Summer/Fall 2014 - Bexley Alumni Association
Transcription
Summer/Fall 2014 - Bexley Alumni Association
Summer/Fall 2014 BEXLEY HIGH SCHOOL Alumni Association Newsletter (This article, reprinted with permission and featuring Brad Rocco, class of 1981, appeared April 12, 2014 on the ColumbusUnderground website (http://www.columbusunderground.com/brad-rocco-of-bexley-pizza-plus) Brad Rocco of Bexley Pizza Plus Earns World Champion Title in International Pizza Challenge Columbus has another Number 1 title, thanks to Brad Rocco of Bexley Pizza Plus. Rocco attended the International Pizza Challenge in Las Vegas last week and brought home the World Champion award for Best Traditional Pizza, beating out nearly sixty competitors. The winning pizza? Rocco’s “Ultimate Pizza” featuring two types of pepperoni and two types of mushrooms. “The Ultimate Pizza is Margherita & spicy pepato pepperoni with flash-blanched & fresh white button mushrooms,” says Rocco. “It is prepared on our house red sauce with a blend of provolone, mozzarella & romano cheese.” The recipe for the Ultimate Pizza was developed in 1992. “We started competing with it in 2003,” says Rocco. “It did so well, that we compete with it exclusively when entering Traditional Pizza categories. I simply try to duplicate the same product that you get (The following article was posted on www.bexleyschools.org) Bexley High School is recognized by U.S. News & World Report as one of Ohio’s top high schools. The school earned a Gold Medal in 2014 and ranked 192nd out of 31,200 public high school across the country. How We Rank Photo by Pam Reece. in my pizzeria. In the Vegas competitions I added mesquite-smoked portabellas to kick it up a notch!” Rocco has been with Bexley Pizza Plus since 1982, when he started as a delivery driver. A Columbus native, he grew up in Bexley and got the job to pay for college. Don Schmitt opened Bexley Pizza Plus in 1980, and in 1992, Rocco bought out the other owner, and entering a 50/50 ownership with Schmitt. The Washington Post’s Mathew’s Challenge, evaluating “America’s most challenging high schools,” put Bexley at 18th in Ohio. BHS earned an A with a Performance Index of 110.7 in 2012 - 2013, the most recent available school report card from the Ohio Department of Education. The school met all ten indicators measuring how many of its students have passed state tests at the proficient or higher level. The win in Vegas is not the first win for the shop, or for Rocco. “I enjoy the thrill of competing against the top pizzaiolos in the world and doing well,” he says. He has competed in about twelve contests. Pizzas were judged in three categories: Crust, Sauce-Cheese-Toppings, and Overall Taste, and also on Visual Presentation and Appearance, taking the bake into consideration. The Ultimate Pizza sells for $16.25 for a medium and $19.55 for a large, with everything made in-house, from scratch. “When I travel on the road to compete, I try to do it just like we do it in the pizzeria,” he says. Which was a bit of a challenge this time as he had to make the dough on the road! “Using different water, having lower humidity, and mixing it by hand in my hotel bathroom was a challenge,” says Rocco. “I guess I did a good job of making dough as I’m convinced that my crust won it for me!” Bexley High School prides itself on its high rate of participation in Advanced Placement (AP) courses that prepare students for the rigor of the college classroom. In 2014, the school gave 499 AP exams for a student body numbering 654. In 2013, BHS reported its highest scores in three years on the ACT quality core assessments created by the National College Board. Bexley High School Alumni Association • P.O. Box 457 • Lithopolis, Ohio 43136-0457 Voice Mail: 614.920.4937 • Email: info@bexleyalumni.org • Website: http://www.bexleyalumni.org 1 Summer/Fall 2014 • Bexley High School Alumni Association Columbus man drawn to Israel By Madeleine Winer THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH mwiner@dispatch.com Saturday July 5, 2014 When he left the United States, Adam Berman took two suitcases, his Jewish faith and a one-way ticket to Israel. “Israel is my home,” said Berman, a 24-year-old Columbus native who moved to the Holy Land last summer. “It has been a welcome change in my life. It’s sort of a dream. I am where my community lives, and it’s exciting.” Berman, who is the son of Rabbi Harold Berman of Congregation Tifereth Israel, is one of about 20 Jews in Columbus every year to make aliyah — Jewish immigration to Israel. Aliyah is a Hebrew word that means ascent. It is often described as a homecoming for Jewish people, referred to in the Bible as the “children of Israel.” “The most common reason people come is to live a Jewish life in the state of Israel,” said Lior Abarbanel, the Israeli representative for the Columbus Jewish Federation. “We believe Israel is the country of the Jewish people. It’s the best and easiest way to (live a Jewish life) in terms of kosher food and religion and just being there.” About 100 Jews from Ohio make aliyah each year, said Sophie Fellman Rafalovitz, aliyah coordinator for the Midwest region at the Jewish Agency for Israel. She said 4,000 American Jews make aliyah per year. Jews worldwide and of any age can apply to the agency to move to Israel. About 85 percent of them choose to move there permanently. To make the move, Jews apply to the Jewish Agency for Israel. If accepted, they receive benefits such as a free one-way ticket to Israel, free Hebrew classes for up to 10 months, free health insurance for one year and six monthly payments totaling $5,000 per person. Jewish immigrants such as Berman also present documents showing their Jewish connection, civil status, medical history and a list of their visits to Israel to be eligible to make aliyah through the agency. “My list filled up one full page,” said 2 Adam Berman, 24, center, celebrates the end of his Israeli military training with his host family. Berman, a Columbus native, became an Israeli citizen last summer. Berman, who lived in Israel for a year after he graduated from Bexley High School in 2008. Then he decided to make aliyah after he graduated from Yale University with a degree in political science. He said the whole process, including the time to get his visa, took about six months. Abarbanel said most Jews who make aliyah do so because they have family in Israel or have visited the country and felt a spiritual or cultural connection to its land and people. “I was over there two years ago, and as a modern country, I love the energy there, and it’s a beautiful country,” said Sedona Rosenberg, an 18-year-old graduate of Lincoln High School in Gahanna who spent the summer of 2012 in Israel. “Culturally, I feel a strong connection to the land and am empowered by the idea of Israel — a land built for Jews by Jews.” Rosenberg, like Berman, applied for aliyah through the Jewish Agency’s Nefesh B’Nefesh program for North American immigrants who want to move with a support group. Rosenberg will leave in September and take Hebrew classes in Israel before joining the Israeli military, a requirement for citizenship. Berman now lives with the group he moved with on a kibbutz in southern Israel near the country’s border with Gaza. He serves in the military as a media liaison for Israeli policy toward Gaza and has gotten used to working in the Hebrew language. But one aspect has been difficult. “We get rocket fire from terrorists in Gaza almost every day,” Berman said. “That’s not something I expected. I’ll be at work and continue working from a secure bomb shelter.” Adam’s father said he worries about his son’s safety but is proud of him for pursuing what he wants. “We are very much like almost all other (Israeli Defense Forces) parents,” he said. “We are proud of our son and recognize, as an Israeli citizen, you have to be willing to put yourself on the line. On the other hand, we’re nervous for him because he’s in the army and faces real dangers.” Rosenberg said she’s unsure whether she wants to settle permanently in Israel, but Berman plans to stay. “I have a deeper connection and a more mature attachment to Israel and Zionism,” Berman said. “ It’s amazing being here and waking up with Israel every single day.” Message from the Co-chair Bexley High School Alumni Association • Summer/Fall 2014 Dear fellow Alumni and Friends of Bexley High School, There are some pretty impressive things going on at Bexley High School these days. Here is a sampling: BHS was ranked 18th in Ohio in the Washington Post’s “America’s Most Challenging High Schools” list. T he r o bot built by the BHS Robotics Team competed in the Greater Pittsburgh Regional FIRST Robotics competition in March at California University of Pennsylvania. A current BHS student was chosen by the Ohio Educational Theatre Association to serve on its Board of Directors in 2014 – 2015. A three-student team from BHS earned first place among 243 teams in a regional competition of the Stock Market Game, produced by the Economics Center of the University of Cincinnati. Other accomplishments are detailed elsewhere in this newsletter. For those of you who live close to our community, you know that the energy and excitement at our school is highly evident. For those of you who are farther away, rest assured that our school’s record of achievement, high