every morning to walk. Lynn likes Dallas because she can spend more time with her niece and nephew. She is currently working for a non-profit organization. She is active with the Junior League, bible study and meeting new friends. I am happy living in Dallas with my husband, Greg, and two children, Will (5) and Cate (2). They keep me very busy. I enjoy volunteering at Will’s preschool and being active in our church. After recently spending time with my dear Salem friends, I realize even more how Salem was the catalyst for lifetime friendships – friendships that are more special each year, and ones I will always treasure. 1989 Julia Carpenter 1613 Nasturtium Way Apex, NC 27539-9763 julia.carpenter@aol.com 41 Allison Hughes Beard and husband Pat live in Winston-Salem with children Kenzie (8), Caroline (5), and Patterson (3). She teaches Sunday school classes for her three children, works some at St. Paul’s Preschool, and travels to see her old roommate Jill Thomas Gilliam who lives in Charlotte raising her three children Thomas (10), Daniel (6), and Kathleen (3). Dawn Phelps Doray finished her postdoctorate in Honolulu, HI in September of 2003 and was hired as a faculty member at the University of Arkansas. She is an assistant professor and clinical psychologist within the department and works on the Arkansas Children’s Hospital campus. She provides clinical services to children and their families and also is a supervisor for their psychology interns where she has started a children and adolescent trauma program for child maltreatment issues and grief and loss issue. She and her husband just bought a new home in Maumelle, AR. They celebrated their 9th anniversary with a hiking trip to the Canadian Rockies. Bekah Little works as an office manager for the BrassRing in Waltham, MA. She sings in the church choir at the First Congregational Church. A guitar player, she enjoys playing and singing both covers and her own originals. She recorded one song entitled “Mother,” written for her mom before she died in 2002. Beth Adams Alexander works at Appalachian State University as Executive Assistant to the Chancellor. She is still involved in development as well. Daughter Katie is in 2nd grade and Web works for a recruitment company in Blowing Rock. They hope to be in a new house by the end of the year. She gets together frequently with Susan Waters Hauser ’88 who lives in Winston-Salem. Alison Crowson Talbert and husband Pat live in Wilmington with two children John Patrick (9) and Sarah (7). She is active in the Junior League and volunteers at her kids’ school. Michelle Brennan Prince is in Arlington, VA. Brice is attorney at SEC. Her boys are 9 and 5 this year. She works part-time from home for the medical journal, Obstetrics & Gynecology, as an editorial assistant. Sheila Elliott Parker and husband Joe enjoy everyday and keeping up with her son Tripp (1). She owns Elliott Interiors and is a sales manager with World Stone, selling granite. Meg Cox Stott works at Medical College of Virginia. She is an office manager for the department of pediatrics. She is also involved in several organization including Salem STARS and the Junior League of Richmond. Lesley Prillaman 42 Kassinger has two daughters and is doing great. Rosalie Hill Bland works part-time in the development office at Salem and loves it! She says that it is so great being back on campus and interacting with both students and alums. The renovation work they are doing to Sisters is incredible! Besides Salem, she and Edwin stay busy with Ida (9), Lincoln (7), and Fred (3). Leigh Whetstone Throckmorton is teaching in her Title 1 classroom. She is creating lessons using Word, PowerPoint, Kidspiration, Notebook and Write:Outloud. She says it is challenging and a lot of fun. Bridget Maley and husband David Cannon bought an 1894 Victorian flat in San Francisco’s Cow Hollow neighborhood. They found time to escape to Sayulita, Mexico for Christmas 2004. This year, Mayor Gavin Newsom appointed Bridget to the city’s Landmarks Preservation Advisory Board. Lea Daughtridge is back in NC after two years in Boston and nine in New York. She works at McKinney, a national advertising agency in Durham, as Senior Vice President. She recently judged a marketing competition at WFU’s MBA program. She says it was hard to believe the girl who never went to class and was quite a rebel is judging an academic competition! In her free time she volunteers as a guardian ad litem for the court system, works on Habitat for Humanity projects and gardens. Mary Poole Reese and husband Bill are the proud parents of Patrick, born in November. He joins William (3). They moved to the Atlanta suburbs this fall after many years of living downtown. Kim Harris McInnis enjoys being a mother to her daughter Harris (1). She is also busy launching a photography business out of her home in Wilmington. Elizabeth Guss Kiernan moved to Ireland this year with husband Noel and children, Madison and Liam. Susan Hamlet Birdsong enjoys working with the children’s clothing line Jacadi, and is busy with daughters Ashton (11), and Greyson (8). Leslie Crow Flanagan’s youngest Eliza started kindergarten this year. Laney is in 2nd grade and Houghton is in 6th. Leslie is busy with their school’s parent association, playing tennis, enjoying her garden and painting again. Betsy Hine Davis, the owner of Today and Tomorrow Interiors, in business for 26 years, is getting ready to start remodeling her home by raising the roof. Cherry Newsom enjoys life with her two beautiful granddaughters. Copeland Baker married Britt Boyd in July 2004. They have a blended family of seven. Currently a practice manager for a local physician at Lanier Family Healthcare, Copeland has also owned her own company, Corporate Cleaning Services, for over 12 years. Ginger Saunders Delegal is the general counsel for the Florida Association of Counties, Inc. Ginger and husband Mark have three growing daughters: Mary Katherine (7), Elizabeth (5), and Caroline (2). Susan Bynum Grider and David reside in Atlanta with children, John David III (8), and Grace (4). She is very involved with PTA and will direct Vacation Bible School at her church this summer. She met Addie Jo Linus Gwin ’87; as Addie Jo’s son Lott is playing baseball with John David this spring. Ellen Mixon Walston works at Pitt County Memorial Hospital in Greenville, NC and was recently elected to serve a 2-year term as president of the NC Oncology Social Work Group. She loves spending time with Joshua (8) and husband Tommy. She still works part-time at a pastoral counseling center. Alison Gill Falkoff is a vice president of multi-national business travel for American Express. Helene (3) is doing well. They spend a lot of time in Southern Florida and in McLean, VA, their primary residence. Allison spent a long weekend with Cathy O’Mally Ferrara in Houston, TX and they had a great time discussing our Salem days. Meg Cox Stott and Lesley Prillaman Kasinger were together in Tampa for a weekend and she wished that she could have been with them! Tiffany Rutledge Wilten left Salem to attend Trinity University in Texas. She graduated with education and sociology degrees. In 1997, she reconnected with her high school boyfriend, Mark and for the last eight years they have lived in London, England. Mark and she have three amazing little girls, Sloane (6), Brooke (5) and Reese (1). Liza Abernethy Stamey is mom to four active children, Chaz (11), Craver (10), Eliza Jane (5), Ellie (3). She still does interior design work when she has the time. She and Chip are building a new house. Julie Lindsey lives and practices medicine in the Hendersonville area. Paul and she spend a lot of time keeping up with their children, Rachel and Bryan. Atticia Bundy, a classmate who attended Salem for 2 years, completed her PhD in career counseling at UNCG and is working at East Carolina. Ruth Lenger received M. Div degree from Union Theological Seminary. Spencer Presbyterian Church (Spencer, NC) for seven years. She recently took leave from work to spend time with her family, as her son lost his wife and is father to a 4-year-old child. She has six grandchildren in three states, so spends much time with them. Parker Hubbard Cohen’s children Jesse (6) and Allison (4) are busy with school, preschool, friends, and sports. Her family just celebrated five years in Bucks County, PA. In her free time she teaches preschool music classes and is involved with her church on several activities. Her husband Fred is trying to establish his own business in pharmaceuticals and business. Mary Poole Reese enjoys her career with BellSouth in Atlanta. In November she had her second boy, Patrick Nelson Reese, and has moved to the suburbs. While she misses the town, she is enjoys having a big closet and driveway. Julia Carpenter, our new class correspondent, is a project manager at SAS Institute. She is building her first home. 1990 Outgoing Correspondent Jennifer Muench Laney Incoming Correspondent Karen Timmons Ellison 511 Roberts Avenue York, SC 29745-1308 Kdte111@hotmail.com Siri Wilkins Johnson, husband Jim, son James (5) and daughter Camille (18) live in Mobile, AL, where Jim owns his own golf instruction business, and Siri works part-time doing marketing and physician recruitment for a private cardiology practice. They bought a new house early in the year and completed an update on it this fall. Lee Manuel Marcus received a masters degree in social work from the University of South Carolina. She and husband David live in WinstonSalem, where Lee is a renal social worker at Piedmont Dialysis Center. Rebecca Bobbitt lives in Clemmons, NC with husband Keith and daughter Caroline (11). Son Will is a sophomore at NCSU. After earning her MLIS, she became a media coordinator at Brunson Elementary School in Winston-Salem. Tammy Taylor Haywood closed her gift and stationary store, but is still selling stationary out of the house. She loves being a full time mom to son Clark! Rebecca Miller Saunders is a wife to Jim and a mom raising Peter (9), Nathan (7) and Matthew (4). Rebecca sings in church and professionally with Carolina Pro Musica, which will tour England in June. Cristi Phillips married Michael Driver on August 27, 2004 in Greensboro, NC at an outdoor ceremony at historic Blandwood Mansion. Cristi is a promotions coordinator for Volvo Trucks NA, and Michael is a Realtor with RE/MAX of Greensboro. Wanda Hucthinson is assistant superintendent Salem College for administration and communication for Wilkes County Schools. Her Ed.D. from Appalachian State University will be complete in December 2005. Husband Walter is serving as pastor of Little Stone Mountain Baptist Church in their community. Jennifer Muench Laney, a stay at home mom, put together a cookbook for the local MOPS group, and helped to create a Franklinton community Little Theatre. Husband Neill is a contractor for IBM and Joann (2) is in pre-school. Ashley Neill Stamper lives in Knoxville, TN with husband Todd, Riley (8) and Jones (5). She