Edna St. Vincent Millay - Vassar, the Alumnae/i Quarterly
Transcription
Edna St. Vincent Millay - Vassar, the Alumnae/i Quarterly
Vassar Quarterly WINTER PUBLISHED ALUMNAE 1994j BY THE AND ALUMNI OF VASSAF®BpGE “I really think is over. that the term Mate’ I think it’s When my parents they went on just spent. were ‘dates.* I in college, just don’t think that what they did applies what we do today. . .” Students Talk about Sexual Expectations in the ’9os to i “You can never entirely repay what Vassar gives to you.” Virginia Cretella Mars ’5l, McLean, Virginia Chairman, The Campaign for Vassar College continue to be and women leaders in their professions and where they live. When I visit the campus now, as a Trustee and as Chairman of The Campaign, I see for myself that an extraordi- lifelong, globe-trotting Virginia philanthropist, A Cretella Mars ’5l has volunteered for organizations that include the New York Infirmary, Columbia Presthe byterian Hospital, of the AmeriGuild Junior nary Cathedral in Paris, the Smithsonian Institution, and the National Symphofor ny Orchestra —serving can four years as its first “Just is her and only woman presi- are current outstanding one. They care about cam- effective one. “When you give to The Campaign, you opporgive students of promise the same tunity you had to think independently, work passionately, and pursue course the world. make a mark in this years ago. I know the an in part because my own daughter graduated from Vassar in 1982. But when I speak with students, I recognize them “Although you entirely repay Campaign from my years at Vassar: they question, participate, and are exceptionalstudents. what Vassar gives In my generation, many of the gift helps the College enter the 21st who went on in the were to Vassar women in their communities graduates. Today, Vassar can never to you, your cen- tury in a position of intellectual and financial strength. Your gifts help Vassar be.” be the very best it can positions of importance world and the is of teachpus, which supports every aspect is a critical and at at Vassar, learning ing transformaand restoration juncture in its tion to meet current and future needs. It is a beautiful campus; it must also remain pride and the attitude that I could accomplish anything if I set my mind to it. My involvement with the Campaign is my way of giving something back to the college. “Clearly, Vassar today is different from 40 important undergraduate education. And “highest priority.” a feeling of great or a teachers and scholars who an “I left Vassar with Vassar 10, 20, as remains Vassar. fact that the faculty remains dent. Today, leading The Campaign for Vassar eduction constant at men Gifts of Cash Pooled Income Fund To date, 14,452 Vassar alumnae Outright and alumnihave contributed Restricted and Unrestricted Gifts Charitable Remainder Trusts Pledges Residences and Real Estate more than $120,000,000 to The Gifts Campaign for Vassar through the Named Gifts Matching Annual Fund and other methods Securities Bequest Intentions of giving: Charitable Gift Annuities Your gift will help Vassar meet its $2OO million Campaign goal. Surveys show that 98.4% of those who receive the VQ do it, and chances do it you are too. Read Class Notes, that is. So be well read and of this magazine the card use report your (You may change of address.) Notes. a to also use at the back for Class news the card to register FEATURES Vassar Quarterly 6 VOL. 91 Editorial NO. 1 WINTER 1994 5447 or a Date? Current students discuss this and other questions about sexual expectations in the ’90s. Staff 914/437-5448 What Is Willa Panvini ’92 By Editor Georgette Weir Assistant Willa 12 Bridges to the World Henry Noble MacCracken, Vassar’s fifth president, arrived at the college in 1915 with radical ideas about transforming the pioneering Victorian institution into a modern college. But first, he had to save his job. By Elizabeth Adams Daniels ’41 18 The Storied Maya editor Panvini ’92 Designer Abigail Sturges ’66 editor Copy Sara Hill Books editor Zeldis Yona AA VC McDonough ’79 Publisher’s Caroline Committee Bryant Beebe P. Berry ’72, James C. Lorraine Weiss Frank Rachel Greenfield Louise Bristol ’56 Since the chair ’43 ago, Minkoff ’77 ’42 Silverman Kerr Valerie ’B4 Joan StrashinskyKjelleren ’7l, they Maya lost in translation. But Ransom ex the meaning of their glyphs centuries to read and write themselves only have been able a literature exists in their lively oral culture, and a recent project sought By Catherine Rendon ’81 officio it out. VQ Advisory Committee Aloff'69 Mindy James C. P. Berry ’72, AAVC liaison William W. Gifford Nancy Newhouse Linda ’5B Nochlin Pommer ’5l Dorothy Seiberling ’43 ’B2 Jeff Wallach B. Gerred Williams ’77 Joan StrashinskyKjelleren ’7l, ex officio Board of Directors of AAVC President and AAVC trustee Joan StrashinskyKjelleren ’7l Vice president for strategicplanning Ronald Vice 24 Minkoff Secretary Barbara McTigue Bruner ’77 Maguire to ber her generous spirit. Landsman ’74 and Stephen Funk Pearson ’l7 ’72 By KimJ. Caroline Bryant Beebe ’56 Fund chr. Sherrie 26 Spohn-Lind ’77 Barbara Muller not only gave hundreds of students study abroad, she invited them to memorable parties. Two former Maguire Fellows remem- Treasurer House Endearing Cosmopolite opportunities president for administration Rachel Greenfield An Helen Schwartzman ’75 committee chr. Muhs Walker Director Is Carole Maso ’77 the American Woman in the Chinese Hat? ’4B By chr. Nominating committee Mary S. Balfour ’6B One Writer’s Character Melissa Pierson ’BO of communications Valerie Silverman Kerr ’B4 Directors-at-large Katherine L. Babson Jean Davis Falk ’6O Kevin Green ’69 'B5 Stephanie Hyacinth ’B4 Hope Christopolous Mihalap ’56 Leigh Proctor ’72 Constance Lousie Bristol Barbara AAVC Ransom Aaron Rosston ’42 ’B4 DEPARTMENTS trustees James C. P. Berry ’72 Jamshed Jay Bharucha ’7B Barbara Bennett Blum ’5l Lorraine Weiss Frank ’43 Josh Hinerfeld AAVC 2 Campus Notebook ’B3 Staff 28 Omnium Gatherum 32 A A VC Network 914/437-5445 Executive director Mary Meeker Gesek ’5B Including the Associate directors O’Shea ’76 Richard Floyd annualdirectory of Vassar clubs Terri Assistant director Bronwen Pardes ’94 The Vassar Quarterly, USPS 657-080, is published in the winter, and fall hy the Alumnae spring, summer, and Alumni of Vassar College (AAVC). POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Records, Box 14, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601. Second class postage paid at Poughkeepsie, NY, and additional entry post offices. Yearly subscriptions $lO. Single 39 Person Place & 40 Class Notes 67 Letters 68 The Last Pag e: On Thing Central copies $3. Unsolicited be accompanied by a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Copyright © by AAVC. Printed in North Adams, MA, by Excelsior Printing Company. Printed on manuscripts must recycled and recylable paper using soy-based inks. By Sarnia Coming Hayes Hoyt ’60 Home Front Cover: Vassar prom photo circa 1950. Courtesy Special Collections, Vassar College Libraries 1 CAMPUS Clark Symposium in April NOTEBOOK Focus on to Museum Culture is under way for ’95 Planning Spring Evalyn Clark Symposium, titled “Gender, Visual Knowledge, and the Formation of place campus, is scheduled for on and 22, begin to 2 at P.M. on Friday. take to April 21 Mary added in built in 1934, and the Lockwood wing in 1977. Hardy Holzman Pfeiffer Associates’ previprojects have included work on libraries Angeles, New Haven, and Middletown, ous in Los Connecticut. The firm has also builtprojects planning institutions nationwide. at designed or thanforty educational Associate Professor of Art Brian Lukacher is endowed by Library was Clark Thompson in memory of her late busband. North and south wings were 1918. The Van Ingen addition was the Museum Culture.” The conference, Memorial son more the conference. For information, Assistant College, to contact Kathleen Brown, the Dean of the Faculty, Vassar Poughkeepsie, NY 12601. Box 4, Changes Students are getting into the habit of carrying their Vassar ID SRO in Avery functioning Mallika Sarabhai, co-director of the Darpana you’ve accidentally on two consecutive eve- audiences in standing-room-only to Addition to Library MallikaSarabhai performed to two standing-room-only Plans for audiences in Avery FrederickFerris Thompson Memorial Library, a of the one 26,000-square-foot addition to goals the of The Campaign for Vassar, moved ahead in September with the appointment of the architecturalfirm Hardy Holzman Pfeiffer Associates of New York and Los Angeles. The campaign seeks to raise renovation and $2O million for expansion of library facili- ties, building endowments, and funds for collection The development and wing will house new new a technology. media center, networkedcomputer workstations, enhanced reference and reader services, and expanded space for Special Collections and the Vassar archives. The new wing will also reflect 1994 of tradition. a strong card security purposes, a at to the Vassar ID now house key. If you don’t have can’t easily get into your dorm—your ID, you functions as a unlike in the past, there isn’t always the front desk to let you in if at and, someone left your card behind somewhere. one Electronic identification card entry is just of the adjustments students returning to are making this year as a result of the implementation of a new plan in residential life. Although faculty house-fellows have re- Vassar mained unique and solid part of the a structure, five new live-in house advisers have replaced residence hall managers, indoor/ outdoor, foot-patrolling security guards have replaced night building guards, and messengers (“white angels”) who formerly “sat desk” from 7:00 A.M. through 11:00 P.M. now staff desks 2:00 P.M. to 11 P.M. (students sit desk from 10:00 A.M. until the messengers arrive). Dorm locks (for years, not but the only rooms dorms too have been locked) have been replaced by electronic card entrydevices at the front and back doors that can be accessed by any student with a valid ID. also is now Entry to dorm computer rooms regulated by electronic devices that require an ID. Dormitory kitchens and televisions/ VCRs (which have been placed in “tamperproof’ cabinets) are, however, now being left unlocked.Those who wish to sign out dormicleaners or billiard equiptory vacuum do ment, must 11:00 so between 10:00 It is intended that the and will im- changes security and student access as well as money. Faith Nichols, director of some residential life, vides A.M. P.M. prove save Says Charles Henry, direcof libraries, “While emphasis is placed on tor and tools, sophisticated computer resources the fundamentalsociology of a library figures prominently in the new design. The future, after all, will be determined in large part by students andfaculty and librarians using new technologies in thoughtful, creative ways.” Built in 1905, the Frederick Ferris Thompsense 2 VQ WINTER charge rary Indian dance Plans Under Way for September, a tion for Avery, Ms. Sarabhai visited a number of in Asian studies, classes, including ones women’s studies, and dance. Ms. Sarabhai is a dancer, actress, choreographer, director, publisher, and social activist. She has performed internationally and created the female lead of Draupadi in Peter Brook’s production of The Mahabharata. She is pictured at left in Kuchipudi style. in all times. In addition at college store, meal card at the All Campus Dining Center, a library card, and photo identificaas Academy of Performing Arts of Ahmedabad, India, was on campus with her company of dancers and musicians for a two-day visit in September. In addition to performing works in both classical Kuchipudi and contemponings Indian dancer Residential Life in says that the new opportunity an to take system “prosome savings and put them back into house programming further support the living/learning envito in residence halls.” ronment The and met new plan ruffled a few studentfeathers mixedreviews whenit was announced last spring. There were thatthe lack concerns of a twenty-four-hour presence at the front desks would mean less security and conve- students. As nience for this fall the idea and some used to far to as they say have even ing semester progressed, however, students seemed to get gone like it. “It’s fine with so me,” Kniffen ’97, a that I’ve resident. “No one Josselyn House spoken with has haven’t said any problem—or if they do, they anything.” In fact, he said, “Access to other dorms is a lot easier [now].” In the recent past, students wishing to gain access to other dorms restricted to entering through the front were said Judson doors and had to wait for let them inside. Now, to through enter don’t have a desk messenger they can to their IDs use front and back doors and wait. to Not all students with the changes, restricted are completely satisfied though, andfind thatbeing signing to between 10:00 out certain resources and 11:00 A.M. P.M. space for Vassar’s Black Student Union, Asian Students Alliance, and Pode'r Latino. Last, and furthest back from Main Building along the Casper Kill, is the new Russell and Janet Doubleday Art Studio, providing new and expanded spaces for student sculpting, print-making, and painting. Linking them all is the “Spine,” or “Promenade,” a new pedestrian walkway that passes between the Powerhouse and the OLB and academic computer vehicular driveway. center and replaces a grounds surrounding these buildings landscaped with grass, trees and ground cover, including a range of species from red maples, red oaks, beech, and Yoshino cherry trees, to weeping forsythia, mountain W.P. laurel, vinca, and Baltic ivy. The have been cramps “They’re going to have to figure out a better way of distributing keys—sometimes we need things after 11 P.M., and under the current plan, we can’t get them convesaid Nikki Brandon ’95. “You have niently,” catch a to wait in the lobby and hope you’ll his which can rounds, security guard making take a while—and they don’t always know where everything is.” how they “The houses have all voted on want to handledorm resources,” Ms. Nichols said, “and given that the program is new, there are some minor glitches that will continue to be addressed as they arise. But for the be running to most part, things seem W.P. smoothly.” their style. Campus Renewal If you ever ments to walked from the Terrace Main Building, strolled to Above Apart- The the Pow- is from package loading building that used to house the receiving department, you will be hard-pressed to recognize the area behind Main Building now. It’s open, landscaped, and lively, and includes several old buildings erhouse Theater, or the retrieved a new The Old ground) now on houses the computer science and development. academic Left A view (OLB) immehouses faculty of- now of the InterculturalCenter from fices and classrooms for the computer science department in its basement, and developoffices Laundry departments of The “Old LaundryBuilding” ment attractive Building (right, middle and administrative uses. diately behind Main an pedestrian walkway. dock of the that have been renovated for behind Main area now the newly landscaped area the Casper Kill. near its first and second floors. The “shipping andreceiving” building now houses the Academic Computing Center, providing significantly increased public comand puting space, several small labs, a new improved office complex for the center’s staff, and a home for the college’s mainframe and former VAX computer systems. Directly behind the Powerhouse Theater are more Theater, renovated spaces. The new a Coal Bin black box theater that seats any- depending on configuration, is devoted entirely to student performing groups and overlooks the Casper where from 125 to 200 people Kill. Between the two theaters is the Intercul- tural Center, whichhouses offices and meet- At the Loeb Art Center “You Are Missing Plenty If You Don’t Images of Consumerism in Buy American Photography 27 January 26 March 1995 This exhibition examines how photographs address differing notions of consumerism in Here”: - American society from the 1930 s to the over forty images by present. Included are photographers working in a variety of formats —documentary, photojournalism,advertising, and fine art. 3 CAMPUS NOTEBOOK Among the works to be included are photographs by Walker Evans and Berenice captured the idiosynAbbott, whose cameras of cratic shops and fruit stands appearance throughout America; photos byWilliam Klein and Dan Weiner, whose documentary style withinAmeriportrayed the bitter contrasts can society; precisionist advertising images made by John F. Collins and more prosaic goods by anonymous photos of consumer photographers. The exhibition also presents contemporary photographers who draw their Frank imagery from advertising, such as whose arch commentary on consumption is revealed through sumptuous, Majore, high-gloss on Campus The total student population on campus this was right on target, according to figures from the Office of the Registrar: 2,250 FTEs fall (full time equivalents, in the lingo of higher education). This translates to 2,312 persons: 2,219 full-time students and 93 part-time Of this number, 63 percent are ones. women; 37 percent are men. The registrar reports that the class of ’95 numbers 534 full-time students; ’96 is and ’97 at 457; 602 students among its full- counts time members.. TheOffice of Admission reports that the of 1998 numbers 606 (66 goods. images of consumer Who's newly arrived class 34 percent men). Although percent women, with both the numbers and quality of pleased the Vassar newest students, Director of Ad- mission Thomas Matos notes that he “would in future the percentage of men see classes increase.” Below, a profile of ’9B: like to Applicants 3,760 Admits 1,886 Matriculants 606 Legacies and siblings 24 legacies 13 siblings Qiovanni Battista Naldini The KatalanCollection of ItalianDrawings (ca. 1537-15911 Hercules, the Nemean Lion and the Cretan Bull 14 Pen and brown ink on April -18 June 1995 This exhibitionof 202 male fifty-five Italian Old Mas- From the collection Katalan. of Jak 404 female is from the collection of Jak City. The exhibition will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue compiled and written by an interdrawings ter Katalan of New York black chalk. Gender of experts. The exhibition includes drawings, Middle 50 percent range of SAT 560-650 verbal scores 580-680 math national team of What high unpublished, by Parmigianino, 367 public Giorgio Vasari, Taddeo Zuccaro, Polidoro da Caravaggio, Federico Barocci, Guercino, 176 independent religious which are most 63 schools did they go to? Bernini, the Carracci, Guido Reni, and othThe exhibition will travel to ers. four other American museums. A Hudson of Landscape: Photographs by William Clift 14 July - 10 September 1995 Featured in this exhibition is the group complete of forty-six black-and-white photo- graphs by contemporary landscapephotographer William Clift. The photographs survey the many personalities and moods of the Hudson River Valley. The exhibition is accompanied by a book with text by T. Paul Kane of the Vassar English Deparment. The art 10 A.M. 1-5 For P.M. a 1994 Top ten they come feeder states from? 190 New York 61 New Jersey 52 California 46 Massachusetts 30 Connecticut 25 Wednesday-SaturSundayfrom 17 15 Texas recorded schedule of events, 12 Ohio 11 Florida is open to 5 call 914/437-LOEB. 4 VQ WINTER Where do Pennsylvania Maryland center day from identify themselves as members minority groups? Asian 19 male, 57 female Black 11 male, 23 female 12 male, 22 female Hispanic Native American 0 male, 1 female How many P.M. and on Fall 1994 Sport Highlights international students. 14 are Foreign Women’s countries Volleyball Nicaragua Canada The Brewers made their mark in Vassar Pakistan India women’s Ukraine Brazil Austria first 13 matches of the Singapore Paraguay Greece Romania the final volleyball history by winning regular season. match with season pressive record of 25-7, including then-No. 7 Languages Eighty students are bilingual or speak English as a second language. The 19 other languages spoken include: poll and No. Regional poll, French well at over the Vassar entered a an im- victory nationally-ranked Brockport State. Ranked No. 4 in the New York State 5 in the NCAA New York the Brewers look Persian German Thai Portuguese Greek to perform Championship, which they will host, and earn the program’s Gujarati Spanish Korean Vietnamese first slot in the NCAA Division 111 national Japanese Norwegian Taglog Malayalan championship. Hebrew Italian the New York State COLDNY Chinese Russian Men’s Soccer Dutch With son regular-sea- one themen’s soccer had compiled Honors 17 7 squad a Vassar 11-2-1 V aledictorians history-making Salutatorians record and earned a 27 Major 22 State scholars ranking in the Intercollegiate Soc- 2 No. 6 book award winners Association of Congressional Scholars cer 30 National Merit finalists and semi- America’s Metro Re- finalists gion Poll. The fact that 88 National Merit commended the top four teams in each of the nation’s National Council of Teachers of 4 English Award for Writing 2 2 Excellence in eight regions National Science Foundation Division 111 Award winners ment National Achievement which shut Commendations for African- and opponents outscored the opposition 34-11, hope for school the leadership tourna- gives Vassar, eight out team’s first soccer Presidents of various school clubs national Varsity sports captains Editors-in-chief of high school ship publications Women’s Crew 22 Class or At 22 Founded 114 73 63 student council presidents a 16 Girls/Boys 13 Class or high school club State 13 All-State music 10 National Honor What do 127 59 52 51 ten champion- berth. Women’s Soccer the Head-of-the-Hudson regatta, the women’s varsity four boat placed first out of seven boats on the three-mile course. student council vice- Society presidents to study? his first invitational race, covering the five-mile course at the Bard Invitational in 28 minutes, 12 seconds-—lB seconds ahead of the second- place runner. Women’s Tennis Vassar finished its fall ranking in the season with a No. 18 140-team NCAA Division 111 38 Undecided 32 Art East region. No. 1 player Elisa Strauss ’9B advanced to the championship match of the 22 Drama consolation draw 21 Science Northeast 18 Math Heather Cohen ’97 16 Classics 16 Music students were fer into upper classes. opponents 21-10. Pictured above: Laura Jackson ’97 celebrates a field match against goal in a soccer Montclair State. Cross-Country Sophomore David Zuzga captured they say they’re going disciplines plus undecided English Psychology History Biology Thirty-two the Halfway through the season were 7-2, outscoring their Brewers Men’s presidents T op se- are lected for the NCAA American Students High SUSAN remaining, game at Region the Rolex Division 111 Championship. captured the fifth-flight Tennis singles competition at the New York State Championship, where the team finished in fifth place. Susan Colodny Sports Information Director Division 111 accepted for trans- 5 Is What Date? a by Willa Panvini ’92 LIBRA ES COLEG Students discuss this VAS AR and other questions about sexual COLETINS. expectations in the ’9os. SPECIAL COURTESY It’s August and students new late to V assar are cerns (formerly this Town House discussion. The sexual expectations. The aim, says Director of Campus Concerns and Assistant Dean of the College VQ; What does the word “date” Pamela Neimeth, is ISABEL: I was means to to raise student give and to have about awareness for sexual consent text having this calling a alcohol often it was “date” him to kiss her. Feeling tipsy, she lays down. She wants When he doesn’t, she kisses him. He responds with kisses unique in its program on sexual expectations (“Sex Ex,” as its known on campus). Such programs have evolved on manycampuses inresponse woman, friend’s dorm room. She thinks he’s caresses. becoming says, “Slow down.” He does slow become intimate and down, but his intimate. She tells him more too caresses thinking he’ll get the hint that this means she wants him to stop. He thinks she wants to continue, but slowly. Women, he thinks, are supposed to feign resistance. She calls his He takes this as a positive sign and pushes her legs name. the is played out stage lights dim and the sex scene apart; viewers’ in she cries. He, only imaginations. Afterward, than he had women are more thinking complicated thought, to be left alone. He leaves. decides this must mean she wants When this actors scene is played out as a skit, one set of portrays the behavior of the characters while another set of actors voices the characters’ simulta- thoughts. Some who watch it say it as depicts rape. Others acknowledge the encounter but the is woman unfortunate, say primarily responsible for it owing to her failure to clearly state her With deliberate the skit prompts thoughts. ambiguity, serious thought and lively discussion about expectaneous inner a tions and communication in sexual situations. Sponsoredby the college’s Office of Campus Con- in sexual situations. Vassar is not to again to slow down, plays about date rape. The above skit, concerns in fact, is presentedat Brown University, Ms. “What I really like about this skit,” she modeled after one Neimeth says. continues, “is that it shows a situation in which everybodycan [say], ‘God, I see how easily that could happen.’My goal is to help peoplesee the need to talk out what of that talk some might be on campus, the Quarterly arranged an informal discussion on the subject with a group of upperclass students (and one brand-new alumna). All are friends, all are heterosexual, five share a Town House apartment. Two describe themselves relationships; include a couple. term as being involved teed anonymity. With their ’95, in long- the group, however, does To encourage frank talk, the students were Denise calling went “date” with someone it a freaked him a friend what she on names not guaran- changed, they are: American culture major; Doug ’96, major; Geoff’96, international studies major; a film major; Beth ’95, an John ’96, a mathematics major; and Jill ’94 and Isabel ’95, both psychology majors. Jill and Isabel are the an computer science and mathematics a is so disjointed from what we term do. I’ve been going out with Amy for a year and I don’t think we’ve actually ever been on a “date.” . . My . who didn’t think that date. For some movie as reason, they long as she wasn’t that word totally If he the idea of “date” is really important larger questions about romantic linguistics. For example, the word “boyfriend.” I’ve referred to people all my life as, “my special friend with whom I spent lots of quality physical time” because I me too, because it raises didn’t know what out. getting freaked out by the word “date,” what exactly did he think it was? ISABEL; He called it an “outing.” [The group laughs.] JOHN: I think that the word [date] is kind of anth GEOFF: date involves going and picking somebody and driving somewhere. Just the fact that there’s no up involved—it doesn’t fit my image. car a DENISE: To was all. It would have been fine that at going to dinner and a were youl was call them. What do you call to had any somebody that you really liked a lot, but never kind of formal commitment, but you were fooling around and they mattered to you? It was black and white in the olden quated. My image of it usuallyfalls with my parents. It implies that I’m going out with somebodywho I might then form a relationship with. I can how see days. You were going to the soda shop to have a malt, or you were sitting home on your all porch. Now you are hanging out with someone around and you’re sometimes, night anyway, fooling or you’re going home and hooking up with an old that word could kind of make friend. It’s kind of about this.” To find a to mean conversation with of mine this morning. She collegefreshmen, are alone in They’re drunk. They’re infatuated. and JOHN: I think the image of activities, what constitutes date rape, and the role and 1994 to that follows is an edited transcript drawn from the discussion. evening of their orientation, 600 freshmen, transfer, and exchange students sit in the chapel and watch a performance of the following scene: a WINTER visiting friends being introduced to the who, what, where, and why of the place and its culture. On the first A young man VQ Rape/ Assault, Conflict, and Harassment), the skit precedes an evening of dorm-based discussions on the topic of what it 6 Resources and Education for GEOFF: It doesn’t seem you anxious. worth it hung up what exactly the person is thinking of when they say “date” as long as there is the understanding between the two people—that theyknow what they’re getting into and what they’re doing. Call it a date, call it an to get too outing, call it whatever the hell you want. be heading [At] Vassar . you can JILL: . . on the a is a date ? You don’t have to you can both end up Laughingstock concert date at Vassar because the cafe at at the same or the Mug time. or the a lot really more gray. think that the term “date” is over. I think it’s just spent. When my parents were in college, “dates.” I went don’t think that what they on they just did VQ; to and run into random guy X and end cappella concert [say], “Shall I pick you up sitting together. Or, you can at in 3:00 and we’ll Lathrop up go together?” Which one JOHN: I applies to what we do today. Why is “dating” DOUG: I think it’s BETH: Now you out out the ... Well, I hope. of date? sex. don’t need the whole ritual of going and you someone for pizza and a movie. If you like normally hang out, it’s not that weird to just go ahead and have sex with them. You don’t need to go through the whole ritual of “I like you, and you like me.” You can just cut to the chase. 7 Casual takes place either with sex, in a going with without intercourse, or you don’t really [expect] if you’re really relationship where expect the kinds of things you out of commitment that you sense bring into it—if that’s going to determinewhat casual is or isn’t—then I really have to be a strong, strong sex supporter of casual no I tried it sex. this point, probably the only I really, truly regret. worked very well. Neither each other, see start of commitment and that was people before and it’s with of one each other, but to and it’s, at my life that expected relationship, or have any kind a to us fooled around we all right. somebody and then we to me, has meant start hook up and to that, that we’re starting something else. fooled around one night and that was just DOUG: We JOHN: You obviously are quite all right with that. Are that the other person didn’t feel you quite sure how used? some- far as that person was JOHN: There’s a do to at the time was messing around was concerned. hurt, I’m only half to blame. as certain part of this casual it breeds awkwardness and If thing generally sex that sounds very appealing, but I think that somebody’s expectations trampled. to don’t say anythingbefore, if you get hurt [because] the other person just doesn’t want anything to do with you afterward, I don’t mean but I think that’s just to bad. You got too sound blunt, yourself into a JOHN: Wait just a minute, large a part of the though. Would you also say population feels that fooling around is the first step toward if not relationship, in the some then at least kind of continued, some kind of change quo? status DOUG: You’re talking about the way that you use sex? JOHN: Are you saying that because nobody said anything about what their expectations were. . I didn’t DOUG: anything assume . about what she wanted. JOHN: But she may have assumed that by fooling the first step toward something else. around, that was I think that’s part of the a reasonable expectation that a large population probably has. That might be DENISE: I feel like it’s a a dangerousthing to [say] people together with no specific expectation, and things happen, that’s just the way it works. get DOUG: Let me got hurt in a that ask a question. When you say if bad that you relationship, what does that mean? Does that the other person treated you badly, or that things didn’t turn out the way that you wanted? mean went and he, let him know [how I encouraged me doing. to go He didn’t ... was me. problem was that I wasn’t communicating all and I didn’t know how prompted me to to with him at communicate sexually, really investigate how you do communicate sexually. What do you intend ? What do you want intend? I was to a virgin at the time, and learn how so very important for me nicate about sex with someone. to DOUG: Communication can be reallytedious... If you it was fool around with somebody and to to commu- they want to fool around with you, talking about what’s going to afterward before do it can be pretty happen you even just take care of yourself. hand, if you’re all worried about how the other person feels, that’s a lot of weight to a casual sexual carry around, especiallyif you j ust want hook up. You should be able to feel fairly comfortable that if you meet somebody and fool around with them they know what they’re getting have baby to No, into. You shouldn’t them. no, no! DENISE: On the one hand, I totallyagree with [Doug]. But, communication doesn’t end after whatever sexual act happens. DOUG: But you have to communicate for yourself, not Yeah, but you are responsible for fostering an environment in which communication is possible. DENISE: analogy, at the risk of being cheesedriving. I was in an accident once. I’ll simplify it—l did something stupid. I stopped in the JILL: Here’s my ball: is like sex middle of the road. I shouldn’t have been stopping, I should have been going. There’s this car coming toward me [and the driver] sees that I’m stopping, but [he thinks], “She shouldn’t be stopping, she’s going!” So, [the car] keeps moving and it hits me. Now, yeah, it’s my fault. I stopped. BUT, this moron could’ve avoided an accident if he had said, “I know she’s an crash into her.” So, idiot, but she’s stopped. I cannot yes, you reasonable expectation, but if better be damn sure next time that hurt, you’d get you so you don’t get hurt. you talk it out DOUG: him, for the other person. situation. that with [I had a similar situation]. I realized the whole ISABEL: GEOFF: DOUG: If you 1994 tered tions often time when I a very, very pressured doing something when it was clear to him that I that we were being physical because [he] mat' GEOFF: But you can’t are and comfortable DOUG: On the other as way I rape me, but I do feel like I into was tedious. have no idea. I didn’t articulate my intenfar as commitment or what I expected after- quite clear WINTER was DOUG: I wards, but what we both wanted 8 VQ being physical was further than I want it. There it varies. me hurtbecause I liked somebody and I was you say you got hurt? knowing that this was the felt], took advantage of me and it JILL: But how did you know that? Wait, that’s really interesting. I’ve been in situations where I’m friends with think I meant had casual out once incident in DOUG: I’ve sex DENISE: For something else? What do mean when you mean for him. [l] somebody. GEOFF: If it’s a greater does that Or, VQ; What is casual sex ? DOUG: an can accident, just go and not stop, but you might avoid problem, situation, if you stop. This is interesting, because I drive like that. DOUG: a a [The group laughs.] JILL: I tell that you do! Keeping with the driving can GEOFF: metaphor—it’s a wonderful metaphor—when you’re driving, you can’t just watch out for yourself. You could be doing every- thing right and some other idiot could smack into you. something that involves more than j ust If you’re doing Sex at Vassar? The Great Debate of 1962 April of 1962, Vassar’s President, Sarah Gibson Blanding, gave an impromptu speech during a to college assembly that made headlines coast dialogue generated by In Students called it her “sex coast. statement,” and she delivered it inresponse to their request that she in the student handbook that clarify a sentence said, “students est are expected maintain the high- to standards of behavior.” Her message was repeated in an article in the November 1962 issue of McCall’s; she wrote, “For century, it had a occurred not to president of a a college such as Vassar that there was any need to make explicit what I, too, had thought was imwho plicit. .[M]y belief [is] that the young woman drinks to excess or engages in premarital sexual relationships is not living up to the highest stan. dards of behavior. I advised those students who did wish Miss Blanding’s speech. Fifty-two percent of the survey’s respondents with her views on moral conduct, 40 peragreed did not, but, cent as the Miscellany News reported, only 28 percent took her from the suggestion of withdrawal college seriously. Eighty-one percent felt that “social mores” were should only be of concern a personal to the that matter college student’s activities brought the college’s name public disrepute. Only students said two if a into they withdraw because of the planned speech. One anti-Blanding survey respondent wrote, “If taken seriously, probably twothe speech were thirds of the student body would withdraw.” Another, “If Vassar is to become the Poughkeepsie to Victorian change of Seminary for Young Virgins, then the policy had better be made explicit in comply with decent standards of conduct to withdraw from the college.” The response to Miss Blanding’s “sex statement” was huge. By May 29, 1962, the president’s office admissions estimated it had received 300 letters responding those of us who do have the moral standards which not to her position. than five were According to one “no memo, to the ‘crack-pot’ rest were favorable. Within a department few days of the speech, did a the sociology body survey of Vassar’s student (1,470 students) that yielded 1,040 responses. The Miscellany Newsprinted a special two-page supplement to its April 11, 1962, issue, devoted entirely to reporting the results of the surveyand additional yourself, especially any kind of intimate physical relationship, any kind of possible emotional relationship, I think it is incredibly selfish and just bad form to worry just about yourself. ISABEL: I feel like I’ve been able never to have casual I physically find it impossible to be with someone intimately and not be overwhelmed with lovey-dovey words and feelings. sex. DOUG: with That’s very interesting. I find that when I’m somebody who I’m not I [still] find interested in [long-term], myself wanting to them—even love within though I know act I’m in a not loving way with going to be in physical hour or when I wake up. It’s the same action, but the feelings are coming from different place. GEOFF: So this sentiment: “I believe that the great came worth of Miss Blanding’s statement in was letting We do, after all, especially the impressionable us. freshmen, occasionally tend to wonder if we are in the minority here at Vassar.” Lively discussion continued for a and off campus on time. One entire box in the some Blanding library’s Special Collections is clippings (from as far away as the collection in the devoted to press China Tribune), magazine articles, letters, and inter-office correspondence on the subject. W.P. VQ; What about AIDS' 1 “Here’s DENISE: To me, AIDS is a really big deal. The reason slept with the person I did, the one and onlyperson I’ve slept with, was in large part because I knew he was my analogy: sex is like HIV driving I how many negative. My whole life, no matter people I fooled around with, I was really pretty careful about high-risk behaviors. When I and found a guy that I cared that I felt comfortable with was it clean and that I was while I knew it keep going back was to that scares GEOFF: I’ve finally got about, at to be 20 safe. That’s same go for I of the reasons one person, because we’ve much so out there me. had talks with past girlfriends—whenyou reach the point where you do start becoming intimate than just kissing, when the risk starts escalatmore saying I’ll act in a tender way because that’s the way I feel at the moment. they have history couple of I’ve had talks about what might happen if occasions, there was an accident and suddenly she was pregnant. to [AIDS] is nothing, certainly, that anyone wants talk about. really At the same time, personally, I think it’s the kind of I have to play it safe. I’d rather thing that go through moment, that it’s okay to act at that way? DOUG: Yes. I’m JILL: How do you know it’s not just your hormones talking? DOUG: It is JILL: You my hormones. It’s all hormonal. mean DOUG: Yes. JILL: Oh boy. all love is hormonal? . physically, and I knew he clean, I really wanted to the . the time, and the way you feel side of the student debate both been AIDS tested. There’s an you’re saying that the opposite she advocated know that the college stands behind more specifically unfavorable, perhaps twenty could be called catalogues.” From the ing—l’ve had talks about whether or been tested, what their past is. On not a 9 the awkwardness and the initial uncomfort of bring' like that with the person knowing ing up something what the stakes are. .knowing what the person’s . sexual background is, knowing other relevant things—are they some sort of drug user? You’ve got to know before you think about doing anything that will result ofknowledge that you don’t have AIDS, as far amount as history your past JOHN: In goes, then that’s I find that too. practice, DOUG: Does that concerned about that you’re mean it good enough. not actually as you say you are? as JOHN: Yeah. I think that people could acknowl- most in any kind of risk. JOHN: A reasonable but sad edge what they should be doing and what’s right, and I don’t think there’s anybody [who, it. But I suspect that driving drunk “Well, when That’s all a right.” ing drunk is analogy is drunk driving. if] you asked, “Is [would] good thing,” say, “Yeah. So bad,” we can and sit around and say, “Driv- likewise, “Having in any for AIDS bad.” is that in kind of risk puts you way any But when you cut of I to the heart think it it, right about whether to would be more hear interesting everybody is DOUG: really quite Well, want to careful. so I have safe sex, but not that safe. I mean, far as pregnancy goes, but if you protect yourself from AIDS, then you have to take precautions we sex as do everything safe and that’s just ridiculous. If you’ve been tested for AIDS, or you can say with a reasonable have try kind of politically correct a conversation about people kind of figure that, most I get into situations where it’s an issue, I convince myself that whoever I’m with doesn’t to have AIDS, and I know I don’t, so that’s the point where I’m comfortable.” I would say that I don’t do what Geoff about. talking was Wait, GEOFF: I need clarify myself. to Have I, at any point, said to the person, “All right, before we do anything, let’s go get tested, waitsix months, and then do it?” No. That’s GEOFF: I’ve the point. not JOHN: But that’s the reality. been tested. I know know myself be free of AIDS to myself to be clean. I any other sexually or transmitted disease. If I’m going to be getting involved with someone, I need first and foremost to be able Two Views of the ’30s to them trust they give to my enough questions to are know that the answers going to be accurate and fair. That will be “If we contributed social and furtive look the to revolutions of the era, the literary sexual revolution untutored mite our lost was on Aside from us. a Lady Chatterly’s Lover and some uncomprehendingyak about Freud, we were basically ‘jeunefille enfleur.’ A good friend came up to late at night my senior year and said, ‘lf I told me at you I wasn’t a imagine the virgin, would you hate Mary McCarthy to be on sophistication we wouldn’t “1 have a hard time saying that man who a drunk a attain until level of after mar- riage, if then (a hunch that her subsequent novels bore out).” From VQ Winter 1979, “Memoirs ofLiteratae and Socialists 1929-33 , by Eunice Clark Jessup ’33 ” is as a woman is responsible for his actions in a way that she isn’t.” ‘J’ [a regular JILL & ISABEL: Boo! DENISE: A just like to really suck too. I would really be dead. friends at VC have said to me that they were terrified about sexual expectations and so forth because of the whole issue of date rape. They felt like there was so much gray area in terms of activity, that what they used to VQ: Male consider normal and appropriate behavior has now documented as date rape. Where do you guys fall been on this subject ? Speaking only for myself—and this doesn’t the stag line that anything is going thing her head. the fact that maybe I’m misthrough Just to reading something—better play it safe from that end. I personally find it a bit more exciting that way. I’m dead serious. No whips and chains, but there are a whole number of reasons why I would prefer the at were heart not enthusiastic. In the first place, they couldn’t cut in unless introduced, and moreover they knew that all the boys there If they’dbeen at all attractive, duds. were probably would have been whisked away to the Outthey door Cabin, where you could spend the weekend (if you signed up early enough) inthe depths of the forest with your current beloved, with no chaperone, nothing but the birds and the bees for com- sex. It put you Just because things her part. I can’t assume on make the first to woman are change in my attitude or anyto try to not initiate anything. so tricky. I can’t assume any- make the first done that, now Even when she does move. move, that’s not at all like, “OK. She’s I’m home free and can do whatever I want!” No, it’s far from it. It’s on a relaxed attitude about you honor as a lady to behave properly. After freshman year it took for granted that you knew a thing or two.” From VQ, Fall 1983, “Of sex, pearls, and the languages of time: Glimpses of Vassar 1929-33 by ” Lucille Fletcher Wallop ’33 where no matter how far really a type of thing along you go, you’ve got to try and stay in touch with what the other person is sending you, either spoken or unspoken signals. If there’s any kind of question, then I pull back and really kind of make sure. It’s real unsteady ground. DOUG: I think date rape is nonconsensual sex. long as you don’t do that, it’s not etration. As rape. 1994 not represent any kind of thing—as a rule, I like on “Vassar in general had VQ WINTER lot of this is uncomfortable stuff to discuss. It sucks. But dying would campus] supposedly took of our love life, but it didn’t. It was care just a place to take boys you were bored with. And the girls on mixer pany. 10 that’s another discussion. Abstinence! Woo! DENISE: GEOFF: “ as absolutely fail-safe, ?’ One can me clankof that remark in today’s Vassar. We considered good enough for me. If you want to talk about what it takes to be absolutely sure and Pen- date What about feeling emotionallypressured in DENISE: away that wasn’t like holding someone you down? whole different way of intimidating somePart of it’s physical, because men are usually There’s a body. bigger than women, part of it is emotional, I think, depending on who is coming into the situation need- ing and wanting what. I think that the definition of date rape doesn’t just mean vaginal or anal penetra- ISABEL: I think that there is expectation that people here underneath, there are of the overriding sexually active, but sort are lot of people who aren’t at all. a JOHN: But that’s how the world is. The world is so of sexual misconceptions that it’s ridiculous. It’s misconceptions not You get the just here, but at any college. You get the impression from watching TV, watching “90210” and stuff, that impression these that people have all kinds of crazyrelationships. But they just don’t. You get the impression from a show like “90210” that being a virgin at 18 or 19 is irregular when alcohol is involved. As I understandour or if you have sex with somebody—as a I guy—if have sex with somebody when she’s drunk, if I am drunk, then that is rape. Whether or not even regulations, she considers it as such is different story. But tech- a simply It GEOFF: through alcohol says that if a is not JILL: No. If she’s that’s it, enough to make decision, a DENISE: Wait. It’s not if a person is just drunk. I think the law says incapable of making a decision, whether they’re a child or a minor, they’re inebriated. JOHN: No. They told us at our of whether irrelevant, or can wants the to go Sex Ex thing, regardless to say that she was raped, then she college regulations board and you’re in DOUG: I just want to say did NOT say that [Editor’s that I in Sex was Ex, and we Note: For the the Sex Ex presenters do record, NOT suggest what John remembered. Sex Ex presenters do designed to raise discussion about what date rape is, and emphasize that in most date rape cases, alcohol is a skit involved. What the presenters DO tell students new among other things, “Students tion from alcohol or are any other behavior of the aggressor, reminded that intoxica- drug does not does it mitigate nor excuse or the nullify a charge of sexual offense.”] DENISE: I am firm believer that you can be raped when you’re drunk. Wanting to fool around doesn’t to that you want have sex. Getting drunk imply that you’re loose for the evening. That’s mean doesn’t the way it goes.. . But, I know that I’m not just always aware of what I say or what I do. I do things and not say over so . things that I wouldn’t do normally. I might walk andkiss somebody that I wouldn’t normally kiss, I have drunk as a hard time also saying that a woman is responsible a man who is as for his actions in a way that she isn’t. even Vassar, tions about sexual activity, and what tions and/or social pressures to remain virgins? current percepsurrounding those who choose are at virginity. real problem with the strongly consider myself a I very sexually active from a younger age than the point that I lost my virginity. Saying virginity at 21 doesn’t say anything about my sexuality, because the actual sex act, to me, was just one little blip in this whole line of blips. JOHN: My thoughts about being a virgin, when I twelve, were was media and what I saw on a virgin or being not greatlyformed by the television. What you see on warped and what you read in books is warped. right. It’s not the way the world is, but that’s not how your expectations are built up, because nobody has these conversations that we’re having like this. I mean, I’ve Doug for known Geoff for years—we’ve two years, I’ve known two had a conversation never like this before. You don’t really have conversations like this unless it’s for a we specific thing like this. Unless Isabel and I talk about it endlessly! in the room, because are What totally blows mind is you’ve known Geoff and Doug for and you’ve never strikes a me had odd. I as It strikes me as a must half minutes before we my years have known Isabel four and started talking about sex... who I consider [to interesting that men guys with talked about it. I don’t know if it’s with two conversation like this. That would have known each other so long and a sexuality have not gender thing, but I know—we get down and women GEOFF: If the topic arises, no pun dirty. intended, I’ve got problem talking about sex with anyone. If the two years that I’ve to talk about why over you want known John and Doug, why we’ve never had any kind of big bonding moment like or that, it’s anything because I’ve always equated that with jock, lockertalk. That’s an unfairequation to make perhaps, room very little but that did you have expecta- bizarre.” expectation, though. That’s an was my reference point. I’ve had more reason Part of the VQ; When you arrived at 19 is a be] fairly sensitive, comfortable a or some point have sex with somegoing don’t think, is an unreasonable expecta- not concept of DENISE: regarding alcohol and charging individuals with a sexual offense is quoted directly from the Student Handbook, Part D: College Regulations, Section J, which states, 18 at to hope! [The group laughs.] ISABEL: I’ve always had It’s the freshmen. to I would expect college. to like TV is trouble. virgin tion. I lost my or if she’s drunkand you have sex, that if the day she next they’re retarded or you’re drunk, because that’s truly not going That’s right? being is that in some just shouldn’t be any. I mean, there could be broad expectations, like, “Hmm. more sober not thing with expectations in general a . ways there an for his actions. excuse The whole one.” That, I is inebriated man GEOFF: along the line that I’m drugs or whatever, that or bizarre. I’m nically, that’s considered rape, is it not? DOUG: No. full of sexual full tion. It’s any unwanted sexual act. JOHN: I think the part of it that merits discussion is college “The world is tions with women as opposed risk of sounding crude, from a to sexual conversa- with men, is, at the practical standpoint, I learn more. [The group laughs.] S 3 11 Bridges to the World Henry Noble MacCracken and Vassar College by Elizabeth Adams Daniels ’41 college THE FALL OF IN as more than million U.S. 1918, a troops i Si co m cd < > i 1 n deep implica- i—H o B rup- connected with reason — service for to use as an cl cd I in a b thirty-sevenyear-old president they had 1 B x —i B p < retired in 1914, were stand his and attitudes and his lack of ground and have fortable with his a members, students, and handful of women trustees Henry Noble MacCracken The a to — egged him on to do battle. By evening of the day after Armistice Day, back pus after a on prolonged immediately MacCracken believed he MacCracken and emergency put Vassar February College, College 12 VQ WINTER 1994 must proceed setting things right. was empowered to set on the conservative Avenue Press, 1994■ victor the task ahead of English. This excerpted from her newly published book Bridges to the World: Henry Noble article is said, the the Vassar campus. The differences leading to the showdown between things right and the president and his trustees largely progressive faculty had developed gradually over the preceding years. But they surfaced after the United States entered the a strain 1918 the Vassar that held itself aloof from the community . of them didn’t thoughts on the implications of victory now con- ivory- and theoutside world. Many suffrage and and off. had preferred to let leave gave a triumphal speech. As reported on November 13 in The Poughkeepsie Eagle News , he endorsed Presi- to tower 31 years doing things. Those cam- for the victor and indicated that he, too, would use them as his mandate. Covered with the mantle of emerita of to ideas tinue undisturbed the . He stretched his less victory, Wilson trustees fire him after 36 months presidency uncomnew respect for the established 1915 wanted been dent Wilson’s historian and professor in way of trustees during which the battle had developed and won, Henry Noble MacCracken is Vassar College on while, a Assured of support, the progressive president decided to public showdown. The forces on his side—faculty Elizabeth Adams Daniels who had been working with his conservative predecessorT aylor, who —i m three years earlier. hurry to change it. Those the board quite 0- quo: impatient with it and trustees 0 cd m firing the hired he was B 1 I 01 excuse trust- in what he had al- titude towards the status H Bm > cd LU hcc =) war were ready displayed about his at- i IB < B 0 i LU B m o guard of trumped up a lay ees dI The conservative Vassar trustees || LU tured on the Vassar campus. of them to Actually, probably His problem withthe O i; ' America, in away. being i 2 education his and objections back. chi tions for the future of higher no war- term happy to see him go off and hoping he wouldn’t come °l cc I < B