performance, and strong spirit and pride remains as vibrant as ever. So, whether you are a recent graduate, part of the “old guard” (i.e., long ago graduates) or somewhere in between (or simply friends of BHS), we are honored to call you one of our own. We encourage you to stay connected – here are some easy ways: visit our alumni website, visit the school website or visit the website of our close affiliate, the Bexley Education Foundation (and check back frequently to see all that we are accomplishing . . . on the shoulders of those who came before us . . . you!). Come back to Bexley for your reunions (I just had my 30th and it was a blast!). Send us some of your fond memories from your own days back at BHS. We’d love to hear from you. Until next time . . . Go Lions! Larry Pliskin Co-chair, Bexley High School Alumni Association BHS Class of 1984 (This abbreviated and edited article, featuring Minnette Webster, class of 1955, appeared in The Tampa Tribune on April 22, 2014) Minnette Webster, Hillsborough arts supporter, dies at 76 BRANDON – Artists throughout Hillsborough County set aside their paint brushes, shed their spattered smocks and came together to pay tribute to one of their own Saturday, April 19. Longtime artist and art educator Minnette Webster died Monday, April 14, during surgery to place a stent in her heart. The 76-year-old Bloomingdale resident had been battling Myasthenia Gravis, an autoimmune disease that progressively weakens the skeletal muscles. The disease, however, didn’t prevent Webster from performing her duties as the secretary and charter member of the Greater Brandon Arts Council or sharing her love of art with children. After attending classes at the Penland School of Crafts in Bakersville, N.C., and the Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts in Gatlinburg TN in the late 1980s, Webster became one of the first artists in the area to experiment with creating handmade paper. Her efforts earned her numerous awards and attracted the attention of the White House, which placed one of her handmade paper angels on the White House Christmas tree. The feather in Webster’s cap was her initiation into the National League of American Pen Women, a national organization you don’t just join. You have to be invited. You have to have credentials. In addition to teaching art classes at the Center Place Fine Arts and Civic Association in Brandon, a nonprofit she helped create, Webster taught adults and children at Brandon area and South Shore libraries and local YMCA branches. Webster also earned accolades for founding and running the state’s first arts program at a state prison. She taught art for nine years at the Hillsborough Correctional Institute in Riverview before it closed. Webster received the first Brush Strokes Artist With a Heart award in 2006 for her work at the prison. Following her diagnosis with Myasthenia Gravis, Webster hosted her final art show at Center Place, “Revisiting a 50-Year Journey in Art,” in 2011. She said it was fun reviewing her works while selecting pieces for the show. “I really enjoyed doing it. It was a trip down memory lane for me,” said Webster in a 2011 interview. “It’s interesting to see how my technique has evolved over the years.” Thank you to the following alumni who made donations to the Alumni Association since our Winter/Spring 2014 newsletter: Name of Donor In Memory Of Robert D. Cohen ’56 Estate of Jack Knauer ‘69 Anne Stolarski Loochtan ‘68 Stanley Kessel ‘41 Todd Adam Kessel Peggy Morris Ramseyer ’57 Nancy Benson Wibbelsman ’67 Roger Shlonsky ’56 William Argo ’40 Leslie J. Susi Maryalice Shockey Susi ’47 Elyse Schacht Kindler ’51 In Honor Of Undesignated X X X Other X X X X 3 Summer/Fall 2014 • Bexley High School Alumni Association Alumni in the News (Many of the following edited articles were posted on www.bexleyschools.org. The entire content of each article can be found on the Alumni in the News link on the home page of the alumni website at www.bexleyalumni.org.) Ben Kassoy ‘07 graduated from Emory University in Atlanta with a degree in English. “It was amazing all the way around: I took classes in 18 different departments, served as recruitment chair of my fraternity and president of the break dancing club, coauthored two books, interned at The Colbert Report the summer before my senior year, and gave a speech at my commencement.” In an interview, he reflected on his years at BHS: “It was really positive academically and socially. I left high school with a strong foundation to think critically and succeed in high school, and I credit some excellent teachers (Joann LaMuth and Julie Horger, for example), along with Stephanie Krosnosky for helping guide me. I’m still best friends with all my buddies from BHS, too.” He is now living in New York City, serving as a writer and editor for DoSomething. org, the country’s largest not-for-profit for young people and social change. He also freelances for Glamour.com, Glamour, Maxim, and others. Nigeria native Oghogho Igodan ’07 grew up in South Africa before moving to Bexley in 2001. After graduating cum laude from the Ohio State University with a major in International Studies and minors in French and Women’s Studies, she relocated to Washington, D.C., “to gain experience in global public health and international development.” She interned with Georgetown University’s Institute for Reproductive Health, International Medical Corps and worked in a temporary capacity with World Vision before going to work full time for the U.S. Agency for International Development. Ms. Oghogho is currently a Program Assistant supporting the President’s Malaria Initiative (PMI) in the Global Health Bureau. PMI aims to reduce malaria-related mortality in 70 percent of at-risk populations in sub-Saharan Africa. She provides programmatic and operational support to the PMI headquarters team and also supports the PMI Democratic Republic of Congo country team. 4 Chris Balch ‘09 is spending a year in Columbus between college graduation and law school entrance. A graduate of Cornell University, he said he “bounced around majors a few times (because I want to go to law school ultimately) and finally settled upon a history major because I love the subject.” He reported that his college highlights were studying abroad in Paris, staying with a host family there, and taking classes in French at the Sorbonne: “Absolutely amazing adventure both within France and all of Europe. I was able to visit just about every country from Portugal to the Czech Republic, Norway to Italy, because the flights within Europe are cheap and everything is so close together. My foundation in French from Dr Romanczuk’s classes have taken me so many places. I had about five or six classes where it was invaluable to my history research and also truly witnessed how it is the second language of Europe while I was backpacking.” Caleb Muller ’09 graduated from Marietta College in May 2013 with a degree in Information Systems and a minor in Leadership Studies. He currently works as a Systems Analyst for the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) in Pittsburgh in the Information Services Division Rotation Program. He described this as a leadership development program with a focus on IT management. A cross country and track and field athlete while in school at Bexley, Mr. Muller continued to compete throughout his career at Marietta College. He now runs and competes at a high level for the Steel City Track Club in Pittsburgh. David Karanja ‘12 returns to the community for a summer internship this year. He is managing his own company in the Bexley/Berwick/Blacklick area through Student Painters, an operation that provides funding, training and mentorship. He is majoring in marketing at The Ohio State University. Mr. Karanja moved to Bexley from his native Kenya at the age of six. He said that as soon as he began attending Cassingham Elementary, he immediately felt accepted. Bexley allowed him to try new things, such as theater, music, sports and other student activities. School programs like Interna- tional Baccalaureate (IB) and Town Meetings and positive role models in school and at home taught lessons in integrity, open mindedness, determination and the importance of community. Meg Farrar ‘13 will attend the United States Air Force Academy this fall. She heads out to Colorado Springs, Colorado at the end of June. This appointment is awarded to only about 1,200 of the 9,700 applicants, according to Carolyn A. M. Benyshek, Department of the Air Force, Director of Admissions. “Your previous accomplishments indicate you have the potential to meet the demands and challenges of the Academy and you should be extremely proud of your appointment as only the best of the best are so rewarded,” she wrote in a letter to Ms. Farrar. Ms. Farrar is currently completing an internship in the Washington, D.C. office of U.S. Congressman Pat Tiberi, a Republican representing the 12th Congressional District of Ohio. A freshman at Colby College majoring in government and economics, Ms. Farrar was nominated to the Academy by U.S. Senator Rob Portman. Jimmy Wilkins ‘11 recently won gold in the skateboard “vert” event at the X Games in Austin, Texas. The youngest skateboarder ever to win gold in the vert competition, Mr. Wilkins earned his first X Games medal, beating the record of veteran