volunteers at their schools and at their church. Ashley will begin selling the Worth Collection of clothes via trunk shows. Stephanie Hines Warren and family welcomed Christian on July 12, 2004. Stephanie, a stay at home mom, who seems to live in the car dropping off and picking up her kids. Rita Gale Young Cruise is the regional director of Self Help Services Corporation. She is also part of the Piedmont Triad Leadership Network. Paige Goza Simmons lives near Athens, GA while Robert finishes his Ph.D. work in forestry and wildlife management. Elizabeth is in first grade; Robert W. and Georgia Blue (2). After Robert’s graduation, the Simmons don’t know where they’ll head. Carol Romig Brecht’s second child, Cameron Elizabeth was born May 5, 2004. The family visited Mindy Worrell Spiller in Centreville, VA in September. In January, Carol, Mindy, Sally Lemmon Bugg, Mathilde Dumond White, and Jill Starling Britt met on the Isle of Palms for a weekend. Sally Pierce Corpening hosted our 15th reunion class dinner at her home. Heather Lewisohn Barton lives in Atlanta, closer to family. She and Philip stay busy with the kids, Anna (5) and Graham (3). Sue Ellen Crocker Bennett lives in Winston-Salem. She has two sons, Daniel (7) and Thomas (18 mos.). Sue Ellen teaches 4 year olds 3 mornings a week at Messiah Moravian. Stratford Newitt Kiger and Kipp’s daughter Carson Blake was born January 14, 2005. Carson is already looking forward to her first Salem visit. April Edmondson Peacock and Todd live in Blacksburg, VA with Emily (5) and Oliver (3). April volunteers with her daughter’s class, Jr. Women’s Club, MOPS, church and children’s choirs, baseball, soccer teams and makes stained glass. Julie Meyer Pope moved to Arizona last year. Melissa Kirk Oliverio’s son started kindergarten. She is active with his school and works part-time Magaz ine 20 05 Class of 1990 Front row: Jennifer Muench Laney, Lynn White Savage, Elizabeth Ranson Parks, Christy Barley Hilpert, Karen Timmons Ellison, Lee Manuel Marcus, Meredith Davies Resener, Sue Ellen Crocker Bennett, B.J. Brown Buckland Second row: Mary Beth Wilson, Amy Bain Cooter, Melissa Robinson Parris, Julie Meyer Pope, Sally Pierce Corpening, Kerry Stovall Garrett, Laura Jones Stevenson, Stratford Newitt Kiger Third row: Kristen Johnson, Kathryn Swing Smith, Casey Hoerner Gressette, Heather Lewisohn Barton, Amy Cass Millikan, Ashley Neill Stamper, Jennifer Morgan Racut, Virginia Edmundson Sutton, Melissa Kirk Oliverio as an attorney. Jill Starling Britt has fun with twin daughters (3)! She practices law part-time in Burlington and volunteers with Alamance County Mothers of Multiples, Young Life, church activities and serves on local rape crisis/sexual assault board. Sally Lemmon Bugg retires as development director on June 30. Bill has been named as headmaster of the school where they both work. Sally is also a Pampered chef consultant and volunteers with Junior League and Salem’s Alumnae Board. Amy Bain Cooter has three children – Andrew Griffin was born March 5, 2003. Amy lives in Greenville, SC and will soon move to a new home to accommodate her growing family! Casey Hoerner Gressette helps husband David with the Old Post Office Restaurant and Sunset Grill on Edisto Island, SC. Elizabeth Ranson Parks and family moved to Apex, NC, and their new house will be finished this summer. Michael likes his new job at Wyeth, and Liz is happy with the shorter commute to Raleigh! Melissa Robinson Parris was named Woodland Heights Teacher of the Year (2003-2004), and Spartanburg School District 6 teacher of the Year (2004-2005). Congratulations! Meredith Davies Resener keeps busy caring for children Megan (9), Peter (5), and John (2). She works part-time as a nurse. Laura Elizabeth Jones Stevenson moved to Atlanta, GA. Scott works at Emory University building an internal audit department for the medical facilities. Virginia Edmund- son Sutton and husband Jim stay busy with the boys’ activities! Virginia volunteers and chauffeurs the children! Shannon Stone Wells’ youngest turned one this year. Shannon is a human resource manager. Alex, in kindergarten, has lots of activities and Shannon and husband Roy love to travel. Mary Elizabeth Wilson is plodding away on her dissertation between her full-time job and part-time teaching. She is so busy that she doesn’t have any other news! Wendy Weiler Tomlinson has three children: Charlotte (4), Matthew (3)and Lucy (born January 6, 2005. Wendy is a major gift fundraiser for Texas Children’s Hopsital. She is president-elect of the Women’s Home in Houston. She regretted missing out reunion which fell on her 10th wedding anniversary. Amy Cass Millikan’s son, William Andrews, Jr. was born October 4, 2004. Laura Sisler de Morais lives in Roanoke, VA, where she teaches English as a second language in the public school system and does some private tutoring. Laura, mother of Jordan (6) is working on her master’s degree from Virginia Tech. 1991 Camille Flippin Wilson 295 Gartin Place Madison Heights, VA 24572 htwilson@aol.com Enjoy the following update from our classmates. Don’t forget you can get next year’s scoop first hand at our 15th reunion in April 2006. Congratula- tions to Susan Murphy on her June 2004 marriage to Spencer Barrett Broadfoot! Susan and husband live in Wilmington, NC with Hannah (12), Seth (10) and Lizzie (1). Susan is a stay-at-home mom who enjoys gardening, surfing, volunteering at church and with her children’s extracurricular activities. Libby Brown and spouse Charlotte live in Atlanta, GA. Libby is vice president of project management banking at Wachovia. She has traveled to London, Paris, Hawaii and New York. Carol Boling Chaffin, husband Mark, Benjamin (6) and Matthew (2) live in hurricane-prone Jacksonville, FL. They are renovating a 45 year old home. Carol is a part-time marketing communications specialist. Congratulations to Tolly Callaway on her marriage to Thomas A. Beckett in June 2004! Mary Elizabeth Beckman was an attendant in the wedding. Tolly lives in Santa Monica, CA. Tolly, a member of the Alliance Repertory Theatre Company, was nominated for “Best Supporting Actress” for ADA Awards (2004). Wendy Nace Castro, Arthur and Benjamin (3) welcomed Elaine Gardner (born May 2004). Wendy, a full-time mom, is training for Race for the Cure. Michelle Johns Culp, Steve and Alexander (3) live in Inkster, MI. Michelle, a customer service manager for The Nailco Group, performs folkoric, Middle Eastern dance at festivals. Heather Inge DeVincentis, Richard, and Anthony (6) live in Walkersville, MD. Heather is a doctor of veterinary medicine and is involved in T-ball with her son. Shelia Carreras Gee, Toby, Madelyn (8) and Hayden (5) continue to live in Glen Allen, VA. Jill Webb Halverson, Andrew, Lars (7) and Wise (3) live in Winston-Salem. Jill chairs the Junior League’s nominating committee. Mary Stuart Brugh Hardy, Chip, Landon (8) and Mac (6) live in Columbia, SC. Mary Stuart is a teacher at Heathwood Hall Episcipal School. Kathryn White Hauser, Sam, Seth (9) and Jacob (4) live in Kernersville, NC. Kathryn a part-time preschool director, also volunteers at her son’s school. Kathryn is constantly learning about education and therapy for the special needs population since son Jacob’s diagnosis of cerebral palsy. Lee Fauber Hicks, Tom, Patrick (8) and Carter (7) live in Charlottesville, VA, where Lee substitute teaches, volunteers and runs. Mary Beth Schroeder Hunter, Jim, Sam (8), Elizabeth (6) and Will (3) have moved to a home in Forest, VA. Mary Beth teaches preschool and is involved in her children’s activities. Melissa Fox Jones, Keith, 43 and stepdaughter Erin (12) live in Graham, NC. Melissa is a DAR member and works on her business of addressing and framing wedding invitations. Catherine Davis Lane, Patrick, Rebecca (7), Elizabeth (5) and Mary Margaret (4) live in Belmont, NC. Catherine’s home business, Pretty Ribbons, makes handmade bows for girls. She is a Deacon in her church. Pam Austin Moore, Andy, Will (9) and Mary Austin (7) live in King, NC. Pam, a substitute teacher, is a PTO president and president of their swim club. She and Andy will celebrate their 12th anniversary with a Carribean cruise. Betsy Saxman Orgain, Marc, and twins Peter and Jack (6) live in Norfolk, VA but will soon return to Pensacola, FL. Betsy loves being a stayat-home mom and looks forward to her pilot husband’s return from Iraq. Denise Decker Pacula and husband Tucker moved to Oak Island, NC where Denise has a real estate company. Betsy Wood Poole, Bynum, Weeks (4) and Carlisle (3) live in Greenville, SC. Betsy stays at home with her children. She loves playing on a USTA League team. Betsy sees Katy Glen Smith when their kids play together. Jennifer Callahan Seifert, Brent, Sarah (10), Mary (8) and Rachel (4) live in Salisbury, NC. Jennifer, a homemaker, enjoys horseback riding with her girls, camping, hiking and other outdoor activities. Elaine Evans Fowler Sharp and husband Will live with their son William Zachary (2) in Ypsilanti, MI. Elaine is a self-employed web designer, a member of the Junior League, and likes running and knitting. Congratulations to Jenni Haskins Shrewsbury and husband Chris on the birth of son Jason Christopher (September 2004). Jenni and family live in Durham, NC where she is a clinical social worker for John Umstead Hospital. She enjoys traveling and volunteering with the American Red Cross. Katy Glenn Smith, Charles, and son Charles (4) moved to Greenville, SC. Katy plays tennis and paints. She designs and sells decorative automobile magnets. Miller Vick Stanley, Bobby, daughter Holden (9) and son Jimbo (6) live in Raleigh, NC. Miller is involved in Bible study fellowship and her children’s school. Miller sees Deanna Pollard Ivey who also lives in Raleigh and has three children. Miller still talks to Gena Burney Smith often. Gena’s twins Augusta and Fulton are four. Sonya Cobb Terjanian, Pierre, Violette (3) and Remy (1) live in Philadelphia, PA. Sonya is a freelance copywriter. Diane Davis Thomas, Joe, Hannah (6), Will (4), and Sam (2) live in Charlotte, NC but plan to move to Alexandria, VA. Heidi Z. Weilbaecher relocated from San Francisco to Seattle where she continues to work for General Motors in management in marketing and sales. Heidi frequently returns to North Carolina to visit Salem friends. She lets us know that Laura Workman Rosenbaum lives in Witchita, KS with her husband Wayne and their two children; and Joan Pearce Bates lives in Winston-Salem with her husband John and their daughter. I started part-time tutoring at Charlie (8) and Perkins’s (6) school. My children’s extracurricular activities keep Todd and me on the go. I will be raising cut flowers again during the summer and look forward to seeing classmates face-to-face in spring 2006! 