Argonne campaign a less global conflict, had raised some d| rope, with j| m in Eu- one j -J en- gaged in the Meuse- but j cc m < cc m DO H were engage in to work for the spring I CD UJ on trustees war the and as the wartime college’s economy. had consented so were of sympathy with the times, both out approve on more of or campus were Perhaps more important, the trustees to accustomed having their own way, uninterfered with, on the campus. Internally, the college had never really had an overall plan of operation. It had had no budget. (Nor was this unusual: neither did other colleges.) Bills came in and bills were paid, first served. There ness was very little coordination between the busi- side of the college and the educational side. Somehow the college had scraped along in this fashion without an overall plan until 1915. The college had been without a president from February 1914 to January 1915, and the trustees, after their customary fashion, had taken matters during that care of all financial period. After MacCracken as- In sumed office in January, to had been chairman of the executive committee—the MacCracken’s request for a part-time leave from the trustee group of power brokers that was George Dimock, who the inner circle ofthe Vassar’s fifth president was a progressive, who arrived with radical ideas about transforming the pioneering Victorian institution into a modern college* But first, he had to save his job. trustees to him —approached say that wish him the board did of right Taylor had judiciously kept. He was not yet in a be burdened to with the financial affairs of position the he would be He should in- college. stead be free devote his to a motion would be introduced the at 1915 meeting June hamstrung from educa- planning for the college, or even conducting the day-to-day business of the president’s office, without being adequatelytied to the purse strings and the plan- busi- trustee Dimock said understand how tional business and finances of the nessmen. to doing long-range energies to work on the educational side, and leave the college to the the relinquishing that not ning of how the college’s rescinding the resolution (which Taylor had insisted upon at the beginning of his presidency in 1886) thatthe president should be ex officio money would be spent. chairman of the executive trustee treasurer committee. lege, Between 1915 and 1918, however, he had discovered all At the time, MacCracken did not object being to An thoughthat was and because with his allowed own to trustees for control of the college’s finances. was very little), wish to administration of the perfectly this action. It meant nature that the college’s But he said that he and significance of authority in the tive control of the business of the execu- College, upon which Dr. the di- always communicated ecutive committee, and he That that MacCracken did necessarily know what had been committed by the treasurer the educational to MacCracken. sums college. the spent the to not be to the of the col- not meant it coincided give his chief effort “understood early battle between MacCracken and the sistent with what had previously been told him (al- was committee, and what went in that committee was on he con- Mr. error. who rection of the executive MacCrackenand his wife, Marjorie, and daughter, Maisry, 1915 ex- as clearly his Pelton, money according cluded from the executive committee, because, later observed, it was too H. V. sometimes was and the ex- caught short. asked for an Occasionally opinion about an expenditure of college funds by the treasurer until it was too late. Such was the case with expenditures of $25,000 for a new heating plant with new not even of 1918. Taylor had insisted by securing the action him ex making officio chairman of the executive boilers committee, had been removed from the office of the President...” Furthermore, it meant that “the respon- indicated that the college’s annual expenses had in$lOO,OOO a year since the beginning of creased over sibility of the Treasurer to the President of the College as ex officio chairman of the Executive Committee had lapsed.” Even though MacCracken thought he understood the nature of the action of the board and agreed to it without objection, he could not have realized its full significance. It was a crippling arrangement. New on the scene and new to administration, he perhaps could not in 1915 have anticipated the consequences MacCracken’s The 1918 in the was summer president’s report was tenure. to the trustees in June 1918 The situation in the spring of the fact that a fire had complicated by occurred the previous February in the largest Vassar building, which housed manyof the students, and that the loss fully covered by insurance. An emerto be raised for rebuilding. Separated from the college’s immediate budgetary concerns, the was not gency fund had associate alumnae in 1915, at the time of the Fiftieth Anniversary celebration of the college (an event 13 connected with MacCracken’s away, didn’t undertaken trustees, it raise a to inauguration), had fund designated for endowment. February 1918, Between 1915 and in this first fund have time get there. These three to turned out, had been the full board, group, but not delegatedby drive of their organization, they had raised the better for running not part of a million dollars. But it was and deliver a message, which was really an ultimatum. Polite, but indirect, the message stated that since expenses of the college. In 1918, in the wartime economy, MacCracken’s interest in the collegeseemed John Adriance, trying to get a new heating plant installed in the college. Owing to the government’s need for metal, new boilers could not be obtained, and a “local trustee,” was so substituted. Costs soared second-hand boilers were and although the executive committee authorized the spend $25,000 for the heating system, the $200,000. The money bill had already run up to over be The had to found some local trustees apparplace. of ently suggested to some treasurer to it his desire they would like Decoded, do to because he his eye seemed was free him for full-time to that he had chance good a get rid of the thorn in trustees and suggestions seriously, encouraged them that the time had to tional policy into their to own of the college handsunder free the institution from its conservative ways of the their past, under which the fac- 7, 1918, MacCracken and campus with throat and was a septic sore degrees. As a consequence, his secretary decided to wait day, when he undoubtedly showing him letter a view the persons of the faculty. Com- re- pletely unbeknownst an inter- met was at from a Manhattan, but MacCracken in on Chambers’s mind. Although still confined to his bed, MacCracken feeling better on Tuesday, and he agreed to Chambers at was ushered into MacCracken’s bed- about four o’clock and first expressedpolite about MacCracken’s health. MacCracken, concern 1915 before the national reading who assumed Chambers could Popular public in September 1913 Monthly had published an Next College President.” Al- Science article entitled “The Professor,” but who had been unconventional “Full” most a at one, Vassar since 1887. him about fiscal matters, turned the conversation cleverly analyzed the pitfalls of the collegepresidency in the early twentieth century and without hesitation towards his formulations of a dealt with all the vested interests which had plan to develop a budget only have come when The though it was attributed to a “Near Professor,” and published anonymously, the article was definitely written by Vassar’s Lucy Salmon, who was no “Near see Chambers in the afternoon. room organizing college governance had been placed it offer any hints about whatwas did not her prior to his arrival Vassar, her sentiments about Vassar business a to MacCracken, who had not following Tuesday who in man one noncom- morning. It came Frank Chambers, trustee, distinguished historian and of the leading spokes- before conference. The questing letter, short and mittal, asked for a the educational Vassar, was the maverick Lucy Maynard Salmon, a until the following Monwould feel better, very little power, turn been well under way when MacCracken arrived at fever of 104 a to policy-making of the college over to the faculty. The ringleaderof the faculty revolt, which had already sick in bed in his residence system for the Chambers, however, interrupted had reason not come to discuss him to to Her article see new college. say that he college finances, but for a quite different. He then 1994 for his leadership. He had plans to C3n Saturday, September WINTER think to come take the educa- them ulty had was long not . side. on meant was had their way.. In the three years that MacCracken had been on campus, he had listened to the faculty, taken their for Vassar if the the campus. It on be service. war statement many radical ideas and too keeping not to war MacCracken knew, the MacCracken’s fault was not work away from the great had decided leave. The trustees he should college, as as inner circle that those in the 14 larger a “wait on” MacCracken to overcome, could avoided, and shape his own be a president policy. She examined the power of boards of regents or who, for the to managed before trustees, parents, and alumnae always liked the existing it to change. “Does somedropping the Latin salutatory and the most part, explained that he had expected to be joined in making this visit by two other trustees, Florence Cushing and George Dimock. Since institution and didn’t one MacCracken hadn’t communicated with him until parent ‘likes the present plan’ and therefore the Latin that morning, however, the others, who lived further salutatory and the valedictory are retained.” Of col- suggest valedictory from the want commencement exercises, the MILLAY Missing class while “in pain with EdNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY, twenty-three years old when she arrived Vassar, had at grown up as an eccentric genius the day on happened in Maine. But because she challenged the authority of barred too one many teachers in her local high school, she was from attending classes and had to complete her secondary education by herself. Besides that, she lacked the training to Camden, credentials herself for Vassar, she attended Barnard City from in New York as a February June conditionally admitted to Vassar and was the over College nonmatriculated student 1913 to her “quick recovery from illness.”She replied, “It just so in pain with a poem.” was keep Millay from making too many constantly in trouble with the wardens who monitored the rather strict social regulations of the relaxed college on behalf of the faculty. MacCracken’s more attitude towards the regulations had not yet begun to prevail: possibly he would have dismissed them all as counterproductive. He was too politic that early in his career, however, to make such to present certain other traditional for Vassar admission in 1913. To prepare required in an faculty exception waters. to She was rules. to But in the spring of 1917, Millay have graduated had it not would not of 1913 into the class of summer poem” that at the time of your class I MacCracken found ways waves Latin prose and construe a been for MacCracken’s intervention. 1917. Millay and MacCracken were each other. The the festivities drawn in his honor later told a reporter, 1932, who wrote: play during surrounding his inauguration and the celebration of all because of Caruso,” she “It was to the Fiftieth J erome Beatty, During Easter vacation in New York, Anniversary of the founding of the college, entitled The Pageant of Athena and was written by Millay. As soon as he made her acquaintance, he paid special attention to her, encouraging her to use her talent as poet and playwright. had invited Miss elderly woman Millay to hear Caruso in Aida. It was an be to tremendous a knew Aida note Vincent event. by heart, couldplay every of the score, but had never that the date whenCaruso was Mildred Thompson, still a was The history instructor 1913, recalled after retirement that she history Millay in her entrance She had to, because the (admission) rest though she had to flunk it, Taylor said, “Oh, our poet!” Millay was fortunately a student in MacCracken’s Shakespeare class, and he taught, “Drama 220,” substitutefor the more students in his the one allowed her a to course conventionalfinal exam class, MacCracken encouraged happened compose She wrote a those days and sick Miss Millay excuses . . . However, could be sent used this convenient o’clock drama class one this did not deter morning. to means class for almost any her eight to cut Dr. MacCrackensaw her perform- of fantastic capers about an hour afterward her later in under Main gate. He remarked teasingly when he saw ing splits and all sorts to was that shecould tearoom to morning... theAshokan silly things in guestbook, and drove suddenly recalled that she was was at some illegally away from gone. She stole in her room at nine .“A week later the warden of my hall visit the tearoom” she told the reporter, “And allwas lost.” a Vincent from getting up and spouting Shakespeare when the frail in occasion moved her to it. Physicians considered women reason. At dinner she her to a wrote the tearoom’s the minister’s house for dinner. o’clock the next observed: lecture course. Reservoir, taken by the other reporter, looking into Millay’s life as a paper The Miscellany News. The reporter, Muriel Crane ’53, a went one ’l7 at Vassar the campus... .The last ferry a King. “She wrote according to a student for the undergraduate was to he class for three weeks and finished it,” Drama 220 Millay make of dramatic literature. As moral interlude called Two Slatterns and during a luncheonat Edna St. Vincent play that wouldreflect her comprehension of the course. a Vassar, and at tell her. She . . she Saturday with her and two Vassar graduates, minister’s daughter. They had driving roommate assignments. She took history sing sup- leave campus overnight for the Remember she was of the term. went even creative innovations in her was 25! Towards the end of May. office to report the result of the exam, and told him she had just read a most remarkable exam back not Her punishment not then unknown to the wayto McCaleb’s Vincent to ishment. me.”WhenThompson encountered Taylor on be know not the opera, had a glorious time, and returned to Vassar to take her pun- answers extraordinary information given at the beginning made me especially interested was to did woman days after Vincent did didn’t bear any particular relation to the questions asked. But, said Thompson, “The in the writer who elderly two posed flunked exam. heard Caruso. Not that she needed encouragement: she had the fresh breath of genius. C. in in Just before graduation, Millay was told that she could not receive diploma with her class and she was banned from the premises. The faculty met in solemn session and voted against leniency. The students in her class were affronted and defiantly demanded that she be allowed to participate in the final festivities for graduation, but she missed both class day and baccalaureate ceremonies, for each of whichshe had written a song. MacCracken, later saying that it was the only time in his career as president whenhe had exercised his right to overrule a faculty decision, granted her to the campus, and she graduated with the permission to return others. He repeatedly referred to her during his administration as her one of the most talented students that had ever studied at Vassar. —From Bridges to the World 15 lege benefactors, she noted: member of the board of great authority. ... science and wishes laboratory, the trustees “The benefactor is and as If the benefactor is interested in to college give the college a Salmon, although she a such wields physical accepts it without question although its greatest need may be a new library building.” Continuing her analysis of various categories, she found that [t]he force of tradition is strong and tradition makes the student, at least in theory, passive u and receptive rather than active and creative.” How- addressed itself had been delivered the was writing anonymously, of the issues that the Vassar some mulling trustees an cerned about the over faculty in 1913 when they had ultimatum. They were con- conservative educa- increasingly policies of James Monroe Taylor, who seemed them to be failing to respond to perceivedneeds for tional to change in student and faculty life and in the curriculum, especially in reference to faculty suffrage, and faculty freedom of speech and action. After Taylor’s Progressive MacCracken (left) and conservative predecessor James Monroe Taylor (right) with alumnae iVlacCracken was as a headstrong seen Hotspur by M. Carey Thomas [president of Bryn Mawr College, but] his lighter and more playful side was apparent to almost everybody else. To the übiquitous Jack Hennessy, thesingular original campus security officer, “making rounds day and night bybicycle looking for other stolen or misplaced bicycles,” (stealing bicycles was the most serious campus crime in the thirties and forties), MacCracken frequently played the role of a Prince Hal, resourcefully reproved and parried in the act by Hennessy’s down-to-earth genius. William Murphy, later first head of Vassar’s employees’ union, but a groundsman when MacCracken came to the college, illustratedtherelationship between MacCracken and Hennessy in repeating in an interview a story that circulated among the employees in his time. Soon after MacCracken’s arrival, the new president was wandering around the alleyways in the service area of the college behind Main Building one night after dark. Hennessy saw him. Not recognizing him, or pretending not to recognize him, he grabbed him by the collarand asked him who he was andwhathe was doing there. MacCracken said he was the new president, out for a walk. Hennessy said he’d see about that. Holding on to him, he guided him over to the president’s house and rang the doorbell. Marjorie MacCracken answered the door. Whereupon Hennessysaid, “Do you know this fellow?” “Why yes,” said Marjorie, “this is President MacCracken.” “Well, I’m glad to hear it, but you’d better tell him not to go wandering around like that on this campus at night,” said Hennessy. The next day, MacCracken gave Hennessy a raise. So was formed a special friendship, which lasted E.A.D. in Bridges to the World throughout MacCracken’s time at Vassar. — ever, there is a “thin entering wedge of alumni reprecollege trustees” which, given time, would influence plans in the future. And the faculties everywhere, as the article was being written, were beginning to work in new ways to gain legislative educational policy. The article, in short, power over resignation under pressure in 1913, which took effect in February 1914, and while the search that identified MacCracken as the winning candidate for the presi- constituted group action for purposes of their sentation boards of on an ian system that indictment of the archaic, authoritar- prevailed colleges and universities just before World War I and colorfully expressed a belief that a more organic system could take its place, under forward-lookingpresidents of the future. 16VQ WINTER 1994 in dency was crued vacuum was new taking place, the faculty had quietly acpower as they stepped together into the created by Taylor’s departure. Uniting in in itself In May a own empowerment novelty. 1914, the trustees had put out a call through the Alumnae Council for suggestions for Taylor’s replacement. No doubt the six alumnae trustees on the board forced this call. At least faculty one Events had mem- ber—Salmon—took advantage of the invitation, but instead of just mentioning possible candidates that she had in mind—MacCracken Salmon the committee wrote not at conspired to produce exactly the right a progressive turnabout in college circumstances for Vassar.... at governance among them— once reasoned a chaotic month of scrimmaging and lobby. .met in New York and voted to a analysis of the principles that should affect the choice of president. It corresponded with her published ar- ing, the ticle. president. Now Now, especially Salmon, but others too, foresaw that this showdown between MacCracken, himself a faculty member as well as president, and the trustees, was a ization, MacCracken quickly set the stage scenery for his return and bathed himself in the limelight. With trustees . allow MacCracken eager tions and off the on the campus gate in relief groundwork concerning professional ranks and employOther colleges were ment. in emonies attached seemed perfect a time for I—the passed October on day after the faculty rousing endorsement of MacCracken’s progressivism—not to resign. a MacCracken in the 1940s beginning, end. Do not The not the fight will be on with president, faculty, and alumnae ranged against an anti- quated system of academic organization. Some of us have long protested against the control of a body holdingofficefor life, self-perpetuating, meeting but once work a to a year, committing its small executive com- mittee, Vassar alumnae met everywhere he traveled. “Last summer,” he confessed, whenputting memoirs—never together some published—“l was beguiled into noted for its a Paris music hall not like prudery. My host, the true resign. Americanclergyman he was, wantedto see just how bad Paris could and therefore be, accompany him. At urged me to the end of one the most of soft voice revealing scenes, at my side said, ‘I suppose you are planning to introduce this art into dramatic production at Vassar, Dr. MacCracken.’ My neighbor was a Vassar a less than seventy, whose motives in attending the show I did of not woman not seek to learn.” E.A.D. — records publishing of its meetings, and admitting one no to The issue is clear-cut and well-defined. institution that has had the opportunity that one with us. I know is day may be realized in practical form ours of to now on and made a execu- with him met plans to wipe out the successfully deficit, which were executed within the six next weeks. Two years later when he was offered the chancellor- ship of the University of Bufat a larger salary, he stayed falo Vassar, and the trustees agreed to the reorganization of at the college and the board trustees on his of terms. There was to be no turning back, thereafter, either on the college campus or in the world at large from the cultural, technological, political, and social levers for change set in place during the world war. They to affect and every level. Certainly they affected women’s roles and women’s expectations. MacCracken redirect life The opportunity is ours to lead the way in the open the whole of question of academic control. was day the next tive committee would continue its discussions. discussion that na- personalvictory stage and in fact, the !N/lacCracken attendance at This is the cer- pivotal position for “getting things right” on the home front. In September 23, and again the to trustees.... MacCracken ac- Salmon, a superb goader, ex- no the over horted MacCracken twice by 1918, off, he stretch the encompass his center on to tional armistice celebration tion. letter—once kind of a campus and on managed in the air. It was train Taking full advantage of the heightenedemotions of joy and University Professors had just drawn up its charter and laid some basic revolt; reform a regal processional the evening of the day after Armistice Day. newly formed nationalAmeriAssociation of so from Manhattan and entered every college in the country. A can was exercise in the to Vassar stage, he took be resolved, not vital to alone, were to Vassar’s as of dra- sense timing which he future, both and well defined. The ques- cut exquisite frequently clear- his duties his work of modern- resume the same open the larger subject of academic gov- The issues were full time to return to matic unique opportunity to ernance. to at in the years ahead addressed the changes and new no needs in the postwar world in the field of education. and Together with his colleagues, and with the active cooperation of the students, and a largely new board ifyou stay . . [The question is] vital to every college in the country. . . I wish we might make a permanent contribution to educational theory and practice in the form of a plan of academic government that would truly repreall the elements included in a college. sent of trustees, he consciously, step by step, made over a stodgy Victorian institution (one, conservative and however, which the founder, Matthew Vassar, had intended modern to one. be responsive B to change) into a thriving 2 17 THE STORIED MAYA Since the Maya lost the meaning of their glyphs centuries ago, they have been able to read and write themselves only in translation. But a literature exists in their lively oral culture, and a project in Mexico’s Yucatan aimed to seek it out and record it in writing, using the language of its makers. recent Catherine Rendon by EAR the unoccupied, an- k| pj Mayan cient Maria Luisa is short and cities of and and she smiles Mexico’s Yucatan penin- Bb S'! a Maya city edgeof the Puuc hills, the otherwise vast, flat landscape; garden of northwestern Yucatan. Here citrus bloom and packs of parrots and other noisy birds in an a stocky like Yucatec most earrings and bright colors wear great deal. She visiting elders what they know so the at to in the time of Oxkutzcab. Oxkutzcab lies only undulations She loves women. '81 that spends all her free vicinity and finding we out go visit them and can record their memories. She and Santiago Dominguez Ake, a graduate student in history and another of the project’s collectors/writers, always exchanging are discoveries. Theirfavorites are the stories about ghosts it is the and aluxes—-little clay figures that farmers fashion trees protect their land and crops. Maria Luisa has been in touch with an fill the early mornings and late afternoons with chatOne can ter. buy zapote fruit and mameys and the hottest chiles in the world, known as habaneras, alwaysbustling market. Across the street from the marketplace is a large, golden-toned, fortresslike church with small, high windows typical of the local mission constructions. In front of the known as used one where the town dances, a square. This is used to be held, and where vaquerias, everyto congregate before ugly an installed. tain was church, one can catch a local cab. Mongol-pencil yellow, but shaped like giant In front of the They are tricycles. Passengers sit on a plank or makeshift seat have been loaded the cabs seem Gongora Pacheco literacy promoter, and one in a sit is a at the Mayan woman, at work She lives with her mother and brother distant end of Oxkutzcab. When on a ning some of us at a who the project visit Maria Luisa, we pile the tricycle cabs and travel to her like a proces- sion of in on holidaymakers. We pass lazy, thin dogs sundoorways; a mother pig leading her piglets in backyard shaded by banana and tamarind trees; a sprinkling her potted plants; children and women standing in line at the local tortilleria, where a woman a rusty machine chugs com; a come to long let to a small bus pass. returning home from work in the are fields. Some ride bicycles, others walk. All around us of those places one cicadas buzz. (The Yucatan is insects of where we all shades and sizes land plantations: an abandoned railway tracks mark each we come one.) on pass the remains of old hennequen old chimney, long, low buildings, and site. Sometimes church ruins being reclaimed across feel we by the envelopedby the all-encompassing horizon—Chum ka’an —the Maya words for horizon “base of the sky.” mean swinging, just Maria Luisa’s out kilo after kilo of flattened vacated hammock. At corner. does last, not have much of a HADZIUH plaza. This hamlet combines Spanish and pre-Columbian characteristics, as center collection of contemporary indigenous Mayan litera- onto we goods cadre of Mayan writers and story collectors who have been collaborate Campesinos back up to a progress there is sometimes our like overladen more gondolas; the steady-gazing matrons like powerful buddhas. ture. by the need the end of at waiting for the “next available” with their baskets full of merchandise. Once their Maria Luisa slowed straight road; wilderness. Most of the time, at the back while the cabbie pedals in front. The taxi stand is always crowded. It is not unusual to see plump Yucatec matrons narrow, Sometimes foun- cement old musician nearby hamlet of Tadziuh and told him that would be visiting him. Tadziuh is at Oxkutzcab’s church is in the to we do many in the outback. Several ruins largetrees surround the empty grass and center. Across from another church, still used it is an itinerantpriest. As we look for someone soon to by descend from thecar as we tell us where Aureliano Carnal party is Maya and reluctant to the tell us are Maya, villagers speaks where he lives. Santiago later tells me that this is lives. Although the majority of our in because the people of this hamlet had been particularly during the time of the Caste War (1845-1901) and had waged war against the local anticlerical establishment. A legacy of mistrust of all outsiders remains. Nevertheless, a and his man son who are walking the direction of Aureliano Carnal’s house tell follow them and so we begin to climb up a us narrow in to Photo: Palace of the Qovemor at Uxmal, Yucatan, Mexico © D. Donne Bryant 19 “[M]uch has been written about the Maya, but by persons this culture. Today the living Maya are beginning to write their own history in their own language, with the letters borrowed from the Latin alphabet, since. writing of the ancient Maya was lost or has not been deciphered. And even though the ancient writing was not preserved, and many elements of our culture were lost, the Maya people have not been extinguished .” foreign to . . Gerardo Can Pat, Mayan poet path. It is littered with stones, weeds, and discarded candy and potato-chip wrappers. After walking up for a bit, Maria Luisa and procession, He addresses expecting ing.” across us you. who I, the head of the at are with a cane. very old man in Maya and says, “I have been come . . a butterfly told a me you were com- This is Aureliano Carnal himself and he leads the his to way thatched hut, which is behind own small a wooden gate. The hut appears to be empty, but contains the rudimentary belongings of a Maya man: small bag woven with gourd for water, and to wood that are days the flames There A belief regarding children that when he grows up he won’t be afraid to wander in the field. A girl’s umbilical cord must be buried under kitchen hearth’s stones so she grows up she will be in her home. one a or large stumps of in his fire have been announcing .. many such were of the that when hard-working be about Many of the a be buried in the so stones on encounters of these afternoons course might to shirt, over time—- would we meet wives, daughters, grandchildren, neighbors—anyone who It is said that the umbilical cord of furthest bit of the bush a meetings inwhich Mayan stories, jokes, superstitions, theater, religious beliefs, medical practices, political ideas, and songs were heard and recorded. During the Recorded by Santiago Dominguez Ake boy must be taken and dotted around a fire. He also tells us that arrival. . our some a hammock. Don Aureliano asks sit either everyone for a trousers influences or have stories songs to tell. heard had clear European we though they were even in Yucatec Maya Spanish words mixed into their refrains; others might be pure Yucatec Maya, but with words that are with longerused. We heard songs sungon the hennequen plantations where hemp was made at the turn of the century. Some songs would elicit dancing. The elders often explained the songs with anecdotes and memories of how life had been when they had sung these no years before. Sometimes the the fiddler tune was singer a choly when he strummed would get melan- his guitar or listened to playing. One old man smiled on self-indulgently before crooning: . . .Girl. . .You abandoned you preferred your turdedove When I saw that I went out and tied the to stone . . . fence rope around the branch of a saramullo Girl, me a I tried to tree . . . hang myself and when the branch broke I fell on the stone wall . . . This capacity for self mockery is typical of the region. 20 VQ WINTER 1994 N the Yucatan, even the religious figures have lightness to them. Religion, like music, pen a the meates landscape and all social The living Maya activities in Mesoamerica. continue folmany of the traditions their ancestors lowed: they seek blessings for their tools and weapons; they ask permission to tains they rites the fields if or performed are Maize continues going hunting. Special are ask for rain or to to take animals from the moun- be the for a them since it provides them with more In the ment. one good harvest. important most crop for than nourish- Popol Vuh, the Maya book of creation, the gods finally agreed upon men how the sees were those who these were fashioned were kinder and had made of maize because out compassionate than more those they Throughout the Maya world there are men who are consulted for blessings, for curses women for ensuring much cures, protection. news of wood. out are In the known as Felipe Manrique Oxkutzcab. He is His an rain and and maize, and for Yucatan, these bearers of divine j’men; j’menob in the plural. is of the one energetic j’menob of seven in his late forties. man is often animated and expression and as A belief regarding Recorded dogs by Santiago Dominguez Alee he smiles he shows off several It is said that if wealthy man. oval-shaped thatched huts made of stone and lashed poles caulked withearth. These stand behind a drystone the tears see the spirits of dead persons, but this very grave sin which God punishes. golden-capped teeth—the sign of a Felipe’s property consists of several and whitewashed wall. Several chickens the in front of the central yard about run hut, which is a of a a dog person were to put in his eyes he would is the kitchen. Calabash, tamarind, mango, orange, and lime trees fill the back garden. In order through reachFelipe’s office-temple, one to must go front hut—the Here family living room. hammocks are knotted to the ceilings, a picture calendarfrom a local business hangs on the wall, as do many a family portraits. Someone is making a new hammock, and its purple nylon strings hanglimply from its frame. One of the palapas (thatched huts) is the temple where Felipe sees his clients, performs ceremonies, and makes offerings. Sometimes, his services prays, in the are field, as in the case of the blessing required of the land before planting a crop of corn after or He it. is talk about his to quite willing harvesting work, As as we is his get to wife, dona Elena, who know them more, graphsof recent ceremonies he has the Ch’aChaak, a ritual to assists him. they show us photo- performed, such as petition the rain god Chaak 21 for rain. the altar. There is are Felipe’s central palapahouses electricity here, and many chairs placed in a semicircle around the altar. Here the floor is of of earth ment, not property. A blue in as dominates the cross of a his of the center table. Severalbead necklaces hang around it. A the left, and on of a V irgin flanks it on ce- of the other huts on some the right, statue a print fair-complexioned, blue-eyed Christ. There are several candles in glass containers of different colors glassesholding freshly cut roses. Felipe is barefoot a blue guayabera. When he prays he kneels and before his altar and speaks in a mixture of Spanish and Maya, invoking saints and ancient gods in equal He combines phrases from both worlds, measure. apparentlyindiscriminately. Felipe’s prayers, like that of all j’menob, show the syncretism between Catholicism and a far older religion. J’menob’s prayers contain long, Homeric-like choruses and are perhaps the most ancient formulaic phrases of the Maya language that have been passed down to this day intact from preand wears Some of the collaborators on the M ayan literature project during a meeting in Mexico. The Collaboration Columbian times. Maya Dziibo’ob Bejla’a (Mayan title), Coleccion de Letras Mayas Contemporaneas (Spanish title) or URING our w 1 ill Felipe gave Maria Luisa, project director Carlos Montemayor, and I individual blessings. These involved long ritual reci- branches of different aromatic herbs, of the Yucatan. The many writers and contributors who participated in the spirits and airborne illnesses. At the end of the cerroses, while emony, his wife gave each of us some project have varied vocations: some are teachers, government officials, graduate students, literacy promoters. Some are Felipe told us to bathe good things our way. campesinos. All the writers are Mayan, though others involved with the project, where the Mayan Letters Collection —was its Vassar, at was a conjuring different saints and gods before the hitting us softly on the back with little in rose to ward off evil This would bring water. at the University of Yucatan, were Maya Dziibo’ob Bejla’e—Contemporary be to officially pre- the culmination of twelve years’ work. The auditorium was filled to capacity. People was stood in the aisles history Maguire Fellow, earned tations altar and his sented. This not. Catherine Rendon ’Bl studied |l That evening, we Mexican writer director, Carlos Montemayor, are including a Ph.D. in history at Oxford, and is a specialist in Mesoamerican history. She hear the Maya poets and writers to speak and read from their work. The university rector, the director of the National Indigenist Institute, and heads of the Rockefeller Foundation’s Humanities worked with the Mayan story project for two years. Her help in coordinating the Division (the last work included Santiago Dominguez Ake spoke with pride and pleasure of being at an official event where Maya was introducing many of the contributors to word-processing, working with them on oral history techniques, and accompanying them on field outings to collect songs, stories, and prayers of the Maya in theYucatec Maya language. (There are almost thirty branches of the Maya language family in Mesoamerica.) She is currently at work translating the collection from Maya and Spanish into English. This article is adapted from a longer one she has written. The collected literature of the Maya of the Yucatan was published earlier this volumes—twenty year in Mexico in forty in Maya and twenty in Spanish. two project during the past organizations sponsored the year) were present. Contribu- tor equal ground with Spanish. Throughout Meso- and South America there is a of native people writing in their growing movement native language. There is much to be learned from on them. Their writings concerns, yet in cover a variety of topics and general deal with familiar, universal themes. What makes their work distinctive are its specifics and that the people are again writing intheir own languages for themselves. Given the opportunity to read their work, not all ofwhat these authors have say may please non-Indian audiences. This is especially the case in places like Chiapas, Mexico, and in to Guatemala, where Maya people tablished ing old that 1994 this year, T Contemporary Mayan Letters Collection is the product of a twelve-year effort to collect and publish indigenous Mayan literature—songs, folklore, ethnohistory, poetry, theater, and essays—in the indigenous languages of the Maya people — 22 VQ WINTER last visit to Felipe’s house *n — can political and social stories and creating are new challenging and structures ones —new are es- retellstories still be told in their old languages. BJ POVERTY —Marfa Luisa Gongora Pacheco, writer translated by Catherine Rendon from Oxkutzcab and Mani From Stories ■ the story that there once old front door and this What tree annoyed the old that fruit wanted saw lived huaya plant her long. was that whoever it and without eat her permission they would climb up the steal the huaya fruit. One day, when the old of town well she saw coins, but felt pity to as woman old an woman When the little the old and ignored everyone him. The old this old see in such a sorry man where she fed him. had finished eating, he told man what eaten what you like because I can you gave me, ask me grant you your wish.” “My good man,” said the old woman, “the only thing I ask you is that you tell the huaya tree not to let any of those who climb its branches down; at least not until I give them permission to do so.” ” “May yourrequest be the rule! answered the old Then he went visit the old for you to come Poverty. That’s why She I to came come with me, old of away of getting rid of quickly thought “I’ll go with you, but first I want you huayas so that I can eat them.” to get me some “Very well, I’ll do it immediately,” answered Death. They approached the the highest part since that is where up to find the you’ll Those the are Very sure wasn’t able to largest ones and most delicious huayas. back into what had happened, she her house and forgot about the saw whole business. Many did not doctors years went by visit anyone, were thing he saw was the an overwhelming laden with fruit. He had tree desire to eat get down. and climbed up but then couldn’t some Up in the branches he found Death and asked him; are you doing here? Everyone’s been looking for you, since manywant to die already and you don’t turn up to take them away with you.” “Look, what happened is that the foolish old of this house put woman with in this if even astonished to see of commission. I out me look for her and the sly one to came but that first I had to me said she’d come bring her down some tree I unable was to down again and here you find me. Anyone who climbs up here is stuck, even you,” Death told him. come “So, that’s why no “What then he dying,” the doctor said. began to shout, “Come here, Death is here with and is one do is get down from here.” And must we a me, here! come and see!” come racket and screamed much so loudly that all the village’s inhabitants gathered around the tree. “Come down,” they told them. so stuck,” the doctor replied. The people then agreed to cut down the tree in order to bring down Death and the doctor. Just at the moment when theywere going to cut it down, old Poverty appeared. “What do you think you are doing? If you want to bring down all those who are up on the tree, why don’t you tell me?” “We’re sorry,” said all those gathered there. Then old Poverty turned toward the tree and said: I want.” of himself, Death climbed up but down. come When Poverty went and there beneath it, tree told Death: woman “Climb woman’s house and the first fable the Yucatan the old went to “We can’t. Anyone who climbs up here is find you.” Death and said: the old of the doctors one He made such to He told her: woman. “The time has his way quite satisfied. day Death came one on by and Many years went A from day, huayas. Upon climbing this woman: “Now that I’ve man. when she searched for away in which so. “What beggar. He asked for food as and took him home, state got asking tree the center to do to One near a die, even not name bore fruit all year woman to certain a whose the edge of town lady at Poverty. She planted was ZUMARRAGO tells MR. AURELIO a manner person and Death was ill. The that old Poverty did “Let everyone down!” When everyone had descended, the lord of Death spoke to her: Poverty, I now you with me. “Because you did have a not let me lot of work and You shall have to down, old take cannot wait for some other day.” Death went away and Poverty stayed on here on earth. That is why she’s still here among us. 23 Helen Maguire Muller ’4SH only gave not hundreds of students opportunities invited them Two former to to study abroad, she memorable parties. Maguire Fellows remember her generous spirit. Of Capitalists HELEN and Communists MAGUIRE MULLER ’45-4, a of Vassar trustee College 1987, died in New York City to 5. Her commitment educational —and, more July from 1979 cross-cultural to study to The ability father, who had founded similar scholarship programs at Yale. Vassar’s Dean of Studies Office has awarded Maguire Fellow- ships 129 Vassar ciaries of graduates, and generosity of spirit that a they far beyond the of my beginning Maguire Upon being informed of my fellowship was a by the dean of studies that the source I thank her. Helen respondedby wrote to live real, person, first year inviting as Fellow in England. a me at visit her home in to Lausanne, Switzerland. I Switzerland. I was wrong. To be sure, Helen was a cosmopolitan person. Indeed, my first experience of the cultural power of languages came from observing her shift effortlesslyfrom English to Spanish to (less often) German. Just or not, was lively, warm, to however, and even a snob zany to a mountain inn to or a as prig. including taste Helen Muller was That first trip woman. land left wonderful memories, (in form) the Vaudois specialty called its the first most to a evening’s long unmodernized however, is of Helen dancing to Latin music with her husband Andre while regaling us with stories of the wild nightlife she had known in prerevolutionaryHavana. This was also my introduc- 24 VQ to her many contradictions, for it seemed WINTER 1994 to me statements to but some Irish-American father an years of her marriage States, Spain, in postwar that only and east was Western on world, she nevertheless reached familiar with many of the terms leaders of Cuba, Vietnam, the Soviet Union, and the People’s Republic of China. That a woman mystery to thoroughly of the capitalist world so was so by and sympathetic to the communist one remained a She was very much aware of and amused by the me. oddity of it —indeed, she boasted of putting her Ho Chi Minh to medal up on the mantelpiece next the Somoza medal her husband had been awarded. She never thought the anomaly worth more than a humorous aside, however; I certainly cannot remember her feeling the need to explain it. Like many of the juxtapositions in her life, it was something that one simply accepted and enjoyed when, for example, it involved dinner at to with the Soviet ambassador restaurant or of the one any was a new generous donor to for Vassar Maguire the University skills to a the United dinners she hosted each numerous celebrate the Chinese year. Vassar College and to to many the Maguire graduate studies, she funded the Indonesia/ fellowship that sends new Vassar graduates to IKIP Sanata Dharma to teach communication English teachers. She also funded the Gallatin Fellowships, administered by a foundation she created, that allows European doctoral candidates to study in the United States and Americans to study at the Graduate Institute of to future Carnegie only get along, but enjoy the evening together. On night, as on many others, my own initial doubt that such a and friendly gradually gave disparate group could become warm way to admiration that she could pull it off. tion early International Studies in Geneva, and that in Lausanne, the to Fellowships Switzer- raclette and the dinner party evening Bom of me. other educational institutions. In addition would not memory of that contradictory traits and Swiss-German mother, she grew up in the United Helen came to epitomize Helen. She brought together people who that seemed barely had a common language in a manner showed the slightest doubt that they random, but she never sweetest out year Helen gave on my last night in Lausanne. That party, my best of the elements that memory from the trip, contained most The a Nations unconsciously, her shift with the language; she always personality seemed seemed most lively in Spanish and most imposing in French. drive and Korean to She infinitely endearing to fascinated accepted with much trepidation. I was already feeling very much the American hick in England and expected to feel even the home of a wealthy woman fluent in four languages worse at I in British to (while was struggling English) who, since get by from had of her life in Spain and most graduating Vassar, spent French was Although firmly of the Helen Muller in spring 1975 met an and then divided her time between Lausanne and New York. mere funding. I embrace to aspect of Helen that could be exasperating was spent much of the have been the benefi- went so before his revolution. in foreign countries. 1968, she founded the Vassar Maguire Fellowships, which named for her grants for graduate study abroad. They were to the invitation of Castro could talk at unselfconsciously about how much fun Cuba was In are who had spent much of her life and her money building the communist world and who had attended confer- to in Cuba ences educational—exchangesmade it specifically, possible for hundreds of students woman bridges on Council Her commitment was vice chairman of the Ethics and International Affairs. on international educational exchange was intelligence, and skill at bringing people together. She loved people, not merely humanity in the abstract, as internationalists are often accused of doing. Helen remained a mentor and friend to me and to one to that used all of her considerable energy, innumerable other students she helped along the way. We have lost a great and generous friend. by Kim Joel Landsman ’74 a Kim Landsman is a partner with the law firm Morrison & Foerster. An Endearing Cosmopolite The Voice I the Phone on SPENT almost two on years Maguire a Fellowship, including a Maguire “extern sion” in the early ’Bos. As a studentof classical guitar and composition, I able was study privately with the best teachers in Europe without the constraints of being enrolled in an Spain, result, a studying in London, months ten institution. As three months in to I spent six months in France, and three Italy. Very few fellowships allow this degree of flexibility; only on a of Maguire could I design my own course of and obtain this breadth study private instruction. Surprisingly, in addition to the months in Siena, valuable and living, I learned actually American own European ways exposure to of music appreciate to my better. roots On my way from France to Italy, I had the good fortune to spend a couple of days in Lausanne, Switzerland, and Mrs. Muller. I remember visit being with Mr. and bit embar- a me, because I by interested in her life and more actually the important things she’d done. (I’m sure others can speak better of these things than I.) Although we corresponded off and on for her again, saw years following that, I never rassed her great interest in was have I since had such wonderful fondue. nor After some passage of time, the phone rang and I answered it. The person on the other end of the line said her name, hear it. I didn’t ask her to I’d know enough who soon but I didn’t repeat it, it figuring We talked was. for twenty minutes as I wracked my brain to identify this voice who knew so much about At every new point of inquiry and conversation about my life I breathed another silent exclamation a la Butch Cassidy and the me. Mrs. Muller’s Ho Chi Minh medal was set next to her Sundance Kid —“who IS this woman?” I did together, of course, and I hope she sensed my despair. It goes to show how never she cared husband’s Somoza medal on about one I never the mantelpiece . at last put it to know and remember again have continued conversation without am to so much of her Fellows. knowing Stephen Funk speaking. Stephen Pearson in is a a phone with whom I Pearson ’77 composer and writer. 25 One Writer’s Character by Melissa Pierson ’80 The woman holding is sitting at the bar, wearing her Chinese hat, notebook and crying. She opens the letter again. “Stop running away,” it says. “Come back to your real life.” A writer’s real life is SHERIDAN MAS AD a when and where she is writing, she thinks. She is not running away in these pages, she is running forward, DIXIE embracing her real life. In the book it will say, “The dark woman was cowardly and always looked for her real life somewhere outside. He appears from the old city. He’s on his afternoon PHOT : ” break. “You cry too much,” he says, and he just watches her cry. He does not ask why and he doesn’t offercomfort. He understands this: that it is not that would make a He’s about possible to say one word difference. He just sits and watches her. get up and leave. to “Attends,” she says. “La femme qui pleure,” he says with bitterness. “Stop crying. f. • J ” I smile. We watch “Look,” Isay. “Over presents and people pass. there. ” I I point feel a little happier. to a woman carrying “She has a dress shop in walking poodle. Or salon-de-the. Elle s’appelle Cagnes-sur-Mer. maybe a Isabelle, non, Delphine.” He laughs. He realizes I have the power to change what a he sees. From The American Woman in the Chinese Hat Carole Maso ’77 IN novel, The AmeriHat, Catherine, the CAROLE MASO’s fourth can Woman in the Chinese main character, is a working holiday in writer on the Cote has been. Some' d’Azur—just as her creator times Catherine relates her pained longings and lusts in the first line later, she may be described person; one in a third'person voice. At every turn, Ms. Maso ’77 makes what is going She on. us question just purposely blurs the distinction between author and character with her sudden shifts of perspective and think in so doing, she asks her readers to closely about the relationship between the two. Who is the American woman it Carole Maso, writing in the Chinese hat? Is as herself? Carole Maso, writing as Catherine ? A purely fictive Catherine ? The object of a narrator’s vision? A device who is none Ms. Maso is a decidedly modernist of the above? fearless writer. She embraces risk, always playing with form and language. Her second novel, The Art Lover, is less a story than a complex collage of prose sections, drawings, actual 26 VQ WINTER 1994 newspaper Is Carole Maso ’77 the American Woman Chinese Hat? in the clippings, and other suggestive ephemera. Her third book, AVA, comprises the words, phrases, and sen—“a tapestry of fragments”—recalled by its tences In The main character, who lies inbed dying of cancer. American Woman in the Chinese Hat, Ms. Maso employs a sharply reduced vocabulary. This has the double effect of connoting Catherine’s precarious of state of mind (she is left by her lover at the outset the book) and of giving the prose a profoundlyrhythmic, interview in a dark Manhattanbar, Ms. Maso publishing’s inability to conanything but “commodities of the entertainmentindustry, which these days means safe, sellable, warm, cozy, eighteenth-centurynovels,” she of commercial itself with cern remarks. “These editors would say, ‘Well, if you take out this part, and this part, and amplify this part...’ ” Ms. Maso Early recalls, on, serious writing—of public knew I was character Catherine, she hangs kind of writing, that grounds her. “I have to writing; to write every it is the dayor to compatible lucre, say, or own artistic with the pursuit of of a house, even or of renounce,” she says. “I just had to make going any money from this never so to I got used it and got to on with it.” Yet in the perverse way of such genuine renuncia- I just don’t feel right,” Ms. Maso says. “[T]he writing has be as exciting, dangerous, moving as life itself.” protect her to —“I speaks effusively, commandingly, passionately, intelligently. And always, at last, about writing. Like her act than slightly amazed. more she decided esteem on them. Those efforts convinced ultimately issued her anew interests. Dreams not poetically repetitious sound. In an that tions, the rewards have finally found her—at A solid audience has come. its core, a large coterie of gay The risks of writing like this become intensely personal. “The writing of this book consciously in- readers, ofwhom she says with a laugh, “I’m happy to be embraced by any group!” Attentive reviews and vaded my privacy,” she says. “Those were its ‘rules.’ I ask you to make comparisons between me and the reading character in the book, but in situationssuch as it still feels difficult publicreadings, to me where night after night you invade your own privacy.” The difficulty is certainly heightenedby the central place in the book and with men of sex —Catherine has liaisons with —and by the raw women by loss, especially up charted this ity—my she own been never known what are have really AIDS. Ms. by particular loss in greater detail Lover. She has fronting death anguish called as Maso in The Art circumspect about conBig Issues. “All my books just been rehearsals for accepting mortaland that of everyone else I care about,” Ms. Maso’s books have been published presses (the by small defunct North Point Press for her first two Yet she has earned wide works, then Dalkey Archive). literary appreciation and other, wards. The list of awards Fellowship in 1985 and more tangible re- with Vassar’s Rose starts proceeds to the receipt in 1993 of the prestigious and remunerative Lannan Literary Fellowship. “One day they call me on the phone, just like that,” she says. “And I think to myself, ‘You want reward this work?’ to Her incredulousness her talents, purists, as those. It comes ” to four packed portfolio. She has been freed from the stocks of waitressing. (The money was lousy, but, pages in her current she said in an interview once, “There’s a great freedom in beingignored.”) Those stocks have been exchanged for the minimum security cell of lack of belief in just a realistic appraisal of her audience—- she comes might too through channels say, and not necessarily a lot of from attempts more to sell her novels mainstream than the presses teaching, at Colum- bia University and elsewhere. And she has bought the country house. She speaks often of being “lucky”—for not disavow early work, to having been raised being nothing able to to as wishing other writers often do; for special, an artist; believe she was write what she wants, limited by but herself. This theme in her conversation reveals the same expansive grace that makes her work stunningly inclusive—pansexualeroticism, poetry, of discipline, flights of inspiration all find their place under her pen. so a sense Her luck includes Vassar. “I felt I really thrived though, she there,” she was drawn to write a so in love with it. says. Until her senior year, to anything but writing, prefering painting, music, and her request from no the country follow across and “luminous, beautifully written,” run for asserts. invitations from each novel. The juicy bits from those reviews, the highlights like “gutsy, haunting,” “richly textured,” even fencing. When creative thesis was rejected, however, her desire to do so was galvanized. Barbara Page, then associate professor of English, helped rethe decision, and the two remain great friends. verse From that time, Ms. Maso says about I just knew.” destiny, “I knew. writing as her Melissa Pierson is nonfiction a critic and writer in New York. 27 OMNIUM Rod Her Work Is ‘Gone Fishing’ GATHERUM Women picking up fly-fishing rods and hip wader boots in record numbers are pulling on reports a recent els in fishing New York Times article. Mod- are popping up in splashy magazine layouts, and publications from Women’s vests & Fitness Sports USA to Today are touting women’s fishing as the next big trend. seemed so chic. Trout fishing never All this fish talk is music to Jennifer Miller only a handful of licensed, professional women fly-fishing guides, her living leading hopeful Ms. Smith earns anglers to some of the most pristine stretches Smith ’Bl. As of of one in the world and water new- the sport in the art of fly-casting. who lives in Montana just to comers instructing Smith, Ms. outside Yellowstone National travels Park, up to six months a year in the United States and Scandinavia conducting seminars and fly-casting demonstrations. Her easygoing and folksy approach to fishing have manner made her somewhat of media star. a She has appeared on ESPN’s “Fishing the West,” “CBS This Morning,” and on Swedish National Television, where she has become the dent expert the American on fishing resi- scene, particular, on women’s participation in it. (Ms. Smith’s Swedish connections include herfiance andfishing partner, Lars Olsson, a Swedish riverkeeper.) in Ms. Smith is not Zen of one to wax on about the fishing, flyendeavor that as a lifelong pursuit, an requires an open mind, a positive attitude, and a healthy dollop of patience. “You can’t learn it in a day,” and “you can’t be passive about it,” she says, stressing her preference for developing knowledge and skills by getting rather than through more into the water cerebral approaches favored by some armchair anglers. What are the water, and an fish, reading keep one’s concentration. office people to let go,” to enjoy the process her job, she release,” concentrate to next year.” on and is often the hardest part of to a philosophy and asks rhetorically, have a ability to Getting “hyper says. She adheres both of “catch and “Why kill it? Put it back. It will be It is natural a do you bigger that protects and the means to a philosophy resource livelihood. Ms. Smith was 1994 in a egalitarian manner. more “I’m trying to get in there and make a place so make an that if my little sister wants to income from fishing, she can the top can’t.” at do it, how can do it. If come one ten guys woman Recently, Ms. Smith j oined with four other women guides in organizing a women-only fly-fishing trip in Big Sky country. In the future, she hopes to develop special Montana programs for cancer, a her mother in recovery from breast women special interest for her since the disease. She is to losing firm a believer in the healing andrecuperative powof fishing. Health professionals advocate ers fly-casting for as good form of physical therapy undergone mastecto- a who have women mies, and Ms. Smith finds that the confidence and strength nurtured in be the ideal tonic for can women fly-fishing who have suffered physical and mental traumas. Meanwhile, Ms. Smith’s literary interests career: persist in anotheraspect of her current She contributor is to outa frequent writing. door sport magazines and has an essay in Uncommon Waters , an anthology of essays by about fishing that also includespieces women by Margaret Atwood and Tess Gallagher. This winter,she hopes to find the time to pen her own book on the subject. —Jill R. Yesko Jill ness Yesko is managing editor 0/ Minority BusiEnterprise News in Baltimore. Eight Years at the Circus Night After Night Diana Starr Cooper ’66 Island Press, 1994 raised in southern Califor- T o say that Diana Starr Cooper’s book Night After Night is about the circus is akin to claiming thatM.F.K. Fisher’s books are about food. Like Fisher, Ms. Cooper paints portraits rich with detail—the seemingly impossible gyrations of a contortionist or the peculiar sneering expression that camels wear —but beyond these particulars lies an exploration of things essential and enduring. Night After Night, Ms. Cooper’s first book, is a philosophical look at a single perforof the Big Apple Circus, a one-ring mance in a circus that spends the Christmas season tent in Lincoln Center’s Damrosch Park and nia andrecalls early fly-fishing vacations with travels through the Northeast in the summer. her The book takes the readerringside, father, who would routinely pack up the family and head to Montana. At Vassar, she majored in English. She began her outfitting business in 1987 after aborting a career as an that left her so overnight radio announcer exhausted during the day “I couldn’t do anything but fish.” Jennifer Smith is the first woman fly-fisher be endorsed by the prestigious Scott Fly to 28 VQ WINTER moting fishing of those skills? Graceful some and proper handling of a nine-foot rod and fifty feet of line, tying flies, dislodging hooks from that other hopes and she the same companies will offer women opporand will begin protunities they offer men but she does talk about fishing Angler Jennifer Miller Smith ’Bl Company, showing aerialist, the dignity of the 49-year-old elephant Anna May, the seemingly effortless flow of the horse’s “liberty act.” And while Ms. Cooper’s evocative dethe the grace of scriptions reader is create can at the impression that the the circus rather than about it, Night After Night poetic musings on is also reading weighty with what the author describes as a classical form in which creatures art varying species, colors, and equals. Considering of sizes interact as the vivid detail and depth of reflection that this slim book contains, it’s surprising to learn that its author quite by accident; circus in fact, came the to she admits that she had little interest in the circus until she the saw Big Apple Circus perform. Ms. Cooper, who calls herself “a writer who runs of farm,” happened to meet Katj a a funny sort Schumann, the Big Apple’s lead equestrihorse farm. Impressed by Ms. a enne, at Shumann’sability, she started attending the horsewoman’s practice sessions, and, after a observing the Big Apple Circus’s performances. By the time the book was completed, Ms. Cooper had spent eight years watching circuses throughout the United States and Europe, talking to performers in their trailers, and taking in dozens of animal time, training sessions. with a Although the reader comes away of the skill, professionalgreat appreciation ism, and sheer wonder of the circus, Ms. Cooper says her book is not simply about this art; instead, she describes it as a project that synthesized everything she’d been thinking about for the past eight years. She adds, “I wanted to see what something looked like if and looked at the you got very, very close to it details of it, didn’t think about it in the abstract, going to and didn’t do research except for which in this case primary sources, the circus itself. This book is about that was way of as a ragtag assemblage of crazy, unpredictable people. Instead, it portrays circus folk as artists working at high levels of achievement. Asked how one circus, Diana can away and run Cooper said, “Well, join the it’s kind of like running away to join the American Balin common let Theater. The circus has more with ballet than with the stereotypes that Americans have of madcap, grotesque, most crazy clowns.” Although Night After Night conveys the great skill of human circus performers, much of the book focuses on the special relationship forged in the circus ring between huand “other animals,” as Ms. Cooper mans it. Although she does not identify herself puts as a supporter of animal rights, she emphatically maintainsthat the circus treats animals with respect. “One of the things that the circus taught me is that you can’t focus on people andanimals as if we existed in separate worlds; we’re totally different, but we’re all in it together. The harmony between people and animals is restored in the ring.” “The circus,” she adds, “encourages us to how various and wonderful and quirky see and odd all of us are, instead of looking at the world in terms of abstractions and theories, Diane Starr Cooper ’66 whichdiminish what’s interesting about the world. Circus is an emblem of this—a meta- phor of away of looking at the world.” —Amy Arner Sgarro Amy Arner Sgarro the Quarterly. is a frequent ’B3 contributor to seeing things.” Such attention to rience is evident in detail and faith in expeNight After Night. The book deflates the popular myths of the circus What’s The a Mother to Be? Myths of Motherhood How Culture Reinvents the Qood Mother Shari L. T hurer ’69 Excerpt from Night After Night I notice a special gesture which an elephant uses to help a person leap aboard her back. Peggy graciously proffers one large foot for Marie-Pierre to hop up on. Then an elegant little flip of the great upward. gray wrist propels the woman This small, stylish variation on giving, and getting, a “leg up” (by which you might put out your hands in a cradle, for me to toss izes me put my knee into, so that you could a horse’s back) symbolup onto the vital of connection be- sense species which is the soul of the act. Because of the elephant’s grandeur, the delicacy with whichshe holds her huge foot out the tiny person is infinitely to expressive of politesse. So a giant, his nobility transcending any hint of condescension, on one hand, or subjection, on the other, might offer to help a midget. There is something delightfully offhand and companionable about it. Peggy says to Marie-Pierre, Up you go! The gesture Houghton Mifflin, 1994 of years, because of her ability to spew forth a child, mother has been feared and revered. She has been the subject of taboos and witch hunts, mandatory pregnancy and confinement in a separate sphere. She has endured appalling insults and perpetual marginalization. She has also been the subject of glorious painting, chivalry, and idealization. Through it all, she has rarely been consulted. She is an object, not a subject. from The Myths of Motherhood For thousands awesome tween have worked this out seems say, We Commanded and commandtogether. to ing, we two species are on mutualground. Mother has an uneasy history. Idols of her have ranged from the sexually capricious, all- powerful fertility goddess of prehistory to the long-suffering Virgin Mother to the mediamanufactured Donna Reed and Murphy Brown. Inherbook The Myths ofMotherhood, Shari L. Thurer, a practicing psychologist and an assistant professor of rehabilitation counselat Boston University, surveys these idealizations and shows the degree to which our ing notions of Mother are hopelessly bound to culture and fashion. She says that a twisted thicket of history, politics, culture, lore, and 29 OMNIUM GATHERUM legend casts a deceiving shadow of a monolithic, idealized Mother over mothers today. There really are no rules about what constitutes a good mother, Ms. Thurer contends. We’ve been making them up as we go along—and most of the time, haven’t been women consulted. today are caught guilt and inadequacy as they No wonder real mothers in a darkness of the many demands and expectations —self-imposed and otherwise—of struggle living to meet in this monolithic shadow. it. It’s Ms. Thurer’s book grew from her di- own a bonding—what we’d consider good childrearing today, yet it was utterly prevalent.” Infanticide, too, she says, was epidemic; “In Europe, there were just too many kids. There were institutions in every city huge where unwanted babies Death rates a [that] only died kids were are couldn’t do what it seemed Thurer be saying you to good mother. I never wanted to stay home. I was pulled in two directions The literature was replete with this ‘attachment theory’ and [the idea of] bonding. You had to be there every minute or the child would felt a into turn an murderer. 1 ax guilty.” A of revelation moment conference, she case underdiscussion during came says. The child a older parents who cessful children. “This kid turned out fire-setter, a child who would kill always precious not the way they today.” If women be freed from the tyranny of monolith, they can, Ms. can the Motherhood hopes, shape mothering new prac- tices that work in their world. “Good moth- really culturally relative,” she says. really understand that and we should try to define our own method, using taking ideology good common sense, but not so seriously.” —Toni Sciarra Poynter ’Bl ering is “We should Ms. Poynter is a book editor living in New York City. be a to when birth control be- a individual adopted by two had raised two highly suc- was out available. The moral of the story is that Psychoanalytically trained, she found much of the psychoanalytic literature to be “very unpermissive. . . I had to do in order to be warehoused. were 90 percent. This was built-in way of life in Europe over were very much came lemmas about mothering. visit years and never total contradiction to the idea of your child away for two animals,” Noted Ms. Thurer recalls. “The mother couldn’t control him.. .The supervisory analyst blamed the mother for child, and I said, God go I.’ being empathic not with this Books ‘There but for the grace of NONFICTION ” Ms. Thurer’sresearch expanded into many disciplines as Mom she saw how deeply the image of embedded in culture.“You can’t go was look up ‘mother’. . .You have images of mother. . . look at look to at Hamlet’s mother ... and you really have to do that in every discipline—religion, anthropology, architecture. You have say, look to does it mean would be much Thurer •69 house and about that relationship?’ Surprises awaited her at thought that the childrearing Shari L. a at ‘Where would the mother be and what more founded on “I today science. shows Public Television for Sale the Market, and the Public Sphere Hoynes Assistant Professor of Sociology Media, Westview Press, 1994 By Invitation Only that I had discovered. How the Media Limit Political Debate a myth of my own . I thought people always loved their babies, and I guess that’s . .1 thought family bonds were just not true. God-given, too. I didn’t realize that family forms also developed.” In her own field, Ms. Thurer discovered that findings about the psychology of motherhood were profoundly shaped by sociopolitical forces. The expectation that mothers can (and should) be totally emoattuned their children was to essentionally tially a post-Freudian phenomenon. “That all popularized by Spock,” she says in an was interview. “Before that, unbelievably, it was . there. . . I don’t have an for answer Othersurprises includedthe enormous dilection care “It 1994 ’66 Popular Press ,1994 An analysis of 265 television game from fifty countries. I why.” i/Q WINTER Village Cooper-Chen didn’t realize that this was never 30 Ann M esserly William ” every turn. advice of Games in the Global of was throughout history infantscompletely over prefor turning the to considered normal and wet good nurses. to give William Hoynes (assistant professor of sociology) and David Croteau Common Courage Press, 1994 Remembering Elizabeth Bishop An Oral Biography Gary Fountain and Peter Brazeau University of Massachusetts Press, 1994 A presentation of more views with relatives, than 120 inter- friends, colleagues, and students of the poet from Vassar ’34. Bridges to the World Henry Noble College MacCracken and Vassar Elizabeth Adams Daniels ’41 College Avenue Press, 1994 (Available through the Vassar Cooperative Bookshop, 914/437-5857) CONTRIBUTORS TO... Pleasure and the Word Erotic Writings by Latin American Women Edited Her Face in the Mirror by Associate Professor of Hispanic Studies Lizabeth Paravisini-Gebert and Margarite Fernandez Olmos Women Writers in Russian Literature by Toby W. Clyman & 1994 From the Heart This collection of poems, essays, stories, and excerpts from novels includes work by writ- Paley, Tillie Olsen, Letty Judith Viorst, and the short story “Second Person” by VQ books editor Yona Zeldis McDonough 79. ers such as Thoughts New Directions inTreatment andRecovery about Their Married Lives Edited Edited by Columbia Henry Holt and Co., 1994 Meris Powell ’70 and Dale Atkins FICTION Tranquility Paul Russell Associate Grace Eating Disorders Men and Women Write Their Sea of Mothers and Daughters Cottin Pogrebin, Diana Greene ’69 Praeger, on by Faye Moskowitz Beacon, 1994 White Pine Press, 1993; Plume (paper), 1994 Edited Jewish Women Edited Professor of English by Barbara P. Kinoy University Press, 1994 A collection of essays written by clinicians who have practiced at the Wilkins Center for Eating Disorders in Greenwich, ConnectiThe center founded and is run by cut. was Diane Wilkins Mickley ’67, who also prepared the introduction and several chapters in this new volume. Dutton, 1994 Walk in a Lost Music Landscape Sheila McKee Barrett ’65 Poolbeg New Writing, 1994 (Knocksedan House, 123 Baldoyle Industrial Margaret Mills Plays Estate, Baldoyle, Dublin 13, Ireland) Margaret Aydelotte Mills A compact disk Cambria Master Recordings, 1994 Pedigree to Die For (Laurie Snyder ’74) Kensington Publishing Corp., 1994 A Melanie Travis Mystery Laurien Berenson Liebermann and Schonthal ’55 (Box 374, Lomita, CA 90717; 1094) Piano works by Lowell Liebermann Cambria CD - and Ruth Schonthal. Remember the Alibi Elizabeth Daniels Squire ’47 Three Poems Berkley, 1994 Song Set for Medium High by W.H. Davies Voice and Piano PHOTOGRAPHY Calhoun Raemsch ’47 (West Oneonta, NY 13861) Dorothy Rodeo Photographs, text by Louise Larocque Serpa ’46 Notes by Larry McMurty Aperture, 1994 An Alphabet of Angels Photographs and verse by Nancy Lecturer in English Scholastic Books, 1994 Willard Masked Culture The Qreenwich Village Halloween Parade Photographs by Mariette Pathy Allen ’62, Elijah Cobb, Harold Davis, Lauren Piperno, and Marilyn Stern. Text by Jack Kugelmass. Columbia University Press, 1994 Music Award Composer Art Clay, known to his Vassar-era friends as Keith A. Clay ’B9, writes from Basel, Switzerland that his adopted city has awarded him 30,000 Swiss franks ($25,000 U. S.). The award from the Music Commission of the City of Basel acknowledged Mr. Clay’s contributions to the city’s cultural life and is intended to allow him to work finan- cially unencumberedon severalcompositions. Mr. Clay, who majored in Germanat Vassar and studied across the music curriculum, ex“new plores paths” in live electronics, voice, comperformance, and video in his current Composer Art Clay ’B9 positions. PRACTICAL ADVICE Let Us Know The Lice-Buster Book What To Do When Your Child Comes Home with Head Lice Copeland ’68 Authentic Pictures, 1994 (89 Walnut Ave., Mill Valley, Send books, compact disks, tapes, and news of otherachievements to: Editor, Vassar Quar- Lennie CA 94941) terly, Alumnae House, 61 Raymond Ave., Poughkeepsie, NY 12601. 31 FROM THE AA VC hopes PRESIDENT AAVC ALU& MNAE ALUMNI VASSAR COLLEGE day be able one make available to For this president, returning to the AAVC board after three years is an exhilarating experience. Both AAVC and the college communicate with any member of the have launched major initiatives these past Vassar’s high years that aim to ensure AA VC staff Our Many Initiatives World Wide Web standing in the twenty-first century. The Campaign for Vassar inaugurated by the college last fall seeks to raise the financial that will support and resources the nurture college into the next millennium. of the Alumnae/i are crucial to the success campaign, certainly as givers, and also as volunteers with the development office and with AAVC. ization of Alumnae House as an on-campus home and program center for alumnae/i and others of the Vassar family, and the expansion of the ways implement with cate Getting One new programs and communi- new one in which we another. through technology. AAVC is moving headlong downloaded data for club and class officers. at this point, we information to tives in PC format, that will allow ity to On electronic hardware and software invited us are Macintosh users only able to official representa- anticipate changes we to to contact are AAVC. and Alumnae House on Track Under the direction of house committee chair Barbara Muhs Walker ’4B and cochair Rachel Greenfield Minkoff’77 (vice president for administration), committee responsibilities have been expanded in accord with AAVC’s new responsibility for expand this availabil- within the next year. larger scale, AAVC hopes to become more broadly accessible to alumnae/i with Internet connections through the development of a campus-wide information system (CWIS). AAVC a Current AAVC Staff InternetE-Mail Addresses advising of policy general manager on matters and marketing, and providing overall guidance on direction and goals. I am pleased to report that the house the are currently working jointly with the college to investigate ways of making AAVC and the college more accessible to alumnae/i through current technological advances. A recent development is the accessibility of While through electronic mail (some e-mail). Again, upcoming include overseeing house finances, electronic into the computer age. We provide on the overall management of Alumnae House. The committee’s duties now AAVC On-Line way is server. already changes in the AA VC office should make this quick communication with AAVC possible within the next year. Alumnae/i with questions, suggestions, or helpful advice on the implementation of are ... AAVC’s initiatives includethe revital- Joan Strashinsky Kjelleren ’7l to wide range of information through a Regardless of the which this project proceeds, pace at alumnae/i with Internet and Bitnet connections should anticipate being able to a ended its first fiscal year underAAVC management in sound financial condition. The college’s 1993/94 investment in budgeted at $98,164, and function income of together with room $115,420, covered operating expenses—such as utilities, service contracts, housekeeping, and maintenance (repaving the driveway, painting, roof repair, deep cleaning)—leaving a small surplus to be reinvested in the house, as agreed with the college. During the summer, house committee chairs Walker and Minkoff began working with Vice President for Development Kathleen Kavanagh to develop a list of capital projects for Alumnae House, which has been included among the Heritage Fund objectives in The Campaign for Alumnae House, Vassar. With the assistance of house Richard Floyd committee member Tom Associate director for Regional Activities have reviewed maintenance needs and FLOYD@Vaxsar.Vassar.edu house improvement priorities and have submitted a plan for $2.1 million. Their list Terri O’Shea Associate Director for Classes TEOSHEA@Vaxsar.Vassar.edu includes such elevator to Lingel ’74, they high-priority items as an make second- and third-floor bedrooms accessible to Bronwen Pardes Assistant Director for Recent Classes BRPARDES® Vaxsar.Vassar.edu alumnae/i, parents, and college guests who cannot climb the stairs, and air-conditioning for those who find the Hudson Willa Panvini Assistant Editor, Vassar Georgette Weir Editor, Vassar Quarterly Vassar.edu Other work proceeds apace. General Manager John J. Miglio, with the assistance of Vassar’s Director of Buildings and Grounds Services Don Wells, has overseen several major maintenance projects over the last several months: driveways were repaved, 32 VQ WINTER 1994 weather inhospitable. Quarterly WlPANVlNl@Vaxsar.Vassar.edu GEWEIR® V axsar. Valley’s summer a faulty sewer line replaced, cleaned, leaks mended, bathrooms painted, and Alumnae House signs gutters reinstalled College Early the at entrances Fulton and on avenues. AAVC Calendar New Year’s Eve Dinner and Dance in the year, Robert new Black, Alumnae House widower of Barbara Bell Black ’24, offered Contact: John]. Miglio, 914/437'? 150 Alumnae House several pieces of handsome furniture and carpets from his home in Cape Neddick, Maine. In making the gift, Mr. Black commented that he and his wife often stopped at Alumnae House and from South Carolina. way to furnishings admired the donate first- and second-floor to 1995 Midwinter Brunch Poughkeepsie Area Club, 914/297-5674 February 1, 1995 VQ deadline for Summer issue to came, of their furniture some They in the bedrooms and decided, when the time Tables, chests, chairs, in mid-August and were their on January 8, the house. and carpets arrived placed throughout by house rooms February 4, 1995 Parties for the ’9os Young alums, watch your mail for details. Contact: Bronwen Pardes, 914/437-5442 committee decorator Tania Goss Evans ’59. The optimism Alumnae House a feel about the future of we evident in was special committee June, when chaired by former AAVC President and Trustee Kay at Holman Langan ’46 joined forces with Professor Emerita of History Evalyn Clark ’24 to celebrate Alumnae House’s 70th birthday and 1924’s 70th reunion. A simple but elegant program was staged during Reunion Weekend. The icing on the cake was ’24’s to give its 70th reunion gift to decision Alumnae House. New Programs at the 1993 Fall Council meeting urged the association plan more programs that bring alumnae/i together in cross-generational groups. Alumnae House is the perfect site for such gatherings, and planning of such programs has begun. One scheduled to take place at to about the time this magazine was to be mailed was “Educate Your Palate,” Decem- popular wine-tasting (professor of Valley introduction an AAVC Board Regular 26 of Directors winter meeting at AlumnaeHouse March 3-5, 1995 LAQAVC Annual Conference to March 10-12, 1995 Film Weekend at AlumnaeHouse special AAVC program that will focus American independent producers of on fictional cinema, led by the chair of Vassar’s Department of Drama and Film and director of the Film Workshop James Steerman. (Ad on page 38.) Contact: 914/437-7100 A Club Leadership Workshop Seattle Hudson Contact: Richard Floyd, 914/437-5440 wines and foods. The second theme weekend is scheduled place March 10-12 and will focus on American independent producers of fictional cinema. Our guide will be professor James Steerman, chair of Vassar’s department of drama and film and director of the film workshop. [Details on page 38.] If there are subjects you would be interested in exploring through a weekend to February 25, Regional and local wine connoisseur Art Levin and Tampa Bay Club, 813/251-8456 March 17, 1995 instructor Morton Tavel physics) Florida International Museum Contact: Alumnae House Class and club representatives ber 2-4. It featured February 12, 1995 Tour of “Treasures of the Czar” exhibit take program at Alumnae House, send your suggestions to Seattle An AAVC regional symposium Floyd, 914/437-5440 Contact: Richard April Leadership Workshop Alumnae House Contact: Terri O’Shea, Donors Blanche Ferry Hooker 1894 and Queene Ferry Coonley 1896 intended Alumnae House to be a center of alumnae/i seeking a few activity. Whether you come days of escape from the workaday world or as a participant in a program exploring a will find a warm new to you, you subject at Vassar in the Northwest 914/437-5439 AAVC Executive Director Mary Gesek. welcome March 18, 1995 Hudson your house in the September 26-October 9, 1995 AAVC Trip to Russia Travel from Moscow Valley. —Joan StrashinskyKjelleren May 19-June 3, 1995 AAVC Trip to Turkey Faculty: Christine Mitchell Havelock, professor emerita of art Contact: AAVC office, 914/437-5436 ’7l to St. Petersburg on the waterways of the Czars. Contact: AAVC office, 914/437-5436 33 New Graduate AAVC NEWS The AAVC is pleased Joins Staff to Bronwen Pardes ’94 has the that announce joined Ms. Pardes served the association her junior and senior years as classes. during committee, Ms. Pardes transferred to Vassar junior from the University of Massaat Vassar, Ms. Pardes a For AAVC Trustee (single slate) Richard W. Roberts ’74 For AAVC Trustee (single slate) Stephen M. Hankins ’B5 For Treasurer served as Sarah North Hillyer ’56 Her a counselor and trainer for The peer counseling group and as a student fellow work has included stints summer administrator for the Usdan Center, summer day camp in the creative and an performing Ms. Pardes will work the ten most For a develop among undergraduates. ’59 For Director-at-Large (double slate) Margaret Cobb Hubard ’6B Susan Porter ’63 Get Inside Info about VC Members of AAVC’s Admission Commitwelcome calls from Directory-Large (double slate) Alison Church Hyde recent to Potential Legacy Students: tee alumnae/i and secondary school seniors. Committee members are: For Nominating Committee (double slate) Martine Vilas Conway ’53 Anne S. Hopkins ’52 For Nominating (double slate) Committee Kathleen Hubbs Ulman ’66 Benna Brecher Wilde ’67 Kevin Green ’B5, committee chair Independent Nominations Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Home phone: 212/242-3628 petition, such petition Jamshed Bharucha ’7B Hanover, New Hampshire Home phone: 603/643-8490 Office phone: 603/646-3181 Constance Leigh Proctor ’72 Seattle, Washington phone: 206/722-4626 Office phone: 206/623-7600 Home Barbara Aaron Rosston ’B4 Bethesda, Maryland Home phone: 301/229-7528 Ronald Schwartzman ’75 Fort Lee, New Jersey Office phone: 212/909-9500 Nominations may also be made by to be signed not fewer thanfifty ing at least ten by members, representclasses and five states, and filed with the executive director more than thirty days after not publication of the slate of the nominating committee. Such petition must be accompanied by the written permission of the candidate, sent to the executive and should be director, AAVC (Bylaws, 2). Article XIV, Section Nominations for 1996 The nominating committee will meet fall to select candidates for the 1996 next slate. Positions to be filled AAVC trustee, vice are president one for strategic planning, nominating commit- Bronwen Pardes ’94 AAVC Assistant Director for Recent Classes: Chair Susan McCallumBledsoe ’64 classes and among recent Advisory Committee (single slate) Ruth Ransom Wilson ’55 programming and volunteer interest current For Fund as arts. As the assistant director for classes, 914/437,5442 chair, house committee chair, one director-at-large, and three nominating committee members. Suggestions for all tee When you positions to dates, including supporting information, should be sent to: Nominating Committee, AAVC Office, Alumnae House, 61 Raymond Ave.,Poughkeepsie, NY 12601 by January 15. plan your trip to Vassar, be sure let Bronwen Pardes know the date and time and begin your visit at Alumnae House. To contact directly, 1994 this spring: (single slate) and house intern for transfer students. 34 VQ WINTER of chusetts. While Listening Center, a for Vassar students, Bronwen Pardes ’94 Nominating Committee of AAVC and proposes the following slate candidates to be voted upon by ballot met AAVC as working closely with her predecessor, Amy Gardiner ’9O, who left the association in August to pursue graduate studies. A psychology major who served as cochair for that department’s major’s student intern, as The has the staff assistant director for recent new AAVC Nominations the Office of Admission call 1-800/827-7270. are invited. Names of candi- Alabama Admission Chair Ross M. Goodman ’79 3600 Menendez Drive Pensacola, FL 32503-3133 H 904/434-8197 Alaska GET IN President Elizabeth Donelson Davis ’B4 TOUCH (Mrs.) 2410 Sebring Circle Anchorage, AK 99516-1954 H 907/345-8238 1994-1995 Admission Chair A Directory of Vassar Clubs Bettyrae Fedje Easley ’7B (Ms.) 4921 Sportsman Drive Anchorage, AK 99502-4193 H 907/248-2025 Worldwide Arizona Including club presidents and admission chairs Phoenix President Elizabeth Dawson Cullen ’69 (Mrs. David J.) 6040 East Calle Rosa Scottsdale, AZ 85251-4221 H 602/947-0929 O 602/852-2900 Admission Co-Chairs Lois Palestine Savage ’6B 3002 East Manor Drive Phoenix, AZ 85014 H 602/266-6945 O 602/956-7877 and Deborah Edge Abele ’73(Ms.) 3116 North 47th Street Phoenix, AZ 85018-6527 H 602/224-5244 Tucson President Joyce Goldwyn Becker ’6l (Mrs. William) 6290 East Calle Alta Vista Tucson, AZ 85715-3103 H 602/885-1481 Admission Chair Erica P. Wolf’72 (Dr.) 13110 East Placita Las Avenas Tucson, AZ 85749-9211 H 602/760-0067 Mary G. Florendo ’B5 160 Maple Avenue Watsonville, CA 95076 H 408/724-4412 San Diego President K. Lynn Kivisild Mulhem’79 3942 Caminito Del Mar Cove San Diego, CA 92130 H 619/277-6780 O 619/259-4797 Admission Co-Chairs Kim Harley ’92 8650 Via Mallorca, Apt. E Lajolla, CA 92037 H 619/458-9773 and Chris Fry ’93 8650 Via Mallorca, Apt. E Lajolla, CA 92037 H 619/458-9773 (Mrs. William) 7568 North Valentine Avenue Fresno, CA 93711-0128 H 209/435-3231 O 209/261-4158 (Mid-Fairfield) Admission Co-Chairs Jennifer E. Bojonell ’B6 (Ms.) 21 Leonard Street Stamford, CT 06906 H 203/359-0204 O 203/966-3504 and Peter B. Korzenik ’B2 70 Strawberry Hill Ave., #2E 510/652-7032 O 415/896-0666 Fax 415/849-2134 Admission Chair Barbara Currier Bell ’63 (Ms.) 160 Harbor Road Southport, CT 06490 (East Bay) H (Upper Fairfield) 203/259-7724 Admission Chair O 301/299-4855 Admission Chair Jennifer B. Bonney (Ms.) ’B5 2737 Devonshire Place NW #lOB Washington, DC 20008 H 202/332-0101 O 202/626-4780 Florida CentralFlorida President Open Admission Co-Chairs Heidi Rose Flinchbaugh’56 4855 Big Oaks Lane Orlando, FL 32806 H 407/859-4855 and Ronald M. Schirtzer ’B9 945 South Ridge Trail Altamonte Springs, FL 327141287 H 407/290-2945 Gainesville Admission Co-Chairs Margery Leith Maines ’B2 O 904/334-2197 and Mark Theodoropoulos ’76 2708 Mabel Street Hartford President Berkeley, CA 94702-2330 H 510/848-4806 Fassett Sudell ’73 (Ms.) 164 South Road Farmington, CT 06032-2552 245 North Lake Avenue Lake Butler, FL 32054-1215 H O 904/496-2832 (San Francisco) Admission Chair Chris Cosgrove ’9l 3354 24th Street San Francisco, CA 94110 H 415/647-8935 Santa Barbara & the Tri Counties President Marion McKinney Ramstad ’45 (Mrs.) 4452 Via Esperanza Santa Barbara, CA 931102342 H 805/964-7284 Bonnie 203/678-1392 O 203/827-5980 John E. H Maines IV ’BO 904/496-1673 The Gulf Stream Admission Chair Charlotte E. Loomis ’B7 1641 Durham Road (Position Open) Naples Guilford, CT 06437-1639 H 203/496-0387 O 203/280-3761 President CatharineLittle Motley ’42 New Haven President Susan Ross Aube ’74 (Ms.) 5 Wildwood Drive Branford, CT 06405-3973 H 203/483-1015 Naples, FL (Mrs.) 225 H Fifth Avenue S #2Ol 33940-6554 813/263-7760 Alternate Address PO Box 448, Doll Road North Haven, ME 04853-0448 H 207/867-2053 O 203/789-1818 Admission Chair Leslie Rogers Steinmetz ’45-4 Southern California President Linda Civitello’7l (Ms.) 3741 jasmine Avenue #2 Los Angeles, CA 90034 H 310/202-7199 O 213/620-1555 Colorado Fresno Admission Chair Barbara Blum Dahl ’69 186 Milbank Avenue Greenwich, CT 06830-6627 H 203/869-9685 O 203/853-2000 H (Ms.) California Tammy L. Kien ’B5 (Ms.) Stamford, CT 06902-2633 H 203/348-6507 O 203/967-6000 2801 Ben Lomond Santa Barbara, CA 931052204 H 805/687-5031 Admission Co-Chair Josiah S. McCalman ’BB 27 Glenmere Little Rock, AR 72204 H 501/562-7797 (Greenwich) Admission Chair San Francisco Bay Area President Stephen M. Hankins ’B5 6680 Pineneedle Drive Oakland, CA 94611 Arkansas and Book Sale/DonationInformation Donna Stackman D.C. Club: H 203/637-2860 President and Admission CoChair G. Lorene Lloyd Patterson ’54 (Mrs. James) 27 Wingate Drive Little Rock, AR 72205-2540 H 501/225-4970 President Pamela Costello Speer’Bl (Ms.) 22 Sunset Road Old Greenwich, CT 06870 President Richard Komar Replin ’75 490 Franklin Street Denver, CO 80218-4009 H 303/333-0112 O 303/331-3232 MontereyBay Admission Chair Sara-Jane Mermelstein Cohen ’65 3120 Sixth Street Admission Co-Chairs Carla L. Gomez ’B5 740 30th Avenue #l5 Boulder, CO 80304-2508 H 303/444-0962 O 303/444-0964 Santa Cruz, CA 95062 H 408/475-4994 O 408/426-4357 and Connecticut Fairfield County Clubs (Includes Greenwich, Mid and Upper Fairfield) Admission Chair Frances Thompson Clark ’53 (Mrs.) 320 Audubon Court New Haven, CT 06510-1203 H 203/772-4455 O 203/772-4455 London Admission Chair Lee Davis Wilcox Kneerim ’47 New (Mrs. Arthur) 3 Gold Street Stonington, CT 06378-1307 H 203/535-2045 O 203/447-7566 Delaware President Nancy Lowe Diver ’57 (Mrs. Arthur Gordon) 1004 Overbrook Road Wilmington, DE 19807-2236 H 302/656-2077 Prospective Students Chair Lori Ingersoll Gaylord ’76 2850 Gulf Shore Blvd. #2OB Naples, FL 33940 H 813/649-5731 O 813/263-4555 North Florida Patricia Tubbs Greason ’6l 3890 Brampton Island Court North Jacksonville,FL 32224-7609 H 904/223-3073 Admission Co-Chairs Alison A. Denis ’Bl (Ms.) 104 Troon Point Lane Ponte Vedra Beach, FL 320822065 H 904/285-0252 O 904/443-8142 and David Harshbarger ’BB Jill W. Piro-Harshbarger ’BB 7932 Southside Blvd. #9Ol Jacksonville, FL 32256-7954 H 904/645-5031 Admission Chair (Position Open) District of Columbia Washington, DC President Amanda B. Pedersen ’66 (Ms.) 3504 Lowell Street NW Washington, DC 20016-5025 H 202/966-5508 O 301/443-1306 Pensacola Admission Chair Ross M. Goodman ’79 3600 Menendez Drive Pensacola, FL 32503-3133 H 904/434-8197 O 904/434-8197 35 (Ms.) 3649 North Bosworth Avenue Chicago, IL 60613 Virginia Morton Lange ’52 (Mrs. Peter W.) Gulf Haven 26 5860 Midnight Pass Road Sarasota, FL 34242-2132 H 813/349-3862 Admission Co-Chairs ’6B (Mrs.) Susan Hord Horton 7043 Wild Horse Circle H O 312/935-0300 312/337-2400 Admission Co-Chairs Anne M. Borchert ’B5 (Ms.) 5496 South Hyde Park Boulevard #1203 Chicago, IL 60615-5832 H O H and Monica Vachher ’77 (Ms.) 233 East Walton Street #2 Chicago, IL 60611-1526 813/923-7350 and Kathryn Swain ’7B 4662 Gleason Avenue Sarasota, FL 34242 H 813/349-4593 South Florida President Sandra Jean Glorian ’76 (Ms.) 820 NE 72nd Terrace Miami, FL 33138-5263 H 305/759-1075 Admission Chair Manuel L. Dobrinsky ’B5 c/o Holland & Knight 701 Brickell Avenue Miami, FL 33131 O 305/374-8500 H Maine Steering Committee Chair Nancy S. Gaylord ’79 (Ms.) 100 Highland Avenue Auburn, ME 04210-4726 H 207/784-9336 O 207/777-8789 312/288-1706 312/702-7562 Sarasota, FL 34241-9609 Admission Co-Chairs Anna (Nan) Rearick Allen ’35 (Mrs. Joseph W.) 312/944-2370 Box 167 Mills Point Road Brooksville, ME 04617 Indiana H President Diana Hartley Mutz ’B5 (Ms.) 211 West 47th Street Indianapolis, IN 46208-3509 H 317/257-8948 and David N. Theriault ’B3 15 Hanson Street Winthrop, ME 04364 H 207/377-2454 lowa Area Representative Kathryn A. LaMair Peverill (Mrs. William) ’53 4225 Greenwood Drive Des Moines, IA 50312 Kansas Rosalind Ebersbach Murray (Mrs. HughV.) ’3O Harbour House #BlO 2401 Bayshore Boulevard Tampa, FL 33629-7306 H 813/251-8456 Admission Co-Chairs (Hillsborough & Pinnelas Counties) Mary Lechner Ellis ’7B 4921 Saint Croix Drive Tampa, FL 33629 H 813/286-2639 and Sandra Burt Sullivan ’65 (Mrs. Dennis R.) 8345 Boca Ciega Drive Saint Petersburg Beach, FL 33706-1522 H 813/360-2917 President Todd S. Mann ’75 1797 Meadowdale Avenue Atlanta, GA 30306 404/872-4434 O 404/279-4419 Fax 404/525-6906 H Admission Chair 1032 Olathe, KS 66061 H 913/888-1140 Kentucky Central Kentucky President Louise Fallon Bryans ’5O (Mrs. John T.) 1158 Athenia Drive Lexington, KY 40504-3006 606/277-2900 R. Fichtner ’9l Clifton Road NE Atlanta, GA 30307-1228 H 404/373-4850 President Jill Chen Loui ’76 (Mrs.) 4945 Mana Place Honolulu, HI 96816 H 808/735-8147 O 808/524-7400 Admission Chair Deane Waters Wentworth ’63 (Mrs. Gordon C.) 47-641 Nukupu’uStreet Kaneohe, HI 96744-5510 H 808/239-4422 O 808/536-4461 Illinois Randolph Hollingsworth ’79 (Ms.) 1292 Magwood Park Lexington, KY 40517 H 606/271-3017 Lynn D. Osborne ’77 (Ms.) 512 Pyke Road Lexington, KY 40504 H 606/231-7241 Louisville President and Admission CoChair Barbara Waterfill Beard ’69 (Mrs. W. Robinson) 541 Barberry Lane Louisville, KY 40206-2976 H 502/896-4187 Admission Co-Chair Peter J. Herbener ’B3 735 Fairhill Drive Louisville, KY 40207-1303 H 502/895-1827 O 502/568-7952 Southeastern Acting President and Admissions Chair Scot Arnold ’B3 812 Henry Street Ann Arbor, MI 48104 H 313/741-4290 O 313/845-4848 Fax 313/845-3393 Western Michigan President Sue Oberlin Conway ’6B 15490 Linn Court Spring Lake, MI 49456-1547 Admission Chair Clara Fear Hall ’5l (Mrs. Randall C.) 110 Gorsuch Road Timonium, MD 21093-4318 H 410/252-1837 Essex Massachusetts and 5841 County ’45 3261 Lake Drive SE Grand Rapids, MI 49506-4320 H 616/949-4427 O 201/345-5748 H ’62 612/938-2339 Admission Co-Chairs Sarah L. Jelley (Ms.) ’Bl 64 West Delos Street H (Mrs. Joel S.) 65 Palomino Drive Pittsfield, MA 01201 H 413/447-7528 President Charlotte Crocker Cleveland ’4B (Mrs.) 7 Russell Street #1 Cambridge, MA 02140-1313 H 617/547-0971 O 617/491-5757 612/225-9056 O 612/332-6966 and David B. Littlefield ’B9 233 Oak Grove Street #304 Minneapolis, MN 55403-3340 H 612/871-6808 O 612/332-7563 Missouri/Kansas Kansas City President Katharine MarshallKatz ’BO 8006 West 101st Terrace Overland Park, KS 66212 H 913/383-2214 O 913/294-4361 H 201/239-5536 Prospective Students Chair Lisa Rosa Bellani ’Bl (Ms.) 19 Slope Drive Dover, NJ 07801 H 201/989-0819 O 201/948-1724 Jersey Hills Co-Presidents Julie Kautz Guerard ’76 123 Washington Avenue Chatham, NJ 07928-1859 H 201/635-3712 and Carolyn Peck Rutan ’7l (Ms.) 17 Crossgates Road Madison, NJ 07940 H 201/301-1893 Admission Chair Barbara Koller Huston Brook Road 8 Canoe Short Hills, NJ 07078 H 201/467-0151 New Jersey Shore President ShirleyGrande Carpenter ’57 (Mrs. JamesW.) 24 Riverside Drive Rumson, NJ 07760 H 908/842-2594 Fax Ulman ’66 17 Elm Street Admission Chair Admission Chair (Position Open) Cynthia Spera Neff (Mrs. Robert C.) ’B5 St. Louis President Davis L. Allen ’75 621 Clark Avenue Saint Louis, MO 63119 142 South Street #6-C Red Bank, NJ 07701 H Northern New Jersey President Mark F. Kluger ’B4 35 Gladding Road Boxford, MA 01921-2321 H 508/887-2018 O 508/887-6040 and Joan L. Horgan ’B6 (Ms.) 39 Marshall Street Medford, MA 02155-4318 H 617-396-9892 913/294-4910 314/962-8710 314/214-3559 FAX 617/868-3450 Pioneer Valley President and Admission Chair Richard LePage Teller ’74 10 Glendale Street Easthampton, MA 01027-2005 413/527-0369 Christopher A. Shustak H Admission Chair Christine Paska Galica ’75 20 Timber Lane O 314/721-5555 and Sanford B. Scott ’B2 1106 South Spoede Road Saint Louis, MO 63131-2611 O 314/466-0572 314/991-3902 ’B3 PC Box 383 (Mrs. Michael) Admission Co-Chairs Sally Strassner Scott (Mrs. Sanford B.) ’B3 ’72 (Ms.) Admission Co-Chairs Kathleen (Kathy) Hubbs Holden, MA 01520-0383 H 508/829-9423 O 508/829-9423 Gretchen Smelzer Coffman ’64 x President Ruth Schuster Manos Saint Paul, MN 55107 Berkshire County Admission Chair Carol Selkowitz Greenberg ’56 504/246-8004 O 504/528-7195 504/288-3803 609/844-0767 O 800/842-2733 56 Hillsdale Road Cedar Grove, NJ 07009-2008 Minnesota/Dakotas Worcester H ’Bl O 201/321-8012 and David A. Dufresne ’Bl 44 Green Avenue Lawrenceville,NJ 08648 Admission Chair Margaret Sanderson Bradshaw ’47 (Mrs. Conrad A.) President Nancy Ann Dunston Dorris (Mrs. Albert F.) 5721 View Lane Edina, MN 55436-1120 President President Jersey Central Co-Presidents Christina Bachelder Dufresne (Mrs. Christos) 16429 Falls Road Aloha M. Cade ’76 (Ms.) Drive 5831 Louis Prima West New Orleans, LA 70128 Admission Co-Chairs Valera Theresa Francis’7s (Ms.)) New H 616/459-6121 Upperco, MD 21155 H 410/239-3442 PrpdnprLt H 402/551-7079 O 402/556-3772 Michigan O Louisiana 3638 Virgil Boulevard New Orleans, LA 70122 1994 H (Ms.) H Chicago 36 VQ WINTER Kimberly H 616/842-6043 President Carol Gram Washbume ’BO O Hawaii A. Skutt ’BO (Ms.) Road 700 Fairacres Omaha, NE 68132-1835 Holden, MA 01520 H 508/852-8135 O 508/799-7308 Boston Admission Co-Chairs and Georgia Aaron Admission Chair Carol Rivera Selvey ’77 (Ms.) 18735 West 116th Street H 207/326-4576 Maryland H 515/279-2318 Tampa Bay President A. Orticke ’77 (Ms.) 1419 North Prieur Street New Orleans, LA 70116 H 504/947-5459 O 504/832-6577 Kristine Sarasota President H 908/576-8595 O 201/622-4444 Caldwell, NJ 07006 O 201/642-5953 Fax 201/642-4236 Admission Chair Steven D. Freesman ’B6 30 Johnson Court Closter, NJ 07624 H 201/768-4051 O 201/461-8183 Nebraska Admission Co-Chairs New Mexico Emily Goodwin Kemp (Mrs. Philip S.) ’5l 740 North Happy Hollow Admission Chair Boulevard Omaha, NE 68132-2121 H 402/558-3062 and ’52 Georgia Sims Carson 978 Indian Ridge Road Santa Fe, NM 87501 H 505/982-9147 Wendy Halpin Hallows ’B4 New York Long Island 74 Lattimore President Judith A. Whitbeck ’65(Dr.) 149 South Country Road East Patchogue, NY 117725412 H 516/475-0928 Admission Co-Chairs Robin Rosen Kluger ’79 (Ms.) 28 Bayview Avenue Great Neck, NY 11020-2984 H 516/482-3613 and Rochelle MitlakFrei ’B4 (Mrs.) 8 Chatham Place Dix Hills, NY 11746 H 516/499-5062 O 516/484-1545 Road (Position Open) Rochester, NY 14620 H 716/442-0573 Toledo President Syracuse Kimberly (Mrs. Douglas W., Sr.) Perrysburg, OH 43551 H 419/874-1225 206 Dorchester Road Syracuse, NY 13219-1428 H 315/488-8549 Oklahoma Westchester President (Position Open) 10804- 2404 212/866-6527 O 718/875-0710x404 H and Abby Tannenbaum ’B6 (Ms.) 15 Sheridan Square #IG New York, NY 10014-3514 H 212/989-7114 O 212/514-5534 Fax 212/514-5538 Northern New York Admission Chair Judith Levine Lempert ’59 H 914/633-0492 Western New York President Marilyn Dubin Kaplan ’6O (Mrs.) 24 Stonewood Drive East Amherst, NY 14051 H 716/689-5881 O 716/645-3312 19 Pheasant Lane Sharon J. Fine ’B4 (Ms.) 4609-1 Chestnut Ridge Road Amherst, NY 14228-3302 H 716/689-2783 O 716/634-0677 Plattsburgh Admission Chair Angela Marvin Scaglione ’B3 Mitchell HillRoad Lewis, NY 12950 H 518/873-6713 Poughkeepsie, Inc. President Barbara W. Yanavage ’B4 Drive 17 Monroe Poughkeepsie, NY 12601 H 914/297-5674 O 914/471-7301 Admission Chair Carney Heavey O’Brien ’B9 20 Whitehouse Avenue Poughkeepsie, NY 12601-4940 H 914/485-7482 Rochester President Elizabeth Pratt Stewart ’5O (Mrs. William D.) 31 Shire Oaks Drive Pittsford, NY 14534 H 716/586-7396 Admission Co-Chairs Laura E. Ettinger ’B9 72 Raleigh Street Rochester, NY 14620 H 716/442-0348 and Cincinnati President and Admission CoChair Patricia Adair Culp ’69 (Mrs. William S.) 2771 Walsh Road Cincinnati, OH 45208-3428 H 513/321-4230 513/398-9515 O 513/865-1953 President Anne Ward Guinan ’B6 4425 Twin Post Road Box Dallas, TX 75244-6746 H 214/239-6578 O 214/220-4300 575 Ligonier, PA 15658 H 412/238-6573 O 412/622-1320 Fax 412/622-3443 East 6701 North Rhode Island 2222 Avenue H H 401/751-7506 Alternate Address: 568 Post Road Wakefield, RI 02879 H 401/789-8117 Sheryl S. Sullivan ’72 1704 Coventry Lane Oklahoma City, OK 73120 H 405/848-3869 (Mrs. Wayne) 20 Devon Court Greenwich, RI 02818401/884-6707 Acting President Margaret Townsend Downward ’36 Sea Pines Plantation 92 Lawton Road Hilton Head, SC 29928 H 803/671-2004 Oregon President Thomas L. Webb ’B7 1812 NW Flanders #4l Portland, OR 97209-2051 H 503/221-0400 O 503/221-0400 Admission Chair Alison Lee Summey ’79 (Mrs. Kenzil) 141 Silver Lake Circle Columbia, SC 29212-2428 H 803/732-2517 O 803/734-2145 Admission Chair Stephen M. Aaron ’BB 12143 SW 34th Avenue Portland, OR 97219-8276 H 503/222-9164 O 503/255-4900 Pennsylvania Central PA-State College Admission Chair Dana Buckalew Zuhlke ’B5 Tennessee Knoxville Admission Chair Maureen A. Hays ’BB University of Tennessee 114 Charlotte Street Matilda, PA 16870-9541 H 814/692-7266 Port 717/599-5959 O 717/763-7811 44122 216/751-1030 Admission Chair Susan Ratcliffe Sour ’62 (Mrs. Peter K.) 11000 ChippewaRoad Brecksville, OH 44141-2153 252 South Stadium Knoxville, TN 37996 H 615/273-4157 O 615/273-4157 (Ms.) RD 3 Memphis President Perre MacFarland Magness ’62 (Mrs. B. Percy, Jr.) 248 East Chickasaw Parkway Memphis, TN 38111-2536 H 901/327-6236 Admission Chair Elizabeth Nelson Smith ’52 (Mrs. Herbert, Jr.) Philadelphia 6562 Bramble Cove Memphis, TN 38119-5533 President H 901/754-6003 Emily Barry Marston ’7O (Ms.) 209 South 24th Street Philadelphia, PA 19103-5550 H 215/557-9445 O 215/545-5323 Admission Chair Teresa W. Doyle ’B5 (Ms.) 915 Kirkwood Avenue Admission Co-Chairs Rosemarie Griesmer ’B9 340 Media Station Road #3IBC Media, PA 19063-4742 H 215/660-9236 Admission Co-Chairs Lara A. Fischraan ’93 4626 North Lindhurst Avenue Dallas, TX 75229 H 214/691-4319 O 817/334-7570 and Catherine Whitmarsh Thompson ’93 1858 Place One Lane Garland, TX 75042 H 214/231-0138 O 214/684-7529 Houston Admission Chair Jeanie Stephan Charness ’B2 South Carolina 405/478-0189 and H Cleveland President Dr. Amelia E. Dubaniewicz ’74 20900 Halburton Road 216/838-4180 Dallas/Fort Worth Margaret Bell Woodwell ’57 (Mrs. William H.) 116 Hermitage School Road (Mrs. Ruprecht) Admission Chair Helen McVey Colvin ’64 (Ms.) 333 Hidden ValleyRoad Harrisburg, PA 17112-9279 H H President and Admission Chair H 7939 (Ms.) Pittsburgh West Oklahoma Admission Co-Chairs Vicki Miles-LaGrange ’74 6600 NE 63rd Street Oklahoma City, OK 731419637 H 405/771-3132 O 405/524-1800 and Elizabeth Mygatt Nitschke ’63 Harrisburg Admission Co-Chair Patrick G. Toner ’Bl 5223 Chapel Lane Mason, OH 45040 O 2804 Allison Drive Austin, TX 78741-7311 H 512/329-8948 Anthropology Department Ohio Shaker Heights, OH H 216/921-5022 H 215/440-8016 O 215/686-5261 President Emily Stone Cocroft ’39 (Mrs. Mason F.) 7 Barnes Street Providence, RI 02906-1516 Admission Chair North Carolina Delmar, NY 12054 H 518/439-6747 Admission Chair Susan L. Black Thickett ’B6 Oklahoma City, OK 73111- President Samantha Gordon Howland ’B7 4500 Gwynnebrook Circle Raleigh, NC 27612 H 919/781-6502 O 919/851-8983 ext. 153 (Mrs. Neil) R. Laver ’B7 262 South Fourth Street #3F Philadelphia, PA 19106 Rhode Island Oklahoma Admission Chair 10 David Drive Rochelle, NY 2043 Westmeyer Street Toledo, OH 43614-4230 H 419/382-6416 East Lisa Keller ’73 (Ms.) 93 Skyview Lane New Rochelle, NY 10804 H 914/636-7924 New Admission Co-Chairs Jane L. Bender ’67 (Ms.) 784 Columbus Avenue #4T New York, NY 10025-5917 Admission Chair Jenny Rheinfrank Barthold ’6l 315/437-1899 Fax 315/458-8292 (Ms.) New York, NY 10016-2555 NY Club Office: 212/697-7499 East (Ms.) Admission Chair Deborah Boxer Minchin ’74 Executive Administrator MonaLober (Mrs.) 24 East 39th Street 216 Admission Chair Elizabeth Strang Crockett ’79 1359 Route 91 Fabius, NY 13063 H 315/683-5567 H 718/803-3803 O 212/908-4540 Fax 212/908-4701 A. Swirbul ’79 (Ms.) Second Street President Barbara Pope Peckham ’5O O New York, Inc. President Christopher J. Moran ’B2 33-51 80th Street #42 Jackson Heights, NY 113724508 Miriam Columbus President Nashville Nashville, TN 37204-2603 H 615/297-2174 Texas Austin President President and Admission Chair Liza Yusuf Heintz ’79 3623 Drummond Street Houston, TX 77025 H San 713/669-1183 Antonio Admission Chair Laura ParkerDersh ’B7 117 Blue Bonnet Boulevard San Antonio, TX 78209-4666 H 210/828-5574 South Texas Acting President and Admission Chair Charlotte Prendergast Yochem ’B3 (Mrs.) 502 Elizabeth Street Corpus Christi, TX 78404 H 512/883-8901 Utah Admission Chair Max B. Valerio ’9l 9863 South 2240th E Sandy, UT 84092 H 801/942-1093 Vermont/ New Hampshire Steering Committee Chair Susan Deßevoise Wright ’69 (Mrs. James) 7 Quail Drive Etna, NH 03750 H 603/643-8230 0 603/646-2243 (New Hampshire) Admission Chair Deborah Bacon Nelson ’75 1 Lakeview Drive Hanover, NH 03755 H 603/448-5068 O 603/646-2244 (Vermont) Admission Co-Chairs Jonathan F. Plehn ’73 (MD) RR 1 Box 406 C Norwich, VT 05055-9776 H 802/649-2352 O 603/650-6154 and Barbara Weinstein LeWinter ’66 (Mrs. Martin M.) 29 Pheasant Way South Burlington, VT 05403 H 802/863-0240 O 802/828-1370 (Position Open) 37 Wyoming Hong Kong Central Virginia (Richmond) President Carol Sutherland Keenan ’6O Admission Chair Admission Chair (Mrs. Joseph H.) 102 Penshurst Road Windsor Farms Richmond, VA 23221-3270 Box 1222 Virginia H Margaret Peterson Hotchkiss ’69 (Mrs. 8.W., Jr.) Saratoga, WY 82331 H 307/326-9617 O 307/326-9617 J. Craig Chapman’BO Salomon Brothers Hong Kong LTD Three Exchange Sq., 21st Floor Hong Kong O 011-852/841-8060 804/358-9647 FOREIGN Admission Chair Sandra Hume Bailey ’76 (Mrs. L.R.) 9012 Brieryle Road Richmond, VA 23229-7735 H 804/741-9522 O 804/784-0388 Charlottesville President Robin Robissa Halsey ’73 (Ms.) 2320 Cumberland Road Charlottesville, VA H 804/296-8513 22901 VirginiaBeach Admission Chair Hope Christopoulos Mihalap ’56 (Mrs. Leonid) 1316 Gray don Avenue Norfolk, VA 23507-1009 H 804/623-0429 O 804/623-0429 Israel Australia Admission Chair Sandra Burt McGrath ’5B (Mrs. Rivkah) (Ms.) 12 Douglas Parade Dover Heights Sydney, NSW 2030 Jerusalem, Australia Japan PC H H 001-61-2/371-9797 Box Ontario President Robert Renaud ’76 10 Preston Place Toronto, Ontario M4N 259 President Matsumoto A Weekend Maki ’57 (Mrs. Fumihiko) 5-16-22 Higashi Gotanda Shinagawa-Ku Tokyo, 141 Japan H 011-81-33/441-8038 Exploration of American Independent Canada 416/480-2467 Admission Chair O 416/513-7977 (Position Open) Admission Chair Mexico (Position Open) Admission Chair Caribbean Tamayo-Cole ’79 Foote, Cone, and Belding Mazaryk 61 H Filmmakers 104 2 March 1995 Moira Interviewer Janet Rose Fuchs ’62 (Mrs.) 21 Walnut Hills Circle Williamsburg, VA 23185-3425 H 804/229-0852 O 804/565-0373 Washington State President George B. Gabriel ’9O 906 19th Avenue East Seattle, WA 98112 H 206/328-6132 O 206/461-8524 Admission Chair H England London President Jill Brinnon Bace ’72 (Mrs.) 45 Downshire Hill London, NW3 INU England UK H 011-44-71/435-3761 Singapore/Malaysia Admission Co-Chairs Thomas L. Potzman ’Bl 11 Whitchurch Road Singapore, 1543 H 011-65-13/472-4681 O 011-65-13/294-3138 151 G Kings Road Singapore, 1026 H 011-65-13/473-3644 O 011-65-13/320-0555 President Stanmore Middlesex, HA7 IPN England UK H 011-44-81/952-8528 O 011-44-71/487-5966 and William A. Plapinger ’74 8 Essex Villas (Position Open) London, 87BN W England Admission Co-Chairs Audrey Schwartz Home ’55 (Mrs. Fred M.) PatriciaDrive Wheeling, WV 26003 H 304/242-3494 O 304/232-2110 and Christina M. Humway ’B3(Ms.) 10 Linden Avenue Wheeling, WV 26003 H 304/242-8188 UK H 011-44-71/937-3152 0 011-44-71/265-6500 Admission Co-Chair Carla E. Slawson ’B6 (Ms.) 1610 North Prospect Avenue #BO3 Milwaukee, WI 53202-2448 H 414/224-0887 O 414/276-8842 Harris J. Vertlieb ’Bl 15-25 Farrer Court Spain Admission Chair Marilyn GalushaFarreras ’6l (Mrs.) Escorzoneras 6 Los Alamos de Bularas Pozuelo 28224 Madrid, France President (Ms.) Le Mas Fleurie 26 Ch Des Nielles Cap d’Antibes 06600 Alpes Maritimes France H 011-33-339/361-3002 Admission Chair Margaret Frankston ’7O (Miss) 1 rue Boulard 75014 Paris, hToI 1-33-14/321-5511 Germany Admission Chair Susan Vakili Ballenweg ’9l (Mrs.) Schollstrasse 10 69469 Weinheim, Germany H 011-962/016-2306 years have the seen emergence of a strong and vital group of independent American filmmakers. Come explore the works of people like Joel Coen, Martha Coolidge, Quentin Tarantino, Nancy Savoca, Ang Lee, and many more while you enjoy the food and comfort of Alumnae House. During the weekend, we will screen unique and diverse films. In four addition, the phenomenon of independentfeature films, including the problems of finance and distribution, will be examined as it relates to the traditional dominated American film Costs will include Thailand Admission Co-Chairs Vichada Vongsiridej ’77 (Ms.) 19/18 Sithakarn Building Chidlom Road Bangkok, 10330 Thailand H 011-66-2/252-3716 O 011-66-2/213-2441 and Elaine Toy Assarat ’62 (Mrs. Suthi) Promsuk Condominiums #BC 45 Sukhumvit Road SOI 26 Bangkok, 10110 Thailand Hollywoodindustry. overnight accommo- dations, meals, the discussion programs, and the movies. Popcorn For about this information get your name future events, will be free. on our and event mailing West Africa Admission Chair Nancy Wills Keteku (Ms.) ’72 Box 9761 Airport PC Accra, Ghana to list for call Alumnae House at 914/437-7100 or write to Alumnae House, 61 Raymond Ave., H 233-21/077-3699 1994 The last twenty Spain H 011-34-1/715-1332 Joan Zimmerman Shore ’56 Wisconsin President and Admission CoChair Katherine Wilcox Lambert ’75 4667 North Wilshire Road Whitefish Bay, WI 53211-1261 H 414/962-9237 Alumnae House Special Event 011-52-5/604-4636 and Virginia an 11560 Mexico (Position Open) Admission Co-Chairs Seamus Ross ’79 (Dr.) 6 Thistlecroft Gardens Admission Chair Christopher H. Martin’9o 80 South Jackson Street #205 Seattle, WA 98104 H 206/233-9855 O 206/223-6414 38 VQ WINTER Visions 4353 011-972-2/263-6602 Misao Canada Williamsburg West Independent President Sara Duker Fishman ’67 Poughkeepsie, NY 12601. Shuttlebus PERSON, PLACE & THING Vassar faculty, are students, alumnae/i, invited to submit items to and staff PP&T. There is charge for this bulletin board service; publication is as space permits. Submissions should be typed and 75 words or less; they may be edited for length and style. Deadlines are three months in advance of each issue. Please that AAVC cannot note verify the terms of ads no that are or walk to town center. Fantastic winter skiing, beautifulsummer hiking, championship golf, horseback riding. Winter: $900/ week. Summer: $700/week. Please contact Norma Cummings ’55, 9 Pinecroft, St. George’sRd., Weybridge, Surrey,KT13 OEN, England. Phone: London, 0932-844790. bedrooms or with den andformal dining. (Mrs. Daniel) Tellep, 4323 Park Vicente, Calabasas, CA 91302; or call weekdays 818/876-2610. Address Fripp, two reply to: Patricia South Carolina.Three-bedroom, two- bath house Adoption: Vassar alumnaand husbandseeking to adopt a baby. We are an affectionate couple with a five-year-old daughter. We offer a lifetime full of stability, security, educational opportunities, beach vacations, and piano lessons. Medical/legal costs paid. Please unrelated to AAVC activities. year beginning January. Wouldlike three- one call Ellen and Seth collect; 301/593-0674. overlooking marshes at private island nature refuge near scenic Beaufort, SC. One block to beach. Site of filming for Prince of Tides, Forrest Gump, and new Walt Disney film. Available in winter for monthlyrentals; for weekly rentals. For informain summer tion call write: Erin Beacham Scott or 3380 Carlton Rd., Gumming, ’66, GA 30131; 404/889-6757. Wanted: Set of Vassar commemorative plates, probably made by Wedgwood, complete or incomplete. Please call Mary Ellen Aloia Gray ’7O at 201/744-9063 (home) or 908/ 321-2780 (office). Apartment for in Hawaii: Deluxe rent two- bedroom apartment available for rental on the island of Kauai. Completely furnished with have kitchen and fully equipped Perfect for rooms. an ocean two view on to four the most two bath- House for sale: Columbia County, NY. Less than two horse farm. Deck overlooks Catskill Mountains. $99,000. Ken Herz ’75. 