skater Shaun White. Dubbed “the future of skate vert” by ESPN’s Devon O’Neill, Mr. Wilkins was a surprise winner in the competition that took place in front of 12,000 people, against the backdrop of the Texas State Capitol building. “Wilkins, supposedly a skater of few words, let his moves do all the talking with a Frontside Ollie that had competitors and the crowd in awe — including Tony Hawk who Instagrammed a video of the move,” noted The Daily Texan. “Wilkins came in thinking he had no chance at victory, yet the underdog rose to first with his smooth skating. At the age of 20, Wilkins is expected to have a lifetime of skating success ahead of him,” continued the online publication. (Posted on www.dailytexanonline.com on 6-6-14) Samantha “Murphy” Bromberg ‘13 is a national champion once again. Bromberg, a Bexley native who’s a sophomore at the University of Texas, won the women’s 10-meter Alumni - con’t.on page 11 Bexley High School Alumni Association • Summer/Fall 2014 LIONS HUNTING DOWN A CURE HELP ME STOP THIS KILLER Hi! I’m Herb Magley (BHS Class of ‘66) remember me.....no, I mean the good things about me!! After 48 years, I really need your help…my beautiful wife of 42 years is dying from Alzheimer’s. My family has been struck 3 times with Alzheimer’s. One person has died, one is dying and another has been diagnosed. My friend and father-in-law, died from Alzheimer’s before his 65th birthday. He “forgot” how to swallow and choked to death. Then, this inhumane disease struck my 54 year old wife and, for the past 9 years, I have watched her spiral down into places where no one should be allowed to go. She was an avid speed reader, but can no longer even hold a book; she has a Master’s in Speech Pathology, but can no longer talk; we had our 1st grand-baby in January, but she doesn’t understand; she had friends, but they have all abandoned her because it is “awkward”; one by one, she has lost the ability to feed herself, bathe, talk, dress, walk, groom, stand up or sit down, go to the bathroom or anything else for herself. This once vibrant, active, intelligent, passionate & caring wife, mother, friend is, simply put, dying a slow agonizing death. From the selfish side of me, I miss her deeply........I cannot tell you the number of nights I have cried myself to sleep........ALONE. It is too late for Gail & me, BUT I need to do something to prevent other generations from going through the stress, pain and misery of Alzheimer’s, and yet a new victim is diagnosed with Alzheimer’s nearly every minute of every day. THINK YOU ARE SAFE FROM ALZHEIMER’S? If you have not been touched by Alzheimer’s, you likely will be. The U.S. Surgeon General declared that Alzheimer’s is the next big epidemic to sweep America. In fact, if it is left unchecked, Alzheimer’s will cost our economy $2 Trillion/year by 2050. It has been ranked as the #6 Killer in the U.S., BUT recent data shows it could be #3, behind Heart Disease & Cancer. However, Alzheimer’s Dementia has 3 grotesque things that distinguish it from all these other diseases: (1) It is a death sentence: NO ONE SURVIVES; (2) Deaths from Alzheimer’s are INCREASING, while deaths from these other causes are decreasing; (3) It is a cruel disease that kills like no other, slowly and relentlessly robbing it victims of their abilities over an average post-diagnosis lifespan of 8-10 years. WE CAN DO SOMETHING ABOUT THIS RUTHLESS KILLER. Not for my wife or for me or my generation, but for our kids and grandkids. Although only a token amount of money has been directed at Alzheimer’s research, scientists have made some progress. Unfortunately, the drugs currently available treat only the symptoms (in some victims), but they DO NOT stop or even slow down its progress. OBVIOUSLY, MUCH MORE RESEARCH FUNDING IS NEEDED AND QUICKLY. The Alzheimer’s Association came to my rescue by getting me involved in a Younger Onset Caregiver Support Group. The Association is one of the biggest contributors to Alzheimer’s research AND lobbies Congress to provide more funding for research. Their lobbying efforts resulted in the federal government, for the first time, budgeting $122 million for 2014. It is a start, if only a small start. Over the past 3 years I have become a serious fundraiser for Alzheimer’s. I personally spend $10,000/year in traveling, giving talks, visiting Congress, volunteering for Alzheimer’s Assn. events, AND, most of all, FUND-RAISING. Even though a few people like me are desperately trying to make a difference, we just do not have the numbers to make this happen fast enough. SO I AM ASKING ALL BEXLEY ALUMNI, FAMILY & FRIENDS to join forces with me and be part of the annual “Alzheimer’s Walk”, the Assn’s main fundraiser. There are thousands of us Bexley Alumni, we have been blessed and have decent life styles.........which we DO NOT want disrupted by Alzheimer’s. WHAT CAN WE DO? THE easiest & simplest way for us to become a part of THE CURE, is to form a team and fund-raise for the annual “Alzheimer’s Walk” (fundraising is usually during the summer and The Walk event is in the fall). I am committed to this cause and will volunteer to do the “heavy-lifting” by serving as the team captain, and the liaison between the team and the Alzheimer’s Assn, and keeping everyone updated, etc. For your part, I NEED YOU to participate by (1) Making a donation to the team after it has been formed this summer and, if possible (2) Become a Walk Team member and recruit other alumni, family & friends to donate and/or participate. First, and foremost, the success of this effort REQUIRES “numbers” and that means we must get this out to EVERY Bexley High School alum. I NEED all of you, who get these newsletters or visit the website, to spread the word to your classmates, who may not get these. EMAIL me at HMAGLEY@COX. NET ASAP if you can DONATE and/or JOIN THE TEAM. I will email you with the important dates and instructions on how to donate AND how to get signed up for the actual “Walk” event. THANKS FOR HELPING ME STOP THIS HORRIBLE KILLER! 5 Summer/Fall 2014 • Bexley High School Alumni Association This article, reprinted with permission, featuring Natalia Fedner, class of 2001, appeared in The Columbus Dispatch on March 20, 2014 Fashion designer Natalia Fedner boosting her profile on TV show By Halie Williams If her family hadn’t emigrated from Ukraine to the United States 25 years ago, Natalia Fedner knows, her life might well be far different. “Just look at Ukraine right now. I could be there,” she said, fighting back tears at the thought of the country’s standoff with Russia over Ukraine’s Crimea region. Instead, Fedner — who grew up in Bexley and lives in Los Angeles — has been free to pursue her interest in fashion design. For that, she is grateful. “It doesn’t matter what your dream is,” she said. “If you’re willing to work hard and if you’re good to people, you will get it. That’s all you have to believe.” Her work as a designer has landed her on the Lifetime reality competition Project Runway: Under the Gunn, a first-year spinoff of Project Runway. The new TV series, hosted by fashion celebrity Tim Gunn, began with 15 up-andcoming designers — a number whittled to 12 after the second episode. The dozen who survived were placed on teams of four led by one of three mentors: Project Runway alumni Mondo Guerra, Anya Ayoung-Chee or Nick Verreos. Beginning with the third episode, Gunn has presented a new weekly challenge that tests the mentors’ ability to bring out the best in their designers. One designer has been eliminated each week. In the episode tonight, six competitors — including Fedner — remain. The winning designer will take home $100,000, a Lexus and other prizes; the winning mentor will receive a Lexus and a guest-editor position at Marie Claire for a year. Fedner’s mentor is Verreos, a Venezuela native who has seen his high-end designs worn by Beyonce, Heidi Klum, Katy Perry and other celebrities. Fedner — a former student of Gunn’s at Parsons the New School for Design in New York, from which she graduated in 2005 — had tried out for the second season of Project Runway. She didn’t make it but went deep into the process. After Under the Gunn was conceived, producers asked her whether she wanted to give the show a shot. She did and made the cut. The competition, filmed in November (This article, reprinted with permission and featuring Erin McCahan Richards, class of 1985, appeared in The Columbus Dispatch on May 10, 2014) Author Erin McCahan finds comfort zone Second young-adult novel set in Bexley As a youth minister for 10 years, Erin McCahan learned to really talk and listen to teenagers. That decade and her own experiences as a shy but observant adolescent in the 1980s gave her plenty of fodder for youngadult novels. Her first — I Now Pronounce You Someone Else, published in 2010 — centers on an 18-year-old grappling with a marriage proposal and a family to which she doesn’t relate while also trying to discover herself as a person. Her second, Love and Other Foreign Words, is quickly attracting attention. “This is a realistic story about growing up, coming of age,” said Kathy Leonard of the Columbus Metropolitan Library, which systemwide has purchased 20 copies of the book, published on May 1. 