1992 Beth Murray Leverton 2309 Rosewood Avenue Winston-Salem, NC 27103 bethleverton@triad.rr.com It has been wonderful to hear everyone’s updates! We had an exciting year with many ups and downs. Our deepest sympathy goes to Mary Mc- Ginnis Schultz and her family for the Valerie Wickersham Markland and loss of her son, Thomas. Mary thanks everyone for their support. Kimberly Gregg and many Salem friends placed a bench and tree at Salem in his honor. Mary, our thoughts and prayers are with you and your family! Stephan Crone Dutcher lives in Asheville with children Kalya (4) and Cassie (2), reports that Nell Nordin Marler was married in July 2004 at the Biltmore Estate. Bridesmaids included Karrie Stansfield and Angie Ingram. Jill Bennett Martin lives in Belews Creek, NC and works in accounting at Vulcan. New daughter Martha-Ruth Isabelle (Belle) joined big brother Jake (8) this past year. Jill and husband Todd are building a new house. Debbie Bruce Nixon quit her teaching job to help Andy. She will be director of education at the church, teaching bible studies and training leaders. Anna just completed 4th grade and Noah kindergarten. Karen Lewis Taylor and family (which includes two kids) moved to a new house in Apex and looks forward to having Salem friends over soon! Juliet Dyal Gray and husband Christian live in NYC. A senior editor and beauty director of Gotham and Hamptons Magazines, Juliet is also the associate producer and company member with Back House Productions. She is developing one of her regular columns into a TV show! Laura Beth Henry Casey and Kirk welcomed John Needham (Jack), September 23. She recently sold her catering business to be home with Jack. She has seen Caroline Swope, Kristin Miller, Jenni Haskins ’91 and Meredith Jarrell Phillips ’91. She stays busy with Jack, the Kiwanis Club, and church. Banner Gregory Huggins living in San Antonio with husband of 11 years, Craig and son Cole (1). She works for Club Corporation of America as the membership director of the Plaza Club downtown. Paul welcomed son, Alexander in October 2004. They moved to Hawaii in July. She misses friends and family but says Hawaii is beautiful! Tara Newton Jennette, Mike, and Ben (3) welcomed Mallory Elizabeth on April 15, 2004. Tara works part time as a physical therapist at WakeMed. She gets together often with Karen Lewis Taylor, Melissa Murray Fletcher, and Patricia Earnhardt Tyndall ’91. She has dinner with Amy Williamson, Karen Stephenson Shore and Liz Butler McDaniel every couple of months. After 11 years of teaching elementary and high school Abrenna Walker Tompkins is now an instructor in the developmental studies department of Surry Community College. She completed her Ed.S. administrative degree from Liberty University and is working on her doctorate in instruction, planning to begin her dissertation in the spring. Dena Free enjoyed a 3 week trip/class traveling by train across the northern US and part of southern Canada. After 10 years teaching 1st graders she is now teaches 2nd graders in the Fairfax County Public School System and loves it! Kimberly Williams Gregg is moving this summer to a new house, in Winston-Salem! Allison Rohe Waters and husband Lee, a Captain in the US Air Force JAG Corps, celebrated their 12th anniversary. They will move to McGuire AFB, NJ this year. She stays busy staying at home with Alexander (4), works with the Officers Civilian Spouses Club, and teaches preschool. Caroline Swope teaches art and architectural history at a local Seattle college and doing architectural design consulting. Her first book with be published this summer, Classic Homes of Seattle —keep your eyes open for it on Amazon! Still busy restoring her house, she hopes to get it listed on the state register Legacies Sisters Catherine Smart Keech ’00, Mary Lynn Smart ’05 and Elizabeth Jane Smart A’01 C’05 44 Salem College soon. She made a few trips back to NC to visit Laura Beth Henry. Susan Combs Segui and Phillips welcomed Olivia McIntyre March 30. Phillip continues to practice law and she loves her work as a clinical social worker for adolescent pregnant single mothers. Amy Rauch Shorey and her husband welcomed Regan Elizabeth on July 23. They live in Orlando where Amy is a pharmaceutical sales representative. Melissa Murray Fletcher and husband Stewart celebrated their 10th anniversary with a trip to Maui. She spends her time with children Amelia (5) and Patrick (2) and works part time for Dow-Reinchhold Specialty Latex. She sees Karen Lewis Taylor, Patricia Earnhart Tyndall ’91 and Tara Newton Jennette. She also hears from Melanie McRae, Amy Williamson, Sonya Cobb Terjanian ’91, and Liz Butler McDaniel. Jean Williams Pal-Freeman, Chris and Cate (4) live in Portland, OR where she works for Nike, Inc. A business systems analyst supporting human resource systems for the Europe, Middle East and Africa Region, she spends time traveling all over Europe. She met Jennifer Fedor ’01 who started working for Nike last spring. Mary McMahan Frail and husband welcomed Regan Elizabeth February 9. Betsy Mebane Farmer, Eric, and daughters Sarah Carter and Mary Banks welcomed Lee Benton Farmer III (Ben) November 26. They live in Winston Salem. Jenny Britt Denny, Joel, and Emma (2) live in Rocky Mount. They recently celebrated their 6th anniversary. Jenny enjoys stays home with Emma. Latanya Gary Gray, Al, Jasmine (5) are living in Chesapeake, VA where she is a family physician in a solo practice. Al is from Winston Salem so they are able to visit often. Our thoughts and prayers are with Dena Chambers Stanley who lost her father this past year. Mary Lawson Stephens Day, Daniel, Samuel (5), Tripp (2) live in Macon, GA and Mary Lawson is getting her masters of Science in Social Work. I recently got back from a beach trip with Juliet Dyal Gray, Elizabeth Gianini, Banner Gregory Huggins, Jean Williams Pal-Freeman and Margaret Pike ’94. My stomach hurt from all the laughing we did...reminded me of college days! Bill and I are doing great. I stay home with Stephen (5) and Parker (3) who are a good handful! I continue my business of hand painted furniture and accessories. What a great update I got from everyone! If you don’t see your name in here, go to the Salem website (www.salem.edu), fill out a bio update on the alumnae and friends page so I’ll have your contact information. 1993 Laura Dossinger Slawter 2985 Wesleyan Lane Winston-Salem, NC 27106 slawter@salem.edu Thank you to everyone for your updates. Hester Haverkamp Davies and Rutledge live in Columbia, SC, where Hester is a stay-at-home mom to Brown (3) and Ellis (1). Congratulations to Anita Brinkley Keenan and husband Steve on the birth of son Preston Michael, Nov. 9, 2004. Anita’s new position at Bain Capital, helping launch their legal department, gives her a more flexible schedule and allows her more time with her family. Heather Carlin Beard and Mark live in Maiden, NC and welcomed daughter Autumn in 2004. Heather Morgan Zifchak enjoys married life in Winston-Salem with Pete. Heather, a nanny, spends many hours scrapbooking, knitting, and volunteering with the Junior League. Congratulations to Carolyn Bullock, recently promoted Grandmother Peggy Fulghum Matthews ’75 and Granddaughter Shannon Matthews ’05 Summ er 20 05 to regional account manager at her company in Raleigh. She is running marathons and competed in the New York City marathon the past two years. Heather Nelson Wiggins enjoys being a stay-at-home mom to Nell (2) and James (1) in Lexington, NC. Erin Garden Baldecchi and Chuck welcomed son Alex in August of 2004. Alex joins big sister Bella (2). Erin and Chuck enjoy their new life in Lexington, KY! Tina Gutshall works at the Mariners’ Museum in Newport News, VA. Tina works in the conservation department, which is responsible for conserving recovered artifacts from the USS Monitor naval ironclad shipwreck. Allison Burkette teaches in Ole Miss’s English department. Allison and husband Greg Tschumper are the proud parents of Anne Paige (2). Jennie “Spaz” Thomas Bushey and husband Peter enjoy living in Atlanta where Spaz loves being stay-at-home mom to William (2). Amanda Long Ramseur and Bobby are in Raleigh where Amanda stays busy with Robert (4) and Walker (2). Congratulations to Lara Moore who married Joe Howe on April 23. They will live in Wilson. Salem bridesmaids were Amanda Long Ramseur, Beth Monroe, Elizabeth Bennett Scott ’92, Margaret Lamb Silly ’92, Amy Faulk Welton ’94, and Ashley Mattox ’94. Ashley Fletcher Vaughn and Hillary Black Hornthal were greeters. Ashley Fletcher Vaughn and husband Harris live in Raleigh with daughter Ella Reaves (4) and son Harry (2). Ashley works part-time selling ads for a bridal magazine. Hillary Black Hornthal lives in Greensboro with sons Will (4) and Alexander (3). Hillary is an interior designer. Beth Morgan Pierce and husband Morgan live in Richmond. Beth works for Cavalier Telephone handling all the company training. Kate Hargett Williams and husband Miles welcomed son Hugh Edward on November 7, 2004. Kate enjoys her new career as a stay-at-home mom! Emily O’Brien Marlowe and Christopher are still in San Francisco. Emily is busy with Caroline (4) and Louise (2). When I last heard, Jane Fisher was working in Uganda, for the Wildlife Conservation Society, writing a business plan for a national park in Uganda. She says Uganda is one of the most overwhelming places you could imagine. Before Uganda, Jane worked in Zambia with the same company. Ann Davis loves her work as an interior designer in Duck, NC. Ann Pollard Bell and David live in Black Mountain, NC where Ann is a special education teacher and stays busy with Allen (6) and Emma (1). Ann Dyar Denton lives close to Ann Pollard Bell. Ann and Wes are parents to Tamsen (5) and Tate (1). Stacy Dillon Tomkins and Richard live in Gallatin, TN where Stacy stays home with Gracen (5) and Ava (4). As for me, Michael and I live in WinstonSalem. I was recently promoted to director of donor relations in Salem’s development office. James (4) keeps me on my toes! It’s fun being at Salem and seeing all the classes come back for their reunions! Don’t forget to send me your updates over the year. 1994 Lisa Findlay Merrill 940 Harmony Hill Road West Chester, PA 19380-1842 LFMerrill@aol.com Allison Bruce Anderson loves being home with Caroline (1). She’s keeping her employment options open, and passed her P.A. re-certification exam recently. Allison and Jennifer Pratt enjoyed seeing each other at a recent alumnae function in Atlanta. Frances Dodson Beasley and husband Jamie are having fun with Gracie Elizabeth Mother Ellen Newton Auten ’80 and Daughter Mary Ellen Auten ’06 45 (1). Frances is the assistant director for annual giving at the NC School of the Arts. Allison Spears Boyle moved to Charlotte, NC. She and Bill’s second daughter, Mary Michael was born in January 2005. Allison has been with TEK Systems as a senior account executive for 11 years. Vickie Collins is volunteer coordinator at AIDS Care Service in Winston-Salem. She loves meeting new people through its community outreach programs. Glenda Pugh Dirienzo, a paralegal, and husband Charles live in Winston-Salem with children Katelyn (14), and Alexander (9). Susan Griffin-Stockton began