212/348-1181. Leslie Friedman ’69 and minium at reasonablerates. Excellent ameni- small group through centuries of history and art in this lovely area. ties on and steam editing by university professor with twenty years experience in publishing/ editing. Any kind of writing welcome: journalistic, academic, technical, commercial. Reasonable rates, prompt delivery. Naomi Ritter ’59,454 GCB, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211; 314/882-4672; e-mail grasnr@mizzoul.missouri.edu; fax 314/8845438. Rome; Vatican. Spacious, furnished, three-room apartment with two baths, eatin-kitchen, washer/dryer availableon monthly basis. $2,700 per month. Contact Florence Squassi Swanstrom ’79 at 201/379-6107. near spacious, two tennis courts, workout room, sauna, bath. Come year-round for skiing, hiking, rafting, back country tours, camping, shopping, and fine dining. Heidi Power McLean ’74. 303/674-1185 or fax 303/674-6994. mountainbiking, Gardens of Northern Free-lance sunny, site includea full-size indoor pool, Jacuzzis, Poipu Beach. Rates vary from $B5-$ 150 per night depending on time of year and length of stay. Call C. Farkas ’7B at 617/585-4509 or 808/742-1165. Visit the great Italian Venice, and the Lake Italy Spring Tour. gardens of Tuscany, Region this spring! Landscape designer and lecturer Marie Stella Byrnes ’63 will lead a small, informal group on a garden history tour of northern Italy. Travel by air to Milan and tour the Italian and lake ferry. train, countryside by mini-bus, Hotel lodging is arranged to savor the charm and regional cuisine of the area. Spectacular scenery, the splendor of enchanting gardens—visit Italy in the spring! March 25-April 7, 1995. Cost under $3,000 all-inclusive. Call, write, or fax for detailed brochure and specific information: 413/339-4278; fax 413/6252158, Kirin Farm Enterprises, Mountain Rd., Charlemont, MA 01339. cottage for sale. Se- Unique mountaintop cluded octagonal retreat in Bethel, VT (only 2,200cottage on mountaintop). 26.8 acres. foot altitude. Spectacular view includesWhite Mountains of NH and Green Mountains of VT. Watch hawkssoaring from 1,300-squarefoot, wrap-around deck. Ski from front porch. Mahogany interior, hanging fireplace, slate floors. Perfect refuge for writers, artists, musicians—or anyone who wants total serenity and privacy. $109,000. Call Tom Carty at 802/479-0349 (evenings). [Lucy Carty Blue ’7o] Vail, 14 and 31 (1995: Apr. 8-15 and Aug. 5-12). Sleeps ten. Three bath- fireplace, clubhousefacilities (indoor/ outdoor pool, Jacuzzi, sauna, bar, squash, etc.). rooms, Explore the Clark lead Jonathan Prehistoric spacious Vermont condominium. Located in Wilmington on first fairway of Haystack Golf Course and only minutes away from ski areas at Haystack Mountain andMt. Snow. Lovely countryside, charming town and shops. Sleeps six, two full bathrooms, standard modern conveniences, fireplace, covered porch with great view, cable TV, tennis courts, free cut firewood provided. Great for families or people who want to make one. Call Dan Kane at 802/464-7458 about Country Club #16. [Joan HowsonHelzle ’82] rent: photographic artist a Roman Cirencester, Avebury, wool villages of Stow-on-the-Wold charming and the Slaughters, private tours of photoare graphic and art treasures highlights. More than sightseeing: outings, advice for photographers and artists; guided walks through history of human and plant and animal life. Spring 1995. Call 415/346-8959. As an collector of ancient coins, I amateur interested was to find that Vassar has cabinet. I’d like to hear from coin no alumnae/i who collect coins: how you began, what you collect, and whetheryou recall coins being used in classes, or collected by faculty members of the College. I’ll write a or other notice of whatever numismatica Vassariana I discover. Ellen Martin, assistant Vassar College, professor of English, Poughkeepsie, NY Box 342, 12601. Visiting France? Why not Enjoy French hospitality stay with Friends? and see the real France. More than 50 host families in all in cozy farmhouses and chateaux. Paris apartment rentals—studios to two-bedroom—also available for stately minimum flyer; 190Families, $l2. Cathy Stein Greenblat ’6l, President, Friends in France, Ltd., 40 E. 19th St., #B, New York, NY 10003; phone 212/260-9820; fax 212/ seven-day stays. Free page illustrated Guide to Host 228-0576. Telephoning Vassar? General Information AAVC Alumnae House Forty-four graduate andhusbandseek apartor townhouse to rent furnished (or ment trade for large, ocean-front house in Carmel) in Washington, National Cathedral area, for Cotswolds. Historian English regions offer stays For Colorado. Condominium available ev- ery year, weeks Mansfield, brook, hayfield, wood forest, buildings, showing available, call 412/363-3336.[Judith Getty Treadwell ’63] two-bath condo- beautiful of the Hawaiian Islands. A five-minute walk to Vermont: 120 acres, view of Mt. Vail, Colorado; Enjoy our two-level, two-bedroom, You’ll people. hours from New York City. Cute three-bedroomhome surrounded by 200-acre 914/437-7000 914/437-5445 '914/43 7- 7100 Annual Fund and Special Gifts Admission 914/437-5406 914/437-7300 39 40 VQ WINTER 1994 41 42 VQ WINTER 1994 43 t ’39 I Sally Kunkel Stafford 1080 Patterson St. #llO6 Eugene, OR 97401 503/344-5104 Reunion is still a happy memory for those of us who fortunate enough to be there. I must were confess that it was all such fun and so filled with activi- rewarding 44 VQ WINTER 1994 of gleaning a lot of news for the that my intentions column were woefully neglected. Instead I have simties ply a composite picture of the “Never Over 40” gang—handsome, active, gracious, independent, fun people, all of whom are a credit to Vassar. The men who accompanied some of us were a credit to our good Our share our lives with each other. You may fill in the card in the magazine and send it in or, better yet, write me directly. Only please, I beg you, make it legible.I’m trouble of the scribbles and some having reading simply have to eliminate the illegible stuff. In keep your news event, coming. Salve! any new Morton, has, up to now at least, been spending time AARP and workforce programs in Tulsa, OK. This involves retirement-planning programs, age discrimination in promotion, reentry into workforce training, etc. Her husband, Tom, has recently retired after 12 years as adjunct professor of ’40 For the first time in many, many I have years “I received a wonderful education at Vassar and have reaped the rewards of the intellectualstimulation and social conscience 55 Alcott Rd. or A number of mini-reunions are being planned for andfall. Doc and I are looking forward to late summer a lunch gathering at Sue Froelicher Holcombe’s next 55 th Reunion week. In October, Hilda Reis Bijur, Marie Drew Powers, and Peggy Jones Brooks are arranging a 1940 table at the large Vassar Happening at Avery Fisher Hall in Lincoln Center in New York. Betty Saeger Daniel and Sally Geer Pickett are hosting a lunch at the Inn at Chester, CT, and Comfy Cary Richardson is planning a lunch at Ellerslie, a lovely Chester County farmhouse on the grounds of Grasslands, Kennett Square, PA, the community I received the sad of news Sylvia Carter Bridgman’s from several classmates with affectionate reminisand more information that I want to pass along cences that “Syl battled you. Sally Geer Pickett wrote hard against her cancer, and she managed to stay at home in Wilton (CT) the last two months. She leaves who lives in Ontario, and a daughter, a son, to Vassar provided. Tell Sally I enjoyed her remarks and also sang alto in the choir!” Sure, now I remember, although the married name had not rung a bell with me at first. Atwood Hedge was sorry miss the reto Schuyler, Edith Ventimiglia, in Topsfield, MA, and two granddaughters. The memorial service was in New Canaan, We missed her and would have liked to tell her in person what a great job she’d done on the reunion bulletin. She sent me a card she’d received from Mary since Payson Greene Hartdegen, who was northwest New Polly union. unable to come her very there. We’ll miss were much. We have remained close friends college.” Betty Nash Nicholson when she roomed with “Silly” courting her. He would drive up Jersey, at remembered Vassar. “Bob was time flat from in no where he worked for the New Channing now live. There are other afoot in other parts of the land, and I hope to hear about them in time for our next Class Notes. A recent letter from Ethel Rosen Price tells of wonderful travel plans. She and Manny leave at the end of this month (August) for a week on their own in London. There they will join an English Elderhostel. This will consist of a week with the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford and London, and two weeks of study of a particular collection auspices of Sotheby. of treasures under the Constance Hedin Carlson ’37, long a leader in higher along with whatever her very outdoorsy—and athletically minded—parents wanted to do. I thinkthat to by the time she college she had climbed, or the church in education in been towed up, Mountains!” of the White of others with regular visits to people in the nursing home component of her community, extensive travel I received word of Katherine Dain (she’s been to Russia, China,Australia, New Zealand, Egypt, Israel, Greece, most European countries, Ecuador, the Galapagos Islands), and frequent came Maine, awarded 50th reunion. She had really wanted to be there, but slow recovery from a hip-replacement operation prevented her from coming. A couple of years ago she moved to a Presbyterian retirement community in our reunion because she was her way to Italy and on Switzerland with her chorale group and after that a to daughter in England. They were to the 10:30 Mass at St. Peter’s on June 19 and be for the pope’s blessing. square sing in the Nice to hearfrom Hazel Wightman Harlowagain. Her regret at not getting to reunion was expressed—“Darn and double darn! but whenthe month loomed ahead I realized I could not cope withyet another trip. In July I had and rewarding but strenuous Connecticut, where I had lived for 35 years, a warm trip and then was going to take one to family in California.” Faithful Nancy Chivvis Quackenbush is still pursuinggenealogy, which is “as addictive as smoking alcoholism; money and time mean or nothing when up that family tree.” Gertrude Good’s nephew Michael (age 37, has barking woodwork business in withher, paid us Brooklyn), who was ’39ers a top at a reunion accolade: “You ladies are all doers,” was his com- only intelligent, you are more ment, according to Gertrude. He was even impressed by Carol Rothschild Noyes’s Sunday P.M. talk than by her beauty (greater now than when PERcarrying the daisy chain!). “The weekend not was FECT,” says Gertrude. “I loved it all, as Thanks to all who planned it.” Frances Lawrie Geisel’s husband,John, is did my of her daughters. She wrote one about her life there and the new friends she had made. I talked with her daughter, Nancy, who lives in Warren, CT. She said that her mother’s death was although at the time Orlando, FL, near enthusiastically unexpected, she happened to be in the hospital overnight for Besides her two tests. daughters, Kaddy is survived by four granddaughters. Along with her myriad activities, Betty Goff beto Cook Cartwright has managed to find time come a grandmother. Alexander Cartwright Garner born on March 2, 1994- The proud parents are was daughter Alice and her husband, Jim. Betty Goff writes, “Now I know why they are called ‘grands’!” At the end of June she was off to attend four nights of ballet at the InternationalBallet Festival in Jackson, some MS—all young dancers from 37 countries. Later in the summer Betty Goff wrote, “It was superb. It’s every four years in Jackson. Ballet aficionados should make the scene.” It was “Sold my good to hearfrom Amelia Lashar Houghton: small house; have moved into this retirement community [in Bridgeport, CT]. I threw out a lot of junk, including sorting out old snapshots and tearc/o of them.” Letters to Amelia sent ing up most AAVC will be forwarded. nephew. a mem- Dorothy Bryant Nodine ber of the pacemaker brigade (but still a nationally ranked doubles tennis player), andshe battledshingles had last fall. Three Armenian tennis-playing friends visited grandchildren. them for a couple of weeks last summer. Now they are eagerly awaiting a visit from the 25-year-old son of their first Foster Parent Plan child, a Polish refugee to West Germany after World War 11. “AufWiedersehen. Remember the German department Meine Fraulein Klep. Delightful.” Finally, and this has got to be a first! Frannie is the mother of grandfather! “Sounds old but doesn’t feel so. Jack and I are great-grandparents of Lauren Brooks, daughter of granddaughter Laurie and granddaughter of our son John.” I’m counting on you to keep in touch so that we Andes. Their parents a one every Binns’s death on April 3.1 remember thatKaddy had health problems thatkept herfrom joiningus at some . with her just about Only recently an honorary doctorate by Husson College to number of Vassarfriends where she and plans Jersey Zinc Company. His father was the renowned physicist Percy Bridgman, who did pioneeringwork at Harvard to try and split the atom. Silly was a dear, really totally unathletic, but always gamely went was visit a pains.” Concord, MA 01742 508/369-8265 death just before our last column was due. At that time 1 could write only a few lines. Since thenI have heard and a Sibby Lamb Howe petroleum engineering. heard, indirectly, from Margaret Hopkins Priddle, who lives in Toronto, Canada. She happens to be related to one of my new, good friends, who shared my remarks about a Vassar education with her because of the Vassar connection. to Margaret wrote my friend: hardly a log cabin, in the woods together. Getting to Halifax is pilgrimage of at least 12 hours plus a ride of an hourand three-quarters from the airport. It’s six miles off the main highway, requires its own generator, withoutTV or phone lines—it a real from civilization. It has a tremendous escape cathedral ceiling in the living room and is generally sort of awardfor some very spacious. The design won the architects. I’m glad to report that I have no aches a volunteering with built this house, is lot to the success of the weekend. class fund chairman, Frankie Davis and added taste can in wrote May that she justvisited Anne Robinson Easton I now “Gorgeous area [Corinth] ... The last two are in in Vermont. have seven Ecuador—in the in the business of taking care to get a Village in Cromwell. She will be active Covenant her life and the lives living seasons Elderhostel programs. When you read these very in midwinter, in notes our only few short months away. I hope you’re making plans to come. Betty Goff Cook Cartwright and Prudy Hemenway Hodge are working hard on the arrangements, and they have lined up wonderful chairpersons to help organize differsome reunion a parts of the weekend: Faith Crandall Scott —hospitality; Barbara Arnold—the memorial service; Anne Barrows Ramsey —rooming; Jane ent Lawrence Beaman and Mary Taber Honey—Friday and Saturday night dinners; and Polly Spear Chapin and Helen (Dixie) Dixon Kunzelmann—the marshals who will get us to Walker Field House in orderly, but spirited, fashion. COME! ’41 Harriet Gibbs Gardiner 1660 Pershing Rd. Jacksonville, FL 32205 904/388-4270 To quote Ruth Kogan Felmus, “The year 1994 has been a very busy one,” beginning for her with the Ruth has had of the shakeup visits January earthquake! from friends and family from Israel who won near a cousin a and far, trip to see including the Oscars Ruth has done her share of traveling, too. packing for Alaska whenshe wrote. Later she take a granddaughter to Detroit to see family, was to then on to Minneapolis to see Ruth Firestone Brin. Molly Bigelow McMillan has a new winter adin person. She was dress in Carefree, AZ. Letters to AAVC will be forwarded. her sent care of was planning a trip to Italy in the fall. Her greatest pride, however, is a Princeton grandson, Shai Ingber, and a Vassar sophomore granddaughter, Becca She is now living haven’t much to say except that I’ve returned Livingston. ever a letter from Elaine Osterweil in Palo Alto, CA. “I writes, “We haveleft the city [San Antonio] and are happily ensconced ranch near San Angelo, TX.” nice member Betty She is now a backpacking.” Betty Tweedy Sykes was Saeger 1991, and she has been since. Ever heard of a “Grand-friends Program”? Ruth Firestone Brin volunteers in such a day care for 4- and 5-year-olds. This is only part of her many activities, both on civic boards and with her own writing. She are of people It The May issue of the bulletin from the First Church in Deep River, CT, has a Daniel. feature article on Betty joined Congregational to on big my first love, sculpture, and I am enjoying it immensely. I’m going up to Halifax to visit my grandson. Trips? My granddaughters will be there, too, as my children Firestone ’97. Janet Dillon Blair and husband Shelton toured the periphery of France in Normandy beaches. They had a May, including the reunion sets withtwo 45 of European friends, one couple whom they hadn’t tuting, tutoring, and working in the library. Also from word thatElinor Scott Oswald still California comes 1945. since seen Norma Prichard Rogers observes, “Life falls into one’s lap a happening at a time.” A surprise happening has been a new career as a professional genealogist. Norma and Bill had a lovely visit with Catie Morrison Sippel and her husband in Florida at Christmastime. Another change of direction: Joan Mendenhall Schreder has turnedfrom fiction writingto her “first love,” painting. She has had two successful shows in tours (L.A. Today Custom Tours). Ellen Lee Blackwell Meigs’s son was married this runs spring. Congratulations to Kay Hallett Sutton, who recently received a Bachelor of Arts in history. Peggy Mcllvaine Joyce is very enthusiastic about retirement her new MA. home (Kimball Farms) in Lenox, Marsh Mundy, and Frances Field sail with the Dennisons. Emily Westwood disappointed not was (Franny) Kilpatrick Gardner loved Costa Rica but to meet Margarita Penon de Arias ’7O, as had been planned. Emily’s grandmother, Lucina Johnson, taught at Vassar in 1869. Priscilla Bullitt Collins and her sister continue to classical music their Seattle, WA, radio on provide station. Our class extends its deepest sympathy Joan to New York City, whichbenefited her Unitarianchurch. She has started a two-year project to create a large From Barbara (8.A.) Lattimer Krader comes word that she and her husband have decided to stay in Rothwell Moor, Nancy HaydenPhillips, and Valerie Hathaway Tew, whose husbands died this year. I was of new work. to I wish I had room quote in full the starry-eyed from MelitaRenfert Harkness, telling ofher message marriage in Nov. 1993 to Ralph N. Harkness. Mixed Berlin, Germany. shocked with the joys of congeniality and the challenges of golf is a combined total of 14 grandchildren! Shattan and her husband on a Baltic cruise, Connie Havrilia to Cyprus, Molly Pratt Barringer and Margaret Merry Willis came east with her sister in June. They visited Annapolis and Charlottesville, staying with Leslie Smith Hogeboom Norton ’4O, Minor body who was former classmate a at Holton Arms. Various other peripatetic classmates include Betty Menderson Schulman to London, Lois Chapman Houghton to India and Pakistan, Mimi Fleiss fish Riviere St. John, Canada, and Grace (Mimsey) Olmsted Potts and Ed to Alaska. Ruth Middleton had an art show in Litchfield, CT, this past September and is working on a stone to Please note this correction: In the Summer VQ, Caroline Smith Stilwell’s daughter was incorrectly Tuscany, Italy, for named. She is Patricia Stilwell Walker ’69, thirdgeneration Vassar. Esther (Bickey) Fowler Pile and Bill, who have rented a farmhouse for four years. Like many ’4lers, Reba May Blum regrets she where classmates can isn’t near areas easily get together. Her enthusiasm for Vassar is still strong, and she hopes one of the daughters of Barbara Blum Dahl Three classmates who have their 50th wedding anniversaries ’69 may be drawn to Vassar when the time comes. Reba and husband Bobby took these granddaughters, Julie, 16, and Susie, 15, on a Caribbean cruise for spring break. They all had a lively time! A birthday call phone to Ruth Tucker reassured that, with her characteristic independence, she is recovering well from the knee surgery she underwent in May. Prior to her operation, Ruth traveled to England, staying first with long-time friends and then time in enjoying a few days in Exeter and some London revisitingfavorite spots. I had a lovely two days with Lucy Hulburd Richardson in early June on my way to my grandme daughter’s graduation from the Exeter sculpture A her sleep March 2, while on on Grove, Cordova, TN 38018. We send pathy to family. him and to our go together? ’42 Anne were present. Kasten and Fritz in Wisconsin. Jean Wyman family reunion were off to a Carpenter Winton heading for Bermuda, while Nancy and husband were (Frankie) Wilson aimed at the Adirondacks. Linda MarlorPickens and husband were on a cruise. Nancy Noland Spreen and husband shipped to London and while Garrett Orchard due for was Normandy, Betty Portugal and Turkey in September. We have word from Vassar clubs. One is in Sarasota, FL, chaired by Mary HanchetteEberle with the assistance ofAnne Nevin Chamberlin.The other two Naples, FL, chaired by Catharine (Cathy) Little Motley. ’42ers in the area are urged to contact them. Jacqueline Heinzen Houser is no longer teaching at in Westridge School Pasadena, CA, but is still substiis in 46 VQ WINTER 1994 Joys and despair Kittens to love All of the above appreciated hut member a looks forward Isn’t that nice? I hope everyone of ’44 to of last pleasant memories with family and friends. includeclimbing a mountain in My happy memories the Adirondacks with grandchildren—a bit too much for me, it turned out, and as my right knee frequently reminds me. her 70th reunion, when the class will “he waited on hand and has that include visits summer as Betty Barlow Cutler-Wotton spent foot,” readying Westport trees garden tour on “Wonderful continuity give form and substance to says, age to see the the land- was transferred scape.” due to had a Mary Elizabeth Armstrong Lyons has finished banding monarch butterfliesfor a migration study and is now working with Share Care, a new organization in Northport, MI, to make it possible for people to stay in their own homes as they age. And another 50th: Peg Abbott Billings, her hus- an to Barbara (Baba) Blagden Sisson’s illness in Phebe’s family. Seven arrivals my a lot of time for the Hidden Gardens of June 12. Another poetic thought her here—she fine time. Mary (Fergie) Ferguson Sullivan is still involved the Vassar Club of Western New York and was looking forward to their springmeeting and the Vassar Jean Irwin Smith still lives in Brazil and came to visit Brazilian friends this past sumsome band, four stateside mer. among Lady Lakes, FL, Bow, NH, and Peakes Gluckman,both widowed within the last few years, together on an Elderhostel trip to Greece last spring, spending one week on the mainland and one week on a yacht in the islands. Elderhostel combines lectures with historical and artistic sightseeing, so one’s travel is greatly enriched. Esther Williams Dasenbrock and Henry Mary went Wellesley, MA, Betty Anne Harvey enjoyed lunch with Ruth (Patty) Patterson Spang, Frances (Franny) Hunt Miltimore, and Florence (Flo) Cushing Perkins. A big family reunion in Yellowstone Park was planned by Ann Tracy Fisher last summer. Still teaching at tbe New School in New York, NY, is our talentedclassmate Miriam(Mimi) Dworsky Obler. She had a workshop for the staff of that school and after the “big snows” lunched with Connie Havrilla, Mildred Swaybill Rothman, and Patricia (Pat) Gardner House. Anne Murray Barbey spent the winter Springs, CA, and is writing a paper on the in Palm need for volunteers. Corinne Somerville Repsold teaches two studies each week and Bible their wives, and four of six spent a long weekend together on Kiawah Island, SC. Barbara Adler Zeluck and Charlyn Fisher sons, grandchildren While in traveling attend, but 24 be to She enjoyed her 50th, Morris Again, many thanks to Franny Prindle Taft for annualpicnic-hosting and transmittingyour 93 postals! and unable to Many of our classmates were from Cherished, savored, relished, Island, ME. Cape Elizabeth, ME 04107 207/799-0326 wonderful poem follows: Adult children who share Louisa Harrington Childs Butcher divides her Selvage a as Letters to send Birds to feed Last May, Phebe Perry Mixter invited those of us in northern New England to a class luncheon, which time Carol Tompkins 30 Ironclad Rd. with Anything but “laid back” A garden to tend Trips to enjoy My fax, a new toy speaker. As I close this column, here are my thanksfor your welcome cards. Keep them coming! And happy holidays to all! this time start Business needs in other members of Marjorie’s Jeanne Walser Burdell 1741 Dumbarton St. McLean, VA 22101-4206 703/536-2169 At 73 I find it hard completed by a deep sym- heartfelt sympathy. Mary Lib Wetzel Peddie, are condolences go to her husband, Dr. George W. Henry, and two daughMrs. Scott Morriss 111 and Nancy Henry MacKenzie ’75 (Mrs. William). Marjorie Smith Leffler died on Oct. 15, 1993. Her son, Dr. Charles Leffler, lives at 285 Locust We’ll celebrated in Switzerland. Our ters, ’43 our Lillian(Lig) to contact We all have an invitation Lowrey Power if visiting Honolulu, HI. Shall we all We are saddened to learn of the deaths of two of classmates. Dorothy Grueninger Henry died in Otter Nancy Hallinan. where. unexpectedly skiing vacation recently latest novel has been recent then went to Portland, ME, to see my niece, Pat Bartlett, daughter of Margaret Gibbs Worthington ’32. Cool, clear weather and good company every- our St. Michael’s church. She visited weeks. Also in Tuscany were two sending LauraWhitaker Roberts, May Orton Westheimer, and Jozefa (Zef) Malinowska Stuart. I Academy. for at learn that Elaine Ott Timme’s youngest I know you all join in to cancer. to Jon, succumbed son, women’s speaks at women’s conferences and workshops. A good letter from Frances (Franny) Ferry Dennison tells of volunteering in the Riverdale Hos- pital, Riverdale, NY, and serving on several boards, including the Riverdale Senior Center. She notes that Katherine (Kay) Cooper Cary, Isabel (Izzy) did Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia last spring and since then have been on a 10-country cruise in the Baltic Sea. In between, she squeezed in a ’43 lun- cheon, givenby her and Sidney Meeker Keith at the home in Haverford where Quadrangle, the retirement they both live. Present were Anne Tall Evans, Esther Montgomery Kolb, Carol Bartlett Purdy, Eleanore Zeiss Bradway, Elizabeth Wallace Muller, and Jean Deming Richardson ’42. Lanny Wiener Atlas tellsof attending the August get-together of the New England contingent at Rusty Allen Upton’s family homestead in Bedford, NH. Carolyn Perry Harwood and Barlow CutlerWotton helped Rusty host the occasion, which included Marguerite Stay Swain, Eleanor Mead Strong, Lulu Allyn Sunderland, Marion Danielson Campbell, Ellen Oldham, Jean MacLeod Noblin, Susie Belding Eldredge, and Sis Tompkins Barnes. Also present were Nancy Crompton Wendell, who is off to China, and Betty Chandler Alexander, who is of Sunapee, NH. working hard on the restoration died on May 1 in Woodstock, Nancy Merrill Bailey IL, after a long illness, leaving her husband, five children, a sister, and seven grandchildren. Carol Cortelyou Cruikshank says she accidentally brought home from our 50th a March 1943 copy of the Vassar Brew with Betty Stockman’s picture on it to its rightful owner, the cover. She’d like to return if you will contact her at PO Box 445, Astoria Hotel, Rosendale, NY 12472. Kate Johnson Armstrong and Charity Crocker Cole, who’ve been in close touch ever since college, both happily welcoming adult daughters moving are their respective homes, Kate in Alexandria,VA, near and Charity in Durham, NC. My husband and I are going to France in September for the first time in navigate Paris traffic in several years. Can we still a rented car? Watch this space! realized that she’s also last time about the death of Doris Perry I wrote Beecher. Since then, I had a nice letter from Helen Speed Tuttle, who sent along Doris’s husband’s ad- ’44 in on 1988. Unfortunately, I have no further information family addresses. Several people have written to say how much they enjoyed our worked so reunion hard and came together beautifully due to I loved seeingall of you I write about withsuch interest, and I had a wonderful time. You know, there is nothing like the camaraderie born of addiction. Bobbie Baer Luchs, Ruth Tiffany Barnhouse, and I, smokers all, thoughtfully removed ourselves about 50 feet from those of pure lung, to the middle of Noyes lawn,where, after discussing our civil rights with some a on a or we two, plans to live to about, be 90 and looks forward to write to me reunion, when we will stay in Alumnae House and “be waited on hand and foot.” We were their efforts and next discussing equal or unequal value of male and female education when we were joined by a perfectly charmBill Clement, whose curiosity about our ing man, isolation got the best of him. He didn’t smoke, but we welcomed him anyway. I learned that Ruth, who was ordained an Episcopal priest in Washington, DC, in to Dallas, where women 1980, was promptly sent priests were not acceptable. I hope her book is about breaking which I Please to had a wonderful number of topics. Ruth has written moment book, which she promises new I would like to commend those of their committees. Bets Moore Shea, particularly, for the Academic Day, the point of wanting to rush over the registrar and enroll for four more years. At dinner in the Villard room, which we filled to enjoyed and to commend all those who to such great effect on it. For myself, our Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, and a very Happy of us will forget 1994 and New Year! Certainly none 50th reunion,which was justabout perfect, as I’m our we all agree. sure Again we must thank Anne Meigs Larkin and Peggy Burke Howe for what must have been several years of hard and successful work. It all to overflowing, Anne Wotherspoon Ross ’45-4 found a complete elastic band in six pieces in her salad and commented with perfect grace, “I love the watercress but it was a little tough.”Phyllis Rosenthal Frankfort reminisced about squirrel her neighbor in Main, Ginette de Bidart Merrill, befriended. They lived the top floor, where they had dormer windows. This French cuisine, i.e., lucky squirrel dined Camembert, according to Phyllis, and became a “very fun at our table, and dinner was fussy squirrel.” It delicious in spite of vagrant petroleum products. Patty Gamble Hecker, in charge of having a down those barriers. is not the end of it all, you A 50th reunion keep sending me news of you that we know. can all tape runs for 30 minutes includes mailing. NY 12601-6199. The and the price is $ 12.50, which I have some from Gini Howell very exciting news Speairs. Her husband,Col. Anse H. Speairs, has been invited by the French minister of defense, with two other Americans, to take part in the celebrations of the 50th anniversary of the landing in Provence. Col. Speairs commanded the 45 th Infantry Division on that occasion. Gini writes that it was his fourth such engagement; the others included Sicily, Salerno, Anzio, and then Ste. Maxime. Lydia TynerAnderson, our reunion book editor, would like you to add the following to your list of “The Rest of 1944” in your book—those whose information ’45-4 Bunny Davison Leonard spend the Arts, a a high the rest of their time in Michigan, of the Interlochen Center for school and summer in the arts camp trustee northern part of the state. She says, “It’s an exciting place with a splendid academic faculty and separate arts faculty and truly gifted young people from all parts of the U.S. and the world.” Madeleine Hulst Lawrence, summering in the Berkshires, again discovered Peggy Burke Howe singing in the Berkshire Choral Festival. Mad says, “We also wrote Wilson home with Friends of the Vassar Art Gallery and had taken a winter break in Sarasota, FL. At the she time she wrote attending was Smithsonian. Anne Stommel continues Howard Stern and his on-air Private Parts, devoted nine art classes at the her crusade against offensiveness. His book, Stommie. She to pages to be “a thorn in his side.” Faith Higgins McCurdy has a press agent in the ofLibby Austin Lindsay, who sent us Faith’s person rejoices book, A Limner’s View—An Architectural Odyssey, which published as the catalogue for a oneshow in Nov. 1993 by the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory press and presented by Liz Watson. It’s a was woman “smashingly of her works, show and also made glossy catalogue attractive which constituted a one-woman for the CSH Laboratory.” Libby was sorry to the event but enjoyed the book. After nearly 42 years in the same house, Elaine (Lainie) Garrabrant Stulb moved to a condo. The money daughters, Our word allotment is doubled for reunion, so I hope ’45-4 will rise to the challenge and send me a lot of news! This column is necessarily being written way before the Aug. 20 deadline, Florida’s long, hot summer, vania to visit my son I as first by and three breaking up to Pennsylgrandsons. Soon am a trip afterward I visit in northern New York State, where I used to live, and then journey to the ivied halls of Dartmouth, where I used to work, though not at the “The Riddles of same to take a course, time, of course, Creation.” Sounds heavy? The advance reading is! Jackson was hoping that the ravages of shingles will have disappeared from her forehead in time for a family reunion in Winchester, OR. Shortly afterward she was to attend four-day meeting in Aspen, CO, of Farmer’s Insurance agents of the Topper Club—people from her region who have qualified by selling lots of life She also planned to take a whitewaterraft insurance. a trip down the Colorado River. A card from Martha Harbrecht Darcy informs to us Baltimore, Anne (Sis) Carrington Wood is recovering from cuff and is helped along by a 48-hour rotator week. She also reports on a “mini, but bighearted” reunion at Jack and Debbie Smith Haight’s exercise in Bethlehem, PA. It was an overnight house party, and up from Baltimore drove Lucy Brady Farrar and Bill, Bunny Hewitt Lothrop and Oliver, and Julie Clark Watts. Next day, Dorrie Hardin Dillon and Sid, Karla Jones Conly, Polly Crawford Cummin, and Sis arrived to meet everybody at the Allentown, Besides nonstop talking by everybody, PA, museum. according to Sis, included also was a garden tour and walking tour. about a wonBobbie Dinsmore Simpson writes derful (last) winter in Vero Beach, FL. She was so from the ice, snow, and cold in New to be away happy Canaan, CT. She was playing lots of tennis grandkids, nearby. and Dorothy Johnson Mary Louise Wieboldt Sample writes, “We’re justhanging in here (Wilmette, IL), hoping we won’t break a leg on the ice. (Same infamous aforemenand tioned winter.) Mary Louise is spending more time more volunteering at the Chicago Botanic Garden, having completely retired from her garden design business. She has also decided to become computer literate so that she can converse with her grandchil- dren. Elisabeth Miller Burger finds (the same) winter (N.Y.C.) much more wintry than she’s seen in City” years. Following an entertaining description of what she has witnessed there, she adds, “Civilization, if that is what we have developed here, cannot just rise above a real winter.” However, she and Chet keep busy and are well. They are planning a trip to Galilee and Jerusalem; the theme of the trip is biblical history. Retirement is not in the vocabulary of Sally Mather Gibson and John. They are blessed witha family of 19, including four grandchildren who are close enough to be very much a part of their lives. Their schedules heavy with board service in several cities in the areas of youth, health, and education, and they thoroughly enjoy three days a month in New York with meetings, exhibiCity, packing every moment tions, music, and good friends. Dottie Brown sent almost 100 dues slips with me the back (thanks, gals), well as the innews on remain torn the Moravian buildings three den Honert van in “Fun Thank goodness there’s no final! At this writing, Nancy Johnson a where Char is She suffered a broken collarbone. Camille that she attended the tour of the Woodrow tutions. address in Use Hochhauser Browner has a new of ’94 is Pittsfield, MA, and except for the winter much. She has two enjoying the Berkshires very 50th Reunion year to attend a coed college. She reports that although she has divided loyalties, she is always interested in Vassar doings and reads the Quarterly with Florida but but Marion had a car accident, so both their plans changed. Marion was seeing her son, who is a judge, off at the Oklahoma City airport; he is being sent to Kiev as an adviser on democratic principles and insti- piano and Ed his computer. 904/445-9133 man “great interest.” She and her husband now live in Fort Myers, FL. Charlotte Carr Roe writes (to Lydia—again too in late for the book) that she and her husband winter to Camille Cottrell Espeut intended to come a mini-reunion with Marion Kurtz Lester, May 1993 before the snows of ’94 and was to very content watch others shovel, chip, and plow, as she had her 29 Welling Ln. Palm Coast, FL 32164 she has moved from Lutherville, MD, MD. in too who isn’t? forced her to get rid of things she thought essential and enabled her to “become more organized than I thought possible.” She moved late for publication. Sylvia Bardelmeier Crouse, known in college as “Stevie,” left after freshcame as were on Raymond Ave., Poughkeepsie, Mainefor the 181 United Church of Christ churches. She is looking forward to our 50th, move on video tape made of allthe festivities, would like you to know that the tape is available and may be ordered through Terri O’Shea, AAVC, Alumnae House, 61 Charlotte (Scooter) Rice Wilbur attended the convention of the League of Women Voters, as state miss enjoy! a was were capital campaign in and Bobbie 809/775-7360 delightful evening knows he would be pleased to hear from any friends. also report the death of Maria L. Ouro-Preto I must a 6871 Upper Wintberg St. Thomas, USVI 00802 a with Sue Latson Blankley and Tom when they in Ft. Pierce. she is acting president of the Portland, ME, area league. She is also co-chair of a four-million-dollar conversation Richards Harkness and enjoying the beach, and had dress, Henry Ward Beecher, Jr., 6533 Seaview Ave. NW #502-A, Seattle, WA 98117. Helen says she asperity for Sally the board ofdirectors. Neat on lady!” and golf, as formation that she spent a month on Sanibel Island, FL, last spring. Ellie Appel Golden was honored as the DistinAlumna of 1993 by her grade school, the guished Orchard School of Indianapolis. Her mother and her Vassar ’O3 and ’O6, were founders, inspired by aunt, of 1922. This is a progresVassar Euthenics, summer sive the arts and emphasizes school that encourages early development. Elbe was invited to have an art exhibit and gave a workshop in silk screening for the entire “It was art a very department. She wrote, 47 and the banners made by the artwork students turned out extremely well. My own looked great. Grade school is about my speed. The place is pretty yuppie compared to the rag-tag days of touching occasion, youth!” own my More on last winter: Lucy Brady Farrar wrote from Connecticut, which was extremely hard hit, “Blizzard, beautiful blizzard! Picture book stuff. Many sit in her red cardinals.” She was to leaving shortly daughter’s garden in El Salvador. Important words from Helen Chatfield Black; “Response to our ’45-4 50th anniversaryfund solicita- gratifying. It’s fun to be working on the We hope to have 100 percent participahigh rate of attendance for our reunion.” has been tion class team. and tion a Meanwhile, her work in outdoor education and conservation keep her “hopping.” Peg Conger Unsworth works on several boards for suicide prevention and the Cornell Center for Religion, Ethics, and Social Policy, but finds volunwork as a mediator the most teer challenging and She recently traveled satisfying. Moscow with Vespers a St. Petersburg spot. We don’t need any she wails. The population has exploded from 8,000 to 30,000 since 1960 and is still growing fast. Johnnie spent last Christmas with family in Cabo San Lucas and also visited family in Montana. Mary Pilliod Enard summeredlast year in Canada West Country, as well as the Lake District, Yorkshire, travel Franny; “If I never and and the Cotswolds. again, I’ll consider Says myself really blessed after that wonderful trip!” of her visit to Marjorie Carolin Bradford wrote Guatemala last March, where she spent an afternoon with Evelyn Clark Rogers, whom she hadn’t seen since graduation. Evelyn showed her around the campus of the school that she had opened in the early 19505; it now has 600 students, grades 1-12, and 40 teachers. Marjorie continued: “Evelyn herself still most exciting! reunion! About a year ago I was diagnosed as having Alzheimer’s disease.” She stays around her apartment, where “everything is in context, and I am much less and mixed up than anywhere else.” She some news later . . .I’m in the middle forgetful she’ll be thinking of all of Mary Lloyd Steele has a new, sixth grandson. off to Baja, a trip to Maine to see him, she was CA, on a Winsor-Audubon trip, but planned to After in book sale time in to help with the annual Hanover, NH, to raise money five-college 1994- She leaves her husband, Henry, and a son, George. Madge Kenyon Fisher, in June 1994- She is survived by her children, David, Ellen, John, Peter, and Charles, two brothers, five grandchildren, and many and nieces nephews. Helen Maguire Muller in July 1994- Helen had and was a strong served on Vassar’s board of trustees supporter of cross-culturaleducation. Debbie Smith Haight had sent in a report for this issue on a “marvelous” N.Y.C. mini-reunion Pomeroy at Helen’s. teaches architecture three times a week. Her home is part of the complex .. . [where she] brought up eight children of her own.” Later, Marjorie took a Smithsonian trip to the Galapagos Islands; on the boat she met two Vassar grads, Robin Rowan Clarke ’6O and Sandra Wood Scarr ’5B, which was a neat surprise. Katy Grace Riggs, writing on July 2, tells of a weeks in Paris and Normandy in April. She then spent a month in Ajijic, Mexico, “serving delightful a chicken curry luncheon at her lovely apartDebbie Smith Haight, Dorrie Present were Hardin Dillon, Libby Austin Lindsay, Julia Richmond Pomeroy, Prue Loeh Miller, Gloria Aronow Roberts, Phyllis Cumins Robinson, Charlotte Brown two part of the largest Anglo community in Mexico and their church.” I looked up that name in my atlas—not to be found—butKay says it’s on Lake Chapala, 25 miles south of Guadalajara. JuliaRichmond the invitations, and Helen provided sent eon Bobbie Lehman Dunlap arranged a Vassar lunchon Friday the 13th of May, a beautiful spring Adams Blake, day. Jean ment. Nancie Coan, Mary O’Neal, Harriet (Harpo) Harvey, and Marjorie Carolin Bradford attended. They had chatting great time talked about reunion. a and A consensus boater hats, beribboned! catching up, emerged: and let’s Dallett, Jean Schmidlapp Humes, Franny Troub Roberts, Barbara Lehr, Henriette deSieyes Montand Liz Burger. A highlight of the gathering gomery, have straw Helen’s report on the Maguire fellowship proFive Vassar seniors selected each year for are graduate work in a variety of fields, often out of the Betty Lou Firstenberger Hummel, Harriet Shand Flotte, Alice (Sis) Forbes Bowie, Ruth Lee Knight, Andy Campbell Watson, and Ann Counts Minor. country. Helen emphasized thatVassar’s sound training prepared them well for further study. Helen’s survivors her husband, Andre, a brother, her are All expect to come to the big Five-O! This summer Bobbie was expecting Elizabeth Wadsworth and in the Adirondacks. HenryReid for a visit at her children, Lucienne, Edouard, and Jacqueline, and sister-in-law Christiane MullerTyson ’54. Keep those cards and letters coming in,and please I have a new note zip code. As gram. Bobbie also worked the warm” chats with Elizabeth ’45 ' 415/681-1548 and had “long, Hood Phillips, a result of this mini-reunion, Marjorie Bradford, talking with Harriet, learned about Audrey Levey Cooper, in Westport, CT; both Audrey and Harriet make documentary films. When Marjorie visited in Westport she called Audrey, who is moving back to I had a great note writing classmates gathering. She went time—and she my 50th Reunion phones (Betty) place New York—no more 1 Anne Williams Britton i 70 Santa Paula Ave. San Francisco, CA 94127-1542 suburbia for her! from Ola Zachry Moore, who is remind them of next to June’s to hoped the 45th and had such I’d be coming. That’s a great certainly plan! Sheila Emerson Sadler writes that she is “still in a beautiful ocean-view house on the Jersey shore” and has “no real news” except for visits in New York and three months in Sarasota, FL, where she tennis and reads trash, and happily ensconced It’s not so hard to be wishing you happy holidays in the middle of August in San Francisco: the fog lies heavy the land, and the on temperature is in the high 50s! The cool is delightful to me, just back from a swelter- ing month’s study in Paris; the column may suffer from touch of jetlag, however. And, as you might expect, this is the travel season not for everyone, just me; let’s a get to 48 VQ that first. WINTER 1994 grandchild. Also very rich in descendants is Pat Williams Faulkner, with 10 grandchildren equally divided by sex and ranging in age from Sarah, 19, to Tiffany, born last May. Sarah just graduated from Concord Acadher class president, and is a wonderful was emy, She’s off to Brown this year for college, where Pat hopes she’ll see Mary Bertucio Arnold. Pat loves her garden and has a new “baby,” a King Charles named Emily, who—let’s hope—is spaniel puppy person. delightful visit plays bridge, enjoys the grandchildren. She, tions she’d just attended a meeting of the American Association of University Professors. You may remember that I reported in the last column our lunch withher here in San Francisco; everyone who knew and loved Ann was stunned. She is survived by her husband, Robert; two daughters, Margit and Bettine; one son, Norman; and one grandson. At this point I’d like to introduce Mrs. Marie Lawrence of Poughkeepsie, mother of MarieAdelaide Lawrence, who died last year. Mrs. Lawrence, who was up in the Poughkeepsie Journal, has, at 88, daughters. She’s worked on her loneliness witha therapist and has come to a kind of written lost her two and sorrow acceptance. “Your children “they are only on loan.” are yours,” she not says, That is true of children, family, friends —and classmates. I think we should treasure each other. Carolyn Potter Harriman, superb was to an for Vassar scholarships. Since I began this column,another card has come in from Martha Harbrecht Darcy, telling of the sad of the death of her husband, George. news I also, very regretfully, report the passing of the following classmates: Edith Joan Haas Elser, in Feb. return She has four a of something.” us! return Newfoundland again this past grandchildren and five greatgrandchildren! Can anyone top that? They are all doing fine, especially Carrie, age 5, her youngest hoped to summer. Cambridge, England, were inNewYork for hersister’s is that she 50th wedding anniversaryparty. The news is publishing her parents’ letters, in two volumes, in England and this country in January. Hetty told Ditta that she’d seen Janice Miller Freeman and Audrey Levey Cooper while in New York. Maybe Audrey was doing little apartment hunting? We’ve lost a wonderful classmate, which I sadly report. Ann Chamberlain Birge died suddenly last June 19. She was a physics professor at California State University at Hayward and was just four days retired when she suffered on a flight aneurysm home to Berkeley, CA, from Washington, DC, where “I’ll send in Griggs says the #1 retirement as people,” more from Helena (Hetty) Malinowska Wayne and wrote about it. Hetty and her husband, who live in me All classmates willbe sorry to read this from Betsy Clark: “I’m so sorry I can’t attend our 50th sends best wishes and Prescott house-broken by now! Edith (Ditta) Turpin Potter had a and local chorus; singing Rachmaninoff s the was to of a six-week visit Frances Wood Gillett writes last spring in Oxford (England), staying with her there on sabbatidaughter and son-in-law, who were cal. Franny is a fan of Inspector Morse on the telly and She also had a great time really learning “his” town. traveled, saw Portsmouth, Wells, and Bath in the too, sends exhorta- reunion—“a great experience!” to come to Joan (Johnnie) Thomas Purnell writes of busy days volunteering with the Prescott, AZ, Art Center. She says she is “sick about Money magazine choosing ’46 Betsey Grout Krida 5282 Heron Way Sarasota, FL 34236 The word “Elderhostel” pops up regularly on your postcards. Roberta Hanson Brandenberger reports visit that Lois Kuhlen Johnson paid her before and a after her Elderhostel bike tour in Denmark in June. Mention was made of Joan Sondheim Greece in the spring of 1994 and that Vogel’s tour to Margery Stomne Selden has moved to Portage, ML Bob and I just returned from Elderhostel in Quebec, learning tai chi other things. Tai chi, a century-old Chinese among exercise, is guaranteed IF you concentration to can relieve breathing and flowing (ha!) and arms. stress get it all and improve the together of your movements Periodic Elderhostel catalogues fascinating reading can legs provide for the armchair and otherwise traveler. Mary Lane Lissfelt