6 Erin McCahan “There are a lot of dark things out there. It’s kind of nice to see a quirky, funny love story.” Warner Bros. has already bought the movie rights to the novel, which is being released in 12 countries. Love and Other Foreign Words focuses on 16-year-old Josie Sheridan, for whom the language of love is indeed foreign. Despite her chart-topping IQ, Josie struggles with the vernacular of her friends. Publishers Weekly praised the book: “McCahan’s sharp-witted first-person narrative will keep readers laughing as they get acquainted with Josie, a selfproclaimed ‘inveterate’ over-thinker.” McCahan, who lives in New Albany with husband Tim Richards, said the story came to her as she thought about what she wished she would have known as a teen growing up in Bexley, where the novel is set. “I always had a lot of friends in high school, but they were from different groups,” the 46-year-old said. “In the Bexley High School Alumni Association • Summer/Fall 2014 and December, posed its challenges — most notably, the quick turnarounds, Fedner said. She considers herself a perfectionist who pays attention to detail and wants to offer unique designs. “I like to look at things from a different perspective,” Fedner said. “For me, it’s all about what has not been done. How can I invent something? But you can’t have the luxury of the experimental-time process during this type of a show.” Designing and art have long been parts of Fedner’s world. As a child, she would draw to keep occupied, including sketching Barbie dolls in various dresses. Later, her art teacher at Bexley High School noticed her passion and predicted success. “She was someone who knew what she wanted, and she went for it,” said Mabi Ponce de Leon, who still teaches at the school. Fedner’s close friends also recognized her potential. “I still have a portrait she did of me hanging in my room at my parents’ house,” said Samara Preisler, a friend since middle school who wore a Fedner-designed gown for her May 2011 wedding. “She poured her heart and her talent into making my dress,” the Bexley resident said. “I am confident that a better dress does not exist. It was perfect.” This month, Fedner realized a dream when different groups, I had friends who didn’t like each other.” Not until she was in her 30s, attending a bridal shower at which she knew only a few of the guests, did she come to realize why such tensions existed. She struggled to relate to the gushing that played out over stemware. “I understood their words, but I was not connecting with them about these designer glasses,” she said. “They all knew each other; they had their own language.” Professional writing had long been her goal — since the third grade, McCahan said. After earning a bachelor’s degree in the major from Capital University in 1992, she spent seven years trying to produce a mainstream adult novel. A growing stack of rejection letters took a toll, though. In 1998, at the suggestion of her minister, McCahan began working with adolescents — she had, after all, attended an Episcopal seminary for 18 months in 1994-95 — at St. John’s Episcopal Church in Worthington. (She later held a similar position at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Upper Arlington.) In her role as a youth minister, McCahan said, she grew comfortable with the language of teenagers. “They have so much going on in their lives — their bodies, their minds — and they needed someone to talk to,” she said. “I was that person for many years.” Not only did the work prove more rewarding than she expected, McCahan said, but it also yielded “ a slow dawning” — a gradual realization that she might have been writing for the wrong audience. “Here, I am immersed in teenage culture,” she said. “I had been around them so much that I understood their conversation. It was a different rhythm from adults.” The protagonist in Love and Other Foreign Words represents McCahan’s antithesis: McCahan rarely spoke in school; Josie often lands in trouble for speaking her mind. Still, the character shares the author’s sense of humor. “Erin had some sarcasm to her; she still does,” recalled childhood friend Bronwyn Craven, a high-school teacher in Akron who plans to share Love and Other Foreign Words with her students and adolescent daughter. Natalia Fedner, a Los Angeles resident, enjoying a lighter moment during a recent visit to her parents’ home in Bexley one of her dresses was worn at the Academy Awards ceremony: Joanna DeGeneres, sister-in-law of show host Ellen DeGeneres, chose a dress from her collection. “(Joanna) told me that she’s never been complimented so many times in her entire life — not even on her wedding day — and that was a huge compliment to me,” Fedner said. With her resume building, Fedner can’t help acknowledging her good fortune. Growing up in Bexley, where her parents still live, was “an incredible experience that you can only appreciate once you leave,” she said. And she hasn’t forgotten those most responsible for helping her succeed: her parents, Alla and Greg Fedner. “People like to say their parents are their heroes, and mine really are,” she said. “They were only 28 years old when they took us (she and her two younger sisters) out of that country. They didn’t know where they were going. They had to leave everything behind. “I’m just so lucky with the life I’ve had; I don’t take anything for granted.” “She was very funny but in a quiet way. . . . She was very witty, and you could tell she was very intelligent.” McCahan gave Josie a high IQ to break the gifted-student stereotypes of “weird” and “friendless.” Josie’s quirkiness is a quality that Kerry Winfrey likes. The Grandview Heights resident, who reviews young-adult books for the entertainment blog Hello Giggles, featured the novel in an April post. “It’s definitely funny, even if you’re not (a) young adult,” said Winfrey, 27. “I liked that it was set in Columbus. She used a lot of real locations in Bexley and German Village. Easton is mentioned.” Winfrey appreciates how Josie often makes “interesting” decisions — ones not always in line with her peers’. Like Josie, McCahan said, teenagers today are more aware and outspoken — traits that aren’t necessarily bad. “They need to talk about these things,” she said. “That’s why young-adult (fiction) is so huge now.” 7 Summer/Fall 2014 • Bexley High School Alumni Association (The following was posted on the Bexley Schools website at www.bexleyschools.org and edited) 2014 Bexley Grads Featured in the News Several outstanding Bexley students have been featured prominently in local news recently. The college admissions essay of 2014 grad Jasper Lau was in the May 31 college essay edition of the Columbus Dispatch. The newspaper noted: “With the challenges of the college-application process having come and gone for high-school seniors throughout central Ohio, The Dispatch salutes the students for a job well-done. Today in First Person — our weekly forum for personal musings and reflections from readers — we showcase a sampling of admission essays submitted by members of the Class of 2014.” Editor’s note: Jasper’s essay follows. Jasper Lau “Go ahead when you’re ready.” “Uh. Umm. . . . Fe-la-a-a-fesh? Fe-a-a-lafesh!” “What, sir? Say that again?” “Fich! Num-ba tan. . . . Ta-n? Pleee?” “Sir, I don’t understand what you’re saying. Please repeat that,” the drivethrough server says as she impatiently pokes her head out the window. A few moments pass as my dad makes his last attempt to place his order with jumbled vocabulary, broken sentences and frantic gestures. On a hot summer afternoon, I am sitting in our minivan with knots in my stomach. I feel nauseous, hungry and dizzy. But, above all, I feel ashamed. I feel ashamed because my father cannot place a simple order at McDonald’s. I sit frozen in my seat, trying to avoid being seen. A part of me yearns to help, but 8 my childish shame makes me reluctant. I open my mouth, but nothing comes out. As I hesitantly glance to the side, my dad’s chestnut-tinted eyes fixate onto mine. That pleading gaze is all too familiar; I know exactly what it means. I quickly unbuckle my seat belt and hoist my body up from my seat, my sweaty T-shirt peeling from the faded seat cover. I lean past the two armrests to place the order. My voice cracks as I stretch my head out the window: “Sorry about that. Could we please have a fish fillet and a double cheeseburger — just the sandwiches? Thanks.” In my 11-year-old Asian mind, translating for an adult seemed so burdensome. Through the years, I’ve translated mail, bank statements and the daily news; and gone to parent-teacher conferences to translate sentence by sentence for my parents. Often, I felt tied to a leash that kept me from enjoying my childhood. At a time when I desperately needed my parents’ guidance, the responsibility fell on me to help them navigate the American culture. As a child, I was too naive to understand my parents’ situation. For quite a while, it seemed as if my parents’ needs would keep me from living my life. Now I see this experience in a new light: It was and is my responsibility to help them find peace in this country. In fact, this duty transformed me from an ashamed boy to the young man I am today. Those childhood days of helping my parents taught me to pursue initiatives even in the face of obstacles. Their struggle inspired me. To raise a family in an unfamiliar country, my parents took a risk so I could have a better life. Their courage