teaching K-8th grade music at Our Lady of Mercy in Winston-Salem in August 2004. She also teaches private piano lessons. Amy Woodard Kemp still enjoys her job in Greensboro as a meeting planner with the NC Association of Realtors. Julie Smith Klingman and Ross live in Charlotte where Julie enjoys being home with son Harrison (2). Kendra Jones Mabon and Bill, living in Kensington, MD, recently enjoyed a visit from Susan Cochran Moser and husband Craig! Shannon Smith McFarland enjoys her new job as Amos Cottage’s pediatric speech-language pathologist for developmentally delayed infants and toddlers. Elaine Smith Montgomery and husband, Louis Allen, live in Greensboro where Elaine has had an interpreting business for over 10 years now. Susan Cochran Moser is in her fourth year as public services librarian and is the interim Library Director at Tri-County Technical College in Anderson, SC. For their 2nd anniversary, she and Craig enjoyed a trip to Cozumel. Britt Biggs Myers and Tem live in Rocky Mount, NC with Eliza Douglas (3), and infant Bess Davidson. Britt enjoys whatever interior design work she has time for and plays tennis and bridge occasionally with Jenny Britt Denny ’92. Betsy Barber Pace received her M.Ed. in elementary ed. and is now working towards her National Boards Certification. She teaches 3rd grade language arts in Knoxville, TN where she and husband John live with their children, Charles (5), and Sara (3). Margaret Pike practices law in Winston-Salem and enjoys co-directing and playing in a local soccer league. She is a member of Salem’s Board of Visitors and a mentor; Margaret recently gave the keynote address at Salem’s Leadership Banquet. She and husband David Werle enjoy gardening and look forward to living in Manhattan next fall where David will complete his surgical rotation. Jennifer Pratt and Frank moved to Atlanta. Jennifer misses the ocean but visits Myrtle Beach to fly her airplane. She is playing lots of tennis and has joined a team in Atlanta. Stephanie Peede Sorrells and Jamie love Littleton, CO where they can ski, snow-shoe, bike, hike, and enjoy time with sons Walker (6), and Brayden (3). Stephanie started her own adventure travel agency last year and loves it! Betsy Johnson Touma and Yano live in Louisville, KY with three children Maddie (5), Mason (2), and Parker (1). Shan Woolard enjoys her work as a career counselor at Wake Forest University. She had fun at the reunion and is looking forward to the next one! Lastly, I, Lisa Findlay Merrill, had a great time at our 10th reunion in May 2004! Grant and I live in West Chester, PA where I stay home with Lucy (5), and Will (3). I’m happy to be singing again, on my church’s contemporary worship team, playing tennis, gardening, or doing home-improvement projects! Thanks for trusting me as your new class correspondent and please feel free to keep in touch with Alison Hughes Beard ’89 with mother Allison Long Hughes ’55 46 Class of 1995 Front row: Sarah Woody Smith, Amy White Rose, Mara Kelly Second row: Emily Estes, Shannon Sides Kvam, Deana Bass Third row: Meredith Snellings, Cindie Burnette Riedinger updates throughout the year! 1995 Outgoing Correspondent Shannon Sides Kvam Incoming Correspondent Sarah Woody Smith 1030 Deepwood Court Winston-Salem, NC 27104 Sarahsmith1030@yahoo.com We had a great 10th reunion this past April and missed everyone who could not be there. Our new class leaders are: Shannon Sides Kvam, president; Amy White Rose, reunion giving chair; Sarah Woody Smith, correspondent. Anne Green is a psychiatric social worker in St. Louis, where she stayed since earning her masters in social work at Washington University. She is working to become a licensed clinical social worker. Annmarie Carter is also a social worker, living in Burlington, NC and working at Alamance Regional Medical Center. Shannon Sides Kvam lives in Columbia, SC, where she is a teacher at Heathwood Hall Episcopal School and also owns Cerce. She married Brian Kvam in November 2004. I was her matron of honor, Diane Conley and Jenny Stokes, both ’96, were also in the wedding! Britt Lawrence Melton and husband Andy have just moved to Findlay, OH and enjoy small town life. Cindie Burnette Riedinger lives in Charlotte, NC with husband Eric and children Hailey (2) and Joseph (1). She is working on a nursing degree and staying busy at home with her kids! Amy White Sisters Anne Redding Andrews ’93 and Katie Redding ‘00 Salem College and husband Mike have been in Richmond, VA for a little more than four years. She is an account executive in the marketing department of the Martin Agency. Amy travels a lot to see her Salem friends! Meredith Snellings also lives in Richmond where she works for the Junior League. Last December she married Stephen Moegling. Jill Sallee Swilling lives in West Roxbury, MA, where she is a part time physical therapist with Boston’s VA Medical Center. Jill and husband Nathan are busy raising daughter Sydney Julia (7 mos). She frequently visits with Gretchen Williams ’96. Jennifer Crowl Mounce enjoys staying at home with daughters, Jillian Colleen (6), Lydia Clare (4), and Lillie Camille (3). She and husband Brian are happy to be back in North Carolina, living in Elkin. Sarahann Williams Wicker lives in Summerfield, NC, with husband Jeff and son Jackson (2). Andy Clark Brooks is a science teacher with the W-S/Forsyth County schools. She and Matthew have two children; Emily Grace (3) and Hannah Elizabeth, (4 mos.) Leigh Camp also lives in Winston-Salem with husband John Wilkinson. Emily Estes earned a master’s in neonatal and pediatric nursing from Duke University and works at Brenner Children’s Hospital in Winston-Salem as the assistant unit manager of the Intensive and Intermediate Care Nurseries. Leslie Howard Smith and husband Ed welcomed son, Richard Dominic, December 2004, joining big brother Henry (3). Leslie enjoys being in Winston-Salem and staying home with the boys. Neili Cole Akridge lives in Virginia Beach with husband David and children Buddy (4) and Katie (1). Michael Morton has moved from Winston-Salem to Glen Allen, VA. Brenda Hughes Tucolda works for Blue Cross Blue Shield of NC but her true passion is her oil painting. When not painting, she is practicing yoga and playing with her granddaughter Kayla (2.) I live in Winston-Salem with my husband Carter, and our son Rhodes (14 mos.) I enjoy staying home with Rhodes, who keeps me very busy! If you have any information about yourself or a classmate, please feel free to contact me. I would love to hear from you! Rose 1996 Elizabeth Haverkamp Apt. 129, 2500 Q Street Washington, DC 20007 elizabeth_haverkamp@hotmail.com Terri Elizabeth de los Santos (formerly Weathersbee-Kardash) Summ er Magazine finished her M.S. in sociology and is a candidate in the Ph.D. program. She will teach social psychology as an associate lecturer at the University of Wisconsin. On April 21, 2005 she married Ernest de los Santos, Jr. Gretchen Brandies Covine and Tony welcomed second son, David Matthew, (between hurricanes in Tampa) on September 20th. They’ve enjoyed sharing time with Alice Joplin and her husband Chuck since they moved to the area. Gretchen is staying at home with the boys and intermittently working on freelance marketing projects. Holly Barnes Hofbauer and husband Steve enjoy watching Emma Caffery (2) grow. In May, Jennifer Dailey Morrison, Carrie Mobley Seck, Deborah Coxe Hensley, Holly Barnes Hofbauer, Amanda Carver Hiatt, Caroline McLean, Elizabeth Eubank Johnson, Emery Boyd Bettis and Brooke Smith spent a girls’ weekend in Blowing Rock. Elizabeth Eubank Johnson lives in Geneva, NY, with husband TW and daughter Abigail (born April 2004). Jennifer Dailey Morrison and husband Aaron welcomed son, Blan Hamilton Morrison, May 2003. Jennifer left her sales job with Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. to stay home with Blan. Jennifer Winters Ratcliff graduated last May from Moravian Theological Seminary with a M.Div. She works part-time while finishing her master of pastoral care and counseling. She and husband Michael live in Kernersville, NC. Jennifer Reeves Needham is a chemist for RJR. Husband Darin is a fireman in Winston-Salem, and daughter Mallory is 8. Ellen Woytowich is active in her local sailing club and won the Novice Series last year. She teaches special education in fourth grade. Ellen and Stacey vacationed together last summer – a tradition. They toured northern Florida and attended Camp Jeep in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Stacey Sharpe is a social worker for the school district and volunteers for Big Brothers/Big Sisters. Caroline McLean’s business is moving into a new office at ADAC West in Atlanta. She still lives in Buckhead and keeps up with Kristin Epting, and Alison Bruce, both ’94, Catherine Wolfe ’97 and Lisa Malone ’95 in Atlanta. Anna Katharine Mansfield conducts wine aroma research as Enology Project Leader at the U of Minnesota. She visited Quincy Howell Bruckerhoff in Sarasota, FL. this spring to escape the cold Minnesota winter. Quincy and husband Jeff bought a house in the DC area last fall. A freelance stage manager, she spends most of the year on the road. Anna Parkes Barfield and husband Todd moved to Oceanport, NJ. They enjoy their new house and Griffin (18 mos). Anna stays home with Griffin, but mentors to teachers and tutors children after school. Mischa Gipson Sell is a member service specialist with Truliant Federal Credit Union. She is going back to school for a B.S. in nursing and is balancing work, school and family life with hubby, David and Trevor (6). Shawnda Adams Pacheco is working on her masters degree at the Universidad de Salamanca in Spain. She and Carlos are proud parents of Robert Mikhail, born September 2004. Courtney Misel Pearson and husband moved to Indianapolis for one year while he completes a fellowship at the Children’s Hospital. She runs her stationery business out of the home. In July, Anna Katharine Mansfield stayed with her while she judged the Indy wine show. She caught up with Lissa Holmes at this year’s American Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Association meeting in Myrtle Beach and Jennifer Claus Burenga in Philadelphia. Kris Porazzi Sorrells loves teaching math at Salem Academy. Breanna (4) is enthralled by brother Matthew Taylor, born November 2004. Kris is working on her doctorate at UNCG in curriculum and instruction and volunteers with her church, where her husband is the minister of education and youth. Peaches Van Every May, married in Key West in May 2003 enjoys every minute of married life! An event planner for the Carolinas Chapter of the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation, she just finished a certification in non-profit management from Duke University. Jennifer Young Conrad and husband will live in Kansas for the next year while he runs the 2006 U.S. Senior Open golf tournament. She is a stay at home mom for Elizabeth (3) and Sam (2). Jennifer and Courtney Misel Pearson have been