Salsbury has retired but is involved in the Academy of Life Long Learning at when not the road. on Carnegie Mellon University Having covered Ireland, Russia,Egypt, and Australia, she is looking forward to her fall trip to Prague. Eleanor (Scoozy) Myers Martini very possibly (as of this August writing) is still her trip to Baltic countries, and St. Petersburg. Norway, she is looking forward to visit from Upon her return MarciaPeaslee Frank,who willbe visiting her daughin Mill Valley. ter Taking a breather from her community responsion summer some a bilities of choir, church elder, representative town meeting, A Better Chance, and Stephen Ministry, Joan Riley Burchenal, along with husband Joe, ited their vis- Guatemala for a behind-thescenes experience. Two other daughters reside in Darien, keeping Grandma and Grandpa busy with daughter in grandchildren. seven Grandmother Naomi Riker Linzer proudly anthat her granddaughter, Melissa Birrittella, nounces accepted early decision to Vassar, class of ’9B. What pleasure that must afford to Naomi and Melissa’s mother, Amy Linzer Birrittella ’76. the links, Vassar ’46ers may travel, spend time on was and of important fly planes but are still very aware issues. Believing that our country faces social catastrophe unless immigration is reduced, Ruth (Penny) Keating Hyde has formed an immigration reform coalition. The goal is to reform U.S. laws and policies, eradicating the current illegal immigration of floodtide proportions. The main objective is to persuade the Reid-Bilbray bills. “ClassCongress to support mates,” Ruth pleads, “please help.” Rhoda Seman Hale has gone full circle. Having gained invaluable experienceas 48 years Vassar senior radio show for Poughkeepsie, PBS television program originating in Denver. I can recommend a good tai chi teacher! Hold on more to rado Institute of Art and language arts at Colodoes public relations and promotions (Sandy Hale, Unlimited). Unlimited I’d say. Son Mark is a city planner in Tokyo energy, with a 3-year-old daughter, and daughter Niko is a university teacher in Germany with an 11-year-old daughter. Apparently there three sizes of reunions Celebrating the survival of relentless winter, Isolde (Bunny) Chapin, Joanne Winship Crawford, Betsy a Nye Suter, Christina Thom Hobbs, Katherine Foster Woodman, and Joan met for lunch in May. Joan frequently sees Sarah Lohmann Smith, whose fifth grandchild arrived in December, daughter of her son, Tim (editor of the Wall Street Journal ), and wife Priscilla (business editor of Time ). The Knowltons had a 45th anniversary three-week sojourn in Paris a as interpreter —arewarding year ago with their son trip after a 20-year hiatus. A fine picture of Dr. June Biedler was printed on from Center News, a publication from Memoa page rial Sloan Kettering. In her interview, June, head of the laboratory of cellular and biochemical genetics, that her association with the center began in to 1947 as a research assistant Joan’s husband, Dr. Joseph Burchenal. Having been exposed to the promstates chemotherapy for been interested of drug resistance Another the waters ever the control of cancer, June has in the genetic mechanisms since was spent under and on Skaneateles,NY. Mary (Tommy) Tompkins Starkweatherand Ann Dewey Kent one hot weekend at brought along their husbands for a with swim Janet StarkweatherBesse and husbandDick. In her letter, Tommy pays a well-deserved tribute to Harriet Hall Dieterich, who died in late July. Tommy reminds us of how hard Harriet worked for the fund drive of our 40th reunion. Not exactly even but nevertheless a micro-reunion grand fun was a house party at the home of Peter and Jean Gumming McGregor added Vassar touch was ’45-4. We all piled into in Rhinebeck, NY. An Barbara Fredericks cars one Applegate morning for a fasci- of the CIA (Culinary Instituteof America). that it wasn’t too guide assured us senior citizens late to apply. Medicare will cover any accident from sharp cleavers or hot grease! Deepest sympathies are extended to the family of Alice O’Keefe Stakgold, who died in Jan. 1994, and to Sally Foster Robertson, whose husband died in Feb. 1993. W e sadly report the death ofAlec Mcßride The ofDavid and Anne Link Donaldson. Alec’s death followed an extended battle with the Donaldson, son illness of manic “terrific” two depression. The Donaldsons acquired and daughters-in-law this summer fourth grandchild. I deeply appreciate all your news-bearing cards, but of my favorites is from Mary Love maybe one a Lehmann, who wrote in Feb. 1994: “I’ll send in some later, I guess l’m in the middle of something.” news No further word from Mary most mysterious. Russia. (This rates “Just found that I may have time deadline for the Quarterly. So, had died but nine months earlier. Pat was a long-time active volunteer in many roles in her community, especially in the Pegasus Therapeutic Riding Program and in the Interchurch Service Committee. ’4B from your humble and grateful who will try her best to live up to her an editorial Our duly elected and esteemed new class president was unable to be at reunion, but the following letter (from Joanie Allen Kastner) for itself: speaks to beat the greetings to the class of new president, predecessors but of good very years will need lots of help! Please take yourselves for the next five years because the 50th reunion is ‘must’ for all—my mother’s class of T 3 as had its 50th Twenty of service the handicapped through Pegasus, to saddler, side walker, and horse leader, led to an annual Pat Bugg award for “outstanding dedication” She learned of this honor three weeks to the program. before she died, and she hoped that any memorial contributions would go to Pegasus, PO Box 2053, Darien, CT 06820. a the now-famous typo found in your summer chair’94 magazine:—l did not call our 50th reunion men “grave” and enterprising! The word is brave. to understanding, and I have forgiven the VQ staff. Mary Anna Culleton Colwell says please tell that their ideas about the 50th are weleveryone (in strict confidence) their pet peeves about come —or her or co-chair previous reunions! So please write Penny Postles Hutton about whatever is on your mind. On June 7, a Chicago group for lunch to enjoy met another and lay plans for a fall ’95 Midwest J Haffner Chandler Stanley French and Chris the hostesses, and they gath- oan were ered in Pat Hume, Betty Wagner Zeni, Cil Huffard Rockwell, Shirley Hamilton McNerney, and Lydia Kerr Lee. The plan calls for an exciting two-night Dutch-treat stay in Chicago, to include the huge Monet show coming to the Art Institute. Lots ofother cultural goodies, as well the joys of reuning, as the works. Midwest residents will get tion well ahead. Sounds great! MarianneRichardson in are Levey has a July day. Marianne has recently Owings Mills, MD. Present were Hughes Carroll, Don and Chris Vassar Tall, Ed and Betty Johnston Preston, Bruce and Claire Wetzel Bairstow, and Pat Thayer Stevens, to whose husband,Russ, couldn’t come. A great pleasure for me was a beautiful lunchon a they were the at time 15 th, and I know as our fun than anybody! same having more “From all reports, the 45th was a ‘hard act to we congratulate and thank Carol and and Emmy Lou for Betsy and their reunion committee her class leadership and for the follow,’ and Gary spearheading fund drive. Thanks also to the other new (or continuing) class officers, Margarete, Ginia, and Jock, article. documentedelsewhere in Ginia’sfine reunion “Your class officers are in agreement that we should stay ‘togetherforever’ with our ’49 sisters and withthem in June of ’99. The AAVC wants reune us happy on this point, and our fund chairs will be working the details of our out “On the Rex’s retirement 50th gift. since after three moves from Shell Oil Co. in 1983, we are personal side, happily perched Mt. Soledad in La Jolla, CA (y’all on come!). The freedom and good healthto travel is our by great luxury—to the Idaho/Montana mountains for the next two weeks, a tiny house in Provence car in October, ‘grandparents-in-residence’ in Seattle in November, etc. “Our four offspring are all married and parents in Houston, Seattle, Austin, and Orange County. The weeklong gathering of that full group (10 adults, 7 children) in June in five cabins along the Blanco — where it the world every advance two or means from some- three years, which, least eight Needless to list oftravel destinations. “We’ll future issues our a in planning of at ‘vacations,’ is quite an accomplishment. to these families are say, visits high on our since some gather one moved from Ohio Joe and Halcyon care River in the Texas hill country is what kept me 45th reunion! We’ve managed to do this our cabin summer Warner, NH, where she had classmates and husbands in ample informa- I can try to keep you posted on ’4B’s plans in of the Quarterly. Volunteers to work on 50th reunion and fund gift willbe most welcome. be reached at 619/454-2567during December.” beautiful August day at the Thetford Hill, VT, home of Nancy Packard King, to which Esther Judkins Marshall also came. Nancy was justback from a won- A letter from Anne (Ky) MacKay ’49 reported that Joan Javits Zeeman ’49 is also looking ahead to our According to “together forever” 50th reunion. derful two-week walking our in Wales and showed us tour and friends and trips and on enjoyable 50thschool Baltimore, I in Philadelphia, and our reunions, Nancy in Esther 3,000 miles from their home Maine! The in Marshalls traveled the West for six weeks in Westphalia camper, attending the class reunion their from the Santa Ynez Valley home of Jan a house party at and Sally Holt Smit near Solvang, CA. It sounded like a wonderful place and great fun. Jan and Sally, in retirement, are runninga vineyard and making wine, well as countless other projects. The Marshalls as continued up the West Coast and had a quick visit with Paul and Margot Landon Visher ’4B in Cannon Beach, OR, where the Vishers recently built an earth- natingtour Petersburg, St. mained cheerful and productive throughout, though her husband, Bob, a noted cartoonist and illustrator, photos. It was such fun I could hardly bear to gorgeous continue on to Boston! We compared notes on families development. micro-reunion to “WOW”!) regional mini-reunion. Joan Aldrich Knowlton remicro, mini, and maxi. the micro variety at the Harvard Club. ports on ise of on one are Milton, MA 02186 They were Rhoda also teaches come. short trip to Canada and thendeparture for the Clan McLeod gathering at the clan castle, Dunnegan, on the Isle of Skye in the Hebrides—then plans—a Once again, sadly, our story begins with a death to report. On May 5, 1994, Pat Pans Bugg of New after two Canaan, CT, succumbed to cancer very difficult years. Her brother wrote that she had re- On a mere host of a in teens Rhoda is hosting “Senior Showcase,” a as ago a '47 Francy Lukens Hays 36 Cherry Blossom Way quake-proof house. Luckily, three of you wrote me the Pearly Taylor Gates, complete with Hallelujah (Stay tuned for the next exciting and Advil choruses. plot installment!) And speaking of musical spectaculars, a postcard from Jane Ellen Murray Wentz said, “My musical, Fear ofFiling, that many of the Chicago Vassar Club members to see at the Ivanhoe Theater, willbe thisfall by the Dramatic Publishing Co. My went published musical, American Rock, a musical salute to Norman Rockwell, will open Dec. 1 at the Starlight Theater in Rockford, IL. It’s Norman’s 100th birthday, and the post office was nice enough to issue new commemorative stamps. Hope Vassar alums will come Rockford is only a little over hour’s drive an from Chicago. For tickets, call 815/654-4296.” see directly this time, but I received NO colored postcards from Vassar. DO send yours in NOW from this copy of the VQ. ’48 Ky, Cecil B. de Javits is planning the show ofthe 100th reunion in 2048-9 at century, to be set at our own it. Creativity and travel Class Notes. Write ’49 Ginia Schauffler Allison 200 Willard Rd. Quechee, VT 05059 to me, willbe featured in our next please! Persis Gleason Laverack Box 542 Norwich, VT 05055 802/649-1709 and 802/295-7818 Jane Murray Broeksmit I hope the reunion enthusiastic summary addendum gave you of our June reunion As Barbara Birmingham great few days we “What a friends and wonderful to McLeod wrote had—fun be back on to brief but a RR 1 Box 173 activities. Dwight, afterward: 815/584-1261 see old Carol IL 60420 many campus. and Betsy promised an enjoyable time, and it was!” Barbara went describe their travel to on postreunion The 45th reunion was superb. All who attended had wonderful time. The campus looked beautiful, the Loeb Art Center stunning. Betsy Boland, chairpera 49 “I want to thank everyone for all help in organizing and coming to our 45th. It off beautifully. We all had fun becoming reacwent quainted and catching up on what has happened in lives. If you missed the 45 th,plan to be at the 50th! our their Reunions are fun.” Carol Levine Schwartz wrote: of the joy, fun, “Hope these pictures capture some laughter, and love that permeated each and every that so many of the incredible 45th reunion moment worked so hard During our make magical.” to class meeting at reunion, was approved. Gleason Laverack; Council representative; Nancy Leet Hetzel. Also the class voted unanimously to have our 50th reunion take place in 1999—“leading the next into century.” Anne (Ky) MacKay has written: “At our reunion, ’4B and ’49 voted to be If ‘together forever.’ Ky asks revote, you to anybody wants you to please remember that take a if we’re show! And Cecil B. de Javits together there’s is already planning the show ofthe century and wants everybody to come back and be in it! The show willbe 100th reunion at the Pearly Taylor Gates set at our and will be complete with Hallelujah choruses and Advil choruses. (The rest of the exciting plot will be not no revealed later.)” Ky adds that there are and Lilly, born in May. Joan Javits Zeeman, with Hans and the dogs, had The car was terrible accident the Sunday of reunion. a totaled. It frightening, very was a few 45th is OK. but everyone Thank the Dear Lord. “I hope the magic Pussy Auerbach Neff writes: [of the reunion] can be sustained, but distance and other commitments slate for follows; coour It is as presidents: Nancy Farnam Gannett and Nancy Edgehill Perry; vice president: EllenByer Friedlander; co-reunion chairpersons: Ellen Ryerson Conantand Doris Garabedian Carlson; secretary: Susan DalianCynthia Eels Nagel; fund tyne Mayfield; treasurer: chairperson: Laura Ten Eyck Byers; co-class correspondents: Jane Murray Broeksmit and Persis the 50th reunion College of Art. His wife, Sandy, is a graphic designer and the mother oftheir 2-year-old, Rosannah, Alberta seem about a mini-reunion idea. We do want in to a keep to us all apart. How two?” A marvelous keep year or the spirit going! ’5O was one Weisberg among 110 women Mary (Molly) Izant White ’50 439 N. Main St. Hudson, OH 44236 216/653-5881 45 th Reunion is replaced Hi from Ohio, where the glow of summer ushered in by was by the blow of winter. My summer a wonderful dinner in Mary French Conway and Bill’s gracious home overlooking vast most Houston Maynard and Fred, JeanetteNortonBartram and Maynard, Betty Hadden Alexanderand Quentin, Marcie Patt Thompson, Bette Dawson Got Blackwood and Terry, and my husband, Gene. Jay showed us great photos of the last ’5O reunion, which letter about wonderful, warm her from MarionHeath Mundy ’5l (the famous hilari- books left. Write to her at Box 97, Orient, NY 11957 if you wish her to send you one. Ann (Hutch) Hutchison writes: “The phone recently on a Sunday morning and a voice rang tentatively said, ‘Hutch?’ I said, ‘Yes.’ I knew it had to be Vassar friend. Those the only people who call Hutch. And then I heard the most me heavenly singing in the world. It could only be Caryl Bergman Perkins ’4B. And it voice. As I said a magnificent in the reunion book, I am always pleased to get unexpected calls. When you get the additional gift of Caryl’s voice, it really makes the day.” Louise Myers Spizizen writes: “I’ve recently learned that my article on Johana Harris in the Musical Quarterly has been nominated by the editors are was the Oxford UniversityPress for an ASCAP-Deems Taylor Award. It’s like an Oscar nomination—winat more We hear results in important thanbeing nominated. October or November.” Louise, be informed. has just retired from her assistpost as dean in the graduate college of the University of ant Illinois. She has applied to the Peace Corps and so far sure keep us Nini Almy to has received encouraging communications. Sally Smith Hasbrouck has written the death of Margot Hedden Green, ologist, of cancer in to class Ellen Kraft Weinstein writes now husband’s stroke in June, whichadded to their home infirmary problems. He’s recovering nicely, and so Ellen, from her triple bypass in March.What a year is in California. Dorothy NewmanPolayes writes from her condo in Stratford, CT, which they call their “summer camp for adults.” More time, however, is spent in their Florida home. Their big volunteer thrust is at the Kravis Center for the Arts, which a tell us Orinda,CA. We send our sympathy Performing they the wider serve community.Should we debate this “inner core” theory ’95 reunion? Toby is the only one I’ve heard at our from this month mentioning our coming reunion. And that is that from Hudson, OH, near muchunfair. Ohio’s Cleveland, which is totally to me the TV, I must admit. found us at JanetElderkin Azzoni and Al’s quiet spot with Mickey Meyers Shriver and J im, Betsy Hopkins Colt and Dave, Meg Kinard Peacock and John, Fifi Locke Richards and Charlie, and of husband, Gene. Prize dogs Moxie and my also stole the show. It’s a good thing they couldn’t talk,for no way wouldwe have time to listen, so busy were we catching up and eating and boating course, and singing to guess who’s easy piano. The years between graduation and 1994 vanished. Such fun renewing those bonds. ’51 Margot Courtright 49 E. 96th St. #7-B New York, NY 10128 Letter from London. Once more Pm back in the Barbican, enjoyingthe breezes from my balcony while the of London swelters from what is reported rest to be the longest heat wave since 1659. One cannot help but picture Charles II and his cohorts swinking and sweating as they hammered out the details for the of the monarchy. Could he drop in on the royal family, he would be amused and amazed restoration present that greets their every move. Imagine paying taxes and raising money by charging admission to Buckingham Palace! Then she is advised at the criticism the queen to sell the palace and build an up-to-date home modern monarchy. How would the “merry” monarch, whose amorous excesses delighted his sub- befitting a jects, have reacted to his 20th-century namesake’s confession of marital infidelity on national TV? Tarradiddle, my lad! More important issues are painful the increasing number of terrorist bombings, the deterioration of the National Health Service, the disruptive railroad strike, and the rise of Tony Blair as leader of the Labour party. The horrors of Bosnia and Rwanda dominate the front pages. Nancy Purdy returned to Cambridge last July for on Victorian England. Mary Coxe Schlosser a course will attend the International Bookbinding Conference in September sponsored by Designer Bookbinder at Christchurch College, Oxford. Her daugh- and held ter, Sarah, will join her for a week in London and a Charlotte Cleveland Look were co-hostesses for a tea in Yarmouth,ME, in honor of trustee V irginiaCretella Mars. Members of all classes were invited, as well as wants VC to know how valuable her getting jobs and degree and training have been, contributing to the field of early lic career on and talked ers, space of the vote to blue-collar chemical plant folks, shrimp- employees. She won with 63 percent job very rewarding. They credible politician who had no pergoals, she says. Terry finds this an and finds her ready for sonal economic were Bay, pub- the city council of this city of 8,500 the campaign she walked every street program a a news in Scotland. Our regional class activities popularity. On June 21, Cal continue to gain in Lincoln Harder and Delma From Little Seabrook, TX, on Galveston Terry Comcowich Lucas writes of her exciting excellent way to use Watch your Texas NancyLeet Hetzel’s son-in-law,ArthurGreenblatt, has recently been appointed the new president of the to a conclusion role models who children, and eight grands. She put her brains and talents to wonderful use; it’s sad she died this young.” Contributions may be made to the California Pacific Medical Foundation. Gretel. on holiday people. During Nancy Thomas Rees writes that her daughter, Hilleary Rees Coleman,produced Emily Thomas Rees Coleman on May 9, 1994- Emily joins 4‘/2-year-old fellows! She goes that some of her Vassar faculty were her the intellectual fuel to gave have been part of since its very beginning. Joan Moore Etheridge, in Aurora, CO, is busy, busy withspecial ed classes, church involvement,four her mother and her four children. Sally writes: “As I think about her, her radiant smile and enthusiasm, and even her voice, come back to me clearly. She was with almost too for a vibrant person much energy Vassar and the East Coast, which she considered too stodgy to make much progress! It’s obvious that she 1994 about her childhood education. of retired cardito to 50 VQ WINTER a secretary), Lorraine fought a brave fight and lost to cancer last spring. She willbe greatly missed by her family and friends. That same class of ’5l held the famous Jackie Kennedy Onassis, whom one of our substitute columnists recalls. Carmine Calenti wrote recently in the Poughkeepsie Journal about her making him feel more comfortable in an English class and in a Shakespeare play they were both in. ous ningis scarcely Cape According paper. a column. She had been in Lawrence,NY, in After years in Chappaqua, NY, Lorraine Adelman Dickinson and husband Ernest had moved to North for their local Truro, Cod, where she wrote reunion women Hope expanses of the country club. A full moon made this minireunion mellowand festive with some 44years between last encounters. From near and far came Carol (Poody) of our architecthonored then governmental nine mini-reunion them. 1993. only were cottage in West Southport, ME, where six of us ’soers melded together in the sun and fog. This midsummer nursing home with emphysema. She leaves her son, Keith, and a sister, Roberta. We send sympathy to fellows of the American Institute of Architects in client. There of 110 new out Addendum This correspondent can still smell the pines, the salt the cozy Dry Point air, and the mud flats and see a new her nontraditional role of Indians have got out of nine profession by impacting community environments, quality of life, and architectural education.”Good to be acknowledged by her peers for maligned I had missed. that Ruth SilNancy Alderman Ransom wrote Ridler’s death before last Christmas had been left ver Sarelle Toback contribution to the . has written; son, lifetime of skills in retirement. for more. now A wonderful letter came from Sarelle (Toby) Toback Weisberg in N.Y.C. She and Maryann Nathan Collin and husband Bob traveled to Bruce Collin’s wedding in Dallas last winter. Good reunion for all. And she went to write about her (Toby’s) on big honor in ’93. She became a fellow in the American Institute of Architects in recognition of a “significant Denneby Van der Veer from the DevelopGinny discussed her position as college and as chairman of the Campaign for Vassar. trustee She enumerated several projects that the college hopes to complete with funds from this campaign, including the upgrading of buildings, additions to the library, and the new North Gate. Both Ginny and Delma stressed that despite the controversies thatwill Vassar can always be raised on a liberal arts campus, boast of a healthy, exciting, and special community. Judi Ballou Freeman ’52, member of the Visiting ment Office. a Committee to the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, praised Vassar’s new She is currently curator museum. of the Portland Museum of Art, where she recently mounted an exhibition of Rodin’s sculpture. Present from our class were Coralie Hanly Murray, Nancy Lee Brown Snow, and Lucia Pierce Smith. Elaine Beatty Timbers ’46 sent the “Because my sister, Diane following item. Beatty Highley, is reticent about blowingher own horn, I willdo it for her. While raising four (lovely!) children, she worked at various through school, though her stepfather always spelled it “Allelu.” Finally, she learned after college that her like artistic father, 60, when she was born after three brothers, exclaimed, “Alleluia, it’s a girl!” On the scientific bent, Patricia Harris Backlar early arrivalof forest writes that she is a senior scholar at the Center for Ethics in Health Care, Oregon Health Sciences Uni- this season Talked to our class president, Mimi Gargill Braverman, who is most grateful for the overwhelm- business projects, such as designing and making leather clothes, then personalized or theme-box of which is currently owned by Jack Nicklaus’s wife, Barbara. Now living mainly in Fort Lauderdale, she took a degree in interior decorating there, and her services are in demand. On the side she pocketbooks, one golfer (champion of several tournaments), a tennis player (less enthusiastic), a dog lover, and reader. She remains size 8, which is enough to is excellent an a do a of us most in.” Louis Clemot. Su’s daughter is an attorney based in Paris and her husband a Parisian banker.... A beautiful reception was held in the Keowee Key Community, where Su and her husband, Everett, built a magnificent home overlooking Lake Keowee. The Clarkshave a pontoon boat, which they navigated to show their guests the surrounding area. Horan and her husband, Jim, were thefestivities.” Kathy Hartman PatHemenway also on hand for Magram visited Bunny Los Angeles. Kathy’s Memorial Day weekend in daughter, Linda, recently married in Boston. She is head of public relationsfor children’s books at Little, Brown and Co. Kathy was awaiting grandchild #5 this summer. Bunny’s daughter, Wendy, is a college English teacher in Portland, OR. Her son, on are moving works for Nike.“It willbe most to Portland, where he for convenient me to have these former Easterners on the Left Coast, closer time to me and in the same zone.” Bunnyand Dorothy Saffir Victor “do lunch” together now and then. They received minimal damage in the earthquake but remain on edge because of the myriad aftershocks that continue to occur. Before signing off I must relate a London experiFor six summers I’ve listened to the all-night ence. radio quizzes from the London Broadcasting Co. “Dummies!” I shout to no one, “I knew that.” On Aug. 6 I screwed up courage and made my 4 A.M. at long- threatened debut. I knocked out a question that had lingered for two months, but I did not win. However, I have joined such faceless luminaries as Harry from Hackney, Perdita of Paddington, and Pat on Edgeware known as Margot in the Barbican. Happy am holidays to you. Road. I i ’52 f Ann Wick West has been dabbling in politics, helping elect her cousin, Christie Todd Whitman, of New Jersey. Wiggle’s to Wheaton. governor BunnySchwolsky Feuer spent some time on the East Coast last spring. “The first stop on my eastern swingwas Salem,SC, where I attended the nuptials of Ursula (Su) Field Clark’s daughter, Ellen, to Andre- Tom, and wife versity, and recently published The Family Face of Schizophrenia (New York: Torcher/Putnam, 1994). Whittaker 2126 Connecticut Ave. NW #44 Washington, DC 20008 Hilary Christie only sorry Anna Ruth Sandin Masters 1028 Walker Rd. Great Falls, VA 22066-1928 703/759-3489 to Oseid refreshingly willing is to write about having had to deal, as have many of us, with disease, death, depression, growing legal traps, and the dissolution offamiliar ways in society. She wonders if hopes for our children flying away . .. It was pleasant are recently with Anne living in Cincinnati, Hampshire, where her Arlington, Dallas, and New husband, Bob, has had Unitarian ministries, is now enjoying retirement in Wisconsin, where her family has summered for generations. She reports that her old roommate, Lyndl Thorsen Marshall, visited for a wonderful week, and they agree they had a perfectly “born New Yorkerand probably the last left,” works at a women-owned ad agency Lyndl, time, renter a where they promote products such as Max Factor and Easy Spirit shoes. (I wear them, too, and they’re the best! ) After rearing four daughters, she has two and a third grandchildren and enjoys the good life of conmovies, reading, crocheting, and watching CNN certs, only. She, too, detests media editorializing. a Off in Texas, Mary Ditmore Mathews has made homefor her mother,substitute-reaches, and works at on 95-year-old providing food and clothes for the needy her church. She has retired after 26 Our best of teach- years Souter who took For a some formidable audience. time we’ve been meaningto share a note from Allelu Beal Kurten about how she got her name, which we often mistake as “Allie Lou.” She’d been called “Alleluia” as a “wee girl” until one Easter she walked up the aisle to the minister thinking she was forms took various answering his call. Her name Lee Mills Petty, who is the new DC. She Sibley Hospital in Washington, daughter Tory and her long-time roomMatt Stone, “known by me my ‘sin-in-law,’ at ” mate, are to that writes as getting married produced two in the spring, and her older sons grandchildren. new On your next visit Stallworth and Rod the bookstore, check for Lyn Kennedy’s new Country Fair Cookbook, published by Hyperion. Lyn continues teaching at the New School, including a course called “How to to Boil Water.” a bed and breakfast of in Ohio? Just east Cincinnati, Connie Dettmer ’53 has renovated and a historic house opened it as location is Boston! B&B. a The wheels already rolling are with a Boston-area committee meeting dates and events. schedule to The wealthof news continues, thanks to that dues But it runs after this issue, so pull the out postcard in the back of this magazine and send your New Year’s resolutions if nothing else! Better yet, call me (number above). Did you see the article in the July 14 New York Times entitled “For a Lost Child, Rooms of Flowers”? Connie QuackenbushUmberger’s garden on a quar- ofland surrounding herNantucket home was born of a need to work through the grief suffered after ter-acre her daughter Mary’s suicide five years ago. The article has an abundance of fine photographic illustrations; Connie under herrose-covered pergola, lily pond, and curving stone and brick a captivating paths through abundance ofperennial herb and flower “rooms.” What started as simply a need to dig has transformed her place into of ineffable beauty and love. one an From MargieBlum Epstein, news thatshe changed jobs in mid-April to become director of development for the Greater New Orleans Foundation. She’ll be responsible for establishing permanent endowment funds as well as promoting public awareness of the Margaret and local offices all national, state, The WCF is a 819 Saint James St. PA 15232 the country. that committee practice in radiation oncology, she now offers primary medicine in Manchester, a town of 1,800 on the care life that she a whole new edge of Appalachia ... thoroughly enjoys. Maggie Perkins Brewster penned only a senabout working as a docent at the Baltimore tence Museum of Art, playing piano, skiing, and hitting a tennis ball. Sounded exhausting to me, so I looked our 40th reunion handbook and by Maggie’s confession: have good health”! So many children as of you, news. “I feel and was cheered extremely lucky rightly so, see to children’s Joan Morton McDonald’s 12th a finds little time I’m writingthis in mid-August from a summer cottage the coast of Maine. This may be remembered as the on that shouldn’t have been! Dense fog here is summer the byproduct of a stubborn Bermuda over bipartisan political Christmas dinner, Joan?Priscilla Heckmann Brown for much else save her business and Pittsburgh, high producing days on Boston and New York. For end the TV weather map candidates for over born year ago, making the count five grandchild girls and seven boys—all but four of them living nearby. How many leaves will you add to the table for Peggy Loizeaux Engel 412/683-8819 fierce heat busy raising $1 Need a bed and breakfast in Ohio? Just east of Cincinnati, Connie Dettmer has renovated a historic house and opened it as a B&B. Retired from full-time was ’53 “As co-chair of in the 1992 elections.” Ann’s supported 242 women other big interest is Indonesia, where she and Gilbert have traveled to visit ancient temples in Java. back to That all, folks, we’re out of fresh news. Have wonderful holidays and be sure send us a copy of to annual letter or write of us with your your one news. as majors is Need from now on! Ann Rasmussen Kinney writes: the Women’s Campaign Fund, I am million to support pro-choice women have on mini-reunion a children. and their younger journalism and politics at the two-day Evalyn Clark the Uses of History at Alumnae House Symposium last December. Hoppy says it was an exhilarating challenge and honor, a room full of Vassar history the dues/news/views to responses The clear preference for foundation’s good work in the community. With that awesome a task and title, I’d better call you chaplain captain in the Signal Corps, both served in the Gulf War, and Sarah recently marriedanother captain in Seoul. The Careys’ elder daughter, Betty, is a VP at Lehman Brothers in N.Y.C., and her twin, Tom, a pathology resident at Cleveland Clinic, and his wife, Chu-Shei Hong, M.D., have bilingual sons. But Betty’s Chinese comes with extreme effort! Janet Gregory Weary recently visited the Careys in New Orleans. Anne Hopkins chaired a panel on history in ing number of ing school from first grade to high school and special education; has raised three children and has six grand- Carey a bringing my wishfor for you all, skiers excepted! Find joy of holidays and homecomings. winter in mailing. erup- that the to notice. chat to Torrison Clarke, who, after and her neurosurgeon husband, Michael, who flew from a D-Day memorial trip in France to accept a Medal of Valor awarded to them jointly by the AMA in Chicago on June 12. As for family news, Michael daughter, Sarah, benign storm Add Though we tend to prefer to share our happy news with each other in this column, Leslie Muskat Smith a pediatrician Betty yellow West... all together, fires in the the best! So this issue arrives In good health, which she considers essential to enjoying life, BJ Scarlett Allen has welcomed her daughter back to New York after three and a half years in Sydney, Australia, with Proctor & Gamble. Both her sons married in 1993, and her older son has twins born in Feb. 1994Mary Louise Gardy Clarke’s 35 th anniversary fine celebrating: first a surprise party sparked some hosted by daughter Anne Clarke Meyer ’B3 and her husband, then a trip to Italy. a Congratulations a of acne—red and case that Margaret Morphy, from computer analysis work at IBM, early retirement she’s says thoroughly enjoying golf, needlepoint, gettingher home back in order, and life in general. She has a daughter at IBM and a son who will marry next with Mary She was planning on going to reunion year. Clark McCormack and Audrey Barnum Ulm, but jury duty deciding an extended case of bus driver’s sexual assault of crippled girl kept her at home. and not bad pockmark a field of rainy green. went Canadian 202/462-8933 a tions ofthe Southeast has looked her grands... all of them two born in 1993 and two more in 1994, living close by. Tina Vavuras Lord rejoices that daughter Sara, her husband Rob, and little Charlotte have moved back to Albany, NY. Likewise rejoicing is Nat Stepanovich Vujovich, who lives withinfour miles of her four grands! I envy you all! 51 Somewhere in the navel ofNew Haven toils a VC the hearts of class correspondents . . . she/he clips clippings! And when they relate to Bitsie Thompson Clark, I am the happy recipient. As executive director ofthe Arts Council ofGreater New exhibiart various Bitsie is called on to alum to gladden competition to choose a child’s is far drawing to grace the mayor’s stationery! Bitsie more self-deprecating, calling herselfand Jean (Chic) One was Kelley the “older ladies” among young archiplanning a symposium called “The Future of American Cities.” A reference librarian at Digital Equipment Corp., Wini Sadler Ferguson is also pursuing a master’s in library and information science at Simmons College, grands, Patrick and Thomas. Boston. She boasts two The one-liners go on! Ruth Graham Siegrist, who gained emeritus in 1990, has resumed partstatus time for time teaching, travel... most recently leaving the Arctic Circle. Liane Hust Heydt was a prethe topic of “outcome-based education” at senter on the national education conference of the AASA. New Yorker Margaret Allen Sedgwick has joined the Corcoran Group (real estate) after 17 good years at to Time Inc. And, from Kingston, Jamaica, Beverly Junor Levy reports she is still in “tourism.” The issue of Town and Country featured her February husband, the hotel, and their country house. And this just in, a PR release from the Private Industry Councilof SouthernConnecticut headlined “Vassar Graduate Elected Chair of Regional Workforce Development Board.” Yep, Denny Taft Davidoff coordito a good cause! This one in the Bridgeemployment and trainingprograms just can’t say “no” nates port, Norwalk, Stamford area. called I’ve reached what a long-dead aunt words now instead of lines! City! We count Capa ’55 ’54 i 210 E. 68th St. New York, NY 10021 Riverside, CT 06878 dealers seen the opening of the $l2 art at million Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh was Holly Dworken Solomon. In November her Holly Solomon Gallery in SoHo, New York City, showed the Asian works of Izhar Patkin, which included a 14- Among foot dancing Shiva of hundreds of hand-blown Venetian glass beads and gilded paintings on the theme of the Garden of Eden. We are sorry to report the death of Martha E. and a stroke. An Metford in July 1993 of cancer Martha attorney and Washingtonresidentfor 30 years, had been a staff lawyer with the Humane Society of the United States. She previously worked with the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, the Democratic National Committee, and the General Accounting Office. She was a member of the DAR. In addition, our sympathies go to Mary BlanchardKirkiles, whose husband died in March 1993. He owned and operated in the Calico Kitchen in Hartford and two restaurants New Haven CT, the CopperKitchen and the Paragon Restaurant, before his retirement. Cambria Masterworks has released a new CD by Maggie Aydelotte Mills, her third, entitled “Margaret Mills Plays Piano Music of Ruth Schonthal and ’54 is holding its 40th reunion. I was in the midst of retiring from the Milwaukee as I was schools after 25 years as a school psychologist public and supervisor. It’s been rewarding and challenging experience. People keep asking me what I’m going to do, and I say, ‘Maybenothing.’ Stay tunedfor Audrey’s a excellent retiring adventure.” We’ll look forward to the next chapter in a future issue of the Quarterly. Unfortunately Eileen Wolf Katz’s letter came too late to post at reunion, as Eileen had hoped. She chil“I’m in Princeton with four grown wrote, living grandchildren, dren, two going to make it to reunion not nearby. I’m probably not but would be happy to see eitherannounced or not.” any classmates that stop by, Eileen is in the Princeton phone book under E. Katz. second AnnRowland Koehler’s fifth grandson, was Cynthia and born on grandchild, daughter March 21, 1994, to her husband, John Bernstein, in West Newton, MA. He joins his brother, Sam, who was 2 Bastille Day. Other family news included a visit for on 10 days over July 4th from daughter Vicki Clare and her husband, Tom, with their three little girls, ages 1 also joined over the 6 /1 i, 5, and 2 /z. They were holidays by son Robert, who moved to Los Gatos from Fort Lee, NJ, last November. Come Sept. 1, Ann “Husband Rege and I will vacation for a month, wrote, weeks in the Alsace and two weeks in Normandy.” Sure sounds like it’s a well-deserved and much-needed two together. Leading a seemingly more sedentary life, but also enjoying it, is Lynn Covington Davies. She writes, home in Park City, UT, “Enjoying my new vacation in all seasons; wonderful hiking, music, reading. All the seasons are inspired here. Back in Palm Beach I have my little granddaughter to look forward to. Life is good.” What a wonderful note to end on. I hope that of us are enjoying life this way, but regardless most please let us know what is going I am now beginning an excitingnew part-time job for the Green- which she is totally involved.” Both composers the recording sessions, which pleased Maggie, since one of her special interests is working with living One piece on the CD was commissioned composers. at by and scheduled to be introduced in Germany as part Schonthal’s honor in Heidel- of the celebration in berg. Though particularly music contemporary since fascinated with new and her student days, when her debutfeatured Bartok’s “Suite,”Maggie has a versatile repertoire. This past year she performed Beethoven, Hayden, and Amy Beach at the Greenwich Arts Center, Bach’s D Minor Piano Concerto in the First Presbyterian Church, and a Charles Ives piece at a conference in Worcester, MA. Maggie made her Carnegie Hall Debut in 1974- Recitals have included Washington and New the National Gallery of Art in York’s Lincoln Center. Being a musician is a seven- day-a-week activity for Maggie, with recitals,recording, publishing, four hours of daily practrice, and a full schedule as chairmanofthe Third Street Music School Settlement in New York. Mina TangKan held an exhibition of her original prints at the Gallery of the Winds in Estes Park, CO, in June 1994 called “Spirit, Form and Earth.” Mina photograph images in my says, “Although I use many new work, I assemble and recombine them to create and personal visions of the world.” ’56 Hope Christopoulos Mihalap 1316 Graydon Ave. Norfolk, VA 23507 804/623-0429 (phone) 804/640-0848 (fax) time on. school consultant, at the Mayfield Junior School Pasadena, CA. Quite a change from life in New York City. It’s wonderful and exciting, but I miss my as a in 522 VQ WINTER 1994 was Hester Hinsdale Nau visited Barbara Philen Chase at her beautiful ranch in St. Helena, CA, where the Chases raise alpacas. Hester loved them, sheared babies as “poodles with the describing newly long necks.” A delightful spread in last May’s “Styles” section of flowerof the New York Times featured wearers trimmed hats, all this at the Frederick Law Olmsted AwardsLuncheon givenby the CentralPark ConserofPat Parton The center was prominent photo vancy. Rosenwald, whose husband, John, was people honored for Conservancy work. That photo Having just taken a killer 12-block walk through the neighborhood so as to justify cheese for breakfast (Greeks are strange), I glance through the postcards in by some of you for these notes and find you are sent slightly more athletic than I am. For example, Anne Salo Hallagan skis Alpine, races cross-country, and joins her husband, Dick, in racing their Lightning sail-cat. They participated in regattas this past year in Ecuador and Switzerland and, during their travels, visited son Peter and daughter-in-law in Cracow, where they workfor MBA Enterprises.The other two children are also married, and the kids, by now aware of their parents’ superb coordination, gave Anne and spread came to me of three one from my faithful misses and witty source, Jeanne Rejaunier, who never item about a classmate. As for herself, Jeanne a news number of fascinating projects: her novel reports a Mob Sisters, about the world’s first female mafia, has been now optioned for network television, and Jeanne is working on another novel, Fool’s Gold, a New Age book set in California. “Additionally,” Jeanne writes, “I’ve been doing some ghostwriting: in the past two years I have completed one book for an abused wife, one for former Jesuit priest, and one for two people in the Witness a $500,000 Protection Program on whose lives exist mob contracts. I’m due shortly to start working on a with Graves’ disease and another book for a woman for also negotiata colorful Oklahoma oil tycoon; am of an 89-year-old Palm Beach ing the memoirs boulevardier.” Penny Travis Lane’s book Night Physics can be ordered from Brick Books, Box 38, StationB, London, Ontario N6A 4V3. Its catalogue number is ISBN 0- to 919626-70 X. Cost, approximately $lO.l continue get great pleasure from Penny’s book of poetry, Reck- onings. My own book, Where There’s Hope, should be in print by the time you read this and can be ordered either from me or from Knox Publishing in Granville, OH. From contains no Maura is probably easier. I calumny. Mulligan Benjamin writes me assure from you it Palm Beach, where she and her husband live in the winter, moving to a saltwater farm in Pretty Marsh, ME, on Mt. Desert Island, in summer. She welcomes visitors, especially in Maine. Finally, news of a richly deserved award to Alice Pack Melly from the Junior League ofGreenwich. In giving Alice the Betty Hinckley Award, the Greenwich League cited her extraordinary record of volunteer work since 1952. Among other things, Alice has been instrumentalin such projects as Shelterfor the Homeless, Inland Wetlands and Watercourse Agency, Long Island Sound Council, the Audubon Society, and the Greenwich Library, which she has served in numerous capacities. Be on the alert for news or questionnaires about 40threunion. It’s not till 1996,of course, but keep our Western it k this, “As I write unable to attend critic wich Time, in Maggie’s hometown, calls it “an impressive album, expertly engineered with beautiful pianosound, showing Mills at her best, playing music ' says, I pipes. were Audrey Clark Mayer’s note Anne is so agile is that Dick is I think the reason slouch himself. I’m going to get Larry to read this. He tried to prevent me walking this morning because and he figured I would be it was before A.M. eight hoping I would be because I’ve been practicing yelling YAH and slamming my fist into cardboard toilet-paper rolls pretending they’re wind- Collins 65 Stirrup Lane 40th Reunion in like a thing of the past, but Our 49th reunion seems there were some classmates who couldn’t make it and with the rest of us. wanted to share their news reunion. mugged. Libby Prince Lowell Liebermann.” The music Selma Gruenstein Miller Dick roller-blades last year for Christmas. Anne says 40th that if she isn’t on crutches she’ll skate to our no supplied. a Russell tects well judge Haven, tions. sister, my children, and my grandchildren in the East. A bonus is I’m spending lots of time with my niece and her family—also on the plane, where I have lots of Class Notes, so please keep me to read and write time in mind and don’t be afraid to come back. The 40 years ago people of whom you were in terrified are now boggled by you. The ones you thought were it. weird now seem peculiarly normal. I mean awe ’57 Alice Handelman Model 7 Sherwood Dr. Larchmont, NY 10538 914/834-5661 Thefew cards received this quarterrepresent the usual themes common to our classmates; accomplishments, retirement, moving, and grandbabies. Having received the first Carol B. Seidler Award from Greenwich where she teaches his- Academy, tory, economics, and art, Carol Nipomnich Dixon in China for two weeks to study its history and was and archeology; and government; art, architecture, economics in Beijing, Xi’an, andShenzhen, the larg- This zones. country’s special economic established in memory of a fellowship who had been especially active for the school. woman The grant is designed to allow a uniqueopportunity for faculty member to pursue a project that would be both personally and professionally beneficial. Com gratulations, Carol! Your students willbe enriched by thrilling experience. your Doris Stearns Swain still teaches high school math in Rockford, IL, but will now be living in Davis, of the est was summer a church IL, where her husband, Jim, will continue ministry. In anticipation of husband Larry’s retirement in November, Barbara Goldberg Niad reports that they’ve sold their home, moved to an apartment, and a home in Florida. They plan between New York and Florida. building are their time divide to Pamela and have lived with Farrington Clayson babysitting her the grandsons, ages 5 and 8, when spoke phone. They are the sons of her daughter, Jenny, who was two we 35. Pam’s son, is investment David, is on 31 and works for an Her youngest management company. daughter, Wendy, is 28 and is the mother of Pam’s granddaughter, Anna, who is 1 year old. Wendy works part time, tutoring and testing learning-disabled children. Lucky Pam! All of her children live near her Weston, MA, home! Pam worked in real estate for 15 years. Now, retired, she travels a lot with her husband, Barr. Barr is with Standish, Ayer and Wood, working in internaShe says, “I am playing andenjoying tional investment. the Ashe Handelman and husband Walter Judy (brother of haveworked together for 30 years each other for the past 10 years. I crew. everybody fortunate. I have great kids and is happy and healthy.” am very derful for her in many ways, that the fact that so many of her classmates bought her jewelry was “terrific affirmation.” She contribution to our I received a phone call from Elenita Milbank Drumwright, telling of Jean Shevlin Gerard’s recent of bad luck. She is holding her own after a serious run bout with cancer and a stroke, undergoing aggressive in treatment she the describes quarterly magazine Sophisticated Traveler. Among the changes under her direction was the weekly section going to color from black andwhite.Nancy’s first travel article byline . l ’58 Sloane Beverly Leßov was in the July 31st Scottish gardens. Nancy says the pressures to write. editor don’t allow enough time 1301 N. Santa Anita Ave on ofbeing an It’s too bad a “Alice in Warheadland, In Which the essay, Young Vassar Grad Falls into a Strangelovian World of Post-Nuclear Planning.” Editor of Outlook, Jodie servant, tion her days as an intern and a junior civil other things, “an evaluapreparing, among of the psychological effect on the nation of a specific nuclear attack scenario.” Thankfulfor less. leaves in late January for Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, where she will be an in a large indepenexchange teacherfor one semester Before Nancy became travel editor, she was editor of the New York Times for several years. nounce dent girls’ the end of husband, Michael lovenko. She is in touch with Jean Sonkin Arbeiter, Betty Ann May Cannell, Alice Garrett McClelland, and B.J. Lockhart Cowie. ' it. We’re all relieved thatthose or day and boarding school. She will return July. Marcy’s daughter, Alison, was married in Toulouse, French graphic France, to Pierre Sardain, a young she artist six met years Marcy and her husband, ago. busy planning a wedding party on this side of the ocean for August. Alison plans to attend graduate school at the University of York in England. Jack, were She wants be to a medievalist. Marcy writes, “Dark her ‘thing,’ but she is beginning to fear are Ages mores that employment might not be there at the end of grad lives in a brownstone in New York with her style She lawyer classmate I must report the death of our Bodil Nielsen Van Kleeck. According to her obituary in the Valley Reporter, Bodil lived in Bedford and Sadly, Manhattanand died She rior on June 1,1994, ofheart failure. journalist and editor whoseforte was intedesign. She moved to Bedford in 1991, when she was a a half- VC in trauma psychology, she completed the project but never found out what happened at course year to Easterling at Vanderbilt and Ohio member of the to because the piece was well written, interesting, and chock full of useful information. I personally look forward to more Nancy Newhouse bylines. Marcia Pears Arcadia, CA 91006-2419 818/355-8915 edition she couldn’t be foreign languages department at Berea since 1976. I enjoyed reading Jodie Tetrault Allen’s rather and Susan Morrison. David said that I “great aunt”! a sorry Sept. After Vassar, Elise went State, and she has been ironic was moment, hear from her friends in the to reunion, and eager class. Letters to her sent c/o AAVC willbe forwarded. Congratulations to Elise Andre, promoted to full professor at Berea College, Berea, KY, as of 1. For the past five years, Nancy Riley Newhouse has been travel editor of the New York Times. In that capacity, she is editor of the weekly travel section and always Paris, Elenita said. She told Elenita that okay for the was class correspondent) are grandparents! Helen Jewell Handelman was born on June 2, 1994, to son and daughter-in-law David Handelman your able to make a substantial class because of those sales. was days are past, more G. Suzanne Murnane Maroon is pleased to anthe publication ofThe United States Capitol—“a coffee-table textbook”—her husband’s 10th book, but the first to which she has contributed. She wrote the text, irony that she should admitting a certain write about an American architecturallandmarksince she is neither an American nor an architect nor an historian. But the book certainly sounds interesting! As liaison to the Fund for Planned Giving, Alison Church Hyde is eager to talk with classmates about gifts to the college that can provide and income benefits to the donor and future income to VC. She says that Helen Zalkan Pearl “has paved the way in our school!” married BarnardD. Van Kleeck 111. In addition to her husband, whose address is Box 310, Bedford, NY 10506, she is survived by her father, Tage Nielsen, and article from the I received from AAVC an Poughkeepsie Journal on the subject of financial aid twosisters, HanneNielsenWilliams ’56 (Mrs. Arthur) and Birgot Deeds of Charlotte, VT. watch “A Century of Women,” the celebration of “some lesser-known American heroes along with a few big-name figures who have helped better the lives and transform the image of women packages for college students. There is a statement from Sally Donoho Griffen on the benefits of internships. Sally is director of field work at Vassar. Had a delightful phone conversation with Barbara Lebow. We became friends in college and were It was always struck by the similarity of our names. great plans to after all these years, and we made each other in New York. Barbara is a see to founder of the Academy Theater in Atlanta. Her play, Aug. 28 The Keepers, scheduled was the Jean Cocteau at Repertory Greenwich Village. The play concerns ily of lighthouse keepers off the coast 1854.The cast includes a retired sea a to on open Theater in uniquefamof Maine in captain, his wife, and an adopted daughter who is black. A storm forces them all to live in the tower. One of the characters unravels and has a effect on the others, the intimacy of the re- profound especially being confined in mote lighthouse. It is poetic play spoken a Maine dialect. It sounds intriguing. I can’t wait in early to see it. Barbara has also been actively involved in Thein Human Service, facilitating plays by ater disenfranchised groups, disparate elements ofthe community like the homeless, prison inmates, etc. If you would like to endeavor, write find to about this worthwhile this column and I will send it on to out more Barbara. Her oldest, Richteacher and active in sons. a environmental issues. He lives on ing to work in Brainbridge, the father of Barbara’s two