influenced my decisions in high school. During my freshman year, I started a business that changed Columbus’ entertainment scene. Despite being an underclassman, I pushed forward with my vision. Eventually, I formed a partnership with two juniors to establish ColumbusTeen, an event-marketing business. My vision materialized before my eyes. I began to lead the company in recruiting promoters, negotiating with venue owners and managing budgets. Our first event, Purple Haze, was the largest high-school concert in the history of Columbus. Helping my parents overcome barriers taught me resilience, which helped me cultivate my entrepreneurial identity. Jasper Lau will study business at Northeastern University in Boston. Meghan Hayden, also a member of the BHS class of 2014, was named one of the Columbus Dispatch Scholar Athletes. The Scholar-Athlete Awards, first introduced 33 years ago and presented by the Motorists Insurance Group, honor the best high school students in central Ohio. Ms. Hayden was the top young woman selected this year, out of the 208 scholar-athletes from 107 schools. Her profile and interview, which follow, appeared in the Columbus Dispatch on Tuesday, May 20, 2014. Q&A with Meghan Hayden Chris Russell | Dispatch Top female scholar-athlete $7,500 Grade-point average: 4.51 Sports played: Track (3 years), cross country (2), soccer (2), swimming (2) Academic highlights: National Merit Scholar finalist; AP Scholar with Honor; National Honor Society member; scored 36 on ACT, 2270 on SAT Athletic highlights: Regional-meet qualifier in track and cross country; secondteam all-league in cross country College choice: Cornell (anticipated major: biology) Bexley High School Alumni Association • Summer/Fall 2014 Home front: I live with my parents, Kathy and Tom, and my two siblings. I’m the oldest; my brother, Peter, is 15 and my sister, Hannah, is 10. We have a very old Labrador retriever named Teddy and four “backyard” chickens named Mr. Darcy, Wego, Penny and Henrietta. Favorite subject: It is honestly hard for me to choose a favorite because I enjoy learning about almost anything. This year, however, my favorite is probably European history. Least favorite subject: I don’t have a least favorite. I’ve never liked writing fiction or poetry so sometimes English classes can be frustrating. Luckily this year we’ve done mostly analysis, which I can handle. How I relax: To relax, I just do the things that I love to do. I go on a run or read a book or cook something, especially desserts. All of these things help me calm down and forget about things that are stressing me out. Prized possession: My prized possession is a stuffed bear named Snuffles. It belonged to my mom when she was younger and went with her everywhere — camp, college, foreign countries. I will be sure to bring it with me wherever I end up in the future. Favorite book: The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver. I’ve already read it multiple times and I could probably read it a few more! Favorite movie: I don’t necessarily have a favorite but some that I have enjoyed recently include Zoolander, Dallas Buyers Club, Argo, and, of course, all of the Harry Potters. Favorite magazine: The only one I read often are Food Network Magazine and Runners World, which makes sense since food and running are two of my favorite things. I used to enjoy getting Newsweek each week, but sadly, now it is only online. Favorite home-cooked meal: One of my favorite meals (of many) is sweet-potatoand-black-bean burritos. They’re basically mashed sweet potatoes with tons of spices and black beans cooked in a tortilla and topped with spicy salsa. Either my mom or I will make them, depending on what we have going on. My cooking specialty: I love cooking and I especially like to try new things. I don’t really have one dish I like to make over and over again but I do make a lot of desserts. I always make the cakes for my family members’ birthdays. I am especially drawn to cooking with aromatic spices like those in Indian food because the kitchen smells so good throughout the day. Favorite restaurant meal: It would probably have to be pad thai. Proudest sports moment: I am proud of qualifying for the regional track meet last year in the 3,200-meter race. I didn’t expect to make it that far and it was a cool experience. Sport I’d like to try someday: I would love to get into downhill-ski racing. My family has always done a good amount of skiing but this winter was the first time my brother and I tried a few races. We’ve skied at Lake Placid and Vancouver, two Olympic venues, and both times I was inspired to race (or at least to ski) more. Favorite athlete: Ski racer Mikaela Shiffrin. She is only 19 yet she has already won an Olympic gold. I am so impressed by how dedicated she is to her sport and how well she truly knows what she’s doing. She studies how to be the best she can be and then performs amazingly. Inspiration: One of my biggest sources of inspiration has been my mom. She is a great runner and works very hard. She has run 11 marathons and a multitude of other races and is always training for something. She is definitely the one who gave me the “running bug” and she was able to push me to get better over the years. Person I’d like to meet: I’ve always thought it would have been interesting to have a conversation with President Franklin D. Roosevelt. in Turkey, trying to learn Turkish and immersing myself in the culture. Feel free to make any jokes about going to Turkey. The most common is to respond with “gobble, gobble” or say something about chicken. Something I cannot get right no matter how hard I try: I cannot sing on key, so never ask me to sing. Where I see myself in five years: It’s hard to imagine where I’ll be in the future, but hopefully, I will be graduating from college and moving on to veterinary school. I would love to continue running for the rest of my life. I hope that in 10 or 20 years I will have run a marathon with my mom. Short description of myself: One word that encompasses my personality is curious. I love learning and exploring new ideas, cultures, foods, etc. I think my curiosity is what drives much of what I do. How an adult might describe me: Parents and teachers would probably describe me as hardworking. It’s hard for me not to give my best effort, which sometimes stresses me out more than necessary. Advice for an underclassman: The most important advice I would give is not to let stress dominate your life. Sometimes it’s hard with all of the pressures of school, sports and life in general, but everything becomes easier if you stay positive and let yourself relax every once in a while. Words to leave by: “Maybe in order to understand mankind, we have to look at the word itself: Mankind. Basically, it’s made up of two separate words — “mank” and “ind.” What do these words mean? It’s a mystery, and that’s why so is mankind.” — Jack Handey, Deep Thoughts. Place I’d like to travel: I want to travel everywhere! I recently found out that you can buy an “around the world” ticket that is good for an extended amount of time to fly whenever on any flight around the world. I would love to be able to do that. High on my list of places to travel would be Greece, Ireland and India. Something most people don’t know about me: Many people don’t know that I will be spending next year in Turkey before I go to college. I am taking a gap year and participating in Rotary International Youth Exchange. I will be staying with host families Simon Horn, Bexley’s 2014 grad and U.S. Presidential Scholar - one of only two such scholars in Ohio - was interviewed on Grads - con’t.on page 10 9 Summer/Fall 2014 • Bexley High School Alumni Association GRADS - continued from page 9 “Good Day Columbus” on Channel Six. Mr. Horn was described by newsperson Pete Scalia as “someone who is really a great role model.” A senior at Bexley High School scored perfect ACT and SAT scores, as well as staying involved with the arts and athletics. And, as ABC 6 Reporter LuAnn Stoia just found out - this remarkable student also battled cancer. The teen says it improved his outlook on life. Simon had to audition to get into a local choir. But, he says competition doesn’t bother him. Horn says that while he likes academics, he deeply values the arts and singing. “It’s about coming together to make something beautiful together,” he said. “And, I think that’s really important.” Horn has run cross-country during four fall seasons. This fall, he’s set to attend Yale University. Despite the amazing opportunity, Simon says he’ll miss his fellow runners. “We are a very tightknit team, made a lot of friends through cross country.” Additional information about the Presidential Scholar program: The U.S. Department of Education and the White House Commission on Presidential Scholars annually select two students from each state, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, and from U.S. families living abroad. In addition 15 students are chosen at large and 20 are named U.S. Presidential Scholars in the Arts. U.S. Presidential Scholars qualify for the award by their performance on the ACT and SAT exams, with some 3,900 qualifying in 2014. They are chosen “based on their academic success, artistic excellence, essays, school evaluations and transcripts, as well as evidence of community service, leadership, and