visiting each other. She was able to see Becky Jones when they both lived in Denver. Katrina Cowley Elsea, finishing up the final few hours of her M.Div at Southwestern Seminary, continues to work in the seminary’s School of Music. Husband David just completed his first year as a children’s minister in their church. They visited friends in China last summer. Pam Butts moved to Atlanta after finishing her M.Div. at Duke Divinity School in 2001, and is now the staff chaplain of oncology services at Emory University Hospital and the Winship Cancer Institute. An ordained minister, she has served as assistant minister at her church. She visited Winston-Salem in March to celebrate her college roommate, Mischa Gipson Sell’s son’s birthday. Dianne Conley bought a house in Winston-Salem and is a biopharmaceutical sales representative for Amgen. Melissa Colburn moved to Atlanta last February. She works for ADP in Alpharetta, GA. Marisa Berdeja married Thompson Patrick Rippey III (Tom) on November 24, 2004 on the beach in the Bahamas. Daughter Marisol (5) now has a stepbrother Dominic (8). Marisa teaches 8th grade Spanish at Columbus School for Girls. Marisa is training for the Columbus Marathon, and Tom is training for the Wendy’s Triatholon in Columbus. Susie Brock Vanlandingham gave birth to Emily Marie on March 25, 2005, bringing Madeline a younger sister. Susie is on maternity leave from teaching music classes at Gymboree, and Josh is going to school at night for his Executive MBA. Melissa Moss Mason and husband Kelsey had a little girl, Lillian Grace (Lilly), on October 6. Yvonne Marsan works in the Biology department at UNCG takes postgraduate courses. She helped Alice Joplin move out of her Greensboro home over the past year and visited Gretchen Brandies Covine several times. She attended Natalie Plank’s wedding April 30, 2005 along with Alice and Kate Flowers ’98. Jenny Stokes is moving to Greensboro near her job with Action Greensboro. She works with Turner South network in Atlanta to promote Greensboro and the abundance of college students in the area. Alice Joplin and husband Charles Ellis recently purchased their first home together in historical St. Petersburg, FL. She works for Cardinal Health in the Quality Assurance department, and Charles is with the Department of Veteran Affairs. Since moving to Florida, she has visited Gretchen Brandies Covine frequently. Gretchen Williams graduated from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary with a MA in Counseling. She finished an internship in mental health counseling and has been in the Boston area for the past few years. She continues to teach piano and remains involved with music ministry in Cambridge, MA. Susan Deans Irving lives in Wilmington with husband Brian. They have twins, Ella Grace and Logan Elizabeth (1), and Susan is a stay at home mom. Jule Rainey Wagoner’s husband Chuck died unexpectedly on February 2, 2005. Numerous Salem sisters attended the memorial. We extend our sympathy to Jule and her daughter Riley. I am finishing up my MBA at George Washington University and am starting the always fun job search. Please keep Salem and me updated on your whereabouts. I can’t wait to see everyone for our 10th 47 year anniversary next year! 1997 Melissa McGuire Bridgman 719 Dickinson Street Memphis, TN 28107 bridgmanpottery@yahoo.com Malissa McKay Arnold lives in Princeton, NJ with husband Derick and Gibson (3). She is active with Princeton League of Women Voters and leadership roles in her church. Barbara Berry works for RJR in Winston-Salem. Her son recently graduated from flight school and is a flight instructor. She and her husband enjoy their grandsons’ Little League baseball games. Tonya Cash is sales & marketing coordinator for Waterford Homes in Atlanta. Becca Dick is a paralegal for the Red Cross in Washington, DC. Jeanne Downs lives in Atlanta, where she is a sales associate with SanofiAventis Pharmaceuticals. Catherine Wolfe works for Aventis, as a medical science liaison. Hope Turpin Everson lives in Charlotte with Jon and Brooke (4) and Cole (2). She begins her master’s in sociology at UNC Charlotte this fall. Michelle Smith Flanagan is a nurse with the high-risk antepartum unit at Palmetto Health Richland. She and Joe recently bought a new home in Lexington, SC. Son Andrew is three. Sharee Fowler lives in WinstonSalem with husband John Wilson. She is coordinator for the Domestic Violence Community Council with Family Services. Beth Mabe Gianopulos is now general counsel and chief planning officer for Salem Academy & College. She and Mike live in Kernersville with Jacob (18 mos). Amanda Burkette Grimstead returned to Winston-Salem this year with husband Jamie and Emma (18 mos). She works for RBC Centura. Avery Harrelson Jones and Bobby recently moved back to North Carolina and bought a home in Asheville. Molly Harbin was promoted to senior revitalization planner for Arlington County, VA. She sold her condo in Arlington and bought a row house in Washington, DC. Hester Meachum Lawver begins her Master’s of Education at George Mason University this summer. She and husband Patrick vacationed in Ireland this summer. Aleeta Loftin Lemm and Jahir now have three sons, with Noah, born Nov. 12, 2004. She stays home with the boys in Advance, NC. Paul and Erin Britton Macchia live in Jonesboro, AR, where she is pursuing a Ph.D. in biology at Arkansas State University. Kathryn Metcalfe teaches 8th grade history and is pursuing a master’s in public relations at USF Tampa. She is an active board member 48 with the Florida Cattlewomen Association, promoting Florida beef and agriculture in education. Leigh Ann Miller is a Ph.D. candidate in international health and development at Tulane University in New Orleans. She received an MSW from UGA and worked for the CDC in Hanoi, Vietnam. Roberta Moberg was promoted to sales coordinator for North and South Carolina with Polo Ralph Lauren and will move to Charlotte. Alicia Morgan married Shawn Smith on April 23, 2005, in Conover, NC. They live in Washington, DC, where she is production manager at the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Brandy Nelson is assistant principal at Broughton High School in Raleigh, NC. Betsy Wimer Rhodes, husband Bruce and Isabel (18 mos) moved from Charleston, SC to Lynchburg, VA. Holly Robinson married husband Rodney on September 11, 2004. They live in Hendersonville, NC where she is sales and marketing manager for Glade Homes. Corey Ash Ross lives in Columbus, OH, with husband Matt. She is assistant to the associate dean in the College of Humanities at Ohio State University. Kacee Scroggins and Mike live in Denver. She works for eCollege and vacationed in Paris this spring. Kim Stoddard married Scott Wolfe on March 19 in Atlanta, GA, then honeymooned in Costa Rica. Kim is development director for the Museum of Design Atlanta. Allison Gregory Stone received her MSW and is assistant director of a community-based mental health program in Birmingham. Husband Jeff is a pediatrician. Mandi Hall Walker earned certification through the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards. Hilary Bogard Williams is human resources director for The Strata Group and is beginning a Sri-Lankan fair trade venture with Samanthi Gunawardena ’96. Hilary, Lonny, and daughter Arwen Rhys (3), live in Kingston, GA. Gary and I are busy renovating our old home in midtown Memphis, chasing Nash (18 mos), and getting Bridgman Pottery rolling after the 2004 baby break. I teach children’s art and joined a co-op gallery. 1998 Erika Nelson Francis 112 Cannon Circle Winchester, VA 22602-6918 erikafrancis@hotmail.com Christine Adams lives in Greensboro, NC and does in-home preservation therapy. Maggie Crowell teaches 6th grade in Charlotte, NC and works part time at the Kate Spade store. Ann Carter Duncan is the associate director of admission at Agnes Scott College in Atlanta, GA. Lynn Cundiff Dwiggins is as a senior interior designer for BB&T in Winston-Salem, NC. Rebecca “Dee Dee” Edmondson has been accepted into law school at Suffolk University in Boston, MA. She continues to work on Beacon Hill as a legislative aide. Erika Nelson Francis and husband Mark welcomed second son Pierce Douglas on Nov. 22, 2004. Big brother Tyson is three. Kelly Frost is a massage therapist in Winston-Salem. Beth Gantz is the director of recruitment and marketing for the Ursuline College Accelerated Program and owns her own bead company, Fiesta Beads. Kathy Garrett-Cox and husband Jonathan and live in Richmond, VA. She is the historical programs assistant for the Maymont Foundation as a group tour coordinator. Anne Dunn Hitchins lives in Richmond, VA with husband Todd. She recently started her own business designing custom wedding invitations, birth announcements and personal stationary. Dana Hunter is a fashion designer and resides in Atlanta. Her first fashion show was in Atlanta in May 2005. Cornelia “Neely” Lambert is a doctoral fellow and graduate assistant in the Department of History of Science at the University of Oklahoma in Norman, OK. Brooke Hensley Legg welcomed her second child, Mattie on Feb. 2, 2005 and lives in Yadkinville, NC. Molly Lewis, a new homeowner in Winston-Salem, is a senior account manager at Wachovia. Katharine Humphrey Martin completed her second year of divinity school at Wake Forest University and was accepted to the Clinical Pastoral Education Program at Baptist Medical Center for summer 2005. Shannon McKenna Micklus lives in Machias, ME with husband Dan and children Torin (4) and Rita (2). She works with low-income students in 7th-12th grades preparing them for post-secondary education. Deena Patel welcomed son Jaiden Hitesh, on October 25, 2004. Sarah Cecil Rhodes husband Jason, and children Eric and Will like in Twentynine Palms, CA where Jason is a Marine. Allison Lemmons Tobey and husband Ned welcomed second child, Camille Boyd on Dec. 4, 2004. They reside in Potomac Falls, VA. Christy Toy recently relocated to St. Louis, MO and is a planner/negotiator for Adamson Advertising. Cheryl Tuttle was recently accepted into the Western Carolina University dietetic internship program. Megan Valentine lives on the coast of Maine as a freelance filmmaker. Thunder Road, a short film, for which she was the cinematographer, won Best Short Film in the New Hampshire Film Festival in 2004. LaVerne Walker resides in Clemmons, NC and teaches in Winston-Salem. She received her MAT from Salem College in 2004 and is now currently enrolled in the MSA program at ASU. Daughter, Darcel is also a Salem alumna, A’04. Nada Bowen Werner lives in Winston-Salem with husband Andrew and son Will. She is the exceptional children’s case manager at Mineral Springs Middle School. Christal West lives in Washington, DC and works at the White House in the Office of the Chief of Staff. 