and of you but sunny December when this issue preferably at night, if you a an near island, commutSeattle. He is grandchildren, a 5-year-old Her middle son, Steven, is business with his the home construction 1-year-old boy. 31 and in father, Barbara’sformer husband. Her youngest, James, is 29 and plans to attend graduate school to study archeology. Barbara’s life partner is Frank Wittow, founder and artistic director of the Academy Theater. They comes Have out. found the ideal climate—warm, even hot, of the time, with just enough rain, most to nurture the flora? Let me know have. but memories a long time Reunion seems ago, I recallwith special pleasure several trips to the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center—both the linger on. building and the collection are spectacular, I think. The panel of our classmates, the artwork, the reunion with old friends, and the discovery of new—those the highlights for me. The food was were good, too, certainly different from what I remember from the days gone by. I tbink, too, of the moving replay ofthe slide show prepared for the 25 thby Linda ClarkMcGoldrick, all the more moving, of course, because of her untimely this question: did we the keys like? No one could remember, although we didn’t have combination locks. Ansie Silverman Baird wrote memories seeing some last winter. Our new president, Alice Bunzl Belgray, said she felt that the reunion was very stimulating; the panel Egypt and literary reading were encouraging to find that sionally were and involved in expanding their califelong learning,” she said, adding that she looks forward to of tear out about the ac- postcard, please: Naomi Katz, Ann Allison O’Connell, Carol Barden Brener, Joan Burdett Wilson, Mary Goodman Walker, Rosalie Kerr Loud, Pauline Morrison Ledbetter, Berry Reavis Eitel, Mary Rickey Parker, Sandra Soderlund Soons, and Anne Warner time. of you next some more Whiting. I’ll name one and all. lock our I talked all of her sure we pleasant seemed mellow, welcoming, and inclusive,”she writes, concluding that we are aging gracefully. She also announces the birth of her fourth grandchild, Eva Kerman, in Providence, RI, in February. She was looking forward to vacationing with all her children and grandchildren in August. I am enjoying the terrific pin designed by Judith that reunion withas many renewed, tivities, books read, films seen, VC contacts places visited, ideas thought, whatever. Send me a ’60 was won- Susan Hammond Hawley Wilbraham and Monson Academy 421 Main St. Wilbraham, MA 01095 35th Reunion one wrote maintaining contact possible during her presidency. Not many postcards this issue. Please comments card right now, jot down some as you of reunion, particularly her pleasure at faces not seen since graduation. “Every- Woracek Mullen. She for her. “It’s classmates are profes- highlights our active and Happy holidays, death. Can anyone answer doors? If so, what were reasons. NY 14052. Did any of you reers to Barbara has three grown ard, is 35 years old. He is girl here in soggy Tryon, I anticipate with some enthusiasm the cold, crisp weather we’ll be enjoying, hope, in talk about her On a sad note, a letter from Anahid Harrison tells of the death ofher mother, Elsa Johnson Millward, in As I sit any to the past 100 years” (Walter Goodman in the New York Times ) ? The six-hourshow aired in June and was narrated by Jane Fonda. I missed it, alas. 704/859-2239 I willing over 141 Warrior Dr. Tryon, NC 28782 reconnect successful playwright who has been working at her craft for 30 years. She is playwright in residence and a current ’59 Caroline Skinner O’Neil class” and is also Alison’s address is: 211 Dorchester Rd., East Aurora, 35TH REUNION COMING UP. WHOOPEE! Bob and I returned to teaching this A new plunge! Note our new address. He is academic dean; I, a middle school English teacher. We willlive the school. At 61 and 55—a new adventure! at past summer. Gail Sheppard Moloney was married to Philip 53 in Sept. 1993, and two weeks later, her daughter, Hillary, was married in London. Gail and the Phil bought a house in Vero Beach, EL, naval air Moloney across from Mary Ann Bickford Patton and husband Flo Smith Stone and Dick. Two of their roommates, Robin Rowan Clarke, have visited the Pattons this winter. Gail serves the board of Ethel Walker’s on street cruise in clinical dren are psychology at the Felding Institute. Her chil- Mavin, 32, receiving a Ph.D in counseling psychology; Boyce, 28, receiving a degree at Boston University; and Julie, 30, who is in the retail business. Judy Connolly Connally finished her third sion of the Virginia General Assembly delegate in education from Arlington, with special interests ses- as a and health-carereform. Husband Tom practices medicine; son Thomas, 25, is a lawyer in D.C.; Anne, 24, volunteerswith the Peace Corps in Africa; and daughand works ter Kate graduated from Princeton last year in San Francisco. Martha Derby McDaniel has been the program coordinator at Ho’omaluhia Botanical Gardenin Kaneohe, HI, fornearly Hyears. Hermajor riding, and she and her Trakehner mare recently won three gold medals in dressage at the Aloha State Games. Her daughter and three grandexercise is horseback children live in Vermont. Deedee Dauler Wilson, at Princeton, recently won of philosophy 1994 Howard T. professor the Behrman Award for distinguished achievement in the humanities. Deedee, a memberof the faculty since 1970, does research on metaphysics and epistemology 17th and 18th centuries. She writes that the in the prize included mostly taken by taxes, Blake-looking medal. She rently serves as president of the Eastern Division of the American Philosophical Association. Mary Ellen Blumenfeld Doyle had a one-person exhibition of her landscape paintings—“ New Works on Handmade Paper”— at the Susan Conway Gallery in Washington, DC, in May and June ofthis year. She enclosed a card: pale bright dry field, fence, suggestion of a road, a brighter field, trees, perhaps mountains beyond—a vision caught, a dream painted on wakenand a sort some money, of William ing. Beautiful piece. Ann Snyder Harrod was there June 6, 1994, “with actual veterans cur- on OmahaBeach, who had made early landings. Likewise talked withFrench whoawakened to fleet and landings on beach. Incredible history.” Meg Taylor Flowers broke her leg in two places over a year ago, had emergency surgery, including the nuts and bolts and the like, was on crutches, had lots of time to think about her life, now takes more time for herself and her family thanbefore. Meg still enjoys directing the church choirs and playing the Fisk organ. installation of on a British frigate. Ballet Competition in Russia. When she wrote her card she had just been home to New Orleans for a visit 100 years. over Jean Orndorff Summers has four grandchildren, in medicine in North Carolina, andfour daugha son the country. Jean stillworks long ters scattered across hours in her financial services business. Rebecca Falk in New York. Her son, Steindecker sells real estate Jimmy, imports steel products, and daughter Michelle is a stockbroker. Mimi Brown Martin is a marriage and family therapist, now pursuing a doctorate in EP-3E aircraft. Kathy earned her an Olga (Olguita) Guardia de Smoak has been working in Moscow as editor of Ballet in Russia since the fall of 1992. This is Russia’s only dance magazine and is an offshoot of the journal Ballet. Olguita is also the official representative of the U.S.A International with Missy Turnbull Geddes, who is now chair. Ann that it was such fun to Heroy Webb, M.D., writes welcome the Clarkes to the Eastern Shore and to ice congratulate them for surviving the worst winter storm on crew wings in 1993. She expects to be in Rota, Spain (Costa de la Luz), until at least June or July 1995. Her next deployment will be a Mediterranean/Adriatic and on a vacation in Episcopal priest/Christian psychotherapist the 19905. It’s still a 27 W. 86th St. . New York, New York 10024 212/874-4081 (h); 212/664-2957 (o) Greetings, all, and congratulations to Carole Lomax Dempsey, who has been promoted to CEO of Aspen Real Estate, which serves the entire eastern from Maine to Key West. Kathleen Davis writes thatshe 54VQ WINTER 1994 am was of the Hungarian Maltese Aid Service in Germany, Although confined to a wheelchair, she woman traveled every month to Hungary and around Gerand asking for assistance from raising money Prior to her death, she founded possible venue. every the Osteuropa-Hilfe/Boeselager Stiftung—since renamed Csilla von Boeselager Stiftung—a foundation designed to continue her work. Contributions may be sent to Osteuropa-Hilfe e.v./Csilla von Boeselager Stiftung, D-59757 Arnsberg/Vosswinkel, Hollinghofen, Germany. Our sympathies are extended to her husband and children. ’62 Barbara Krone Grenquist 1192 Park Ave. and Vassar: the Reismans have asked that any contributionbe made to the Ellen Roth Reisman Memorial Scholarship Fund at Vassar.” corresponding secretary) ’63 Well, classmates, this included dues wrote space a year. She’s thrilled, as these dwellings of choice for many of the students these days. To me, they don’t look so inviting because they’re off-campus, but what do I know (as she would say)? Give me Raymond House any day. Which reminds me; On July 30, I attended a beautifulsoiree in Hopewell Junction to celebrate the wedding of Julie Blodgett, daughter of my Raymond SusanDeisseroth Blodgett, to Brian Ferki. roommate, Also in attendance were J udy Winebaum La vine and her husband, Burt. news On Labor Day (Sept. 4), I received some sad very from Cyntbia Gilbert Kennison. She writes: “On Aug. 24, Hertha Gassmann Barrack, with her family, and I attended the very moving, very beautiful funeral service for Ellen Roth Reisman at Congregation Rodelph Sholom in New York City. Ellen’s the class on she likes Australiaso much she’ll go back, and visit! Selby rafted on the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon in June and thought it was writes enough to be exciting! Selby great—just scary books and magazine articles for children and is starting to do the illustrationsfor themas well. Selby’s daughter, Amanda, Vassar ’9l, is in grad school at the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern. Son Charles, Colby ’93, works for Piper Jafffey in Seattle. Selby said that visiting Amanda at Vassar gave her a whole new and different perspective about the school; maybe some of the rest of you “Vassar parents” could of your thoughts about that. Selby had give us some lunch with Sue Forney Boyd, who was in Minnesota giving a talk. In a previous column, I talked about classmates in the field of art but neglected that Kathy Lee Reid is the director of the of our Badder is in Richmond, VA. Also, Susan Stevenson now director ofeducational programs at the National Gallery in Washington, DC. Could there be correlation between the superb experiences we all a had in Art 105 (and more advancedart history courses) and the substantial number of classmates involved in art world? Some more career news: Cynthia Jacob, a partner the Somerset, NJ, law firm of Collier, Jacob, & Mills, was and be the note can Association in to a hopes Babs and Canada, edited seem write with the little (sigh!) news I have. Babs’s daughter, Meredith, spent the summer of’94 in Australia and was to start Princeton this fall. Babs in a to both counts! So here goes museum freelance editor: everything from the latest Clancy blockbuster to how-to-plan-your-weddirector ding guides. HusbandPeter is still executive of the Association of American University Presses: more books. Daughter Louisa will be living in a “TH” for you mailing—so, hopefully, you paid your dues AND about yourself a while ago! If so, thank you on and “loves even the weather.”A book review came my way that features Abortion Politics in the United States as through various whining! Maybe do it! Babs Currier Bell and Selby Butt Beeler also art Tom out moral of the story is that ifyou want to be able to read about your classmates, take the first step by writing about yourself! Jot a note to me at the address above, of this issue of the Quarterly—just or rip the card out mention of books, that’s what I’m still involved find all about themselves just last just hasn’t arrived yet!) In any case, the it the Jelen. Speaking to of the shorter colof the news most I has written week, and full professor. Her son Chris just graduated from UCLA in anthropology; son Bob is living in Seattle G. one calls! (Oh, Dede, stop phone to by Marthe and her husband, Ted be may have is what I’ve been able frantic many a Rothenberg Quarterly history, because in umns 212/831-6763 been visiting philosophy departments in China and end up teaching Chinese may philosophy back at De Pauw University, where she has recently become Dede Nieman k 34 Lakeside Rd. F Mt. Kisco, NY 10549 914/666-2242 New York, NY 10128 Dear classmates: I got only one card this time, from Marthe Atwater Chandler. She writes that she has seaboard recalled was Perry to active duty (because ofher language skills—SerboCroatian) from the U.S. Naval Reserves in Aug. 1992. Stationed in Spain, she has been flying with a instead of rac- ism, sexism, competition, and domination—and I many was roommates, everyone beginning to write about it.” that yet another one of And, sadly, I must report classmates has passed away. Csilla von Fenyes our her von at Boeselager died in Feb. 1994 of cancer home in Hollinghofen, Germany. Csilla dedicated her life to helping those in need—from Hungarian refugees to the homeless and needy from Eastern chairEurope. In Dec. 1988 she founded and (town house) at VC this ’61 and woman oppressive world for a and I’m still passionate about very feeling, spiritual person, equality, mutuality, and collaboration YOU? Trek back, touch base, send back your card: say you are coming! SALVE. Elizabeth Orton Davis re- ports thatshe is back in North Berkeley, CA—a brief walk to the seminary and within an hour of San Francisco. “Everything I am is a part of being an in post- as London with husband Jim. talent and has participated in “Gallery 37.” The Reverend Doctor Bonnie Kilstein Ring in Ellen’s quick affectionate wit, from our time for 32 more years.) “Ellen had been particularly involved in ’62 (as there Melinda Johnson Burger writes that older daughHelen Joyce, entered Concordia University in ter, River Forest, lE, this fall to study nursing, while younger daughter, Carolyn Grace, a sophomore at Kenwood Academy, is showing signs of real artistic from Sue Crowder Cutler: “I don’t a note much. Somehow Poughkeepsie in the ’sos seems far from California in the ’9os. But I do look very forward to our 35th in ’95 and think I’llmake the trek back to touch base with old friends.” How about Finally, write husband, Jim, and their children, Adam and Leah (Vassar ’95), were among those who spoke eloquently of Ellen’s devotion to their family, her strong leadertalents, ship in public causes, her intelligence, artistic strength in the face of debilitating illness, her warmth and humor, her amazing wit. (Yes, oh yes. Always state in sworn as first VP of the New May 1994. She and courts, serves on is active a Jersey Bar in bothfederal variety of commit- including those concerned withcivil and criminal law, labor and employment law, and women’s rights. (Yea, Cynthia!) Patricia Mainardi is visiting Clark Professor at Williams College as of this fall and cochair of the “Women and Society” seminar at Columbia U. for 1994-96. Cathy Cash-Spellman writes that she is “officially hyphenated—and back home in Manhattan”after herdivorce. She is “writing tees, book and movie in tandem with Brandon new Tartikoff (a wild island adventure called Trophies ). Also, Bless the Child book) is about to be a made into a (previous movie! It’s been quite a year! the “family front” (yours, not Paramount ” Some news on mine!): Anne Goldenheim Creem and Tim of Bridgton, ME, became grandparents in July 1994 to Daniel Adkins Paseltiner, son of Linda Creem Paseltiner and Phil, who live in Stamford, CT. Ellen Frankel Winetsky also claims is “grandparenthood be—absolutely heavenly!” The Winetskys have two new grandchildren—Debra’s son, Jordan Schiff, and Jill’s daughter, Erica Solomon—and another on the way via third daughter Amy Schlakman! I’m jealous! all it’s cracked up to Babs, as involved in and concerns forget our us president, would like to get area-sharing and networking about issues we (Who can might have in common. see all the interest in at menopause last our re- union?!) Perhaps people would like to communicate (by mail, E-mail, phone, or through this column) about health issues, elderly parents, information about living in different areas, retirement thoughts (even still infants!), or volunteer though we’re of course activities that encompass all the responsibilities of running a small business. For example, Babs mentioned that Kitty Sides Blather manages (as a volunteer) a child-welfare public service organization in Boston with a budget of several million dollars! I’m sure of you many have joined a board and then wound “running the show.” Let’s give each other the our experiences! That’s it for now—l hope to be inundated with of news from all of you by the next column. In the tons you’re reading this in early winter, meantime, since up benefit of let’s hope it’s ’64 an easy one! Take care! Christy Hoffman days Brown begin writing the Winter issue, we are in the “dog of August” in N.Y.C. Let me congratulate the on at Albany, NY, one Of course, Alice Horsey Thiede celebrated her50th birthday by starting violin lessons (Suzuki method). Often playing with very young kids, she finds it a total challenge. She and Roger own Carto-Graphics in Eau Claire, WI, producing high-quality maps, charts, and full graphs since 1984. Son Will joined the company time in 1992. The example of their work she sent along with her postcard was most impressive! In the news: Ellen May Galinsky, co-president of the Families and Work Institute, was quoted in the May 11, 1994,New York Times on a study of in-home day care done by the National Centerfor Children in Poverty. “This is an important report because our studies and others have shown that often low-income children, particularly in these informal settings, receive lower-quality publication, Vassar care.” And in a Campaign for of our classmates were two pic- tured: Susan McCallum Bledsoe, chairman of the Atlanta regional campaign, and Theodora reunion to serve helpful to me since I met with her at reunion. Keep the postcards coming. My column will be good as the news I get from all of you! five years: president, Alice Keidan Lanckton; president, Margaret Appelbaum Levine; treaLlyn Christian Agress; secretary/class corresurer, spondent, Christy Hoffman Brown; Council repre- Louise Duncan 700 Madison Ave. ’65 New York, NY 10021 As the director of subsidiary rights, she is involved with the glamour of selling movie rights as well as the less glamorous —selling rights to engineershe spoke of ing titles. Reminiscing about reunion “the compassion that our classmates have for each other that seems to increase with every reunion.” Her to start daughter, Emily, Holderness this fall as a sophomore. Mary Peacock, who works in the same building with Marjorie, is now deputy editor at was that “life continues be a juggling act.” Her daughter, Allegra, eighth grade at Chapin here in N.Y.C. Luisa is real estate at Sotheby’s and traveling. Last winter, she and Alex went to Southeast Asia. In June, her family, including her 87-year-old mother-in-law, off to Paris. Also on the move were is Alice Harper, who was planning a two-week October trip with her husband, Lou, and 6-year old son, Harper, to Japan. due to there was Budapest and Prague. Her last time ago! Her younger son Her older musician. is a senior works son a trip to and Radio here in tographer, the city. Brenda is part-time phoat the computer whiz, and editorial maven New York Outward Bound office, leaving her time to travel with her “wonderful companion.” Karen Mathisen Seatonand husband Edward seem always to be traveling to a Spanish-speaking part of the world. He is publisher/editor of the Manhattan Mercury in Kansas. Son Ned is married and a reporter on the St. Petersburg Times; son Jay is at the U. of Kansas Law School. Anne Youngclaus Stratton wrote wedding in Little Compton, niece’s she missed en today she route RI. That reunion, but she wanted us to It seems hard to imagine that I am writing this on the 25th anniversary of Woodstock. Even I knew it was a watershedevent, her to was why know that but the closest I ever got to hippiedom aspiring to whatBill Blass called the “rich hippie” look. Maybe the biggest change in me since then is that now I at least know enough to be embarrassed by the expression. was Ruth Williams Cornelison said she and her husband were on driving up the New York State Thruway their way to Canada 25 years the traffic, only later finding Ruth dropped out ago and got held up by about Woodstock. out of Vassar in the spring of 1965 from what she says were of “establishment reasons stress.” Later, she graduated in 1974. At her graduathe stage wearing only an tion, a streaker ran across American flag. I guess he had it, too. her husband has made her a In this hot summer, cardboard fan to use when she has hot flashes. He, Those three capsules she gave me are stages of Dorothy Coburn de Yore, another Marylander, knowledgeable about the sciences than she once thought she would be, because she has a Ph.D. daughter, Nicki, who “has done gene slicing in the summer.” Son Peter is at the U. of Maryland in is more mechanical ian in the army Anne JunekFitzgerald says she became a librarbecauseshe liked the feel ofthe cards in herhands, leafing through them. Now, of course, the business of providing information is so changed it is like “a career change, the biggest change since Gutenberg.” She lives in Connecticut. One of her girls, Caitlin, gradusummer rugby team). Her roommate Tubbs Aspen, who lives in (she was captain of the the daughter of Sue Illinois. The blew up was girls on the at the U. of Connecticut. She also the saw Foundry Bookshop Business and Professional Not only is she the program director but she is also involved in software design. She enjoys going to concerts with Leslie MacCoull in D.C. Nancy Kent Eliot has moved to Buckinghamshire, midway between London and Oxford. She is a fordeseign-based representative for American tourism tinations and suppliers. Her sons; one a lawyer in was working.” Susan Schley Gristina moved to after years in North Carolina to be near Reston, VA, the research herhusband, Tony, started. He’s an orthopedic surgeon and studies why implants would encourage infection. Mother of four boys who are now adult, she enjoys her cello. In amateur she groups, institute plays symphonies and chamber music, Mahler, Beethoven, al. I have gotten such interesting mail from you. Sheila McKee Barrett, who lives in Dublin (Ireland, not Ohio), has written a novel, Walk in a Lost Land' et Olga Smoak ’6l is in Moscow, editing Ballet in Russia, the country’s only dance magazine. Point cadet, in 1961. They married, and she was not able to finish until 1967. In January, they will celebrate their 30th anniversary. The Curtises live in Tucson a They have two married daughters. He is the university, andshe is the administraofthe UnitarianUniversalistchurch. His hobby is now. physicist at tor flying, and they have been from the Mayan ruins, which she studies, in Mexico and Guatemala, to Barrow, AK, where she had to jump out and hold the plane down she put on her on the runway long johns in against the wind—then full view of the control ’65, who also lives And ifyou “I says, a Susan, who lives in Colorado, says she’s “free at last.” Divorced, she has two sons who are now out of the house. She works as the office manager of a small lbs., measur- Catherine Paulson Gray has experienced the information transformation firsthand, too. She worked at Honeywell for 14 years as a computer programmer, starting on an old-style “card computer.” In 1978 she and her husband,Jim (she met him at Dartmouth freshman year), started their own busiin Minneapolis. They have two children, a son ness, the U. of Arizona, and a daughter, 13. at She didn’t even know about Woodstock. As she completely different story was that of Joanne Herscher Curtis, the first war bride (Vietnam) to graduate from Vassar. She met her husband, a West option). They 115 engineering,and Jesse, 17, is reserves. A president-elect of her Women’s Organization. ’4", weighing four life, aren’t they? ing 36-22-35, flat tummy, thick, curly blonde hair. believe any of that,”she goes on to say, “I’ll love you forever.” Lee Perkins is getting oriented to her new duties as is “still 5 Maryland, where she keeps is a psychiatrist. She’s an agoraphobia therapist. You have to ask if she makes house calls? cold. Susan Jane Brazell Eldridge started school in 1960 but graduated with us. She mentioned Faye Padelford Michener, who did the same thing but is listed as a member of the class of 1964 (you get the now even she Floyd, 30 years N.Y.U. and a jazz the Museum of TV at at on a Squire Hay, who works at 30th Reunion to is 13 and in selling Brenda Walker missed reunion And the DOE. She says process 90-acre farm in horses. on in that goes on in the sun and the weekend, she foxhunts. She lives energy in New Haven. versity Press, where she has been for the past 20+ the studies the law school Carol 212/355-4820 Mueller McKittrick and I drove to and She is happily working at Oxford Uni- Mirabella magazine. Luisa La Viola Pagel writes Arkansans ministration Recently, Anne had dinner with Julie Brazina Connolly, who is the director of development at the sentative, Gretchen Smelzer Coffman. years. from Arkansas, she has fun with the ad- Originally, stars. to their mothers’ Vassarion pictures and put them wall. Nobody could believe theirhairdos. vice from reunion. alongside also the “race was ated from Vassar this as for the next Marjorie the establishment and the the moon.” Anne Carlton Davies went from Vassar to Yale, where she got a Ph.D. in applied physics and later went to the Atomic Energy Commission. At that time, the AEG was funded with moon it’s part of the but now money, DOE. She is the associate director of energy research. war Zopko 541 E. 20th St. New York, NY 10010 class officers voted new in Wei, chairman of the Princeton campaign. I am busily trying to master Microsoft Word for Windows andfind a new job, hopefully in the career office of an academic institution. Clare Graham, director ofVassar’s Career Office, has been extremely 212/473-4671 As I in the travel business in one international banking in D.C. Ohio; tower it was scheduled to be published by the scape, which was Press this fall. She has six children, Niamh, Bronwen, Denis, Tim, Michael, and Grace. Husband Poolbeg had taken extended years abroad. in the English department at UCD. Vicki Smith Cole, who has moved to Randolph, has joined the Vassar club and took her little girl, John is so NJ, to VC on Founder’s Day. Vicki has made a in managing senior housing, and she now has Joanna, career her own property management business. She sent me her picture and, as corny as it sounds, she looks exactly the same. manufacturing company. Faye lives in New York City and has bought house near the south of France where a village in Martha (Mattie) Brody Banzhaf writes, “DaughAmy willattend MIT... son Jeremy... plays cello ... husband Walter... is a professor at U. ofHartford.” Jill Weber Dean writes from Madison, WI, that she is practicing law and looking forward to early retirement in a hot place. She could go to Tucson with several writer the Curtises. a friends of hers have also gone. ter 55 I don’t know how this escaped me except thatI do know the bit of paper got lost, and I am very sorry. Last March I talked to Selby Fleming Holmberg. She was Hotel in Florida in at the Walt Disney World Dolphin VP of the National Association of Independent Schools, which promotes independent schools. She has two daughters, one, 23, is a VC who works in the psychological wing of her capacity as graduate Boston Hospital. The other, at sophomore at Carleton College in thinks fondly of Ellen Dunbar. that time, was a Minnesota. Selby Our own media stars are still generating plenty of energy—Dr. Bernadine Healyand Margaret (Peggy) and Milner Richardson. The latter is going to come speak to everybody on the Friday night of our reunion in June, I so am hoping will get yourselves there, you Furthermore, she at three different sites. worked to obtain $50,000 from Head Start to make funds to grants available to mothers withoutsufficient send their children to the school. The author of the editorial credited Kathy with doing something about and into the job getting mothers off public assistance market, while others just talk about it. Congratulations to Kathy for a job well done! Finally, from the New Times, Friday, July 22, of a book by George A. Dudley, Sally 1994, a review Dudley’s father, called A Workshop for Peace: Designing the United Nations Headquarters. According to the review the book brings to “vivid life a spirit of solidarity that has all but vanished from the architectural 13 -year-old daughter,Katherine, spent the Summer Institute for the Gifted at Vassar, lived in Davison, took fencing, archaeology, creative writing,and medieval legends, and loved her first taste of college life (except for the food). In the profession.” It describes the process thatthe architects about in producing the building. It looks like a went Thomas and Julia, my twins, started kindergarten this fall; big sister Cece started third grade; stepdaughters Nathalie and Amanda are in their final years of high playgrounds interesting book. Ken and I have had my 16-year-old This summer cousin, JuliaBuchholtz, from Bredstedt, Germany, for too! very Puzzy Elder Peskin I ’66 Erin went India. to Jordahn Beacham Scott 3380 Carlton Rd. Gumming, GA 30131 The has sped by, and most of it has been spent summer fighting the rain. Rain has persisted so much that it in Georgia. In fact, has really slowed construction schools in the Atlanta metro some area because of construction time ing on also a lot of delays in the rain affected you, are not open- delays. There from are Has too? I am happy to report that Ellen Lehman is alive and doing well in California. My next question is regarding Jerrilyn Greene hearing Marston. Jerri, where are you, and what are you doing? And Sally Semos Couluris—what has happened to the visit promised while your you son was Judith Allen people in that she has been advising Estonia on training housing a lot ofthe changes in Eastern writes Poland and She got to see Europe firsthand and would love managers. who have had any Estonia. experience Cathy Scott-Craig write about home of a Newell to in hear from others either Poland kind was enough or to held at the McLean, VA, Files Lacey on June 18. Courtney mini-reunion Kathy home to Austin, TX. Hoge Brown was there en route She had just concluded a trip to Hungary for the LBJ School. Cathy was there for a meeting of Even Family Literacy grantees. Diana Francis was there with her husband,Cal. Diane and Cal are Start also in the Stobie Lynch, Marcia joined the fes- tivities. Several articles havebeen and from others. In the along from AAVC April 1994 edition of Sky sent magazine, theDelta airlines magazine, Leslie Bedford is featured in a Tokyo” exhibit The interactive short at explanation about the “Teen the Children’s Museum of Boston. exhibit had details of the culture the eyes of children of all ages—every- as through thing from trying a song in a karaoke booth to a ticket machine from a subway that says “out of order” in Japanese. According to the article, Leslie first saw the possibility of such an exhibit whenshe and her chilseen dren lived in Japan in 1986. As Leslie puts it in the article, “Unless you a foreign country, spend it’s hard to connect with people on a real human level, to see them as people—as parents, as children, as coworkers.” It’s too bad that more children and adults around the world can’t see the exhibit to have a better time in understanding of differences and similarities of culIt certainly might invitebetter tures. understanding of people unlike ourselves. From the July 21,1994, GreenwichNews there was editorial praisingKathy Lord McKnight. According to the article, Kathy was from the an just retiring Family center cluded Child Care Center. Under her direction the from 30 children to 165. Her work ingrew a new 56VQ WINTER building 1994 at the main campus and ’68 716/655-3137 school and college (Bucknell),respectively, with ac- to having bought herfirst condo. Ownership new produced some responsibilities! Ken’s in Santa Fe and is Vanderbilt. Please send all your news! daughter spent a wonderful summer back now at ’67 Georgia Shepherd 110 Mill St. winter see head off to Italy for a few weeks of much-needed Mary gave me an article from the Toronto about Irene Dowd, who spent six weeks in paper vacation. Toronto with the National Ballet School. Irene is Maas NY 12601 of my theories.” Back on the home front, Bob and the summer with I had dinner over Cathy Blaine Muzzy, who was up from Atlanta for her 30th reunion test 914/452-5212 Paula at recent Weinberg Sabloff sent a card telling about the changes in her life. She began an assistant professorship in anthropology at the University of in Sept. 1993, and Pittsburgh’s Greensburg campus friend of ours Buffalo Seminary. Cathy’s dad the notes who sent her husband, Jeremy, became director ofthe University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology on July 1. Paula and her daughter, Lindi, who is entering the international baccalaurethe local high school, will stay in ate at program Pittsburgh until Lindi’s graduation in ’96, then join Jeremy in Philadelphia. Son Josh is a math major at Harvard. Jane Manner writes: “Still living on the beach in Ft. Lauderdale and loving it. Every time I thinkabout selling my condo and buying a house, I thinkabout how much I would miss hearing and seeing the ocean! August, some the University of Florida in to goes and Catherine will be in fourth grade. Have in great projects interior design this year, mostly corporate.” Eve Slater-Solomon was named senior vice presidentfor clinical and regulatory development at Merck Research Laboratories last associate May. In addition, she is an attending physician at Presbyterian Hos- in New York and a consultant in medicine for Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. She and her husband and two live in Short Hills, NJ. sons pital that her son, JoshuaGeorgette Bennett wrote Marc Bennett Tanenbaum, was born in Aug. 1992, weeks after the death ofhis father, Rabbi Marc seven Tanenbaum. In addition to runninga public affairs and communications practice, Georgette is writing a book abouther husband. She also serves as president ofthe Rabbi Marc H. TanenbaumFoundation, which was on established in Dec. 1992. The foundation carries Rabbi Tanenbaum’s ecumenical efforts and has funded action and symposia that promote interreligious understanding. Georgette says she is grateful for the support of many of her Vassar friends the past few years. over one programs I again have the sad task of reporting the death of of our classmates. Christina FaulknerMills died onJulylS.We send our Lawrence Mills (210 21218-1140), her sympathy to her husband,Dr. Northway, Baltimore, MD daughter, Dorsey, and son, Robbie, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Lee Faulkner. As for me; A couple of months ago I heard thatthe Vassar Development Office was relations assistant. The job was looking for a donor part time —which I wanted—and required writing and editing skills—which I have—so I sent and started today a resume (Aug. 15). Meanwhile, my freelance writing/editing/ translating career is taking off slowly, a professional dancer and choreographer and neuromuscular specialist in New York. She was working with the dancers on biomechanics and, according to the article, found the work challenging and a “best 1-B # Poughkeepsie, had Nancy t Lynn Russell Butcher k 659 Knox Rd. f East Aurora, NY 14052 of passage, has also evening of catching up.” Another great mini-reunion held in Red was Bank, NJ, on May 21, 1994, when Diane Chambers Wise Vaughan’s daughter, Vera, married her Princeton ’92 classmate, Rick Hough. Diane writes that Betsy Goodman Flanagan, Sally Goodman Graflund, Neelie Caminati Gray, Jackie Fisher Poughkeepsie Day at in western New York. While taking Nat up to the U. of Toronto, we had another wonderful but all too quick visit with MaryBalfour, who was about Meredith, 17, Bozzo Sherwood, and before joining the class of’o3, she’s continuing School. years Germany has any suggestions for her, I know she would appreciate it. My daughter, Veryan, has just passed another rite of movingfrom Washington, DC, to St. Louis for Olin. According to Cathy, there was a “great process at the second year in a row. Her English is rapidly improving. She is considering going to Vassar in three after her Abitur. If anyone who is living in years, Georgia at Tech? three weeks all around. We companying angst and excitement spent July at the beach on the Canadian side of Lake Erie, sailing and sunningand communing with each other. It was great and bolstered us for the coming of you. some optimistic. My and I remain I have from you along the ones First is a neighbor and to the piles of and Ann McElwee Howley, here—small world. But you on included with your dues! hear from Lucy Lee about Vassar hosted at the De we program San Francisco with its wonderful Museum in director and the director of a Young Vassar’s new There were art center. alumnae/i from the classes of 1928 through 1993, she said! From ’6B Sara Scribner, Lucey Bowen, Linda Tedeschi, Janice Tomer, and Connie Monroe and her daughter. Lucy and Deb Hall Coburn, who now lives in Phoenix, also saw Betsy Howland and her husband, Dennis Zavac, last fall. Lois Palestine Savage also visited. Lucey Bowen also wrote about that show and sent along a card announcing a show of her work entitled “Family Ground,” described as “an installation of images and texts inspired by an American family history,” which was shown at the Worcester, MA, public library last March. Colleen Burke writes thatshe is “emerging from my 18-yearcycle of motherhood” with news of her son, Bill Burke-White, who was a finalist in the Westinghouse Science Search (he did genetics research in Russia the previous summer). Bill graduated from Exeter, was accepted at Yale, Stanford, and Harvard (he’s going to Harvard), and were then learned that USA a member of its Today had selected him to be All-USA Academic High School Team (20 chosen from 5,300 nominations nationwide) with a scholarship awarded in ceremonies held in Washington. Colleen,who raised Bill alone follow- ing a plans “cruel decade-long custody battle” years back, relocate to the Boston area. to She closed, “If this sounds like I’m bragging, I am.” No wonder. Marilyn Flood writes that she is now associate executive director of the YWCA in N.Y.C. and is fun!” She is responsible for all the having “great programs, service for not from swimming to crafts and community three facilities. She added, “No excuse now exercising or brushing up on my French.” at Henrietta Lintz Keller writes that she and husband Chris are “up to the same old stuff.” Son Rob was goalie for the travel Larry did a semester hockey team in Vienna and last year, and son stayed the summer in Austria. Connie Eaton writes that she is living in Washington, DC, and that “one of the highlights is walkswithMary Wagner and somemy intermittent times Martha Taylor Schantz.” Amy Fiedler Lippman writes that she spent the end of summer gathering college supplies for son Russell, who is now at Yale (Davenport, class of 1998) “after having the pleasure/ of having to resolve every torture student’s dream dilemma of choosing between Yale and Harvard.” She adds thatshe and husband Jon are “both working hard at lawyering” and that daughterLindsay appeared to be tradition the mock on following family trial team that won by being County compe- the Westchester tition. from Ann McElwee Howley herself; Maryland, she and husband Peter are Wellesley, MA, where she is working director of development for the Network Finally, news after 20 years in enjoying life in as part time of Sacred Heart Schools. Peter is enjoyinghis position at Harvard Medical School and was recently inducted into the National Academy of Science. Daughter Cristin is Colgate, and Megan is a sophosenior Boston College. Maura is now at at Newton Country Day School. Ann says they saw Anne Ashmore, who came from Washington for a visit. Fois and Steve Savage also visitedfrom Phoenix. In a small-world incident, Ann and Sally Pasley Vargas found themselves on the same plane headed for Florida. Sally and her family live in Concord, MA. senior a at more a . | 7568 N. Valentine Fresno, CA 93711 209 1 435-3231 actually want of you many on expected never this job. But after working with so 25th reunion and getting reacour quainted with at least 350 of the 380 of us, I realized this the perfect way to stay in touch until the next was I will be privy to all of your lives via the cards in a while to fill in once you take the time (please) and the newspaper and magazine clippings that wend my reunion. SUCH A DEAL! is two months As I sit down to write, the reunion in the past but I think about it often and have heard from so many of you who attended that it was an event who you truly found memorable. Unfortunately, some way. planned a on being in day! When will be only about seven you read this, short months haven’t made your reunion gift yet, please July, Gina Bronkie Hammond, our fund-raising chair, reported that we had pledges and gifts in hand of over $160,000. That’s a good beginning, but nowhere near goal of $600,000. Let’s aim If you do it now! away. In our for 100 percent class participation so we can reach our goal for this landmark year. Nowfor the news. The Blanchards have had a busy summer—we purchased a mini new and took it van on short two trips to see our parents in New Hampshire and Maine. Peter’s mother entered a nursing home, and my parents, Jim and Phebe Mixter ’42, are preparing to Perry celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary. We’re plan- ning a big celebration for them in early October. I’m quite busy these days with computers, at work and at home. We’re planning to install a new LAN at the library, and I’m the vendor selection committee on on in Poughkeepsie never son Flehinger, card from Harriet Wolf College with a second master’s in math leadership, our son, Roger, graduated from high school, and daughter Libby graduated from middle school. I (the only one in the family without a brand-new diploma) took a great picture of the three of them! Those of in you Boston between Nov. 15 and to stop December 15 may want by the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. Some of the works of our classmate Judy Riolo will be displayed there in the Torf Gallery as part of the “Traveling Scholars Exhibition.” Judy was of six winners in the School of the Museum of one Fine Arts’ annual Fifth Year Competition and Exhibition. In addition to the honor of showing her in paintings made it. In she sent her a world-class Will the class that, like many of us at this regrets and pointed out has more responsibility for stage in our lives, she now her aging parents than for her children. An emerfor her 86-year-oldfather her from gency surgery Judy has been museum, as well No longer are her weekends and holidays She did manage, however, to take a biking through California’s wine Judith Fibkins Tavel has not country recently. strayed far from her Poughkeepsie. A professor at Dutchess Community College since 1976, she is now department head of mathematics, physics, and computer science (whew!). The Poughkeepsie Journal (yes, there is a in Poughkeepsie other thanthe Miscellany newspaper News ) reports that Judy has won a $115,000 grant to of courses to develop a program integratemath, physics, chemistry, English, and reading. “I got the idea from students,” she says. “They want know how to they can use what they have learned in a job.” Sounds about the parent of two young women good to me off to college. to go in roots as As I type this column on my word processor and get ready to send a three-and-a-half inch disk to Vassar (only with this issue has Class Notes entered the computer age), it is 101 degrees in the Central Valley of California that I call home. It is difficult for me to imagine that the majority of you will be reading these words in December, when it is you live. With of you grandmotherhood, hopes for a experienced always nice), in 1993 (or a to be -10 where a happy move thanmost the “best year ever!” She’s taken a sabbatical from Yeshiva U. to work on a book, but has continued her practice of clinical psychology she cares for to it the feminist and antiwar movements: issues of government power, letting to same and Just heading into adolescence with her two children, Charles (10) and Maia (13), who “continue to be wonderful additions to our planet,” Patricia Francothat she’s still working as an mano Jasper writes at UCFA and in that position, goes from one another. She and Alan are celebrating their 21st wedding anniversary. In closing her note, she end I says, “All in all, things are moving along to an haven’t quite figured out yet.” And I thinkthat’s what makes life so interesting, Patty! Mary Ellen O’Farrell had a real scare last spring. Her son, who’s 15, nearly died of alcohol poisoning on the last day of school, after his j unior high graduation. his mother’s part, on Luckily, thanks to fast action this he’s okay now, and they all had a good vacation crisis to biking, hiking, summer, Gwenellen Janov has left N.Y.C. and moved to Albuquerque, NM, where she has become a member of Cover, Stetson & Williams, an Indian-owned, women-owned law firm. Anne Mook Frost and her family have returned to Switzerland. I ran into her husband,Chris, very briefly when we were visiting in Maine. He’s been named the new headmaster of a school over there. Unfortunately, I didn’t get a chance catch up with Anne, so didn’t to details. get more They plan to keep their house in Round Pond, so I’m we’ll each other see Five of you the card today ! not 203/637-5341 sent next I’ll keep you back those wonderful cards the are...), takea run on of your one moment Vassar Quarterly. a while (and in for right now, tear much about my own family and will for yours! Here’s news from those “fabuso 25th Reunion position as Dybas manager in writes that she enjoys her at EMC of Insecticide Discovery Princeton, NJ. She’s been there for living in that part of New Jersey. She and her husband have a beautiful home way out Corporation a sent of this issue, fill it in, and send it back I promise that if I get lots of newsy cards, I will make space lous five”: Jane Cohen on summer. out sudles@aol.com just and horseback This riding. children is journey through adolescence with our filled withunexpected twists, turns, and dark places, and is certainly not for the faint-hearted. Hang in there, Mary Ellen—here comes high school! Jane Levine Myerson is teaching Latin full time at Rhinebeck Central High School. I’m glad Latin is still taught, Jane. It comes in handy all the time here that she’s very active at the reference desk. Jane writes you and is about to enter be very proud of all four summer must five years and loves Well, folks, that’s all the news you, touch! The stay in exciting ones as suggestion—if we any next for now, but I beg few months will be get ready for our 25th! I have a of you are subscribers to America Online, let can plan can meet know (via E-mail, of course!), and we me the first Vassar “virtual” mini-reunion—we in a “chat room” online and make plans for the big reunion! “It’s the world philosophy that does not ...” All in all, it’s an eye-opening article. A couple of our classmates have moved recently. a college provides in each issue Old Greenwich, CT 06870 Manhattan while to all of you, Barbara. to people die, honorall people I know who you It’s hard to believe that this column will appear before Christmas as I sit here writing you all for travel Congratulations, Judy! Philadelphia Gay News conducted an interview with Ann Northrop in early April, when she was in town to make a speech at the “Fight the Right” town meeting. Always vocal, Ann has been working as an AIDS activist since the early ’Bos. In this article, she describes her background and how she got to where she is today. In describing AIDS activism, she likens Those of you who have not ’70 use India. where it is Sudie Mixter Blanchard 70 Laddin’s Rock Rd. in Molly. Congratulations of them! awarded $lO,OOO, which she will posted. 1995. happy announce eighth grade. Jane, sure milder winter warmer, I wish you likely I’m thatBarbara Gerson gave birth to Molly ElizaPearlman on July 7,1993, and since then has had to had his bar mitzvahthis story of the May 9,1994, issue ofBusiness Week featured Nancy Lederman Karen, who is now a director at Nynex and feeling the effects of corporate vacation Grossman ’7l. After talking about 1993, and her son Ethan is a junior at U.S.C. Honors College. Another son, Jeris entering 11th grade, and Ben, her youngest, emy, kept sacrosanct. would like to hear from our classmates Melissa Hawes and Sylvia Hummel, as well as Robin Moody U. of South Carolina in joining us. The cover downsizing. a in Jewish organizations, currently serving as vice president ofthe Empire Region ofUnited Synagogues and as a member of the Advisory Council of the National Board of United Synagogues of Conservative Judaism. Her daughter, liana, graduated from the of ’7O he reuning on-line as on campus 7 in the country—off dirt road! She is also the proud grandmother of Alisa Rachel Greenblatt, her son that she Jonathan’s new daughter. Jane mentions attorney there. In addition to mining for Internet treasures library time, I volunteer as a reference assistant Bank Street My first column—and in all honesty I to late-summer sunny, reunion our America Online’s reference area (my “screen name” there is REFSudie). In June, Peter graduated from Barbara Blum Dahl ’69 bright, Deborah Lytle Plimmer c/o Vassar Quarterly 61 Raymond Ave. Poughkeepsie, NY 12601 ’71 ’72 Katrin Belenky Colamarino 30 W. 74th St. f New York, NY 10023 Well, no one is superhuman, and I 1972, for the dearth of news—we you, tion in Cape Cod on the Aug. must apologize were on to vaca- 20th Class Notes deadline, and when I returned home I found our housekeeper had jettisoned all of your pink cards by mistake! However, I do have some via other news letters received and from the “grapevine.” Oct. 17, 1994, was the date scheduled for the kickoff meeting for the Campaign for Vassar College in New York City at Avery Fisher Hall. Barbara Long-Parker, our class president, encouraged us to have 1972 get-together there, several of planned attend. Betsy White sent to me a note enclosing a relevant New York Times article and expressed her of the Cynthia Fisher dismay about the outcome tenure case against Vassar. I was thereafter advised by at the Quarterly that Vassar is appealing my contacts a the as decision and that four married female court fessors us refuted, pro- the Vassar science on in a Vassar faculty had vehemently publication, Ms. Fisher's legal 57 Appartheory about Vassar's denial of her tenure. in its appeal, it has all ently, the college maintains decision was made completely along, that the tenure independent of Ms. Fisher's marital status. If Jill Brinnon Bace could resend me her letter (also lost in August), I could tell the class about her as Thank you for writingto me, J ill. I do activities. recent recall that you mentioned you of the London Vassar Club. currently president are else has been rewarded for their labors mates not the first in seen many and a year, an and members of the Vassar administration, and reunion co-chair John Mihali—l to sincerest dent.” ing this fall. Son Adam, 16,is an animal rights activist column in Otherwise magazine. He’s own campaigning to eliminate dissection in high school Valerie Pawson Pilot House, Lewis Wharf Boston, MA 02110-3904 '75 with his labs. Good for him! Daughter Ali has graduated from middle school, and Lara is now in second grade. Stephanie Hoffman writes that Jamie Sunderland 617/227-9400 (phone) 617/227-2444 (fax) and children Cameron and Taylor came for a visit last that she and her children, April. Stephanie writes 20th Reunion Mandy and Briona, showed them the sights ofcentral Florida—“lots of theme parks and beaches and pools and sunshine.” Another Florida voice DeMers, who is B. Virginia Aug. 1 started on in a Johnson position new as director of the Academic Skills Center of the Ringling School of Art & Design in Sarasota. Daughter Anna, 14, is house “entirely taken up on the water with Suzanne Tolleson done. at to a with ballet.” Virginia has a sailboat and asks me to “tell come visit.” Duly noted, and addition her academic life, she has written two cookbooks, one of which, The Georgian Feast: The to living on Cape Cod for four serving the Falmouth Jewish Congregation as its rabbi. He reports the birth of his second child, Anna Tova, on April 30, 1994. Within the last year, he has seen former Vassarites Liza Weiss Stern, Sherry Greene, and Robert Lerman 76. The public relations director from the Laurel School in Shaker Heights, OH, reports that Gabriele years, Gossner has been appointed director of development. Gabriele and her husband, Jeffrey Strean, moved to the formerly at in the of 1994- Gabriele summer Guggenheim Museum in N.Y.C. The New York Times Magazine reports that Judith Regan is now the president ofthe a was Regan Company, co-venture with Rupert Murdock’s News Corp. She “star reporter” on the TV news magazine Vibrant Culture and Savory Food of the Republic of Georgia, won the 1993 Julia Child Award for Best will be Cookbook of the Y ear, sponsored by the International Association of Culinary Professionals. Her husband, that I have been class correspondent, only 20 percent of the class has ever Dean Crawford, teaches at Vassar; a bit of a commute says English and creative writing from Williamstown, but, Darra, “Vassar students are worth it!” Their daughter, Leila, is musicians in a revival group called Beat Big Bang recently staged a well-receivedmusical based on the life of Karen Carpenter. Abby Edleson Pollitt is an attorney in Santa Monica, primarily in appellate work, and shares offices with husband John. She and John marked their 14thanniversary in October and 1 ive in the Brentwood of West Los Angeles, an area we heard a bit about area this Daughter Chelsea is nearly 7, and cat Princess is 17. Abby would like to hearfrom her childhood and Vassarfriend Jane Ayres. Jane? Mary Alice Dixon underwent a major life change recently. After years of teaching architecturalhistory in places far and wide, she decided to become a lawyer and effect environmental changes through the legal Now Mary Alice, single mom of 15-year-old system. son, practices as a public interest attorney in Charsummer. a lotte, NC, representingchildrenwho have been abused and neglected. The work is very emotionally packed but satisfying. Mary Alice would like to hearfrom any other Vassar folk in and around North Carolina. We’re still in the muggy of but throes August, since won’t be you enjoying its last healthy holiday things. '74 this until the year is hurrah, I’ll wish you all a happy and and a new season year full of all reading good Geoffrey Poor Honeoye Falls, NY 14472 gspncm@rit.edu We received the following from class B. Sauer: ‘Because 58 VQ WINTER president Klara ofVassar...everything...nowhere 1994 me. What doing? When was the other 80 percent of you are the last time that YOU sent in a card? a new job with Mutual of Omaha. Alison is an aspiring novelistand mother of Jessica, age 8. Sharon Abarno-McArtin also has moved, to Peekskill of all places! She and husband Jim and kids Andrew, 8, and Alexander, 3, live in a condo on the Henry Ward Beecher estate. Sharon attended the wedding of Jane Gerver last February (see my previous column for details on this highlight of the social season!) more and especially enjoyed catching up with old pal Jon especially enjoyed the Powerhouse Theater, Sunset Lake, and the Walker pool! Unfortunately, the new closed on the days they were art center was there. Susan is looking forward to our 20th reunion. (It’s not that far away, folks, so mark your calendars for June 1996!) I received one card from a member of the class of 1975 whose loyalties obviously cross class lines. Gordon (Ariel) Hirsch wrote just to say hi (hi back!) and remind all our friends that “the spirit lives” now to as well as then! Gordon has been living in California for and in 10 years now “the quaint practices chiropractic capital of yuppiedom,” Los Gatos. Gordon, father to Corinne and Gabriel, willspend (or rather, didspend— I hate this three-month time lapse!) a week on a reservation Nice to '76 Risa Sherer Scranton 183 Homestead Ave. Albany, NY 12206 moment: as I write it seems many of you hand and fill So here’s a were too weary even Chicago a volunteer. area and are the parents of two daughters. Henry practices labor law at a Chicago firm, and Olga was recently made chair of her department at St. Xavier U., where she is an assistant professor of Spanish literature. Olga is working to this year. Always good to hear from me this, it’s 90 to take pen those littlepostcards this season! reminder: WRITE! On to the news. out Karen Levinson Gaughan found a moment to write with the news of the birth of her son, Matthew, in Dec. 1993. Karen says he looks like the Gerber baby and reminds her of Calvinfrom “Calvin and Hobbes”! Karen is a full-time mom and would love to hear from Beverly Moran, as finish her Ph.D. you, Olga! for the REST of you: It has been brought attention that SOME of you (who shall remain as to just assure you that YOU ARE BEING RIDICU- LOUS! I degrees in the shade and 100 percent humid! (So as to shovel your you trudge out driveways ONE MORE TIME, remember, it could be worse!) Apparently, I’m the only one rendered limp not by this hot weather—in summer nameless) are NOT writing to me, your old and dear, to close, personal friend, because you DON’T want have your life splashed all over this column. Well, let 518/482-4508 (phone) 518/446-9178 (fax) Another time-travel in Arizona this hear from you! I also heard from another old friend, Olga VilellaJaneiro. She and husband Henry Valdez 75 live in the my only print here what you WANT me to print—l don’t include things from personal correspondence unless you say it’s OK—and lastly, I MISS YOU! So please, all of you, friend or foe, the deal here to write.This is NOT this: I write what you want me “gossip column” but a Class Notes column! (There, I feel much better having gotten that off my chest.) So write what you want to see here—use the little postcards enclosed with every issue—and don’t be afraid write to me personally and say “this is NOT for is a publication”—l’ll respect that! One last plug: PAY YOUR CLASS DUES if you haven’t already. Our loyal treasurer, Mamie Eng, would be happy to hear from you! As would I, your loyal and trustworthy correspondent. So don’t be a stranger! WRITE! Ross Mandel, and Nancy Chusid 77. Johanna Gaines, according to a New York Times clipping, married W illiam Simms of Charlotte in May 1993. Life has '77 changed also for Susan Tannehill,who sent a lovely, long letter. Sue married MarkKenmore in Oct. 1993, and is happy and amazed! She teaches in education at Canisius a graduate course College and also does 96 East St. “ show “On Assignment.” Over the past five years written “playmates,” Ken take And and in the news a nearly 4- In San Francisco to receive the award, Darra saw Katie Guthorn. Katie and husband Morey Goldstein are love to know whatbecame ofhis old Kaess and Frank Wolff. Alison Weary Henderson and husband Michael have moved to Omaha, NE, so that Michael could Delfin. Susan Stanton Benedict wrote to say how much she and her kids, Katie and Peter, enjoyed a recent visit to the Vassar campus. After 16 years away, Susan Elias Lieberman has been Cleveland Heights Darra Goldstein is associate professor ofRussian Williams College, whereshe’s taught since 1983. In and both she and Centers, a bankruptcy and debt counseling firm. His first child, Matthew, was born recently. Alan would thanks! I am also pleased to report following classmates agreed to serve and were elected: Anne Board Richards, vice president; Richard Melinda Beth Maidens, LePage Teller,treasurer; class fund chair; Geoffrey S. Poor, class correspon- Some new voices join us this time. June Sklar Weissman has completed courses for certification in elementary education and planned to begin job hunt- group, the Quaker society. Thanks for smiles on every face desire to share intense thatthe 914/969-3184 in active are This must be the season of life changes! Late word arrived from Alan Dubow, who writes that he has see especially express 1085 Warburton Ave. #717 Yonkers, NY 10701 storytelling Mark retired from the Florida bench and has moved to Washington, DC, where he operates the Debt Relief to among and build new To all of those many ones. wonderful people who worked on the reunion—classmost newsletterfor her writing, Sue! memories mates Margaret Sanborn and chah old class- by being friends, witnessing jubilant embraces they encountered, Salve and apologies from your uncharacteristically disorganized class correspondent! '73 intellectually stimulating as This quote by Kim Landsman (printed in the reunion book) pretty much sums up the sense of pride our classmates expressed during our 20th reunion. Those who helped during the registration were lenging.’ writing for her local newspaper. Lately she’s been exploring the issue of television for childrenand is active in a television awareness group. This community group advocates less television for everyone, especially children. (I know things in our home became lots more peaceful andproductive when we limited the TV our kids watch!) Sue also edits a Jodi Bornstein 2431 NW 63rd St. Boca Raton, FL 33496 407/997-9067 Summer and Winter and Elizabeth Putnam 427 Mapleton Ave. Suffield,CT 06078-1707 Spring and Fall some This willbe a short column since only one person from class wrote in. Jane Baird Evans has recently married and moved to Arizona from Washington, our DC. She would love to hear from old classmates. Letters sent to Jane c/o AAVC will be forwarded. Jane would also like to hear from the Rev. Petero Sabune, who was on the cover of the Summer ’94 VQ, and Josip Novakovich ’7B, who wrote article in an the issue. same McDonald had an interesting article pubthe May ’94 issue of Essence magazine entitled “A Sister in Paris.” Janet discusses racial attitudes in France; despite some she loves Janet lished in living in Paris and is The people asked NOT problems, currently working on a novel. in regular contact with have I am be mentioned in this column, so those to of you who would like call! or please write to see your mentioned, name position been promoted '78 I’m any in 1901 Wyoming Ave. NW Washington, DC 20009 It’s Woodstock Weekend, and I’m We really were class: too a transition to the to go original; revival. I suppose too old to # 45 young to we’ll always have the to go be able the to Noyes Circle version—which, as I recall, was about the only night of our four years when Sly and the Family Stone was in evidence than K.C. and the Sunshine Band. All of which brings us, somehow, to Everett Smith. In a letter that arrived the very same day that vandal worshiper Michael Fay dragged his caned-tomore of Singapore, the Big Guy wrote to say that—withhis wife and three kids in tow —he’d left his ancestral homestead in Greenwich, CT, for that idyllic Confucian police state. is Ev’s new a-pulp posterior out job managing director for South and Southeast Asia for GE Capital’s Global Project and Structured Finance Group, which is likely to keep him in Singapore for the foreseeable future. New j obs seem to be the order of the day. Another and financial high flier, Barbara Gault, living in San Francisco, where reports that she’s now she just joined Bankers Trust’s Private Adviser Ser- Mug Legend vice president. Babs vice reports running into aging heartthrob Bill Hebner in Zion National Park. She also attended Leslie Johnson’s wedding and sees Dance Theater compatriot Wheeler Shanholt as a Cindy from time to time. Two of our divine divines—Rabbi Sue most Berman Stone and the Reverend Ann Philbrick—are now also professionally peripatetic. Rabbi Sue, who is the mother of two, is moving to a congregation that’s new, where Sharon Spitz Fagan is of directors, too. on is assistant to headmaster. He and wife if this counts sure as a new job or not. In Robin Gaines —writingher first-ever letter 15 years—reports thatshe received her Ph.D. from not case, U. in language behavior and is currently practicing as a clinical researcher in speech language pathology at AlbertaChildren’s Hospital in Calgary. She’s also married to neurophysiologist from her hospital and has two children. Another classmate deeply concerned about children’s welfare is Beth Weitzman. Beth apparently took umbrage at the comments of a fellow classmate (which I paraphrased in a previous column), who noted that she had left New York City for the more “child-friendly” suburbs. Beth writes that she “feels the need to inform you ... that many of us find life in New York City extremely child-friendly.” There follows a multipage “snapshot of family life” in the VP for new business Of course, fortunate as Beth recognizes that not hers. She’s planning as all city kids spending on Time sabbatical from NYU (where she’s been tenured) and homeless families. Beth also poor reports seeing Diane Harris, Melissa Green, and Ellen Smithberg at their collective 20th high school researching reunion. Beth recently spent “a nice day at the home of Paul Mendelowitz and Patti Klein.” A final note, class president Mary Grace Elson just called me to say that Martha Frish—who is making a fine recovery over responsibility for from cancer—is going to take class’s fund-raising. Our our outgoing fund chair Helen Hillegass for thanks go to all her hard work. That’s about all for this time. of Peace, love, and—- salve. course— k Sharon Shavers Gayle '79 I F D R Station PC Box 8158 New York, NY 10150 or may not know, Zabatta Kauffman is “living out fantasy as a my athlete.” Nan’s playing competitive tennis and was to have run a “mini-marathon” in Central but I’ve recovered, and I have to admit I’m thrilled— school as the Zabatta-Kauffman kids. Another happy job changer, Rick Bloom, also wrote. After 13 years of working in jobs he “really didn’t like,” Rick’s company—PPG Industries—sent him (along with his wife and 4-year-old son) to of the company’s England, where he’s manager European paint business. On a sad note. Rick reports the death of “Beaver, the cat who lived in TA-21 ... and was probably better known than I was.” Yet another job-change report comes from the U.S. Geological Survey’s JeanNoe Weaver, who was transferred from Denver to Reston, VA. Jean—who now has responsibility for all ofher agency’s programs in Latin America—often sees Mary Dillon Bird and Tory MacLeod. Although she loves the new challenges, Jean concedes that trips to the State Department are justnot as much fun as backpacking around Wyoming. Like Jean, Carla DeLandri and Phil Variano have kept employers but changed posts. Carla, who’s been with ABC News for 15 years—most recently covering the O.J. Simpson story—justaccepted a new president, Robin Raphaelian Getzen;fund chair, Shane Mitchell; treasurer, Tracy Vogler. vice We left the and traveled banquet practically en fashionable ’7os revival of disco music in the Mug. Suffice it to say that suit jackets, ties, and the disco beat were readily discarded once pumps began. The dance floor of the Mug has been filled in, so we had to learn how not to fall down those three tiny (now imaginary) steps. On Sunday we were lectures and treated to various masse to a “We traveled practically en to a fashionable masse ’7os revival in the Mug . . . suit jackets, ties, and pumps were readily discarded once the disco beat began.” ofthe campus, including a private tour ofVassar’s addition, the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center. It houses a phenomenal collection and is well worth tours new weekend visit VC just to take a tour. to The library held an exhibition of works published the head librarian by Vassar alums, so please contact a ifyou’ve been published so that they may get a copy of work. your The weekend ended with a class lunch on Joss beach (the lawn between Davison and Josslyn). Here’s a list of some of the people who attended the reunion: Kathleen BalcezakBruce, Honesto Baltazar, Liane Beier, Evan Berenzweig, Gwynn Jagoda Berney, Larry Berney, Martha Bednarz, Mark De Fries, Bernice Feuer Garbade, Ross Goodman, ThoHildebrand, Avila Hendricks, Kathleen mas Monomakhoff Loree, Nancy Reynolds, Shane Mitchell, Robin Raphaelian Getzen, Thompson Getzen, Catherine Wolff, Leotine (Lee) Hartzell, Lauri Warner Masur, Cherie Voris If you attended the reunion and I didn’t cite your name (and if I did), please drop me a note and let me know even what you’re up to so I can mention time you next ... classmates! As you may elected class correspondent Greetings, I Park this fall. She’s also doing fund-raising with Cyndy Dietel Krieger 76, whose children attend the same Saturday eveninginvolved a class twilight cocktail party and dinner held in the Aula. After dinner we had a recap of the past five years and an election of our class officers: class president, Catherine Wolff; new are Warner Interactive. While Scooter “carves out his niche on the information superhighway,” wife Nanci professional keep mind that Triple A VC holds events throughout the year and would love to hear from alums. Please conthe AAVC or me for more information. tact her the board at which is between the College Center and the Terrace were treated to apartments. At the reception we music, southern and Caribbean soul food, and reggae conversation with current students. Please in public school fourth-grade opera, karate, cooking and woodworking lessons at the local religious center, brownstone basketball, Little League in Prospect Park, and multiethnic dining experiences. The kids, it apall right. are pears, Somewhat less now African-American alumnae/i by the African-American Alumnae/i Association (Triple A VC). The reIntercultural Center, ception was held in the new Weitzman-Rothbart household for the week of June 7, 1994 —including a trip to the Botanic Gardens, a poetically, the Rev. Ann has left her pastorate in Carnegie, PA, to accept for evangelism and a new position as the associate church development at the National Capital Presbytery. Another job swapper, the ever-interactive Scott Kauffman, of that network’s “20/20” proHackley School, where he’s the a feeling nostalgic. want at Leslie Allen ’B7 are the parents of two. Denise Degnan Clemons wrote with not one, not but three big changes to report. First, she has a two, husband (Jack Clemons). Second, she has two new children (they came with the new new husband). And third, she has a new job at IBM, where she’s now a software development manager building imageprocessing equipment. Denise is in touch with both Marcia Wood Hecker and Susan Wolf Gallager ’79. Boston Jack Nadler producer as Phil is still gram. was reunion. I I was hope during the recent certainly caught off guard when asked, hear from all of you with whom I’ve lost the years. touch with over I especially hope that you bombard me with tons of information and updates about yourselves. to To all of you who did not attend the reunion, you genuinely missed. Our class consists of a wonderful group of positive-thinking, down-to-earth people who are intent on having good time and fondly remembering “those Vassar years.” It was the nicest, were a most relaxed weekend I’d had in a while—what a surprise! The reunion took place the weekend of June 10th until through the 12th. I was not able to arrive Saturday morning, so I missed the Friday night cocktail party, but by all reports I heard it great fun—was casual and unhurried. On Saturday morning, the festivities began in the college chapel with stimulating speeches by AAVC president Billie Davis Gaines ’5B and college presi- dent Frances Fergusson. a The speeches were chance to further lunch there was with the campus followed meet up by the class parade and with old friends. After the opportunity to reacquainted (and particularly the college bookget store). Later in around! I havealso heardfrom the following people: Alison Lee Summey and her husband,Kenzil, now have a boy, a reception was held for a girl, age 3. Alison was recently administrative law judge by the South an Carolina legislature. She is responsible for deciding involvingfoster care, environmentalissues, and occupational licenses. cases Daniel K. Hellerstein has relocated to West Palm Beach, where he is head of urology with the Palm Beach Medical Group. Thomas Edwards’s second child, Phillip, was born in October. Thomas is chief of allergy medicine at Albany Medical College Hospital. as well as at Stratton VA Claudia Mausner received her master’s environmental psychology and is now degree in working to- ward her doctorate. Last but not least, I’ve been married threeyears to absolutely wonderful man, and I’m senior editor for I’ve juststarted a large children’s publishing company. editorial consulting business focusing on an an multicultural children’s books. That’s it for you want just drop to a contact line to any me or If now. of the people listed above, the Vassar Quarterly and will put you in touch with them. Take and let me hear from you soon! someone the afternoon, 6, and age elected care 59 ’80 A practicing family law attorney, Sonja Trom Eayrs resides in Minneapolis-St. Paul. Sonja had the pleasure ofrunning into fellow classmate Kyle Lefkoff in Baltimore in May. Kyle, a vice at a seminar president for a venture capital firm in Boulder, CO, has Mary Anne Wilson Gartland Bullet Hole Rd. Patterson, NY 12563 15th Reunion of the many professional same interests as her hus- band, Douglas. ’81 A fellow Minnesota resident, Sarah Jelley, coninvolved with Vassar admissions and to be very Pamela Costello Speer 22 Sunset Rd. tinues and her Victorian home (roof, furnace, garage, on with a trip over etc.). She kicked off a busy summer conservator Memorial Day weekend to visit art Judy Susan Chevlowe 401 Second Ave. #2l-C New York, NY 10010-4056 and Fall Greenfield in Denver and was hoping to end it with three weeks of canoeing. Sarah also keeps in touch with Mackenzie Anderson, who is getting settled into her new house in South Carolina, and Leslie this quarter and limited space in Minnesota have Orfuss Tepper. VC connections been invaluable and very enjoyable for Sarah. of In my last column I mused on the notion work Old Greenwich, CT 06870 Winter and Summer Spring Lots of go news so let’s . .. than by sharing new What happier way to start baby news! Fran Thorpe Rosenberg and husband the arrival of 7 lb. 2 oz. Gary are proud to announce 21-inch-longJames (Jamie) Lawton on May 17,1994, at 3:34 P M. The Rosenbergs reside in Santa Barbara, CA. My old roomie, Liz Parrott Brennan, and husband John are thrilled with the birth of Charles Calvert Brennan on June 4, 1994. The 8 lb. 4 oz. 20brother Jack out in Seattle. Charlie inch-long joins Sherry Stein Epstein and husband Jeff welcomed Erica Lee Epstein into the world on June 15,1994,and all are doing great. Jesse Ruth Sworden, born on Feb. mom 26,1994, has Kathy Canfield Sworden provided with a six-month maternity/family-care leave, which she and Kyle, 5 years, and Samantha, 4 years, have thoroughly enjoyed. But Campbell’s beckons, and Kathy will be back at work shortly. Husband Brett keeps busy with the farm. Jesse is a calm baby, Kathy happily. And that is reports, who sleeps and eats most a rare gift from God! My heartiest congratulations to all the new dads, and future Vassar legacies! moms, Johanna Kelly checks in from New Haven, where she is anticipating to Denver. Johanna willbe joining DU Law School as director of development for major gifts. In an interesting cycle, this move brings Johanna back to the town she grew up in andreturned after from Vassar. She sends best to wishes, graduation particularly to Christy Wood and Betsy StuartKehoe. 1993 proved to be quite an eventful year for made partJoanna Swomley. She got married, a move was ner wonderful new apartment on N.Y.C.’s Upper West Side. Alums present at her wedding to Brian Meyer included Gregg Zoarski, Peter Weiss ’BO, who flew in from Spain, and Melanie Czarra ’BO, who flew a in from London. where he is an from beautiful Sonoma, CA, “Life in the wine orthopedic surgeon. us is terrific,” says this happily married father of country three (two sons, ages 5 and 3, and a 4-month-oldlittle girl). Noah’s ’B2, who cisco to regular include Eric Feldman contacts getting his Ph.D. and leaving San Fran- is go to farm in upstate New York, which allowsher to indulge in one of her childhood passions, horses. She bought this year. One produced a thoroughbred mares lovely colt by a German warmblood, and the other future winningracehorse. She will, she hopes, carry two a often peruses her old Greek and Latin books, but fears Mr. Pounder “would be shocked at how I struggle over the Where does all that stuff we simplest things! worked so hard Yale for wrote love in—we John Sperber Maine, where he a couple sends continues the New England real estate would like holiday to season. in us from Down East news his involvement in both market and the Sales and Rose Brosseau, an engineering systems specialist for T.Y. Lin International, in May 1994. Among those fellow present at the “breaking of the glass” were ’Bl ers Paul Cristello, Katia Garrett, Patrick Sullivan, Kenny Levin, Jamie Kurten, and Doug Rediker, along with their lovely spouses and others. Other recent nuptial news includes Stephanie Mer this past spring. I had a great chat with Susie Hill Mesrobian when she, Pete, and their three terrific kids were visitingftomLondon, and she filled me inonStephanie and her new husband Peter’s beautiful celebration. Along with Susie, Marti Zimmerman Moseley, Jeff Sumner ’B2 and Lisa SchumacherSumner, and Leslie shared in the special day. I’m sure all of our class joins me in extending very best wishes to John and Patricia and Stephanie and Peter. 1994 to trials and tribula- your small. As time, I press special, large or a close a wish you and yours Think about adding me at happy, healthy to your card list and jottinga quick note! Untilnext take care, stay well, and stay in touch. Christtime, to work as a features editor at N.Y.C., Liz sion our is a senior Workshop, tent.” At home in the wilds of editor at the Children’s Televi- and husband Jeff is a director of First Boston. As for this column’s better half, Amy recently JeffWallach ’B2 reports that the time he spent on Vassar's has golf course His book finally paid off. Beyond the Fairway: Zen Lessons, Insights, and Inner Attitudes of Golf will he published in April. completed five reputed working to for a Japanese recording star songs be the “Madonna of Japan.” She’s also on a musical depicting the life ofLawrence of Arabia, “sort of along the lines of Broadway’s Tommy or Jesus Christ Superstar.” Jeff Wallach’s was inadvertently dropped apologies—so the following is note from the last issue—our updated entry: “All that time I spent on the Vassar whenI should have been writing papers on golf course 18th-century British lit has finally paid off. My first book, entitled Beyond the Fairway: Zen Lessons, Insights , and Inner Attitudes of Golf, willbe published by Bantam in April.” Jeff has also had articles published in Town and Country, Sierra, Men’s Fitness, Golfing, an and Health. Looks like Jeff has found his best stroke. be Frank to Landscape architecture appears Edgerton Martin’s best stroke. Frank writes from Minneapolis that after founding the Suburban Documentation Project with a panoramic photographer in 1990, he’s currently involved in planning small col1,000 leges, writing articles, and archiving over negatives of new midwestern suburbs. From the suburbs ofPortland, OR, comes ’B2 years. Division of L.L. Bean. John wed Patricia 60 VQ WINTER sharing tions, be they day-to-day or the year will be drawing to Pamela Thompson 2310 Woodsdale Blvd. years—Jewels moved north to Portland, where she has again relocated and recently held large garage sale. Summer and Winter Julie Riess, husband Nick de Leeuw, and their children, Josh, 8, and Leslie, 3 from Pittsburgh to Poughkeepsie. Julie is now the a Also Powers 310 W. 72nd St. mailbag summer for our discover that chology contained rather slim column, I picked up the phone, only in some of you were phase of vacation preparation. So here’s what I gleaned, despite trips to the beach, mountains, barbecue grill, and to most hammock. In the midst of packing, class VP Martha Frey informationbefore she, Cristina Celada some imparted (our class fund chair), and friend of Martha’s from Tuck Business School departed for the Far East, specifically Beijing, Shanghai, and Hong Kong. This marks the third trip Martha and Cris have taken a they set out as sophomores for the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics. At Chicago-area “DoubleDecade” party, Martha reported talking with Rob Mayer, who is teaching poli sci at Loyola. From nearby Windy City tennis Martha spotted Remy Fisher brushing up on court, her game and taking break from her work as a gambling/gaming industry analyst for Kemper. since a a a on the move are directorofthe W impfheimer Nursery School at V assar. in cognitive psyNick has been in a Ph.D. program New York, NY 10023 Spring and Fall Since the news Lincoln, NE 68502 402/476-1257 and pickings the that Julia (Jewels) Blagden has moved again. After leaving the Bay Area in June 1993—after seven Amy Kisco, NY. She would love to hear from any classin her area. Denise is also working on herpilot’s mates license and taking pottery classes. Tepper there go? Downloaded That’s allfor this quarter. Thanksagain to allwho Rueppel Santomero, when not on one of her previously mentioned pleasurable travel jaunts with husband Camillo, is having a wonderful time renovating a turn-of-the-century home in Mount Orfuss in cram all. by you Denise Marketing to storage tapes no doubt. I thinkI need to re-evaluate current one my storage and retrieval system, as my seems singularly inefficient.” No editorial comment by me on this one. Just food for thought and reflection N.Y.C. to zebras around enthusiasts. Along with husband Peter and her two stepsons, Kristi keeps busy maintaining their 60-acre mas Noah Weiss pens has moved People magazine. Amy said she bumped into our former class correspondent at an Upper West Side health club and promptly learned thatNO ONE calls him “Danny” anymore. They reminisced about tradingLevis in college and traded phone numbers in the Big Apple. from newly Amy also shared with me a note married Elizabeth Vitton Kelly, who detailed some from her honeymoon in memorable moments Tanzania, complete with “lions roaring and chasing turning35 and wondered how some of you felt about it. Well, 684 of you chose not to reveal to me/us your thoughts (are you all that indifferent about it? or are traumatized? or in denial?), but Linda Walder you Fiddle cheerfully announced that “the big 35 was great.” Her husband had a wonderful surprise partyfor her at “50 and 100” in SoHo. Hurray! Linda keeps busy in the Big Apple with children Danny, 3 1/z, and Ara Jayne, 1. She wishes everyone a happy birthday. JudithKristi Spalding, having earned her C.P.A. in 1993, is currently employed as a controller of a multimillion-dollar corporation and would love to hear from Vassar folk, particularly erstwhile classics a the law firm of Dewey Ballantine, and moved in into A call to my column colleague, Amy Powers, the news thatformer Chicagoite Dan Santow produced at the U. of Pittsburgh and plans to finish his dissertation “out of residence.” Although sad to leave Pittsburgh, “which is a great city especially for famithat they are looking forward to lies,” Julie writes being on campus Another and in family on the Hudson Valley again. the move is Mona Jacobs Marked, husband Dave, and daughters Rebecca and Jenny. The Markellsreturned to Albany in late August after spending the summer in Portland, OR—maybe they went to Jewels’s garage sale—where Dave taught environmental law. Back in Albany, Mona writes thatshe’ll “probably” resume part-timeactuarial consulting work. is Marcia Far from part time the Office of analyst for D.C. Marcia began 1992 after receiving as an Occomy’s job as an Management and Budget in OMB analyst in the fall of an M. A. in public policy from the U. of Chicago. Outside of work, Marcia is enjoying the comforts of her recently purchased condo near Georgetown. Although she’s based in Connecticut rather than D.C., Andrea Boissevain’s role as an environmental consultant puts her in contact with federal agencies and local officials and such as the EPA, as well as state communityresidents in Fairfield County. In an article about Andrea andher firm, HealthRisk Consultants, the year, Lisa Zane appeared on my television—perhaps yours as well—face to face with the legendary Dick Van Dyke in “Diagnosis Murder.” Despite the wily tricks she learned at Vassar, she was, permanently. she’s in the end, a murderess undone. And hats off to Daniel Fishman (officially ’B4 but ’B3 where it counts), who is living in Pittsburgh, PA, with wife Nancy, son Matthew, and daughter Ellie, but more to the Karen Masiello Beasley and husband Robert welcomed Caroline Marie to their growing family in Jan. 1994- Caroline, brother Nicholas, mom, and dad leave Charleston, SC, in the fall due to to were who justfinished his Ph.D. in molecular (something- Robert’s submarine base quoted saying that she became interested “in public health side of the dark microbial world” during her biology classes at Vassar and later at Yale working toward her M.A. as the Andrea’s environmental correctness also extends giving lianaCareen her daughters’ hand-me-down clothes. liana writes from “brown, drought-struck but California” that whenher 3-year-old fraternal sunny twins, Arielle and Jessica, outgrow those clothes she to sends the unisex items to Kathy Boonin Andros’s After liana married Andrew Childs ’Bl in 1989, son. she began work on her Ph.D. in epidemiology at in late 1991 slowed UCLA. The birth of the twins liana reports now working on her dissertation, involvingIUDs and pelvic inflammatory disease and risk factors—parsections. ticularly maternal age—for cesarean she’s Jeannine Vetrano Dowdle announced the birth of their second child, Vincent Thomas, in late May. Vincent’s 2-year-old sister, Shannon,thinkshe’s pretty —especially the blond streak in his brown hair. Marcel Laurene Riem reported the birth of her son, Jesse, on Feb. 25,1994, and thought herfirst-born “would one day get a kick out of seeing that his name had appeared in the VQ.” cute Last but not least is Francoise Senekdjian Huffman’s news that she married Steve Huffman on June 18. The newlyweds live in where Francoise is She chiropractor. or-other) deoxyribose and (something else) refractive index of (a bunch ofother big words), etc. Call himfor autographed copy of the dissertation. News from the East Coast: Suzanne Batchelor, now an attorney in Connecticut, was married last Januaryto Andrew Pinkes and, after a honeymoon in free a Antigua, returned to live in West Hartford. Robert to first vice president Alpert was recently promoted with SmithBarney. He lives in Port Washington, NY, with wife Lisa Deßruin Alpert ’Bl and their children, Lauren and Steven. Josh Kaufman, who was married in is notes that she’s the southern accent down Linda Sabith Molinari was a bridesmaid. right.” Well, that about wraps it up, except for the following blatant plug for my fax machine: USE IT! ’84 as an marketing work to make NASDAQ (the stock change) household Justina also attended the christening ofher goddaughter, Caroline, daughter of ex- a name. Karen Masiello ’B4 and Robert Beasley. In dance was Nancy Mack. atten- From overseas, Peter Cummings sends word that he is now editor and publisher of Phase magazine (a publication of BLASE Ltd.), the largest lesbian and gay style magazine in Great Britain. And Valerie Martinez writes from a place called Big Bend— Swaziland, that is—-where she teaches English. She married last January to Keith Allen in Tucson, AZ. From Japan comes word that Jane Illsley James has arrived, withhusband Thanand daughter Anika, was to teach English. In the “new persons department,” we have several class of 2016 members to welcome. Joan Hirschhorn Bright and husband David had a daughter, Katherine, last April. Nelson and his wife, Victoria, had a son, Larry Lawrence Shephard, last May. Susan Russo Walker and husbandDuncan Walker ’B2 have a new daughter, Alice Eavan, who joins brother Max. Susan busy as a freelance writer, chauffeur, and story reader in the Baltimore area. is Charlotte Prendergast Yochem writes briefly that she is working as an attorney in Corpus Christi, TX. We’d love to get more details. I should also mention attorney, but you’d at Harvard. They both look forward returning to California after we’ll start there. in the last issue with a recap Liz Donelson Davis scarce of reunion deserves and (and this news kind of some re- award. Not only did she fly in from Anchorage for the weekend, she needed six plane tickets to do it. brought her husband and four children with her. business in L.A. and is searching for the next Nirvana for his record label. Rafael Flores still looks good in shorts but has wear a suit to his work at the Department ofDefense. Co- Hallisey is planning an alumnae/i“Follies”-type performance to benefit the new Avery Theater. It may not be too late to help out; you can reach him through AAVC (or look him up in your bulletin). Lee Hettinger reunion is prosecuting child abuse cases at the D.A.’s office in Boston. He and his wife, Michelle, a social worker, are building a home in suburban MA. Filmmaker Fritzi Horstman (now at work on Naked Man, a documentary to be shown at our Marlborough, next writes in with these observations of the weekend: “We all seem to be getting on with our lives, but I’m so happy to see that most of us have kept our immerse our ourselves in ability Higgins look for Lisa’s latest novel, Tvoice Verge. Upon a Time , due Sept. 1994In performing arts news, Elizabeth Frankel appeared with the Randy James Dance Works during its at the Merce Cunningham Studio in spring season New York. Meanwhile, several parents of small children have noted that they have seen of Jon more Tenney this than in four years at Vassar, summer thanksto Lassie's big advertising budget. And yes, it is that we are old enough for Jon to be playing the scary father in the movie. Ellen GatinsBlock wrote let us know that she to and husband Andy Block ’B5 had a baby boy, Daniel, on May 4, 1994. They to laugh at and frequent to also recently became home- and have moved to Armonk, NY. After maternity leave, Ellen was planning to return owners summer The reunion) of humor, our ability to what is, our playfulness, and Amelie Tseng Lewis and husband Scott just a house in Upper Montclair, NJ, just around the corner from Tom andLisa Be sure bought in to kill her. Robert sense for missing the weekend is thatshe has accepted an offer for an assistant professorship in 19th-century French literature at Mississippi State University. During the weekend she was in the Deep South looking for housing. Michael Me Vick er writes that almost exactly 10 after graduation he proposed to Mile. Sylvie years Naux. The wedding was planned for September, in France. (Michael notes that being a French major in very handy during this courtship.) came to Lisa Levy Jensen tried to find out what he does there, but he said if he told her he’d have to up on June 13. Sherry, husband Ivo, and the girls live in Baltimore, where Sherry teaches law at the U. of Maryland Law School. Earlier this year Sherry made the Washington Post when she turned down a high-profile job at the Justice Department. In otherpost-reunionnews, Lydia Belateche writes union Liz considering hanging shoes in favor of a new in the medical field. career A few of the people who didn’t make it to reunion thather excuse didn’t have much room quarter), gathered miserable Boston Knobloch, 6027 Harwood Ave. Oakland, CA 94618 we a winter. Winter and Summer and Cariad Hayes correspondent working an had good excuses. One of these was Sherrilyn Ifill, who welcomed her second daughter, Amah Alicia music D.C. as 1037 Siena Oaks Circle West Palm Beach Gardens, FL 33410 Guests included Michael’s wife, in well guess. business studies Lisa Levy Jensen L of Kevin Watson and Kathy Hughes in N.Y.C. last July, where Michael DeWitt was an usher. in the EPA Office of Enforcement. She sees attorney her quite a bit of Charlotte Morford, who continues as clown extraordinaire, is because those postcards have been mighty Leslie Damesek ’BB, Bruce Mendelsohn mother now, Judithis a freelance journalist in Chicago. has three Lee Squires Berezuk, lighting guru, She is also children, a husband, and a busy career. in her local lATSE union. quite active Quinn Stills is spending one more year in Cambridge, MA, while wife Lauren finishes her graduate never big Since ’9O, and Victor Jockin. Justina Fugh has been a Peter Wilson did a magnificent job constructing the giant “84” made out of balloons for the parade of classes. He managed to stay on his stilts while he led class from Main to Walker Field House. Peter, our MonicaFerreri lives in D.C. and works in “the oil bidness.” She’d rather be in Europe reviewing the fashion collections, however. Mike Feld is in the Stephanie, Saturday. picnic be to “Naked Man.” Dorothy Parnizzo. In attendance Michael Cesta, Herm Farrell, Matt Fenton, Sarano Kelley ’B4, and Judy Silverman Fenton ’B5. 914/ 241-7149 (fax, phone) DeWitt ’B2, Alex Cooper and his wife, Karen, Gard Little and Alice Meade, Bobby Zuckerman and wife closing. Destination TBA. Brooke Spanierman and sister-in-law Judith Nemes Spanierman made a brief appearance at the Walker Field House Brooke claims on were Bedford Hills, NY 10507 Margaret Alexander less Cavalier married Spring and Fall wedding or Ben Swett has been writingfor E! He is continuing to freelance while exploring the possibility of He is not the structure. returning to a more corporate 510/547-1168 less, or fact-less? In any case, kudos to Adam LevinDelson, who took one small fax for classkind whenhe became the first to fax facts. Adam attended the just France, more to recently moved with Carol Hartley ’B4 to Charlotte, NC, where he’ll teach history at Queens College. Earlier this year on Long Island, NY, Matt Dave Tobias 149A Broad Brook Although I take pride in the fact that the class of ’B3 has a class correspondent with a fax, you folks seem to be lacking in fax skills. Are class of’B3ers fax lax, fax- they move Cole Still always a bridesmaid myself, yours truly is living in both Omaha and Lincoln and trying to help moderate Republicans get elected. See you at the polls! '83 In the fall reunion. to now Charlotte, NC, “finally getting Karen Littell and husbandDaniel returned from their yearlong trip around the world in time for medical director at New England Rehabilitation Center in Framingham, MA. Tom 1993, | a point I down her studies somewhat, but that earlier in part-time work in the fall as in New York. Andy is also an city specializing an attorney for a firm attorney and works at a in intellectual property firm in the work. Ellen says, “All in all, life is very good!” P.S. For those of you who are wondering about the tale of the “Naked Man,” let’s just say this; that will teach you to miss a Vassar reunion! ourselves.” Wendy Israel is a freelance writer contributorto Metropolitan Home magazine. By workto ing at home, Wendy has finally found time strip wallpaper and redecorate her own place. Sanjay Jaiswal, Mutuma Marangu, Noonan live very come near crazy pany and utensils is doing very well. to reunion. Their toy com- Springfield, MA 01089 10th Reunion to straws West 413/737-2947 and Cebert each other in London but had Poughkeepsie to see each other. Erik Lipson and Stephanie Shepard Lipson brought their two adorable little girls and a case of to ’85 Peter J. Schindelman 130 Apple Ridge Rd. We correspondents are now limited to a certain number ofwords in each column (currently 1,500). This is based on our class size and the fact that our 10-year 61 reunion will occur within the year. I don’t expect to have trouble fitting this column within the size rehas appeared striction, since recently little class news work toward her doctorate in before ethics at Georgetown. After five years practicing law in D.C., Donna M. to lawschool—on the other Nagy has opted to return me. Starting, as usual, with births; Michael Haas had his second child. His daughter, Margot Francine, was born on April 5, 1994Seth Hirschberg baby boy, Matthew April 30, 1994. Harris’s Warren Harris, was born on Deanna Aftab Guy also has a DanielleFarideh Guy was born at 7:53 daughter. June 20, new A.M. on 1994. Danielle weighed 7 pounds 8 ounces 21 inches long. Deanna has returned to work as a neonafellow at Rainbow Babies and Children’s. Her and was of year finally “will be Mr. Mom surgical residency his fourth he does research and as during call!” no Anne Borchert and Jeffrey Isaacs had their first child. AndrewElson Borchert-Isaacs was born on July 6, 1994. As for weddings, Susan H. Manbermarried Louis I. Abraham at the Vassar chapel in Oct. 1993 (from what I can tell). Susan works for Ammirati & Puris, a New York ad agency, as a vice president and associate research director. Louis works in New York for Bank Hapoalim, Israeli bank, an as a computer network administrator. Dr. Sylvia Lynn Hargrave married Ralph David Kelly on June 4, 1994, in Pittstown, NJ. Sylvia is an resident at the University of Medicine andDentistry of New Jersey in Newark. She had received her M.D. from Boston U. Her husband works ophthalmology for Trammel Crow capital Company in Dallas as a director of Natasha Cooper Benisty and husband Motti Benisty became proud parents of ManonKayla Benisty Feb. 17, 1994. Natasha has also been promoted to on In herfirst Class Notes postcard, Elizabeth Adams wrote to say that she is living in N.Y.C. again after finishing architecture school at U. of Penn. The reprint rights, comics, plus sales representative for United Media, a newspaper syndicate representing, others, “Peanuts,”“Dilbert,”Jack Anderamong many Alan Dershowitz, and Cokie Roberts. Comics son, an director. With Abramson Ehrlich Manes in art Washington, DC, she had “created and developed advertising campaigns including print, collateral materials, and direct mail for clients in retail, financial services, and communications industries.” Victoria had also previously worked with DDB Needham Worldwide in McLean, VA, USA Today/Gannett Publications in Rosslyn, VA, and John Marks Associin Baltimore. ates As for me, I graduated from Western New England School of Law in Springfield, MA, in College May in 1994 • I took the Massachusetts bar examination July. I have no definite plans for the immediate future other than to care for my youngest daughter at home while perhaps looking for nonlegal work in the out- side world. law. recession, she tells us, has been a drag in her field, but she landed a job with I.M. Pei. (Not too shabby.) Anyone need Beth Jacqueline to to design a house? Paskow moved from Baltimore back Florida. After tryingMiamiand Boca Raton, is trying to decide where to settle down with sunny Jacqui her private practice in psychotherapy. Last January, Scott Silverberg spent a week in Guatemala providing anesthesia for a surgical team from the U.S. caring for children in a mountain community. In the fall he finished his residency at SUNY Stonybrook and, by the time we read this, will have a job, somewhere. I misspoke in my summer and her beau did moved into a Eric D. Ort 12 Parkview Rd. a press conference sented by Catherine Contopoulos’s marriage to Apostolos (Laki) Lambropoulos. The description of their courtship was charming and their Greek Orthodox wedding inspiring. Robert (Gobie) Fink July, wrote Robert was to announce to his bid for announce married to and Rob Forman ’B5. have the Assembly seat as a bully pulpit to burden and then push for the economic we so desperately need.” of time before Pat is I think it relieve the tax development is just a set a completing 1994 of ’B7 reports, other things, three among master’s degrees, two law degrees, one Ph.D., four five weddings, two moves, babies, and a prize winner medical ♦ Representatives. As you can see from the return address, my is thatI have moved back to New England. I news associate director of big am Miss Porter’s School (Farmington), and I have just begun to familiarize number of MPS/ myself with the vast Vassar grads—including our classmate Chris Orth. development at When I called to get advice about life in the Hartford area from Scott Parven, I discovered thathis wife, Cari Shane ’B7, had justgiven birth to theirfirst child, Olivia Shane Parven. Congratulations to the growing family. And speaking of first children .. . Myra Thomas wrote to the birth of her announce daughter, Chloe Myra are busy Ann Thomas, born in April. Evan and and deliriously happy. Engelstein gave birth to a son last Joshua More Pratt’s son, born last May. Libby is to Michael Pratt, still undecided about to return to work. But she has plenty of time think about it while caring for the needs of her “gorgeous little boy.” Now that I have moved out Pennsylvania, brunch has once my weekend again become part of In late August I had the with several Vassar chums up scattered around New England. On one Joan Horgan, MarniKessler ’B7, and I got occasion together in West Hartford, and the following weekend I saw Joan, Barbara Stachniewicz ’B2, and John Stachniewicz in Boston. ’87 Bobbin Bob Samiljan, Tom Webb, Tom Beller, Slutsky, under- writing for planes and boats and also is the drummer for the band This Is It. Ellen is living in Hoboken and booking rock bands! Another nice letter announced that Cornelis Overbeeke, Jr., was married to Sharyn Ingram on May 7, 1994 on Block Island, RI. It was a perfect day! Cornelis is four-year student at the Chicago Medical is planning a career in emergency medicine. Sharyn is a chemistry/biology major and a graduate of Holy Cross. She is currently working in an immunology lab at the U. of Chicago and will be applying to medical school. Cornelis and Sharyn are both triathletes and enjoy white-waterrafting, scuba diving, and sky diving. The two are also planning to bike Europe for three months next spring. Wow! Finally heardfrom Scott Cooper, who tells me he is officially an attorney. Scott attended Temple Law School in Philadelphia and graduated with honors in 1992. After clerking for a federal judge for a year, he work as a labor and employment attorney went to with Blank, Rome, Comioskey & McCauley. Scott also announced his Aug. 1993 marriage to Karen Foytlin, who is also an attorney. His former rooma School and Paul Garcia, was best man, and Paul’s wife, Tracy, also attended. Scott andKaren had an amazing two-weekhoneymoon in Hawaiiand have now settled in Center City, Philadelphia. Congratulations! Cara McCarthy writes from Boston that all is going well. Cara graduated from Babson’s M.B.A. last May and got a job on State Street as program She is now global advertising manager. engaged to J. Brittan Hutchins, a fellow classmate, and the two were planning an Oct. 1 wedding. Cara also saw many Vassarites at Marianne Martens’s wedding this past March in N.Y.C., including Mary Chan, Laura Macnow, Liz Darsh, and Evan Neufeld. Jeannie thatshe justcompleted her master’s in at the Kennedy School of public policy program Kelley 137 S. Canon Dr. *3 Beverly Hills, CA were Owen Mazon, Russell Geekie ’B9, Marlin and Ellen Stewart. Marlin is doing insurance mate, of ruralsouth-central vocabulary. pleasure of meeting ronmental organization in New York. I heard from Jim Saft ’BB and Rebecca Moore ’BB, who attended, that the wedding was beautiful. OtherVCers attend- ing matter running for the House of Banker writes 90212 Government Many cards and lots of great things going on with ’B7 classmates! Especially in the baby and wedding area On so here goes. 21, 1994, Cari Shane Parven —- date yet, Karen Y. Roberts became engaged to Douglas P. Turner in June. Karen is a third-year litigation associate with a courseWashington, DC, law firm and is not rights a seat the New York State Assembly, Dutchess County legislator Patrick Manning said, “I would like to use his Fran Goldman, U. of Wisconsin ’B7, at the Metropolitan Club in N.Y.C. Vassar guests included Steve and Jocelyn Strieker Mendelsohn, Scott Olsson, George Tsiolis, Kathy Anderson, Linda Williams, Lisa Maclean Malik, Bill McVail ’B7, Lance Levitt ’B4, nonprofit in Libby the wedding of Daniel Reichert ’B5 to Andrea Marcovicci, but last June the class of 1986 was repre- a relationsfor Geffen Records an assistant to the president human and envi- The class N.Y.C., just blocks from the David Letterman Craig and his wife, Sue Kellman ’B7, had a mini-reunion Memorial Day at the wedding ofMichael Starnbach ’B7. was of you who share my passion no doubt enjoy “Vows.” The featured wedding came pretty close to home with 62 VQ WINTER of Crescentera, in whether Though they directorofmedia and artist in New York. Jennifer is had been Vassar.” follow the marriages and charity work of of our classmates, I have become an avid reader some of the New York Times. Those of the “Styles” section Last Sage Cornell University in Ithaca, NY. Jim is the Chapel at Craig Ornstein completed his Ph.D. in health psychology last June, with a dissertation on psychopathology in adults with epilepsy. When he wrote, Craig was working for a medical communication company In a newsletter to call her at United Media in New York. Received the New York Times announcement of the June 4, 1994, wedding of James Merlis and Jennifer Richardson. The wedding took place in together for some time.) Gail took a jewelry course this fall and would love to hear from Linda Davidson. West Hartford, CT 06110 to wedding. package of syndicated features designed to supplement corporate and nonprofit newsletters. Natasha welcomes anyone looking to spice up your together; they living in place. (They March, Brian Noah Engelstein. The mother reports that “he is gorgeous, brilliant, and plans to go to 203/232-5829 In order Plus is column. Gail M. Vincent just move not new Susan Nover '86 a studio. markets. Bill Sprance is “a civilian trial attorney for the navy.” He pursues an LL.M. in internationallaw (on a part-time basis) at Georgetown Law School. He keeps in touch with Joel Doolin, Jeff Fligelman, Eric Allison, Tracy Galloway ’B6, and Melanie Mitchem ’B6. Bill also sends greetings to Tara Delson ’B6, Milla Trigos ’B6, Lisa Shapiro ’B7, and Dave Rosoff ’B7. Victoria Hecht recently joined Kershner & ComMarketing and Advertising in Alexandria, VA, pany as of 12 hours. Cari planned on working at home for a while and then returning to work part time. Sounds like long nights, but Cari says it’s definitely worth it. professor at the U. of teaching constitutional side of the lectern. Donna is Cincinnati College of Law, tology husband philosophy/medical June and husband Scott Parven ’B6 welcomed their first child, 6 lb. 14 oz., 20.5-inch-long, Olivia Shane Parven, into the world. Cari was in labor for short just Harvard U. Jeannie does not yet did make the big decision back to N.Y.C. And Rebekah Gleason to move got her M.A. in music at Columbia Teachers College and is now teaching math to LD students in at know whatshe is doing but Maryland. Lots of people on the move— moved to Baltimore and has Amy a new Goldman has position as the director of development for the Peabody Institute at Johns Hopkins University. Brian Ellis Hanson has shakenoff hisfirst name and now goes by Ellis Hanson. He went to Princeton, got his Ph.D., architect for the Central Park Conservancy. Debbie in to say thatshe has a new Sunderland wrote job and and moved back Debbie also reports, “Recently visited Jessica Slotkin in Columbia, SC, and Ute Joas in Washing- assistant to New York. Ellis has now joined the Sarah Lawrence, where he professes “all of queer manner things.” And Sylvia Parkyn Koontz and husbandGary have moved (hopefully for the last faculty at time) just outside of the city of Winston-Salem, NC. two now own a home, and Sylvia is still a “library peon” working for the state ofNorth Carolina, trying make the library at the North Carolina School of to The a new manager husband. She’s now technology marketing for the publishing house of Prentice-Hall. DC. Jessica is working on an M.A. to teach ton, foreign language. Ute finished law school and has joined a D.C. firm.” DawnM. Ever and SarahBishop (who’s starting her own landscaping business in Seattle) traveled all the way to Philadelphia for Nancy Rhoads’s wedding the more to planned to move hospitable climate of northern California. Millie Park is on the move, too, heading to the University of Chicago’s Business School after a busy summer attending a couple of class of ’B9 weddings. Emily Dephoure and Josh Laurence will be the latest classmate couple. MonicaTrumble’s wedding rounded Millie’s itinerary. She’s also looking for Aimee out Laman ’9l. Already married is Leigh Ziemian Todd ’9O, who’s the recipient of congratulations from Stephanie J.E. Nicoll. Leigh, and any other VC grads in the D.C. the Arts a friendlier place for art students! She also sends hellos to Feme Kilcollum ’B9, Anuradha Murti ’B9, Stacey Greenberg ’BB, Sara Sezun ’BB, Sylvia to area, ance Niedner, Christina Chiu, and Andrea Gordon. Amy Wilson. Reston. Melanie A. Wells, M.D., found time between Tufts and her emergency medicine residency in Den- Natalie Lowe let us know that she to wrote graduated from the U. of lowa College of Law and Now all she has passed the New York State bar exam. wrote do is find a job in Germany or the Virgin Islands that does not require her joining any of the armed forces. Natalie sends congrats to Julie Szabo on her Toni Herzog. wedding and a big hug to old roomie that Marc Plawker just won FIRST PRIZE Got news to the F.C. Valentine Competition for urology residents—an out-standing achievement in his field! in Marc is four-year resident urology at Downstate. He is living in Brooklyn and says life is great but tough. And lastly, Daniel Bucatinsky writes that he is living a in L.A. and starred in in working as a writer/actor. Danny recently new pilot for Disney and is currently a Adam Click. Among the many VCers in attendMarc Saidenberg, Lisa Magaro, Jen were Mudryck, Wendy Membrino, Joan McMenemy, and side. This fall she Already wed Catherine Carleton Jones the birth of the ir first report William, in June. And Cris Sanchez Mary in from Vermont