demonstrated commitment to high ideals,” noted the U.S. Department of Education. Simon traveled to Washington, D.C. where the U.S. Presidential Scholars were honored for their accomplishments with events scheduled from June 22-25, 2014. He plans to attend Yale University this fall. (The following was posted on www.bexleyschools.org on 8-26-14) Molly Davis Memorial Garden The staff and students of Cassingham Elementary School will open the Molly Davis Memorial Garden, named in honor of a late beloved teacher, this Friday, August 29, 2014 from 2:00 – 2:30pm on the front lawn of the school, 250 South Cassingham in Bexley. Mrs. Davis untimely passing was the result of an auto accident in March of 2011, just three months shy of her retirement after 37 years of teaching at Cassingham. “Cassingham Elementary will honor and celebrate the life and work of Molly Davis with music, poetry and remembrances,” said the school’s Principal, Jeannine Hetzler. Mrs. Davis’s former colleagues, retired Cassingham teachers and some friends and family will join the school community for the celebration and a light snack afterwards. Cassingham students celebrate Molly Davis Day each year during the second full week of school, noted Ms. Hetzler. Mrs. Davis was known for her practice of encouraging her fifth 10 graders to keep portfolios and then inviting them back to open the time capsules just before their high school graduations. In keeping with that tradition, after participating in the garden opening, Cassingham students will visit with their last school year’s teachers (2:30 until 3:00pm). New students and kindergarten students will get to know each other with art, music and physical education teachers helping them create activity bags for children who access the services of a local homeless family support center. “The garden has evolved into a simply lovely space; one that students and community members are stopping by to enjoy more and more each day,” added Ms. Hetzler. The garden was built with support provided by the Cassingham PTO, a Bexley Education Foundation grant and the contributions, both monetary and in-kind, made by Cassingham parents and students. Bexley High School Alumni Association • Summer/Fall 2014 The following was posted on www.bexleyschools.org TORCH honored once again The Bexley High School Torch is one of only three high school newspapers in the state to be named an “All-Ohio” publication, the top award from the Ohio Scholastic Media Association, for the 201314 school year. In addition, 31 members of the staff won a total of 69 individual awards for writing, photography, artwork, graphics and design. Bexley High School’s student-run publication is not subject to prior review. The Torch is led this year by co-editors Emma Crane, Marissa Kelly and Alex Meyer. English and journalism teacher Julie Horger advises the staff. ALUMNI - continued from page 4 competition at the U.S. diving championships on August 16 in Knoxville, Tenn., to continue her recent success in that event. She also won the 10-meter dive in last year’s national championships and the winter national championships. Along with teammate Emma IvoryGanja, Samantha won the synchronized 10-meter final on August 17. (This edited article appeared in The Columbus Dispatch on Sunday, August 17, 2014) Alexander (Aky) Locke ‘14 a talented musician, always found ways to work his creative muscle, through Bexley programs as well as in ensembles outside of school. Now he goes even farther afield, having accepted a scholarship to study viola at Mercer University’s Townsend School of Music in Georgia. Mr. Locke was one of the Bexley singers who took part this winter in the American Choral Directors’ Association Central Division Honor Choirs in Cincinnati, performing with the High School Mixed Honor Choir. He was a co-winner of the National School Choral Award at Bexley High School’s May 21 Student Awards Assembly. He performed at graduation with Vocal Ensemble. Alumni Association scholarships presented At the senior awards assembly on May 21, Larry Pliskin, Alumni Association CoChair, presented $1,000 scholarships to Elizabeth Williams and Alexander Eikenberry, recipients of the Carlton Smith Memorial Scholarship, and to Emma Crane, recipient of the William E. L. Young Memorial Service Award. Prior recipients of these awards are listed below. Carlton Smith Memorial Scholarship Fund Recipients (Awarded since 1994) YearRecipient 1994 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Shana Carter Aaron Gilbert 1995 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Andrew Hayes Erin Zantello 1996 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Shane Roberts Christi Smith 1997 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Patrick Elias Alissa Luck 1998 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Alex Meizlish Amy Shifflette 1999 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Joel Borovsky Bryn Tschannen-Mora 2000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kay Ritchey David Truesdale 2001 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lindsay Avner Curtis Henn 2002 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Eileen Neal Mitch Ryan 2003 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Megan Wenz Brandon White YearRecipient 2004 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chelsea Callif Brendan Devine 2005 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chase Stanley Lauren Cooper 2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ellen Braverman John Zanner 2007 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Michelle Beck Tyler Stanley 2008 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rachel Leeds Ben Scoblianko 2009 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tyler Johnson Deena Levey 2010 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Leah Levey Reuel Rogers 2011 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Zoe Beaumier Neal Pohlman 2012 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Harold “DJ” Jones Stephanie Rawlings 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kevin Powers Kathleen Wittig William E. L. Young Memorial Service Award Recipients (Awarded since 2001) YearRecipient 2001 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tiffaney Mummey 2002 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Eileen Neal 2003 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Diana Haninger 2004 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Shelby Nathans 2005 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ashley Foote 2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cynthia Liefeld 2007 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jonathan Carroll 2008 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Robert Moore 2009 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chris Balch 2010 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Anastasiya Nazarenko 2011 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Aaron Gaba 2012 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sirrus Lawson Bourne 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Harold Wang 11 Summer/Fall 2014 • Bexley High School Alumni Association CLASS NOTES Class of 1939 June 2014 Marcia Black Crabtree – Orlando FL 75 years ago I graduated from Bexley High School. I am healthy and active, was married 61 years and have two sons. I started 1st grade at the old Main Street school and went on to graduate 12 years later with an excellent education including music, art, recess, etc. There was no kindergarten. I understand that a new program is being planned to teach teachers for 2 year old kids to prepare them for kindergarten!! April 2014 Lois Dworsky Sheketoff – Hartford CT I have lived in Hartford since 1945. I had a wonderful marriage for 67 years to David. We have a son and daughter and two granddaughters. Daughter Arlene did work in Columbus for a few years as an engineer for Taft Broadcasting TV. Class of 1941 April 2014 Stanley Kessel – Hollywood FL Am now the oldest teacher in the history of the dental school at Nova Southeastern University. Still banging biomechanics into innocent post-grad orthodontic heads my grandchildren’s age. Slowing down with a new hip but driving and no walker yet. I wonder if our old house at 2539 Fair Avenue is still intact (corner of Fair and Cassingham) – formerly 45 seconds on a dead run to the school – probably take 10 minutes now! Class of 1942 May 2014 Chuck Salt (Submitted by his daughter, Betsy) Charles F. Salt, Jr. passed away on October 1, 2013 at the age of 89. 