1999 Katherine Ferrell Apt. A, 714 Avalon Road Winston-Salem, NC 27104 Desire Edwards Carter and husband Kevin live in Greensboro, NC where Desire is an attorney. Rebekah Bokros Hatch and husband Anthony live in Baltimore, MD. Rebekah is an Episcopal priest and associate Chaplain at St. Paul’s School in Brooklandville, MD. Shakerra Jones lives in Winston-Salem, NC. Sarah Macgregor Williams and husband Kevin live in Leesburg, GA and Sarah is a 3rd grade teacher in Sylvester, GA. Aimee Martin is an operations analyst for Wachovia Corporation in Charlotte, NC. Shannon Lawing McGinnis and husband Brian live in Belmont, NC. Shannon works for CMG, The Hearst Corporation in Charlotte, NC as a category management analyst. Clare Seagraves lives and works in Austin, TX as assistant director of Admissions for University of Texas at Austin. Teleia Tollison White and husband Adam live in Rock Hill, SC where Teleia is assistant director of annual giving at Winthrop University. 2000 Outgoing Correspondent Gina DeMasi Incoming Correspondents Karla Gort 211 East Voorhis Avenue Deland, FL 32724 kfgort@hotmail.com Nicole Potts Kirk 9260 Potomac Loop Fort Belvoir, VA 22060 nlkirk@hotmail.com The results of our elections at our class meeting during reunion weekend are as follows. President, Jennifer Butler Brow; Class Correspondents, Karla Gort and Nicole Potts Kirk; Thank you to everyone who made this such a great reunion. We missed everyone who could not come. Thanks to Gina DeMasi, our class correspondent, for writing our class notes for the last five years. Jennifer Butler Brow and husband Mark live in Kettering, Salem College OH where she is a CAD drafter for a structural engineering group. Karen S. Kates finishes nursing school in July 2005 and plans to work at Forsyth Memorial Hospital. Courtney Booth graduated May 7th with her J.D. from North Carolina Central University School of Law. Kena Stone Bowman and husband Robert live in Advance, NC where she is a security analyst for BB&T. Tina Brooks, stationed overseas, regretted missing our reunion. She is a captain in the military police of the U.S. Army. Tracy Tucker Bullock and husband Chris live in Raleigh where Tracy is general counsel for a real estate company. Katherine Leonard Campbell and husband David live in Winston-Salem where she is a teacher. Their first daughter, Anna Jane, was born on May 1, 2004. Drusilla Carter will graduate in December with a MSIS and an MA in public history. She will spend this summer interning in Bath, ME. Carrie Pritchard Dickey married Luke Aaron Dickey on May 15, 2004. This spring she held her first solo art show at Tessera Gallery in Winston-Salem. Carrie is an art teacher at Presbyterian Playschool in Winston-Salem. Jennifer Twineham Dunn lives with husband Jay in Snellville, GA. She is a medical technologist for Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. Christian Enochs lives in Richmond, VA where she is a designer for The Planning Partnership. Karla Gort enjoys living near the beach in DeLand, FL where she is an associate director of alumni relations at Stetson University. Stacy Griffin recently graduated from Wake Forest University’s PA program and is a physicians assistant at Salem Chest Specialists in Winston-Salem. Ginger Hendricks enjoys her job at Elon University. She just returned from a month in Ireland with 30 Elon students! Katie Holland lives in WinstonSalem and is the executive director of the Amani Children’s Foundation, which raises money for children with HIV and AIDS in Africa. Catherine Smart Keech lives in Washington, NC with husband Tony. She currently is working to complete her Clinical Social Work License. Nicole Potts Kirk, husband Jon and daughter Aubrey Lynn relocated in December to Fort Belvoir, VA where Nicole is pursuing her clinical social work license. Ellen Kitchen enjoys living in NYC, where she has been since graduation. Her marketing job gives her time to hang out with fellow alums Michelle McKoy and Lena Boyeva. Jennifer Martin works at a law firm in Winston-Salem, NC. Tameka Rosa Nathan regretted missing the reunion, but she, husband Welensky and son Marcus were in Magaz ine 20 05 the process of moving from Colorado to Arizona. Maria Parker lives in Clemmons, NC and works in marketing at Sara Lee Intimate Apparel. Jennifer Higgins Poindexter and husband Brad live in Richmond. She enjoyed organizing the class dinner for the five year reunion. She works in marketing for Circuit City Stores Inc. Katherine Redding received her MFA in graphic design from Savannah College of Art and Design. She is a graphic designer in Savannah. Beve Remington is happy, healthy and busy in Fredericksburg, VA where she is a real estate broker. Jennifer Gardner Shepherd and husband Joseph welcomed son Joseph A. Shepherd V, born October 31, 2004. She enjoys being a full time mom in Washington state. Monica Wood Sparzak lives in Southfield, MI, and is a first year doctoral student in the School of Music at the University of Michigan. Allison Toney, working on her PhD in Educational Mathematics at University of Northern Colorado, looks forward to having two papers published in the next year. Lindsay Mayfield Wells and husband Cameron were married last May at Home Moravian Church in Winston-Salem. Fellow classmates Suzanne Fleming, Ellen Kitchen, Christian Enochs, Karla Gort and Courtney Booth were all bridesmaids. Blair Strickland Bergevin ’99 read scripture. Jenny Cook Scott and husband Russell were married in October 2004, soon after opening Tessera Art Gallery in downtown Winston-Salem. They encourage everyone to stop by. Melissa Marion married Bob Ives on May 14 in Mt. Airy, NC. Stephanie Dutton and Gina DeMasi were bridesmaids. Melissa is a production manager at Carr-Hughes Productions in NY. Heather E. Wall returned from being a Peace Corps volunteer in Zambia in November 2004. She currently lives near Charlotte and just started Enterprise’s management training program. Meredith Wood enjoys her job at the U.S. Department of Commerce in Washington, DC. In August 2004, she attended the wedding of Melanie Swain. Meredith earned her SCUBA certification and looks forward to traveling more with her new hobby. 2001 Kim Byerly 2824 Bromley Park Drive Winston-Salem, NC 27103 k_byerly@bellsouth.net Class of 2000 Front row: Jennifer Martin, Jennifer Twinham, Melanie Swain Nance, Karla Gort, Tracy Tucker Bullock, Jennifer Higgins Poindexter, Nicole Potts Kirk, Lindsay Mayfield Wells, Heather E. Wall Second row: Ellen Kitchen, Catherine Smart Keech, Michelle McKoy, Suzanne Fleming, Meredith Wood, Christian Enochs, Stacy Griffin, Kathleen Dziak-McBride, Jenny Cook Scott Third row: Katie Holland, Carly Phillips, Katie Redding, Jennifer Butler Brow, Allison Toney, Monica Wood Sparzak, Courtney Booth, Maria Parker, Ginger Hendricks It has been a busy year for the class of 2001 and we look forward to our five-year reunion next spring. Mimi Aledo is pursuing a masters in public policy at the JFK School of Government at Harvard University. She received a Jack Kent Cooke Foundation scholarship. Kris Amidon is now the director of annual giving for Salem Academy and College. Emily Barrett lives in New York City and works as an account executive for Tahari. Gwen Blanton lives in Charleston, SC, and works in a lab at the Institute of Psychiatry in the Center for Drug and Alcohol Programs. Lindsay Brandon is a broker associate at Coldwell Banker Triad Realtors in Winston-Salem. This year she earned the designations of Certified New Home Specialist, Accredited Buyer’s Representative, and received an award from the Sterling Society. Sally Brock Sprecco gave birth to Gracie Marie, January 2005. Kim Byerly is the director of publicity at John F. Blair, Publisher in WinstonSalem. Dana Calder lives in Durham and is the assistant retail manager at LensCrafters. She recently returned from an optical mission with Give the Gift of Sight in Paraguay. Dee Dee Carter works at Salem as an admissions officer. Brandy Chappell Palmer and husband Charlie welcomed daughter Mary Samuel Margaret, September 2004. Brandy is a stay-at-home mom and private English/writing tutor. Jennifer Clay Mickey teaches elementary school in Winston-Salem. Katie Dail Long and husband Will moved to a house in south Charlotte in December 2004. They are training for marathons in Virginia Beach and Kiawah Island. Michlene Daoud is an account executive for a clothing line called David Meister. She is responsible for nationwide sales to department stores and boutiques both nationally and internationally. Amanda Davee is in her final year of divinity school in Richmond, VA, and working towards ordination in the Presbyterian Church. Cozette Dorado Vasquez lives in Houston, TX, with husband Raul and children, Amaya and Joseph. Heather Douglas Morton welcomed daughter Mallory Claire, September 2004. The Morton family returned to WinstonSalem where Heather was promoted to a loan administration officer at BB&T. Monique Farrell is an admissions officer at Salem. Jessica Faulkenberry was promoted to assistant vice president of the WV central region at BB&T. She joined the Professional Women’s League of Charleston and worked on the 2004 presidential campaign in West Virginia. Jennifer Fedor bought her first home in Beaverton, OR, where she is over the entire Men’s United States visual presentation for Nike. She is training for a marathon and volunteers to teach P.E. through Nike. Mary Gordon Jenkinson welcomed twins Beau and Mary Banks, October 2004. The Jenkinson family lives in Walterboro, SC. Andrea Hartley lives in Atlanta, GA and works at Rabaut Design Associates. Jenni Jenkins graduated in August 2004 49 from the UNC at Chapel Hill School of Nursing with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing. She works at UNC Hospitals in the orthopedics and trauma department. Sarah Jones lives in Kinston and is working on a degree in social work from East Carolina University. Lynn Justice McIntosh lives in Yadkinville with husband John and son, Logan. She is a medical unit secretary at Forsyth Medical Center. Kristy Keck Cannell teaches chemistry and sponsors student council at Dominion High School in Sterling, VA. She and her husband Pete split their time between their home in Ashburn, VA and their lake home near Winchester, VA. Kennette Lawrence lives in Mount Airy, NC and teaches English at Surry Community College. Harriet McCarthy received a congressional award for “Angels in Adoption.” Elena Perrineau Gold and husband Marcus live in Wilmington, NC. Elena is working on a graduate degree in biology at the UNC at Wilmington. Elizabeth Richie married Jim Bowers on December 14, 2002. She works at Carolina Day School in Asheville as a teacher’s assistant. She and Jim reside in Marion, NC. Hilary Robertson lives in Winston-Salem and teaches fourth grade at Jefferson Elementary. Jennifer Schleider Edney and husband Woody live in Pleasant View, TN. Jennifer is in her last semester of perfusion school at Vanderbilt University. Candice Sotriffer is a residential counselor for Old Vineyard Youth Services. She is pursuing a masters degree at Gardner Webb University. Heather South Marks was married in Asheville, NC, on March 5th, 2005. Katie Dail Long served as matron of honor. Alexa Starr married Brian Bures on June 26, 2004. Kim Byerly, Gwen Blanton, Rowe Carenen ’02, and Jennie Sosnowski ’99, were bridesmaids. Alexa and Brian live in Chicago where she is a student at the Univ. of Illinois pursuing a Ph.D. in economics. Katherine Varner Shoaf and husband welcomed son James Holland, on July 9, 2004. LaDonna Williams is in her second year of law school at North Carolina Central University. She competed in the Mike Easley Opening Statement competition and was a top seven finalist. She is also a member of the Law Journal and is on the board of editors for the Law Journal, and a class representative for student government. Tasha Wilson Lanier lives in Lexington, NC, with husband Casey and children, Alex, Payton, and Anna. She is a data coordinator at Wake Forest School of Medicine. Amy Woodall lives in Kernersville, NC and works at Salem as mailroom/supply center manager. Michelle Yates Becker and 50 husband Chris recently bought a new house in Cornelius, NC. Michelle teaches severely disabled children in Mooresville, NC. As many of you know, our class suffered a loss this year. Jaimie Horn passed away on September 17, 2004. Our prayers and condolences go out to her family. She will be missed but not forgotten. 