to child, Timothy reported from Dallas that she’s engaged to medical student Charles Eberhart. No date for the wedding yet, but they’ve closed the deal on their first house already. Finally, and Liz Waller. That’sall for now. I’d love hearfrom Lexi Lord, Karl Mini, Peter Sweeny, Eve Wollman, and John Berlinsky. to ’88 192 Sixth Ave. New York, NY 10013 and a happy 1995! wishes for the holiday season as corporate attorney. ’89 cago and hot it in was you July. N.Y.C. quarters. I ran in Brook- that Will Wood and Ben report thatshe’s completed herfifth year there and her third year of marriage to Yasuki Nito, an executive at Nissan. Gisele Richardson is still living in Northampton, the Psy.D. program at MA. She was accepted into Antioch New England Graduate School and started in her program Scott R. Bloom has re- September. turned from sunny Los Angeles and is now “chilling in sunny Cape Cod” until the fog rolls in. Samuel Bell wrote in to report that after nine Poughkeepsie, he’s finally escaped to Chapel Hill, NC. He and Stephanie Schlagel ’B9 get together “whenever she can be pried away from her dissertain tion.” Christina Kanka Nelson spent part of the year job-hopping but has finally settled into a “great” new in central New Wedding Jersey. bells continue 1988, and here’s the order): Alice Felarca most was to recent chime for the class of crop (in no particular wed to Charles Scott Howe IV Valentine’s Day, with Jennifer Childs Zidar as maid of honor. Tamara (Tammi) Hawkinson married Api Sulistyo on Aug. 8 in Minnesota, with Janet Arnold in attendance. Janet and her husband, Jim, have become homeowners in Lancaster County, PA, on and plan big housewarming party soon as they’ve unpacking—whenever that is! The New York Times reported that Karen a as finished Herskovitz York back in was wed July. to William Ackman in Karen is as as a in because a chunk of their to extrapolate.) anticipated the in summer to working for The Gap, Inc., for the past five Steve Epstein is moving to Philadelphia to the Wharton School. Next summer he’llalso be more hearing from any other alums in “I’m just knee-deep in diapers debris,” writes literati. The May issue autobiographical essay living with epilepsy and terms with the con- the area. and construction Elisa Talbott Freedman from Venice, FL. Last January, Elisa and husbandMike celebrated the birth of their second child, Erica who’s Lynn, 2-year-old brother, Christopher. The happy family recently visited by Rebecca DenHartog, who’s teaching and living in Orlando. Elisa also sends congratulations to Pam Johnstone. Michael Gottlieb was lighting designer for the very well with her was May subway platform a is I had College, getting along the entertainment Krevolin ’B9 were both living in New York City and in from Japan to doing well. Jenifer Hermes wrote job conducive dition while at Vassar. David Hochmanhad an article in the issue of US looking at the scapegoating of News has trickled in from various years was 135 Paul Bartlett ’Bl on and he gave me news Medical so use entering married life, though he doesn’t say with whom. Being new to Philly, Steve would be interested New York, NY 10027-6814 Katherine H. Lipsitz on the difficulty she had coming to Another summer has come and gone. By the time read this, we’ll probably be wishing it was still lyn, enter in ery into W. Morgan Smith 15 Claremont Ave. #3l by (Considering how steamy this July, maybe not!) missing, was to inaccuracies After and Juliet Meyers Berkeley PI. Brooklyn, NY 11217 Spring and Fall (Any slight Whitney and Craig’s tale card years, First the clippings from our of Mademoiselle contained an Winter and Summer a research assistant the curator of European painting to at the Art Institute of Chicago, and Craig’s putting his column. clippings. Luxgal@pipeline.com California. Whitney Templeton-Zodikoff and husband Craig Zodikoff’9o have been in Chicago for a year and have of it. Whitney’s working enjoyed every minute The Santa Barbara News Press reports that Sharon Leslie Broadbent did indeed graduate from the Chi- thanreunions suggesting that there’ll be lots of births I’m referring to the large number of next summer. people who took the time to send in cards, letters, and Luxemburg month-long trip through Nepal and Bali, and a the New York Times on the Voting Rights Act. Keep those cards and letters coming! Juliet and I can’t keep the class informed without your help. Best in The June air and I’m not Rachel home in at University of Denver Law School degree a new prime-time soap for Fox. He would hearfrom Missy Burke, Barb Murphy, Emily Kemp, Steph contact Andrew Benkard reports that he’s “still Columbia Business School and designing a deck of cards on the side.” (The latest business tool, no tarot doubt!) And kudos to Jordan Moss for his op-ed piece at | . to to withNoelle Boyle in visit a writing for love for ver encouraged are working as a New landscape industry for violence and debauch- in America today. David is listed with a couple of other stories butions to as a staff reporter his credit and contri- to the New York Times. Erica Rubin ’BB appearSpeaking of the Times , three Vassar names of record during the month of ing in the newspaper May were Pamela Johnstone, Timothy M. Ognisty at ’BB, and Charles R. Cohen. Pam, a gallery assistant Linda Hyman Fine Arts with M.A. in art history from Hunter College, and Timothy, a vice president in the equity trading department at Goldman, Sachs, teacher on married on May 14- Charlie, science were was producer of SummerStage 1994 a free concert series in the , an New York’s Central a Long Island, married Debra M. Dicker, a vice Park that featured music from Verdi to Morphine presi- dent at Revista Aerea magazine, on the 29th. Other wedding news from Elaine Anderson comes Phillips, who’s working on her Ph.D. in English at Vanderbilt, as is Philip Edward Phillips, her husband . ofabout a year as you read this. At a belatedreception the happy couple celebrated with Rob Scott and Debbie Nassif Pugsley. Elaine, who should be done with her comps by now, sends congratulations to Cybele Fisher ’BB on her marriage and greetings to Holly Pease, Emily Powell Resmer, and Ann Sison. Mint Theater Elaine also reports that she and Philip are “the proud ‘parents’ of a papillon (butterfly dog).” I’m not sure what that is, but it sounds like something out of Lewis ment Carroll. Quarterly. Danny Sarubin, D.D.S., who’s serving his residency in hospital dentistry, says he enjoys catching up with the lives of people he doesn’tremember. He does remember, and misses, Steph Vucovich ’9O and sends warm regards to Liz Brown and Greg Virginia (Ginger) Pittman is also tying the knot. Ginger’s back in Atlanta working on a Ph.D. in psychology and doing practica at Emory and Georgia Tech. Her husband-to-be is Duke andWharton alumDale Pistilli. The two will be “doing the housenus yard-dog thing and would love some of you Yankees to visit.” Ginger sends greetings to Claudia, lan, Bobby, Joey, and Aaronand Kate, congratulations to Nell on her engagement, and expressed the hope that she’d see Noelle, Bobby, and Erik in San Francisco in July. The City by the Bay is also Rachel Rivera’s destination. Having graduated from Columbia University with a bachelor’s degree in nursing, Rachel headed to the Big Easy only to find it a bit on the hot andhumid Life in Young writes Your Company production of The Time of New York City in May. And Lauren from Seattle, where she is a develop- officer at the Lakeside School. There was another card this month from someone who left Vassar early but stays in touch through the Gillard ’BB. He also poses the question, “Did my James Gifford Rogers-Linn, really exist?” roommate, Yes, Danny, I believe he did. Here in New York City I’ve seen a number of classmates. JessicaMorris, whose previouslyreported dissertation is entitled “Lesbian Mental Health and the Coming Out Process,” was in town for Stonewall 25 and ran into a number of other VC International Dyke March. I talked to Deborah Kerker at an women at the introductory 63 home at the at the New York Vassar Club’s new Williams Club and saw, but then lost in the crowd, Caroline Johnston. The club’s really very nice, though we’ll have to get them to put up a portrait of Matthew Vassar. If you’re interested in club membership, including reciprocal arrangements at clubs around the world, get in touch with the Vassar Club of New York event for information. I’ve also run into David Leistensnider a couple of times the streets of Manhattan.Dave’s working for on a scholastic publisher as an editor of history textbooks more planning his upcoming wedding. last quarter so it’s older I missed including this news than usual. Emily Tobias Shumsky reported on her Oct. 1993 wedding attended by Lynne Stem Elkes, and Wayne, Arlene Cooke, Doric Simmonds, Danielle O’Hare ’B7, and Professor David Schalkand Lisa she wrote, Emily was public policy to work in be She noted, “I’m proud to Vassar wife Elisabeth. At the time looking to put her master’s in the Boston area. alumna. When I a Georgetown at was I ... was not impressed.” I’m sorry has been misinreport that someone forming us about James (Jay) Powers. After checking up on a particularly tall tale, I heardfrom Jay thatwhat read here about him was “bogus.” It to you’ve previously makes my job more consuming if I have to vet be honest. to what you tell me, so I rely on everyone I’d like to use last few words this quarter to my Erica Ruben ’BB, the producer of time recognize Summer Stage 1994, a free concert series in Central Park featuring a multiflavored collection of music ranging from Verdi to Morphine, and Queen Ida to the Toasters. I’m sure I wasn’t the only alum who weekend afternoons this sum- sweltering cheering the shows Erica spent mer some put together. M.A. in English lit in hand. (If I don’t get it then, I’ll officially get it in December.) Now I’m headingfor Lawn Geyeland and SUNY Stony Brook’s Ph.D. my program.” Jennifer Gauthier left her position at Colgate University in Hamilton, NY, to work in for the Whitney public relations and special events Museum in Stamford, CT. that she married her high Tanya Johnson writes school sweetheart at a wedding attended by Dave Hinchman, Mike Solomon, and Lisa Kulhanek ’9l. Janie Weigandt ’B9 was the maid of honor, and Ina Slater was a bridesmaid. The new Mrs. Mickler and her husband honeymooned in Venezuala. Tanya, who is pursuing her Ph.D. in clinical psych, wonders Jennifer Cutler and Carolyn Matzger are. Speaking of weddings, Carrie Schadle had already been to ho w three VC weddings Carrie is working at left. and had one more Harlem library and plugging by July a her M.L.S. She’s looking forward to reunion and asks, “Has anyone mentioned that Paul Freitas at away and Karen Purtell ’B9 are engaged?” Jim Palmer is apparently after my job! The following is a slightly edited mini-column he sent me. Jim reports: “HannahSchneewind is already teaching on teaching at guage and presented her methods in whole lanColumbia this summer. at a conference of us how to live, though, Francine rest Teaching Lipton is doing her final coursework for her M.B.A. in Rome for six weeks. Chris White participated in this classroom exercise by joining her in Sicily for a while. “Nuptials married #1: Lisa VC at on and Kyle Moss were Liz Addison and Julie Penley June 9. Smith stayed with me during the festivities. Afterward, Julie returned to Baltimore, where she moved after living in N.Y.C. Liz is through with lawschool UT Austin, I think. “Laurie Martinka stayed with 135 Temple St. Founder’sDay was down. I did see Heidi Segal, Ruth Manfredi, and Claude Meyer, though. Heidi and Italian to intensive prepare month in Florence taking for the academic year, whichhe is spending in Spain and Italy doing dissertation research. Upon graduating from University of College of Medicine, Larissa Meyer is in residency in family practice in Monroeville, PA (just outside Pittsburgh). MountSinai School of Medicine (N.Y.C.) grad Christine Horowitz started her residency in pediatrics at Dayton Children’s Medical Center and Wright-Patterson Air Force Medical CenArizona Ohio. She says hello to Dan Choi ’B7, Christine Yu Moutier, Raquel Apodaca ’9l, Pam Sexton, and Doug Harris. Heather Fox is living in Oakland, CA, with her dog, Eli, and obtaining a joint M.S.W./M.P.H. (foci in health and community healtheducation, respectively) She spent the summer at UC Berkeley. as a hospital social worker,and sees Kelly Allgaier often. Heather ter in has also started learning guitar. She says hello to Gary Lubow ’B9, Justine Barda ’9l, Judith Holiher, Jodi Sandf ort, Michele Miller,Danista Hunte,JenBruck- Goldman, and Kim Glickman. Kim, meanwhile, is living happily in Rhinebeck,NY. She graduated from NYU School of Social Work with her M.S.W. and works at Poughkeepsie’s Astor Child Guidance Clinic providing therapy to children ages 4-18 and their families. to a three-year degree in acupuncture and oriental medicine. She sends regards to Hilary Strilko and Marguerite Grable. As one Vassar grad leaves D.C., another arrives: Jon Dauphine is studying to take the bar after graduating from Harvard Law and pursue relocating to D.C. on reunion weird to join Swidler & Berlin as an associate. Jon misses Boston University Ph.D. candidate David He spent a summer weekend on Cape Cod with Nancy Bagot ’B9 and Maura Heffner, and visited L. A., where he with Moore ’9l, who Brody. stayed Daisy pursuing her master’s in journalism at USC, and Nancy Wolfson, who is working in the entertainment industry. Jon hoped to see Drew McLeod, who is pursuing his Ph.D. in clinical psychology in Chiin August. cago, More relocations: Jennifer Frangos writes: “I’ll be shuffling out of Buffalo come August, hopefully with is 64 VQ WINTER 1994 to were on campus for a training session earlier in May. It seeing classmates among planning start was incredibly the particiin work with women where I usually pants in sessions the classes of the ’sos and early ’6os. Poor Amy Gardiner was having an alumnae/i meltdown for the thatweekend. She, however, is fleeing to same reason grad at was the artisans among the Dutchess and Crafts Festival/Balloon Race in County Arts May. position the Renee Hill left her staff assistant at World Bank to attend the Summer Institute of Linguistics, Dallas, TX, and the University of Texas, Arlington, to begin study in linguistics for preparation a as Bible translator with Wycliffe Bible Transla- to Wycliffe sends it missionaries people whose been recorded. Renee will help language has never the alphabet and assist in literacy trainingand create tors. the eventual translation of the Bible into their lanShe has heard from Paul Hebert, Olga Acosta, guage. Dawn Cohen, Danista Hunte, and Ray East ’9l, and be in touch with Vicki Thomas ’9l. Renee in Africa and wants to hear from all her hopes to wants to serve friends before her anticipated Aug. 1995 because she misses all of you! at departure Baynard Bailey finished an enlightening five weeks the Omega Institute working on inducing out-of body experiences (OOBEs) before leaving teach English through the JET program. to for Japan He’s “excited to be back on the adventure horse” and welcomes letters. Mail sent to him c/o AAVC will be forwarded. Finally, from first-time writer Natalie Keng: “Even though I’ve been a Class Notes dud, I’ve been an school in Texas this fall.” (I don’t know nuthin’ about it!), then moved to Niceville, EL (motto: Nice town; Nice folks; Have a nice time), to join Lloyd Gamble ’B9 (significant other for over six years), who is rising predawn to track red-cockaded woodpeckers; getting ready to move to Boston to attend public policy at Kennedy School of Government in Harvard in the fall. Hellos to Rob D’Emilio, Rachel Algenio, and Rhea Hsu.” Hope you all enjoy the holidays. . . Happy 1995! Don’t forget—reunion is just around the corner . . . J im continues, “I was really proud to receive Larissa from med school. Meyer’s graduation announcement in Riss was on campus February while looking at residency programs. “Nuptial#! is Hilary Hageman’s wedding to David Wulf in Connecticut in early October. She and Dave both practice law in the legal epicenter of D.C. “Another of our class’s Hilarys—Hilairy Hartnett this time—phoned not too long ago to tell me of her great misfortune. Hilairy had to spend a month this it’s summer on a ship in the North Pacific. OK, what oceanographers do, and the Pacific is chilly, but landlocked me it sounds pretty idyllic! to in Po’town, where “Me, I’m still plugging away work is going well. I feel sometimes like I’m slowly of Betty Daniels ’41 becoming a young version Vassar’s historian—and am racking up years of ‘instiso ’91 tutional memory.’ It’s an VC, though, and it’s nice about the place as an exciting time to be back at have a realistic perspecinstitution—especially for to Neil E. Jaffe 111 1549 N. Orleans #3 Chicago, IL 60610 312/587-FIRE When told be fruitful and multiply, Harsh Gupta July 1993, Harsh has been working for himself, manufacturing components for Xerox Corporation affiliate in India. Harsh hopes to expand his business to something substantial in the three years—but perhaps he’s closer to next two to took it to literally. Since a world domination than he thinks, as it is a cruel and Harsh world. Although — tive Julie Merrill left Washington,DC, for Santa Fe Jeweler Abra Rothberg displaying their wares worked as an aide with the Atlantic City Council until my councilman was indicted on bribery charges Kristin Krase a laboratory, rescue work, and planning for grad I noticed, however, that ’9O attendance at > Michael Levin spent Columbia Medical School research the neural control of movement. She’s doing incredible things as a Montessori teacher in New Jersey, as well as playing in bands, school. So much news! a studying VC alum: I was founder and chair ofAPAVC (Asian Alumnae/i of VC), 1990-92. We will be celebrating our third conference in Nov. 1994- Please join us/become a member! We need your support! I doing emergency Harrison, NY 10528 914/835-2099 at active for Founder’s me Day. ’90 somewhere in the Caribbean! “Hi” to Wendy Rasmussen ’9l, ChristineKolars, andKirsten Gantzel from Liz. Tony Hacking lives in Carroll Gardens and works the at Michele Camardella for the GAO in San Francisco, and Diana Garcia, be lost to who left her job in Boston and appears the world Harsh may be a few years from having string, Wendy (Bubba) Bethel and Julia Kyles ’9O have a few fish on a string. This the two of them “have finally found our summer, on a niche with the fish. Julia caught fish and was the one such rose-colored glasses. It’s good and all, Vassar say that, warts an education.” truly is a remarkable place to receive the column over Whew, maybe I’ll just turn to Jim else’s fish off the hook. I myself who took everyone read pretentious Generation X type books and occa- permanently! Okay. Here’s the rest Julia are someone who always be able to to wore of my column... Liz Shick received her Master of International Affairs from Columbia and is working in The Gambia, West Africa for a year. While in N.Y.C., Liz spent time with former district attorney’s office employee Dede Hill, in law school; Evie Klein, who works at the now American Federation of Arts; NYUGraduate School of Film grad Heather White, living on an island in Maine and making her own documentaries; Marc Perry ’B9, working with BlackSide in Boston after leaving the “McNeil-Lehrer News Hour”; and Jennifer Carlin, pursuing her clinical psychology Ph.D. at NYU. Liz keeps in touch with Sue Kramer, working sionally sipped out soon, a Snapple.” Look for their new novel Women Who Run with the Fishes. Wendy and happy on Lake Monroe in Indiana and very in their return address refer Vassar Bag Ladies. From Bags to to themselves as the Riches: Emilie McDonald is in Los Angeles pursuing acting and is also art modeling for Walt Disney Imagineering. I'm not what art sure modeling for Walt Disney entails, but Emilie assures it is not me Mickey Mouse. each other are Adam Mizock and Goofy over Lauran Stepsis, who engaged to be married in the of 1995. Lauran will be completing her presummer med, postbaccalaureate studies, while Adam starts grad school at the Pels Center of Government at the University of Pennsylvania in the fall. Adam and are Lauran were looking forward to being near everyone for the first time since graduation when they returned to Philadelphia in the fall. Also engaged is Meghan Williams, who recently got engaged to be married to her best buddy, Kevin. Perhaps the above-mentioned couples willwant to contact Lewis Meyer, who could probably help them fashion some unique wedding rings. Lewis is nance a master’s in aeronautics Stanford U. Con- at gratulations to Claire Hebner on the birth ofher son, Aiden Huckleberry Hebner. Claire will begin her third year of medical school at the U. of Washington. She writes thatshe misses Liz Haberfeld. U of Massachusetts medical student Jeremiah Frank recently Museum in at soul,” and recently took fifth of the New Jersey ChampionCharlie Kim is pursuing a Ph.D. in French at NYU and was to be an assistant professor there this the NationalOrnamental Metal Memphis, exhibits, constructing props, mounts, It’s coming while he If you a at on Lewis see working up a sweat Chicago Press in move , February 4, 1995. Be there . fine and good with job at the University of book publishing—“ Which I hated. seemed logical to become a professor and literally spend the rest of my life in school (saying things like at ‘ergo’). So, I started at Princeton in the fall of’92 and am getting my Ph.D. in English. This will be the beginning of my third year—l’m teaching the Victorian novel to undergrads and working on my dissertation. It’s a busy and full life, and I’m very happy. Plus, Dartmouth, and Laura Benjamins, who willbe going to Wayne State Medical School in Detroit, MI, starting Aug. 8. She says hello to her TA-44 roommates and anyone else she I get simply months of vacation!” Also thrilled to be a student again is Francesa Gutierrez, who is pursuing her master’s in business at the University of California at Berkeley, which she Amy Wilensky, who has been working at a division ofLittle, Brown Publishing Company in Boston, will be studying writing at Columbia University this “a magnified SUNYHealth Science Center in Brooklyn. Other doctors-to-be include Deus Cielo, who is in his third graduated from SMU with an M.F.A. in stage design. He moved back to N.Y.C. and has begun an internship as assistant lighting designer at the New York City Opera and the New If Russian York City Ballet. Kenneth ever has any ballet troupes in town, he might want call on to Jennifer Gargiulo, who recently received her M.A. of medical school year has at touched base with in not a while: “I miss you all!” fall. of Vassar, version western Condolences Rosalia Padilla, who writes to her brother, Efrain, passed currently working an as that February. She is investigator in the Neighboraway in hood Defender’s Office and says that she looks forward to our class reunion. Speaking of reunions, Ken Storer informs us that (with distinction) in international relations from Boston University. And, should any of those Russian ballet is injure themselves, perhaps Paul Frank could be of assistance. Paul just finished his second of medical school and passed his state boards. year Well,gang, that’s all the news that’s fit to print,or at least all the news that fits. For our next column, we list, and we need your will be compiling a top ten suggestions. The topic: The Top Ten Things People Say When Told You Graduated from Vassar. Send your fictional and true-life responses will receive office in Chicago. The winners in addition to their having published Love, your in this column. As always, class ’92 names to the home cash prizes and responses respond or die. correspondent. Odom 36 W. 90th St. #3-B Tanya New York, NY 10024 212/873-7018 Winter and Summer and and a half ago, dealer working year experienced sino to pursue in a career in Reno!” He is about to City Gen Art of gradu- I have since become Circus, Circus Ca- at travel across the country help train Native Americans to work in the gambling industry. He writes thathe believes that “it will be rewarding helping Native Americans gain badly needed revenues for tribal development.” Mary Green writes that she will be beginning her final year at George Mason University School of Law in Arlington, VA. She said that at the end ofJune she to able to travel to Scotland was Heather Ann of postgraduate year to herformer TA- visit Thompson, who is in her third study at the School of Ancient History, University of St.Andrews. She recommends traveling with a classicist—“on-the-spot- Latin translations are handy at museums and medieval castles!” They spent memorable fourth of July at the American Cemetery of Normandy. She writes that she is in her element at George Mason Law, which “boasts two borked Republican the on Supreme Court nominees faculty ... right-wing bias in the classroom is refresha ing.” And finally, AAVC has at summer Enrique’s apprenticeship at sent me a of copy a press that talks about Woody the Powerhouse Theater Vassar and New York Stage and Film. That’s all for now ... keep writing—or, for of most debate organized by Jeff Dupre. From the West Coast we have news of Joanna Pearlstein, who works with Paul Devine ’9l at Macworld magazine in San Fran- you—START writing. Thanks must go out to Joanna Pearlstein, John Hunt, Cindy Lee, and Ritta McLaughlin for theirhelp in gathering information She says that she runs into a few Vassarites on the Internet. Joanna is living with Meredith Steiner, who hates temping and is searching for other work. for this column! cisco. Meredith is currently volunteering with ShantiProj ect, AIDS service organization. Ritta McLaughlin is finishing up her master’s in urban policy and management at the New School for Social Research in New York City. Ritta has recently an been selected to serve as a fellow in the Women in Public Policy Program in SUN Y-Albany. KC Corbett was planning to enter U. Pennsylvania law school in the fall. Hyun Chin Kim is going into her third year of law school at Temple U. in Philadelphia and spent 908/422/0643 Spring and Fall pology smiling, begging, and cajoling: Chad Jennings reports that he is finishing his second year of teaching at Andover and hopes to receive a Department of Defense Scholarship to fiof a He is also studying for his series 7 exam. We also received word of a New York Other graduate school attendees include Cindy Lee, who has begun her second year studying anthro- help! an school release from the 1102 Sweet Briar Ct. Monmouth Junction, NJ 08852 press the fall Joel Rowland writes, “Having droppedout ate classmate and former TA-mate Sarah Lichtman, and he works for a small Wall Street firm. Vanessa Pardo Please send in current information! At of the following time, I had received some submissions, and other contributions were the results your living with this past summer working office in Philadelphia. ofthe four columns two Hi! I have been asked to write for our class—and I have gladly agreed—BUT, I need in beautiful. She saw David Bains ’93 and island by haggling with vendors, riding the buses, etc. She admits that she did not want to leave. mate he keeps in touch with many Vassar alums including Jen Siegel, Robin McCoy, Lawrence Pacheco (whom some of you saw in the pages of the New York Times not too long ago), Suzi Hamill, Joanna Oilman,Jen Krasinski, Lisa Dabney ’B9, and Ryan Hart ’9l. Ken stars Angeles wedding was enjoyed the was visited Claire in Seattle and then traveled to San Francisco to see Robin Cooper. Karlene Ross writes in that she is in medical school as: Los in that she recently visited Virginia Smith writes the Dominican Republic to see Darys Estrella and Andy Wilson get married. She writes that the island the people were was wonderful, and the gorgeous, Party for the ’9os while welding but without the Mug.” Kenneth Schutz recently to film/TV. She willbe living with Nunzio DeFilippis ’9l and Brian Donnelly ’94- InNovember she was to fly to Michigan to be a bridesmaid in the wedding of Jennifer Cook ’93. She writes that Boston has become lonely since Katrina Holmberg moved to Portland, City Chicago, Man, the office life is not for me—and I had the boss from hell. So, I decided pretty quickly that I belonged back in school—and for as long as possible! Ergo, it describes the Children’s OR. to direct the gatework of a cathedral, you might want him to the church well. Speaking of which, we hear from Sarah Churchwell. All dear, sweet Sarah, who had a is currently working at Workshop in New York. Christina Weir, who received her M.A. in TV in May from Emerson College, planned to 901/774-6380 still affordable. is Television San Francisco, & Austin his own. So, for all you lucky there who have iron gatework in call or production New York on out property owners dire need of repair, give Lewis respect to body in the first race fall, and Ray Kim . To: cases, and crates, and overseeing evening ground events. After Lewis completes this two-year internship, he will have the basic knowledge to start seeking architectural commissions living in Portland, OR, and New York. He keeps in touch with Cindy Lee and MikeBratter . He continues to mountain bike “without TN. In addition to working on Lewis’s responsibilispecial projects for the museum, ties include conducting metalsmithing demonstrations for visitors, conducting tours of exhibitions for groups, designing and installing permanent and temporary Dennis O’Brien. Kenan Ginsberg is place ships. a metalsmith intern with Marc Antezana, Tony Yanez, Stuart SclaterBooth, Allen Weinstein, Courtney Tedrowe, and at the district attorney’s at Columbia U. Cindy spent the summer as an intern with Asian Americans for Equality in Chinatown. (Cindy sends a “hello” to Brian Nishii ’93 and Peggy Cheng ’93 from her cousin and his wife.) After spending a year teaching English in Japan, and to the NYU French lit program John Hunt went is preparing for his master’s exam. John recently returned from Atlanta, where he visited John Gutierrez and his wife, Nyria, who are planning to move back keeps in to New York touch with many recently enjoyed a pretty City soon. John Hunt also of his old TH-mates and pricey, wine-filled evening ’93 Jong Soo Kim 206 W. 38th St. #222 Austin, TX 78705 512/453-0887 Happy Holidays, everyone! Please join me in con- gratulating our latest bride— Allison Scardino. On Aug. 7, 1994, Allison married Nathan Belzer in Savannah, GA. Bridesmaids were Genie Chough and Dorothy Royle. Best wishes to you in the future. I received a postcard from Kate Buckner, who, along with NinaEdwards, completed Sotheby’s yearin London. Despite the long Works of Art course of her studies, Kate enjoyed her experigorous nature much that she is staying for another year; so “I’ve learned so much as well as meeting a lot of new and interesting people. London is a lot of fun, and it’s rest of the great being in such close proximity to the U.K. and Europe.” She is currently enrolled in the art rience history master’s program at the U. of London.- Kate also reports that Merrill Falkenberg (another art history major extraordinaire) is pursuing a Ph.D. in American art at Stanford U. I received quite a few notes from, class members who have recentlybeen awarded various scholarships and grants. Sherri Godlin reports thather research in 65 received physics space funding through prestigious a NASA Graduate Student Researchers Program Grant. She continues to study for a Ph.D. in astronomy at Boston U. Erin Lehane is the recent recipient of a Presiden- tial Scholarship to Boston Law School. As an undergraduate, Erin spent considerable time engaged in oceanographic research, this award enables her so to her interest pursue law. in maritime Hey, did you ever wonder what happened to David Paul? I saw him at Founder’s Day, and we had chat. He believes that he is finally settling a nice down: “After a year in which I took a few science classes at U. of Penn and put 40,000 miles on my car, U. of Texas at Austin Law don’t send your letters to my previous address in N.Y.C. Feel free to drop me a line if you Austin and need a place to stay. As Kat want to visit in the shade Mills stated, “It’s 100 currently attending the School, so eloquently degrees and the music is everywhere. Texas is a great big land of opportunity. So I want to stick up for that and say a place to great, affordable, laid-back, and warm be! And the Butthole Surfers are from here—what do you want?” Write me! more it’s ’94 4545 Connecticut Ave. NW #914 Washington, DC 20008 202/363-8769 Hello, class of ’94! August came not research technician at Mt. Sinai Medical research technician Center. Jennifer also works as a and is employed at the New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center. She lives with Doug Hand ’92 and plans to an pursue M.D.-Ph.D. at McGill U. Jennifer time with Ceccarelli, enjoys spending her free Tanya Elise Billings, and Nikki Rabidou ’92. Did anyone see Anna Grace’s photograph in the New York Times “Arts and Leisure” section? This past Anna appeared in The Group, one of three summer, one-acts by Sarah Schulman that was presented by the Three Dollar Bill Theater in N.Y.C. If you were wondering about the Vassar in crew foot and went, and I did Vassar’s campus. It was pretty strange not returningto school, but from what I can tell, most of us have plenty to keep us busy. I hope everyone had and that the first fall semester of out a great summer set on Vassar is treating you from people, so please well. I didn’t get many cards the cards in the Quarterly to use let me know what is going classmates. Feel free to contact with you on me Karen Schmeelk began Penn State’s behavioral this fall after selling ice cream all health program Lisa Giovannini Turturro was married to summer. Bill Turturro on June 25,1994, and is living in El Paso. In attendance were Alison Emery, maid of honor, at U. ofTexas in my hometown. I received a detailed letter from five in Chile. Using my Vassar procrastination skills, I’ve deferred!” Katrina Halloran continues to wander about the world and sends endearing thoughts to her former Dylan Carson, who began law school at Suffolk Judson Pierce this fall. Dylan spent a lot of time housemates: “Love, hugs (and a good ‘pants’-ing!) to TA 25ers David, Josh, and Jamie-Babes.” Katie, you’re Jon Bailly, who making us a dope nine to imaginations run our wild because the of rest idea what a “pants-ing” is about?! And for those of you who are still living at have no home and are dying to get out, you may want ask Laurie to Eccard for some suggestions. She informs me that she has finally flown the coop and has made the bold and brave move to Tucson, AZ. Having spent an entire working at Dylan is in Boston. He ran at living into Jon New York law firm, as was with Austen Barron, who is a Random House. also ran into Ethan Reece, Bennett Graebner, and Steve Neu. Josh Lazar is teaching Japan, Jim Leu is in Taiwan, and Sivan Nasoff is in in Gabon with the Peace Corps. We have quite an international contingent. Sam Yan is teaching in Japan, Jennifer Jeffreys is teaching in the Philippines, and Mary Liao is teaching in Taiwan. There are many people living and working in the New York area, including Elaine Hutchins, who is working for a commodities firm that enables Russians make candy! Also in New York are Nicole Paoli, to less, she loves her “liberal-artsy” job as a research assistant and editor for a textbook development comherselfwith the art to engage pany. Angela continues who is studying at Bank Street, Felicia Liss, and Darcy Katzin, who is working as a paralegal. And Liz Philips, Janine O’Neill, Damon Ross, who works at of storytelling and Nickelodeon, and Michael Fanuele, who was managing a congressional campaign last I heard. More New Yorkers are Eddie Gamarra, who is at NYU Film School, Adam Pockriss, Patricia Bobadilla, Gracielle Dejesus, who is a researcher at Columbia U., Alice Lane, and April Thompson. Marina Myre is at Rutgers studying criminology, Greg Oswana is working at Debit and Touche in N.Y.C., and Michael at home, she looks forward to living on her Vassar alums this summer Cole, who was working with with the Windy to visit or move City, please get in touch with Angela Bowman. She is dismayed that the city lacks Vassar grads. Nonethe- year If anyone happens own. to spends her free moments with Leif Tellmann ’92 and Drew McLeod ’9O. Rowena Bowman writes from Ann Arbor, MI, thatshe has acquired a “hot” position in the corporate headquarters ofthe bookstore chain Borders, Inc. She teaching an archaeology class to spent her summer children at a local science museum. Finally, I received a thoughtful letter from our musically gifted Austin connection, Kat Mills. She is living happily with a beloved punk rock singer and her kitty, Venus. Kat focuses her energieson her fulltime position as the office manager/assistant editor/ layout creator/person Friday/you-name-it for Texas Iron Motorcycle Magazine: “Yeah,it’s a Harley rag, but with a great deal of taste! It’s actually the only Harley magazine in the country for the whole family'—no nudity or profanity—and it focuses mainly on the charity work, great races, and shows that bikers are involved in.” She reports that Kenny Davis, Jon Rappaport, and Erin Weinberg are living in a fresh bachelor/bachelorette condo in South Austin. She also tells us that the esteemed class of ’93 band, Sick Little Monkey (currently manned by John Steiner, James “Snake” Chapin ’94, and Andy Robbins ’92), is of the hottest bands in Austin. one Andy informs me that he, Kenny, Jon, Erin, and Jenn Tench want to maintain undisclosed addresses in an effort to stay one ahead of the Vassar Annual Fund mailings. However, he did reveal that they are all working together to develop a children’s television show, “Waxahachie Station,” to be aired in thefall of 1995. step Well, that’s all the 66 VQ WINTER 1994 news I have right now. I’m for a job and am now Tancinco is in Buffalo. Rob Seixas is at BU law school. Ben Mattison’95 reports that Diana McFarland is student-teaching in Poughkeepsie and that Debbie Goldman is at Tufts Medical School. Griffith is near Vassar Bronwyn working at Wilderstein, and Vassar working as AAVC’s recent classes. There is a crew Bronwen Pardes is at director for of people in California, new asst, including Jane Alexander, who is at USCfor occupational therapy. Laura McCarthy is living with Margo Cam in San Francisco; they tell me that they graduated from bartending school this summer, a degree that might get them further than their Vassar B.A. Anna Arnedt, Heather Reisz, Steven Mangle, and Hannah Koopman are living together in San Francisco also. Steven moved there after a brief in layover Washington, DC. Hannah is a Shaw is in U. of Louisville’s law school. Georgia Zombolas is doing well after a relaxing summer in Chicago. Kaori Yokoyama is at U. of Chicago’s pro- in international economics. gram I more hope everyone of you soon. is doing well. I hope to hear from Good luck and keep in touch! and fellow U., and Alex Manugian is at CalArts. Cory Lippiello and Amy Smith traveledaround the country together this summer and had an extended stay in Graceland, Austin or looking directly, too. research in Santiago. She reports that Wendy Raney and Tara Sullivan continue to reside and work in at summer Also in Philly is Gabrielle Tenaglia, wonderful trip to Italy this summer. Penny Simmons is working in Boston on First Night. Amber who had Jennifer Kroh, and a few members of the class of’9s. Columbia at Amy Brienes is in the drama program open-minded: I spent the respectively. South America, I received a note from Kris Salen, who was in the process of wrapping up her Fulbright Chile. As for her future, Kris remains “I’m choosing between a Ph.D. program this summer working on Middle East issues, and Sebastian Bacchus interned on the Hill this summer. Jung Yun and Mario San Martin are living the married life in Philadelphia while attending graduschool at the U. of Pennsylvania and Rutgers, ate Sujata Tejwani works a mer interning in D.C., and Daryl Dyer worked at the Urban Institute. Andrew Fishman is working at the Labor Department, John MacDonald is studying criminology at theU. of Mary land, Priya Lothe was in D.C. working at Senator Barbara Boxer’s office with Matt Kagan ’92. I am starting medical school in Biddeford, ME, at the U. of New England.” Other grads in the medical field include Patrisha Woolard and Jennifer Bogdany. Patrisha currently as NAS A. Alison Hinchmanis working attheNational Trust for Historic Preservation in the public policy department, Melissa Morgenlander spent the sum- working at a small film company. Here in Washington, DC, I have run into many Vassar alums, from every Nikhil Dehejia is year. working at a small environmental law firm in D.C., Jennifer Haas spent the summer working at a human rights organization, Dave Howard is working as a financial analyst, and Jenny Hopkins is working at IN MEMORIAM 1915 1917 M. Dinsmore Patrick Conant Dec. 15, 1989 Carolyn Holbrook Hill July 22, 1994 Feb., 1983 June 1, 1994 1920 Sept. 2, 1994 1920 Mar. 6, 1994 Isabel McConway Siebert 1920 Cornelia Springer July 9, 1994 1921 Mercy Pegram Buck unknown 1921 Carolyn Bailey Field Sept. 1, 1994 1921 Charlotte Ball Geilen June 27, 1993 1922 Mary Gaston Cornell Sept. 10, 1994 1922 Josephine Hutton Douglas Aug. 12, 1994 1922 Helen Bishoff Price Sept. 14, 1994 Elizabeth Wales McLain 1924 July 9, 1994 1924 Louise Hayford Wolfenden Sept. 3, 1994 1925 Susan Plummer July 31,1994 1925 Elizabeth Coggeshall West June 13, 1994 1925 Helen Rogers Wyman June 27, 1994 1926 Nov., 1993 Mary Van Duyn Hill 1926 Keturah Robinson Nichols Sept. 3, 1994 1927 Emily Floyd Gardiner July 13, 1994 1928 Constance Woodworth Goss Aug. 27, 1994 1928 Elizabeth Tuttle Ritchey Aug. 27, 1994 1929 Katharine Horack Dixon Aug. 13, 1994 1929 Alice Heald Updike Aug. 7, 1994 1930 Helen Spencer Cha the Id May 7, 1994 1930 Madeline Verriere Muscanto Oct. 17, 1993 1930 Elizabeth McLaren Stovel July 18, 1994 1931 Joanna Jennings Hadden unknown Edith Dalzell Wile 1932 Aug. 1, 1994 1933 Dec. 12, 1990 Elspeth Hill Coghill 1933 Marion Tobey Humphrey May 24, 1994 1935 Dec. 24, 1993 Virginia Wilson Rulon 1935 Esther Vanamee Griffin Aug. 12, 1994 1936 Elizabeth Hanavan Hube Sept. 11, 1994 1936 Rose Collier Miller Sept. 4, 1994 1936 Jean Smithers Moister Sept. 29, 1994 1936 Lois Palmer Wallace July 28, 1994 1938 Ruth Weiss Mandelbaum Jan., 1994 1938 Alice Garrett Phillips Feb. 26, 1994 1941 Martha Wellington Aug. 4, 1994 1942 Elizabeth Gorham Clement Aug. 13, 1994 1943 Merrill Nancy Bailey May, 1994 1945-4 Marjorie Ferguson Anderson Sept. 15, 1994 1945 Ann Chamberlain Birge June 19, 1994 1945 Anne FreemanTurpin Aug. 18, 1994 1946 Nancy Nichols Barker Mar. 30, 1994 1948 Mary Betty Stevens Sept. 13, 1994 Feb. 13, 1994 1949 Ann Kingman Curtis 1950 William J. McCord May 14, 1994 1952 Agnes Mastrangelo Griesar Aug. 14, 1994 1952 Nancy Hadzinoff Sheldon July 15, 1994 1962 Ellen Roth Reisman Aug. 22, 1994 1967 Christina Faulkner Mills July 18, 1993 1969 Minia Rose Nov., 1988 1980 Irene Goodale Perkins Aug. 17, 1994 1988 Alice Felarca July 26, 1994 1919 1919 Dorothy Morgenthau Eaton Helen Ball Robinson Mildred McAfee Horton LETTERS Quarterly welcomes letters to the editor, preferably typed, doublespaced, and no longer than 350 words. Another Reaffirmation of different career Wimpfheimer Nursery School very beautiful part of the world and found Publication will be reserve the right to as space permits. We for style and edit letters length. Letters reflect the opinions of the writers and not those of the magazine, AAVC, or Vassar College. To be for publication, include a current letters must address. be eligible signed and interest I read the article “All I most ended up in this a world-renowned The With paths before I Needed to Know aboutKindergarten I Learned at the WimpfheimerNursery School,” byKaren Dahlberg VanderVen ’59 in-your summer scientific-technical/environmental publisher just a few milesfrom the beach! Eve been happy to be editing and producing erudite books by day and developing my inner beach bum after hours. mainly because of my experience in discovering at the Wimpfheimer Nursery School the largely to my somewhat belated education, I not only learned to enjoy learning, but also to appreciate the many pathways and places whereI can continue to educate myself and hone my appreciation of best of what the field has life. issue. I too student learned much there while 1 Vassar. As the author at became career early was did, a my childhood education to offer. The strong stand taken in Thanks Vassar advocating for children through quality programs was ticulated clearly in the article. Vassar Mary Kugler ’7B Managing Editor ar- de- CRC Press/Lewis Publishers the credit for setting an educational where child development is taken seristage ously. I hope the college continues to offer Boca Raton, Florida serves students the Professor opportunities same VanderVen and I had. The principles taught there, based on sound theory and practical application, are crucially needed if our children are to stand a chance in today’s complex world. The nursery school is certainly where young children place a have a living laboratory for those adults who have been fortunate enough educated there. We learnedhow a in their supportive, appropriate beginning education. It is than more can to be stand up for all children in the real world. We need people more who can do the to same. Pearl Waxman ’72 Res ton, Virginia Wanted: Bronsons, Brownsons, and Brunsons Researching all Bronson/Brownson/Brunson graduates andfamilies, in the hopes of adding information to the family history. Compilation of an extensive Bronson genealogy is underway, withexpectations that within the next couple of years nearly anyone of the of their parents or name knowing the name will be able learn of their to grandparents history. We now have a collection of statistics, documents, photos, stories, etc. on over and an addi5,000 bearing the family name tional 18,000 individuals connected is welcomed. the to family. Correspondence Richard Bronson 221 N. SunderlandRd. Some Thoughts after Spokane, Washington 99206-3711 Reading Recent Class Notes Reading through the Class Notes, it struck that my classmates are older now even than I was when I graduated from Vassar in me 1978. This may but I was jolt them into age of those few older students in one the class. Our numbers those of who had us awareness, were so small that The delayed our education had our little support group, the own for Older Students (SOS). We were referred Society later “returning students,” which always sounded mysterious to me: raising to as questions such as, where had each of us been? What had brought each one back to this one particular goal of obtaining a Vassar education? of them my top priority, because I’m not one those lucky women who have the energy to participate same After in several Vassar Quarterly (publication number 657080)is published by the Alumnae and Alumni of Vassar College (AAVC) from offices located Alumnae House, 61 Raymond Avenue, at Poughkeepsie, NY 12601 (Dutchess County). adThe editor is Georgette Weir, at the same dress. As of the filing date of September 29, 1994, the average number of copies published of each issue during the preceding twelve months was 30,234; theactual number of copies ofthe single issue Attending Vassar, I always felt as if I were of an observer than in the background, more Of this was by my own a course, participant. choosing. There were many tempting activities available, but I could not resist the pull of from classes my family awaiting my return each day (I did bring them with me on occasion). I made the right decision, keeping the Statement of VQ Ownership, Management, and Circulation published nearest to the filing date was 31,058. The magazine has a total paid and/or requested circulation of 170 (average and actual) . The average free distributionfor the twelve months preceding the filing date was 29,864; the actual free distribution of the single issue published nearest to the filing date was 30,679. The distribution was total average 30,034; actual distribution was 30,858. Two hundred copies were not distributed. This information is reported Service Form 3526 and here as on U.S. Postal required by 39 U.S.C. 3685. interesting activities at dropping the ball. time without leaving Vassar, I set out on a few 67 THE LAST PAGE On Again Home Coming by Sarnia Hayes Hoyt ’60 Yorkers believe their city is the live this only place meaningfully planet. Instinctively, they distrust places that don’t have fresh bagels and good hot pastrami. They are the only people I know to of who refer on their hometown to as “The City.” I was here for raised in New York and have lived eighteen years of adult life, and if I shared this ethnocentric world-view, I once creation is, after time I courses That’s I became investors tell Looking back, my apostasy started early. to do with meeting Aunt ing than Europe, stimulat- more questions without necessarily new Rudyard Kipling today, fortunately, East and West meet constantly along the Pacific rim, learning from each any answers. prisoner of his a other. the all comes worship of worldly women too easily. When 1 met the couple for the first time, in the summer of 1953, they were expatriates living in Europe, and Uncle has Fred had just retired from the cork business in Lisbon. Like migratory birds, they spent liberal Democrat winters in Palma de Mallorca and violent, less litigious sum- forgotten Aunt Helen’s facility with languages and her stylish Parisian clothes in that idyllic Alpine setting. So it seemed natural to man never me to marry a who had also wanderedfrequently away from American soil to graduate school lured easily to Colombia in 1964, we were before the drug lords ruined it. Later, we took assignments for JP Morgan in the Europe. After Mexico and we finished Netherlands in the late 1980 s and Singapore include our might even in bilingual three-year stay 1970 s as yet defection from Zigzagging our true mockery home. a home feel except in America. I guess I’ve become a hybrid or a new anywhere species, grafting onto original peanut butter-and-jelly persona a new self, with new ideas, habits, and preferences. Re68 VQ WINTER 1994 my that, prefer the relative peace and security of less a by a talking films, country ruled one-party authoritarian state? I’m about a place where the censor cuts controls the sale of certain books and magazines, and where political dissidents can be held without trial; a place where drug trafficking is where vandals are punishable by death and caned. Would Ameri- put up with less freedom, Singaporeans do, if they had a cans the Asian in as the squeaky a thriving with full employment? economy twinge of a envy speak about their large, close-knit families embracing several generations, families where grandparents taken in for years they’ve got it at right. whether Asian honesty going to cut once successful than colorblindness. Even never liked, stretch. I think about now (“Who’s race your Caucasian hair?” a Singaporean friend more a I also wonder our asked me) politically isn’t gentle personal mouthed confrontations a horrible shock. having become accustomed to And, the anonymity of traditional artists and craftsmen in Asia, I found the Museum of Modern Art’s Matisse show—its homage to —excessive. man one Our healthhabits have also reflect the tropical changed environment and got between we used to, the closer relationship body and mind in Asian thinking, and the prevalence of alternative medicine. Some changes might have occurred naturally with age, but Asia probably accelerated them. We now wake early, before sunrise, for a few rounds of Surya Namaskara. During this yoga practice, I try to ignore the noises outside the window and street on concentrate the breath. I less consume alcohol and meat, more rice, fruit, vegetables, and spices—preferring Asian flavors to bland American food. I also wear looser clothing and walk an hour each day. welcome from many Despite the warm and the fresh friends, bagels, it’s hard to home again. New York, my oldest come home, has changed. But after seven years, have I. The old filter system in my mind doesn’t work the way it used to, and I see so things now paying more I wish I didn’t. I can’t help attention when Asians speak of the decline of the West and the decadence of America. me Yet my innate American optimism tells that faced with a crisis, this country can renew what itself and find the be done political will to do stop the killing, rebuild our continue to clean up the cities, environment, and expand health insurance must to coverage. As it has before, America can provide new leadership in this new multipolar world. Having that hope, and doing small part to foster it, will help me stop missing my Asian home and the daily discovery of its ancient traditions. Isn’t there a lot to discover here, too? a correct my Christian faith, strong as my mother would have has yielded some ground to the as tolerant practicality and material watching face-saving techniques encounters, I find New Yorkers’ foul- clean government that promoted are of Steinberg’s 1976 New Yorker poster, where China, Japan, and Russia are simply vague blobs on the far horizon, at American citizen, a live in to an at whenChinese friends like this between homes and suggesting that real Americans cannot can Western culture. I feel another work in New York and abroad makes mind-stretching Asian experience challenged my cherished American beliefs about good government and the value of individualrights in a democratic I have no answers, just a lot more questions about the family, religion, and to in 1989-93. Some Miami in the late time: This society. How of Buddhism. After us. Helen, the wife of my father’s good friend Uncle Fred, when I was 14, the age when mered in Switzerland. I’ve just Five years of living in and traveling in Southeast Asia was It had something I know not because that’s what the economists and providing home now—l have a Asia is where the action is, and haven’t got just one teacher of why European history. Today, though, ture. Singapore has taught me many. and French litera- in Western art longer do. I have traveled widely and felt at home living in Florida, Amsterdam (the Netherlands), and Singapore; I no the American way. all, thought of Europe as long the holy of holies. That’s why I majored in modern European history and took many Lora simplicity Ms. Hoyt is the author of two books in the Images of Asia series published by Oxford University Press: Old Penang (1991) and Old Malacca (1993). Date Clas ad res colege New in Name Name News Above: 61 Vas ar A l u m n a e Poughkepsi, Raymond NY 12601 Avenue House Quarte ly 19 stamp cent Requires The Fourth Biennial Regional Symposium Sponsored by AAVC will be held in Seattle, Saturday 18 March 1994 D K 5 Everyone Is Invited! Save the Date For details, please call AAVC at 914/437^5440 Winter at Alumnae House 03Z o> MSt n < o* Plan to ski downhill in the Catskills? Or cross-country in the Hudson Valley ? x <> >o C/> 300 Want to get away from the rush and slush of the city? Or the phones and fax of the office? X 02 r“(H ffi Hope to gather your family, friends , or colleagues together for a midwinter celebration? Come A quiet to Alumnae House. refuge for personal or small-group retreats and To plan your stay New Year’s Eve and an or a sophisticated setting for parties and programs. event, call 914/437-7100. For information about upcoming film weekend at the House, turn to page 33. m