12 Class of 1944 June 2014 John H. Ramey – Akron OH I was recognized with the award for “A Lifetime of Distinguished Service” at the 24th Annual Harold K. Stubbs Awards Dinner on March 14 in Akron. The dinner is held annually in memory of Stubbs, a popular municipal court judge and West Side Akron resident who died suddenly in 1989. The City/County Safety Building is named in his honor. My wife Carol died February 20, 2013, of an aggressive non-Hodgkin lymphoma. She assisted me in administering the work of the Association for the Advancement of Social Work with Groups (AASWG) for many years. After working since 2002 at getting my Myasthenia Gravis under control, I developed Multiple Myeloma Stage 1 in early September 2013. Considerable time was spent in rehabilitation this past year. At the moment I seem to be improving. I remain active in various community services and organizations. During our many years with AASWG Carol and I traveled extensively to represent it at conferences and meetings throughout the United States and Canada while I was at the University and afterward in retirement. With support from my family I continue to live at our home of forty-four years in the integrated West Side community in Akron. My books, office, shop and archives are here and I still know where everything is located! In addition to social work, music, gardening and community services, I continue interests in bridge, genealogy and family history, science and politics. I received a “Keep Akron Beautiful” Award in summer 2013 for the garden and landscaping of our home and am well started on the gardening for 2014. Our granddaughter “Erzsi” (Elizabeth) Szilagyi graduated from Stanford with a Ph.D. in Chemistry in June. She is the daughter of Imre and Janet (Ramey) Szilagyi of Kingwood, WV. Imre and Janet have been retired from whitewater rafting for several years. My other daughter, Susan, operates Ridgetop Pottery, making hand-thrown porcelain, also in Kingwood. I continue after 25 years to play Euphonium in the Cuyahoga Falls Community Band (CFCB). This is in addition to TubaChristmas (550 Tuba family instruments, two audiences totaling 5400), TubaSummer and the OSU Alumni Band at Lakeside each summer. I play in seventeen or more concerts each year. I remember well my years in the Junior and Senior High bands at Bexley and particularly my 1943-44 senior year as Drum Major. I was Assistant Drum Major in 1944 and 1945 at Ohio State. I retired December 1989 after 20-1/2 years on the Social Work faculty of the University of Akron. This followed 21 years of social work in settlements, camps, etc., in Columbus, Chicago, Hartford and Cincinnati. I was also instrumental in securing passage of licensing in Ohio for social workers in 1984. This is not the same kind of report on various exotic life activities that I read about for other BHS alumni, but for me it has been and continues to be interesting and productive, and I can reflect back and ask myself what better could I have done with these 87 years as I contemplate the days and years ahead. Bexley was certainly one of the best places one could have been to get started Class of 1950 April 2014 Gerry Olson Bartholomew – Powell OH I, too, really enjoy reading about the Bexley alums. I was not always at Bexley, (transferred from Grandview HS) but felt very fortunate to have attended two of the best schools in the district. Milton, my husband of 59 years, was a Grandview boy. Unfortunately, he died in October, 2013. I have three boys, two daughtersin-law, eight grandchildren and two greatgrandchildren. How did I get so lucky!! I spoke with Joyce Nickell Loughery recently. She moved to Chicago. I hope to connect with her since one of my granddaughters is getting her masters there. Hi to all my 1950 classmates Bexley High School Alumni Association • Summer/Fall 2014 CLASS NOTES Class of 1960 Class of 1954 July 2014 Marilynne Thompson Rohr – Morrow OH On Friday, June 13th we held a 60th Reunion Luncheon at the TAT Restaurant in Columbus with 34 attending; 28 classmates and 6 spouses. Members of the class traveled from California, Florida, Illinois, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Ohio. A good time reminiscing and catching up on the last 60 years was had by all. Some of the classmates have been meeting about 3 times a year in Columbus for lunch. Anyone who is interested in joining us, please contact Marilynne Thompson Rohr at mkrohr37@aol.com or at 513-708-7630. April 2014 Caroline (Bebe) Baird Mason – Glenmont NY My husband and I will be leaving Albany after 20 years in an 1805 house and closing the door on our professional lives to move to Prides Crossing MA where we have bought an even older house to be near our daughter and her family. The prospect of beginning anew at the end of our careers — for which there is no road map — is both daunting and exciting. It was lovely being in Bexley with old friends for our minireunion in 2013. I look forward to seeing more of you at our 55th. Class of 1970 Class of 1958 July 2014 Neal Noethlich – Estero FL Notice: Planning for a birthday celebration of “BHS ’58 class members turn 75 years old” is underway. The latter half of September 2015 is the timeframe under consideration. Classmates are requested to respond with a show of interest via email: Nen13@earthlink.net. Please place BHS’58 in the subject line May 2014 Betsy Salt – Westerville OH I received my 30-year service award from Otterbein University this year. My niece, Megan Salt, received her Ph.D. in biomedical sciences from the University of California at San Francisco this past March. She is currently employed at Genentech in South San Francisco. My nephew, Colin Salt, received his B.A. degree in psychology this month from SUNY- New Paltz in New York. It has been a year of awards and honors for the Salt family although tinged with sadness due to the passing of my father on October 1, 2013. Take Note! 1969 Bexleo needed The high school library is missing its copy of the 1969 Bexleo. If anyone has a copy they would be willing to donate, please contact Mike Nolan, the high school librarian, at 614-231-4591 ext. 4154 or Mike.Nolan@BexleySchools.org. Congratulations 2014 Graduates! A time to celebrate the dreaming and hoping; the reaching and believing . . . . You are now officially Bexley High School alumni and we welcome you to ‘the club.’ This is your first BHS Alumni newsletter. We hope you enjoy it. Also, be sure to check out the alumni website at www.bexleyalumni.org. Please remember to update your address, phone and email information as it changes throughout the years so that we can keep track of you for alumni and class reunion mailings. Note to Class Reunion Committees The Alumni Association can help your planning process by providing updated class lists and/or mailing labels. Please leave (The following was posted at www.ohiohouse.gov on 6-10-14) 1997 grad, Steven Zilberman, honored State Rep. Kevin Boyce (D-Columbus) today, along with Ohio Department of Transportation officials, unveiled signage designating a portion of State Route 270 as the “Lt. Miroslav Steven Zilberman Memorial Highway.” Lt. Zilberman, a Navy pilot serving in Afghanistan, died saving three crewmates by steadying a hurtling plane so that the rest of the crew could safely eject. “Each day our service members, like Steven, sacrifice their lives in defense of our nation and freedom. His act of valor saved the lives of his crewmen,” said Rep. Boyce. “Steven believed in the American dream. A dream that avows no matter your upbringing, social status or native country, through hard work and perseverance one can achieve and create a wonderful life. With his selfless commitment to his country and this ideal, Steven has ensured that the rest of us can continue to pursue the American Dream.” The “Lt. Miroslav Steven Zilberman Memorial Highway” will run along State Route 270 from the intersection of State Route 33 and the intersection of State Route 270 and State Route 315. Lt. Zilberman was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for his heroic actions, which was presented to his widow Katrina and two children, Daniel and Sarah. a message on the alumni office voicemail at 614/920-4937 or send an email request to info@bexleyalumni.org. When planning your reunion activities and supplies, why not consider offering our alumni decals as part of the reunion package? Contact us for pricing on bulk orders, or check prices on the order form on the alumni website. What would you like to see in this newsletter? If there is something you would like to see included in this newsletter, please submit your suggestion(s) to the editor, using any of the contact means listed at the bottom of this page. Better yet, if you’d like to write an article for consideration in the newsletter, send it along as well. 13 Summer/Fall 2014 • Bexley High School Alumni Association REUNIONS Class Contact Phone 1949 Wayne-JoAnn Hanners Betsy Madison Kent Dick Kohn Gary Seckel 614-235-8550 614-864-1557 614-208-8540 614-231-5563 E-Mail Reunion Date(s) Sept 19 & 20, 2014 Bexley H.S. Class of 1949 – 65th Reunion Never too old for friends to meet!! Most of our classmates have been located and many have indicated they plan to attend. Anyone not receiving a letter, please call any of the contacts listed above. 