2002 Mindy Daniel 1830 South First Street Salisbury, NC 28144 mjdaniel@gmail.com Erika Barnette is a production coor- dinator for American Movie Classics in New York. Hunter Brady lives and works in Winston-Salem, NC as an operational investment analyst with Wachovia Bank. Alias Burket spends her summers working at the Suzuki Institute in Virginia and lives in Brooklyn, NY. Rowe Carenen lives in Hattiesburg, MS and works as an English instructor at University of Southern Mississippi, a legal assistant for Holmes and PLLC, and as a freelance editor. Holly Douglas Charles is a graphic designer. She and husband Joseph live in Mohnton, PA. Mims Creed lives in Elgin, SC works as development assistant for South Carolina Cancer Center of Palmetto Health Foundation doing their fundraising and event planning. Laura Dangerfield lives in Winston-Salem and is a flutist for Western Piedmont Symphony and Salisbury Symphony and in her spare time is a sales rep for Elegant Ensembles. Jennie Lewis lives and works in New York as an actor. Kimberly Melissa Moore lives and works in Raleigh, NC as a receptionist and media assistant for advertising agency Howard, Merrell & Partners. Leslie Newton lives in Saint Petersburg, FL and works as a marketing assistant for Polaris Consulting Group while she continues to be a student. Elizabeth Rogers lives in Asheville, NC. Amanda Evans Sandor and husband Mark live in Fayetteville, AR where Amanda works as accounts receivable manager for Athletic World Advertising. 2003 Rachel Rodrigues 2628 Bromley Park Drive Winston-Salem, NC 27103 Class of 2004 Front row: Conschetta Wright, Victoria Smith, Nicole Smith, Liz Smith, Meenal Khajuria, Jessica Cecil, Allison Crooks, Meighan Mahaffey Second row: Beth Young, Andrea Falden, Katherine Biggers, Danielle Bowers, Elissa Gall, Kate Pinkerton-Long, Sara Al-Jazra, Jennifer Cassels, Ashley Watts Third row: Alison Graham, Anna Walker Barry, Elizabeth Blackwell, Holly Palmer, Casey Kiser, Lesley Simmons, Sara Butner, Melissa Esposito, Michelle Sammons Alicia Colombo lives and works in Asheville, NC as residential counselor handling direct care and human services for Eliada Homes, Inc. Laura Herrin married Ralph Craig in December 2004 and moved the family to a 36-acre farm in Montana. Laura is Vice President/CFO of ProTrax Investigative Services, Inc. Morgan Gentry Lasater does print and web production at Elon Univeristy. She and husband Walt live in Burlington, NC. Emily Leonard is an independent sales rep for Crown Sport Sales and lives in Mooresville, NC. Joy Truluck recently accepted a new position with Aladdin Travel in Winston-Salem where she and daughter Lili live. Kristen Carico Varner, husband Kevin, and daughter Kayla live in Archdale, NC. Kristen is a sales associate with Allred & Company Realtors. Laila Muhammad is in graduate school at Northwestern University in Illinois. Catherine Parker completed the masters in art history program of Sotheby’s Institute in London October 2004 and now works there in a new gallery, Riflemaker Ltd. 2004 Jessica Cecil Apt. 1, 1409 Pilot View Street Winston-Salem, NC 27101 SalemCollege04@hotmail.com Sara Al-Jazra will leave for Morocco to serve in the Peace Corps in September. She currently lives in WinstonSalem. Danielle Bowers is the sales and event coordinator for Holiday Inn of Manahawkin, NJ. Rebekah Bray serves as the volunteer coordinator for the Maymont Foundation in Richmond. Katie Burge is currently living in Winston-Salem. Sara Butner is the assistant director of public relations for Salem Academy & College. Jennifer Cassels is the sales & executive management coordinator for Smith Phillips, and lives in Winston-Salem. Jessica Cecil lives in Winston-Salem and is an admissions counselor for Salem College. Katie Laverdure happily reports that she married Barry Chance, and they reside in Mechanicsville, VA, where she teaches advanced English to sophomores and juniors. Priscilla Christensen is a field producer for WXII 12 News in Winston-Salem. Allison Crooks is a sales associate at Ann Taylor in Winston-Salem. Stevie Davis is a graduate student at Salem College. Becka Detraz resides in Winston-Salem and attends UNCG as a graduate student. Robin DeVane is a business office assistant for Salem College; she resides in Lewisville. Katie Dickson lives in Winston-Salem. Kristen Clark Dougherty is a high school English and psychology teacher in Winston-Salem. After graduation, Melissa Esposito worked in south Florida for EMILY’s List on the Senate and Presidential Elections. After the elections, she worked for Clean Water Action’s Tampa office as a political organizer. She and roommate Meigh Mahaffey live in Alexandria, VA. Andrea Falden is a graduate student at the University of Virginia; she resides in Charlottesville, VA. Nicole Fischer is graduating from the University of Salem College Virginia and will serve in the Peace Corps in Togo, Africa. Elissa Gall is a sales associate at Home Depot in Winston-Salem. Jamie Getty is working for the House Republican Campaign Committee in Camp Hill, PA. Amy Gregory is a tax analyst for R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company in Winston-Salem, where she resides. Mariana Guimares resides in Morganton, NC. We send our condolences regarding the death of her father, Paulo Guimares last summer. Kira Hasbargen is in the masters of public policy graduate program at George Washington Univeristy. She resides in Silver Spring, MD. Susan Jacobs married Michael Lawrence on October 30, 2004 at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Winston-Salem. Sara AlJazra, Jessica Cecil, Tsungi Hungwe, Lola Soummoni, Joy Truluck, Brandi Jones, Samantha Culler and Klarissa Joemath all attended. Susan is the director of research and special projects for the Downtown Winston-Salem Partnership, Inc. She and Mike reside in High Point, NC. Meenal Khajuria is a graduate student at the George Washington University School of Political Management; she is also the coordinator of Founding Fathers, the Winston-Salem domestic violence prevention program. Casey Kiser works as a manager at Village Motorcycles; she resides in Clemmons, NC. Casey is also pursing a masters in business administration degree from High Point University. Maria Lendacky currently resides in Aston, PA. She will be pursuing her masters of arts in teaching at the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore, MD in the fall. Carolyn Lukason is the gallery director for Left of the Bank, Fine Art Gallery and Frame Store in Old Greenwich, CT, where she resides. Jessica Magelaner lives in Charlotte where she serves as a librarian at Freedom Regional Medical Center. Meigh Mahaffey currently resides in Alexandria, VA. Perry Mauzy is pursuing post-graduate studies in the History of Art at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland. Rebecca Midkiff is a research intern at Cassity & Associates in Washington, DC. She resides in Arlington, VA. Holly Palmer is a 4th grade teacher at Lewisville Elementary School; she lives in Winston-Salem, NC. Jenni Penberthy married Kevin Thomas Buckley on July 17, 2004. Elissa Gall, Amber Barrett and Alison Graham served her as bridesmaids; Amanda Sealy and Jennifer Dowdy attended. They live in Wilmington, DE, where Jenni is a paralegal student at Widener University School of Law. Noni Person currently lives in Silver Spring, MD. Kate Pinkerton-Long is a learning consultant at Muskingum Magaz ine 20 05 College in New Concord, OH. She is also a volunteer EMT-B. Hannah Rimmer is an intellectual property specialist in Alexandria, VA for Oblon, Spivak, McClelland, Maier, & Neustadt P.C. Michelle Sammons lives in Winston-Salem. Heidi Schneble is the assistant for institutional research at the Stanford Washington Research Group. She previously worked in the U.S. Senate for John Edwards and lives in Alexandria, VA. Amanda Jo Sealey married James Adam Hamilton in 2004. They live in Winston-Salem where Amanda is the associate director of finance and administration for the Northwest NC Chapter of the American Red Cross. Lesley Simmons is a student in the Graduate School Joint Masters of Social Work Program at UNC-G; she lives in Winston-Salem. Liz Smith resides in WinstonSalem, where she is a family support specialist & interpreter for The Special Children’s School. Victoria Smith is a volunteer for Communities in Schools through AmeriCorps Vista. She lives in Reidsville, NC. Angela Venable Sorrell lives in Winston-Salem. Dawn Albert Spainhour lives in Kernersville, NC, and works as a corporate account manager for Wachovia Bank. Colleen Hogan Todd lives in Winston-Salem. Emily Ustach is entering her second year at the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence, RI. She also works as an Americorps VISTA volunteer to help establish a concentration of art and design in the public sector. Anna Walker married Jennings Berry, Jr. in 2004. They reside in South Hamilton, MA, where Anna serves as an ophthalamic technician for the Ophthalamic Consultants of Boston, Inc. Ashley Watts is in real estate school through Coldwell Bank in Winston-Salem. Shannon Whitt lives in Lexington, NC, where she works as the operations & project assistant for Nelson, Mullins, Riley & Scarborough. Conschetta Wright is a laboratory assistant for LabCorp in Birmingham, AL. She will attend Palmer College of Chiropractic in Davenport, IA beginning July 2005. She is also becoming a certified soccer referee. Beth Young works as a food service and catering assistant for Aramark in Winston-Salem and lives in Kernersville, NC. 1924 1942 Vidette Savage Bass Sara Hester Aiken Died October 28, 2004 Died April 5, 2005 1925 Anna Shankle McGee Jean Abell Israel