1955 Benjamin Zox Benjamin.Zox@icemiller.com Summer 2015 We are just beginning to plan for our 60 reunion next summer. th 1958 Neal Noethlich Nen13@earthlink.net Sept 2015 Planning for a birthday celebration of “BHS ’58 Class Members Turn 75 Years Old” is underway. The latter half of September, 2015 is the timeframe under consideration. Classmates are requested to respond with a show of interest via email to Neal. Please place BHS ’58 in the subject line. 1965 Dan Vogel dvogel1@cox.net July 4, 2015 weekend Planning is just beginning for our 50 reunion next summer. Make sure you receive all of the details as they develop by sending your current contact information to Dan. th 1975 Mark Palmer mark.palmer@josephgroup.com July 3 & 4, 2015 We are in the planning stage for our 40 reunion. As they are finalized, further details will be provided. Until then, please contact Mark for more information. th WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU! Send us news about yourself to be included in the alumni newsletter and on the alumni website. Please note: we will not be able to publish your news, either in our newsletter or on the website, if your dues are not paid and current. Name:_____________________________________________ Maiden Name:________________________________ Class:_________________________ City/State:________________________________________________________ News:____________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mail information to: Bexley High School Alumni Association P.O. Box 457. Lithopolis, Ohio 43136-0457 14 Or email to: info@bexleyalumni.org # Bexley High School Alumni Association • Summer/Fall 2014 PLEASE PAY YOUR 2014 ALUMNI ASSOCIATION DUES NOW! Your dues expire December 31 each year Mail information below to: The Bexley High School Alumni Association ALUMNI ID #______________________________ (found on the mailing label) P. O. Box 457 Lithopolis OH 43136-0457 Enclosed is my check (payable to Bexley Alumni Association) for $_______________ as indicated below: I prefer to pay with my MasterCard or VISA! Amount Paid: ____________(Check selection(s) below) Circle card type: MC VISA Card Number: _________________________________Expiration:_______Month_______Year Card ID No.: _______ (3-digit number on the back of your card) Or pay by credit card online at www.bexleyalumni.org Annual Dues: o $10 Senior single (60+) o $18 Senior couple (60+) o$25 Regular single (-60 o $45 Regular couple (-60) Lifetime Dues: o $200 Lifetime single o $360 Lifetime couple o Other $___________________ o Contribution to the Coach Carlton Smith Scholarship Fund $_________________________________ oContribution to the William E. L. Young Memorial Service Award $_____________________________ Dues payments to the Bexley High School Alumni Association and contributions to the Coach Carlton Smith Memorial Scholarship Fund and to the William E. L. Young Memorial Service Award are tax deductible. Name_____________________________________________________ Student Last Name _______________________Class_________ Last First (If applicable) Name_____________________________________________________ Student Last Name _______________________Class_________ Last First (If applicable) Address___________________________________________________ City/State_____________________________Zip__________ Home Phone_______________________ Cell Phone______________________ E-Mail______________________________________ S/F-14 WAYS TO DONATE TO BHSAA Why not consider making a donation in honor of or in memory of a family member or classmate? The Bexley High School Alumni Association welcomes any size donation and we offer two options for payment. Your donation is tax deductible. OPTION 1 You can make a secure, online payment by credit card. Simply click on the Donate to the Alumni Association link on the home page at www.bexleyalumni.org to be taken to our transaction processing site where you can select your method of payment and specify the amount you wish to give. OPTION 2 If you prefer to send in your credit card information or pay by check, please print and complete our Donation Form (below) and mail it to us at P. O. Box 457, Lithopolis OH 43136. Please make checks payable to BHSAA. Bexley High School Alumni Association 614-920-4937 P. O. Box 457 Lithopolis OH 43136 Your gift to the Bexley High School Alumni Association will promote excellence in a variety of areas. Please make your check payable to BHSAA. Your cancelled check is your receipt. I prefer to pay with my MasterCard or VISA! Amount Paid: ___________________________________ Circle card type: MC or VISA Card Number: ______________________________________ Expiration: ___ Month ___Year Card ID No.: ____ (3-digit number on the back of your card) Please complete this form: Check if this is a new address Name: __________________________________________________________________ Street: __________________________________________________________________ City State Zip:______________________________________________________________ Enclosed is my gift in the amount of $___________ to the Bexley High School Alumni Association. My gift is in memory of in honor of _______________________________; an undesignated donation to the Bexley High School Alumni Association. Your gift is an investment in the future education of our children. Please mail with your check to: Bexley High School Alumni Association P. O. Box 457 Lithopolis OH 43136 THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT! S/F-14 15 Bexley High School Alumni Association P.O. Box 457 Lithopolis, Ohio 43136-0457 ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED NEWSLETTER Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Carol Miley Middaugh ’62 OFFICERS/STAFF Co-Chairman. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Larry Pliskin ’84 Co-Chairman. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ron Robins ‘58 Secretary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . position currently vacant Treasurer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Carol Miley Middaugh ’62 Financial Advisor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Adam Roslovic ‘89 TRUSTEES 2011-20142012-2015 Barbara Bidlack Hauser ‘53 Saralee Graham Seckel ’51 Tina Heddleson Wolf ’90 Sherry Rosen Goldenberg ‘58 Barbara Volosin Elsass ‘61 2013-20162014-2017 Matt Copp ’86 Joan Eickholt Birtcher ’49 Andrew S. Ives ‘88 Wayne Hanners ’49 John F. Lewis, Jr. ‘80 Joann Susil Hanners ’49 In Memoriam (REPORTED SINCE LAST NEWSLETTER) ‘33 ‘35 ‘37 ‘39 ‘40 ‘40 ‘42 ‘43 ‘45 ‘46 ‘46 ‘47 ‘47 ‘48 ‘49 ‘49 ‘49 ‘49 ‘50 ‘50 ‘51 ‘53 ‘54 Juanita Alvarez Lephart. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-27-14 Betty Snell Smith . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-17-14 J. Rodgers Magee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-25-14 John Ferguson. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-29-14 Jeanne Beckert Collins. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-25-14 Joanne Boeshaar Young. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-11-14 Marilyn Jaynes Hannum. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-24-14 Robert Thompson. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-20-14 Gerald Nangle. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-30-14 Adele Buck Conroy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-26-14 Mary Jane Pohlman Hammond. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-23-14 Christopher Powell. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-10-14 Charlotte Thomas Striebel. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-12-14 JoAnne Nida Patterson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-17-14 Carley Fisher Seitz. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-14 Jim Foley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-08-14 Glorialea Howard Sievers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-10-14 William Ong. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-18-14 Ted Cook. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-24-14 Mary Lou Lippert Russell. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-25-14 Donald Zigler. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-24-14 Thornton Swisher. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-30-14 Roger Holstein . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-22-14 ‘55 ‘55 ‘56 ‘56 ‘57 ‘58 ‘58 ‘59 ‘60 ‘60 ‘60 ‘60 ‘61 ‘62 ‘62 ‘63 ‘65 ‘66 ‘71 ‘73 ‘84 Gary Nateman. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-17-05 Minnette Ross Webster. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-14-14 Sandy Mollenauer Kirwood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-27-14 C. Robert Russ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-12-14 Harve Clodfelter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-02-14 Mimi Canowitz Silverstein. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-07-14 Jeannie Kellner Sanderson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-10-10 Warren McLane . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-19-14 Richard Bahr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-06-14 Tom Graham. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-09-14 Linda Weissenbach Helgerson. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-21-14 Jane Woodworth Kondracke. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-17-14 Cynthia Westerman Way. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-08-14 Rick Culbertson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-19-14 Dan Schoedinger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-27-14 John Schmidt. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-30-14 Jon Powers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-25-14 Richard Weis. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-28-14 Sharon Fetter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-27-14 Linda Kerns Diedrich . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-04-14 Jay P. Morris. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-22-14 Trola McCurdy (Teacher). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-21-04