Died August 31, 2004 Died January 24, 2005 Margaret Shipp Ray Thelma Hedgpeth Morton Died November 12, 2004 Died February 23, 2005 Elsie Newman Stampfli 1926 Louise Jenkins Stengel 1923 Alva Goswick Raiford Died April 4, 2005 Antionette Barrow Swan Died January 19, 2005 Died June 12, 2005 1927 1943 Marion Neely Miller Marjorie Wilson Gardner Died August 14, 2004 Died March 27, 2005 1928 1944 Margaret Schwarze Jacquelyn West Kerr Died April 6, 2005 Died November 15, 2004 1929 1945 Edith Harris Pearce Died September 20, 2004 Virginia Blakeney Vincent Carrie Day Davis Died September 12, 2004 Marilyn Strelow Silver Died October 18, 2004 Married Dr. John Groel March 2003 1930 Jane McNeely Wheeler Louise Bateman McQueen Died April 27, 2005 1932 Katherine McCallie Brubeck Died August 13, 2004 Margaret Blackburn Walton Died July 23, 2004 1934 George William Dickieson Died May 23, 2004 1935 Mary Penn Thaxton Died March 18, 2004 Died November 28, 2004 1946 Vidette Savage Bass Died October 28, 2004 Vawter Steele Paull Died December 1, 2004 1947 Betty Jane Bagby Balde Died February 17, 2005 Betsy John Forrest Dunwoody Died November 1, 2004 1948 Beverly Hancock Freeman 1936 Died October 27, 2004 Estelle Dixon Gilliland Betty Jean Holleman Kelsey Died May 11, 2005 Ruth Kuykendall Died March 14, 2005 Helen Sink Moser Died March 14, 2005 1938 Martha Coons Mitchell Died August 15, 2004 1939 Frances Byers Watlington Wilson Died October 20, 2004 1940 Helen Cox Atterberry Celebrations and In Memory Died April 17, 2005 Died January 26, 2005 Helen Lineback Chardwick Died January 23, 2005 1941 Died May 9, 2005 Jane Morris Saunier Died August 6, 2004 Margaret Newman Stroupe Died December 28, 2004 1951 Effie Chonis Died November 3, 2004 1952 Lahoma Poindexter Gray Died February 2, 2005 1955 Barbara Lakey Hardage Died October 7, 2004 Barbara Smith Huss Died April 19, 2005 Virginia Hamrick Millican Ruth Hauser Binkley Died April 11, 2005 Died March 20, 2005 Jean Hamrick Weir Nell Kerns Waggoner Died February 12, 2005 Died February 14, 2005 51 1957 1990 Kate Hargett Williams Allison Lemmons Tobey Nell Newby Stallings Carol Romig Brecht Died February 10, 2005 A daughter, Cameron Elizabeth Born May 5, 2004 A son, Hugh Edward Born November 7, 2004 A daughter, Camille Boyd Born December 4, 2004 1994 2000 Allison Spears Boyle Katherine Leonard Campbell A daughter, Mary Michael Born January 2005 A daughter, Anna Jane Born May 1, 2004 1958 Judith Golden Upchurch Stratford Newitt Kiger Died April 19, 2005 A daughter, Carson Blake Born January 14, 2005 1962 Amy Cass Millikan Vicki Van Liere Helms Died August 26, 2004 A son, William Andrews, Jr. Born October 4, 2004 1963 Cristi Phillips Louisa Freeman Married Michael Driver August 2004 Died December 13, 2004 1970 Cyndee Grant Married Doug Martin Fall 2004 1971 Dencie Reynolds Married Jef Lambdin February 2004 1974 Martha “Mopsy” Nesmith Died December 4, 2004 Wendy Weiler Tomlinson A daughter, Lucy Born January 6, 2005 Stephanie Hines Warren A son, Christian Born July 12, 2004 1991 Tolly Callaway Married Thomas Beckett June 2004 Wendy Nace Castro 1980 A daughter, Elaine Gardner Born May 2004 Paula Young Chamblee Jenni Haskins Shrewsburh Married Mack Roebuck December 31, 2004 1981 Susanne Hux Long Died October 5, 2004 A son, Jason Christopher Born September 2004 1992 Laura Beth Henry Casey 1982 A son, John Needam “Jack” Born September 23, 2004 Kathy Glover Betsy Mebane Farmer Married Rob Robison December 2004 A son, Lee Benton, III “Ben” Born November 26, 2004 1984 Mary McMahan Frail Paula Blanchard Married Larry Pressnell August 2004 1986 Charlotte Daves Benson A son, Thomas Garland Born December 14, 2004 1987 Ann Winfree Nugent A daughter, Emily Peyton Born September 27, 2004 1988 Caroline Hines Batten A son Raike Curtis Born June 23, 2004 1989 Copeland Baker Married Britt Boyd July 2004 Mary Poole Reese A son, Patrick Born November 2004 A daughter, Regan Elizabeth Born February 9, 2005 Tara Newton Jennette A daughter, Mallory Elizabeth Born April 15, 2004 Britt Lawrence Melton A son, Charles “Charlie” McReynolds April 26, 2005 Shannon Sides Married Brian Kvam November 2004 Leslie Howard Smith A son, Richard Dominic Born December 2004 Meredith Snellings Married Stephen Moegling December 2004 1996 Marisa Berdeja Jenny Cook Married Russell Scott October 2004 Melissa Marion Married Bob Ives May 14, 2005 Lindsay Mayfield Married Cameron Wells May 2004 Jennifer Gardner Shepherd A son, Joseph A. Shepherd V Born October 31, 2004 2001 Jaime Lynn Horn Died September 17, 2004 Married Thompson “Tom” Patrick Rippey III November 24,2004 Mary Gordon Jenkinson Gretchen Brandies Covine Heather Douglas Morton Twins, Beau & Mary Banks Born October 2004 A son, David Matthew Born September 20, 2004 A daughter, Mallory Clair Born September 2004 Elizabeth Eubank Johnson Brandy Chappell Palmer A daughter, Abigail Born April 2004 A daughter, Mary Samuel Margaret Born September 2004 Shawnda Adams Pacheco Elizabeth Richie A son, Robert Mikhail Born September 2004 Married Jim Bowers December 2002 Kris Porazzi Sorrells Katherine Varner Shoaf A son, Matthew Taylor Born November 2004 A son, James Holland Born July 9, 2004 Susie Brock Vanlandingham Sally Brock Sprecco A daughter, Emily Marie Born March 25, 2005 A daughter, Gracie Marie Born January 2005 Terri Elizabeth Weathersbee Alexa Starr Valerie Wickersham Markland Married Ernest de los Santos, Jr. April 21, 2005 Married Brian Bures June 26, 2004 A son, Alexander Born October 2004 1997 2003 Susan Combs Segui A daughter, Olivia McIntyre Born March 30, 2005 Amy Rauch Shorey A daughter, Regan Elizabeth Born July 23, 2004 1993 Erin Garden Baldecchi A son, Alex Born in August 2004 Heather Carlin Beard A daughter, Autumn Born in 2004 Anita Brinkley Keenan A son, Preston Michael Born November 9, 2004 Lara Moore Married Joe Howe April 2005 52 1995 Aleeta Loftin Lemm Laura Herrin A son, Noah Born November 12, 2004 Married Ralph Craig December 2004 Alicia Morgan 2004 Married Shawn Smith April 23, 2005 Kim Stoddard Married Scott Wolfe March 19, 2005 1998 Erika Nelson Francis Susan Jacobs Married Michael Lawrence October 30, 2004 Katie Laverdure Married Barry Chance In 2005 Jenni Penberthy A son, Pierce Douglas Born November 22, 2004 Married Kevin Thomas Buckley July 17, 2004 Brooke Hensley Legg Amanda Jo Sealey A daughter, Mattie Born February 2, 2005 Married James Adam Hamilton In 2004 Deena Patel Anna Walker A son, Jaiden Hitesh Born October 25, 2004 Married Jennings Berry, Jr. In 2004 Salem College Planned Giving at Salem T he Rondthaler Circle is a society dedicated to alumnae and friends who have included Salem in their estate plans. These gifts help to secure Salem’s future and enable donors to make a larger philanthropic gift than might otherwise be possible. Salem is committed to increasing membership in the Rondthaler Circle to ensure Salem’s financial stability for generations to come. We invite you to visit our new planned giving website for additional information on how planned giving can help you achieve your financial goals for charitable giving. For more information on ways to include Salem in your estate plans or to be recognized as a member of the Rondthaler Circle, please contact Institutional Advancement at 336-917-5558. Go to www.salem. edu and click on Support Salem. YOUR GOAL YOUR GIFT HOW TO MAKE THE GIFT YOUR BENEFITS Make a quick and easy gift Outright gift Donate cash, securities or personal property Income tax deduction; avoidance of any capital gains tax Make a revocable gift during your lifetime Living trust Name us beneficiary of assets in a living trust Control of trust for lifetime; possible estate tax savings Defer a gift until after your lifetime Bequest in will Name us in your will A donation exempt from federal estate taxes Make a large gift with little cost to yourself Life insurance gift Give a policy with us as owner and beneficiary Current income tax deduction; possible future deductions Avoid the twofold taxation on retirement plan assets Retirement plan gift Name us as beneficiary of the remainder of the assets after your lifetime Avoidance of heavily taxed gift to heirs, allowing less costly gifts Avoid capital gains tax on the sale of a home or other real estate Real estate gift Donate the property to us, or sell it to us at a bargain price Immediate income tax deduction and avoidance of capital gains tax Give your personal residence or farm, but continue to live there Retained life estate Designate the ownership of your home to us, but retain occupancy Charitable income tax deduction and lifetime use of home Secure a fixed and often increased income Charitable remainder annuity trust Create a charitable trust that pays you a set income annually Immediate income tax deduction and fixed income for life Create a hedge against inflation over the long term Charitable remainder unitrust Create a trust that pays a percentage of the trust’s assets, valued annually Immediate income tax deduction, annual income for life that has potential to increase Supplement income with fixed annual payments Charitable gift annuity Enter a contract with us, in which we’ll pay you fixed payments annually Current and future savings on income taxes; fixed payments for life Reduce gift and estate taxes on assets passing to heirs Charitable lead trust Create a trust that pays a fixed or variable income to us for a set term, and then passes to heirs Reduced size of taxable estate; keeps property in family, often with reduced gift taxes March Events Salem Alumnae Lunch Events in March Salemites from all over the country and abroad got together in March with old friends and roommates. They gathered in many different locations, in many different ways ... Here is a photo gallery to showcase this fabulous event. Winston-Salem, NC (L-R) Seated: Amanda Romero ’97, Brandy Nelson ’97 Standing: Lucia Uldrick ’99, Beth Mabe Gianopulos ’97 with son Jacob and Kris Porazzi Sorrells ’96 Washington D.C. (L-R) Elizabeth Haverkamp ’96, Molly Harbin ’97, Anu Chettri ’03, Becca Midkiff A’96 C’04 Charleston, S.C Class of 1985 (L-R) Back row: Frances Buist Byer, Madeline Giltert, May Sherron Reed, Leigh Flippin Krause, Sherry McMillian Hambright Front Row: Anna-Lane Tatum Swing, Nina Anderson Cheney, Liza Robinson Hart, Marilee Eagles Reed, Jennifer Matney Rucker, Libby Glenn Lanier Greenville, S.C. (L-R) Harriet McMurria Van Hale ’71, Sidney Campen Surles ’71 Winston-Salem, NC (L-R) Kathryn Wilson Mansfield ’67, Susanne Bunch Hill ’67, Pam Pruett Short ’94, Chris Coile Say ’71 Greenville, S.C. (L-R) Anne Richbourg ’72 and Sidney Timmons ’71 Libby Shull of Greensboro, NC and Sally Bason of Reidsville, NC went to Daytona Beach, FL for Biker’s Week in March. They wanted to do something different this year for the get together. Greenville, S.C. (L-R) Mary Jane Galloway Quattlebaum ’58 and Marie Clay Hall ’79 Non-Profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID Permit No. 31 Winston-Salem, NC P.O. Box 10548 Winston-Salem, NC 27108-0548