We dedicate this issue of the Journal to our beloved Lila Sapinsley
Transcription
We dedicate this issue of the Journal to our beloved Lila Sapinsley
We dedicate this issue of the Journal to our beloved Lila Sapinsley who gave her all to Laurelmead. Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 1 SAMUEL BENDER—VETERINARY PHYSICIAN Sam was born in Brooklyn in the days when ethnic enclaves were the norm. The blending together of ethnicities, religions and neighbors came much later. Sam recommends Henry Roth’s book “Call It Sleep,” a profound novel of Jewish immigrant life, to accurately describe existence in that era. Sam’s family moved frequently, and by the time he reached fifth grade, he had attended four or five different schools. In 1926 Sam moved to Nassau (Rensselaer County) in upstate New York near Albany. There was a marked change from the paved streets and sidewalks of Brooklyn to this rural setting with its unpaved roads and paths. Sam immedi- Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 2 ately began his duties as a farmhand, cultivating the fields and milking the cows. His new school was a 4-room schoolhouse where the students were summoned to class by the tolling of a bell. There were two teachers: one for English and History, and the other for Math and Geography. Sam will never forget the Principal’s office which housed what they termed a “board of education.” This was basically a paddle board used to discipline the students who had committed infractions. Sam went on to Martin H. Glynn High School, which had the distinction of being dedicated by Franklin D. Roosevelt, who was Governor of New York at the time. It was during the depression, and Sam went back to work on the farm. In the meantime he was searching for a veterinarian school that he could afford. The least expensive was Kansas State College which offered a one- year pre-veterinary curriculum for no tuition, with just an out-of-state fee of $62. Sam’s father offered to pay this fee, which he never did; however, the registrar waived the fee and Sam enrolled. At that time, Kansas was experiencing the devastating dust storms that were the result of a failure to apply dryland farming methods to prevent wind erosion. This era came to be know as the “Dust Bowl” and the “Dirty Thirties.” Regardless of these tumultuous times, Sam was at the beginning of what would become a lifetime career. Sam transferred to Cornell Veterinarian School. During this time, Shirley, a girlfriend from Brooklyn, periodically visited him at his father’s farm with her parents. They became engaged, and then married in the month of May, one month before his graduation from Cornell in June. At the time the government was hiring veterinary college Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 3 graduates to become meat inspectors in Chicago. The poet Carl Sandburg said of Chicago: “It is the Hog Butcher for the World…Stormy, husky, brawling; City of the Big Shoulders.” Sam and Shirley went to Chicago, where he was employed as a meat inspector. He and one other person were in charge of a conveyor belt that passed 600 hogs a day needing inspection. He left after six months for a job as Meat and Milk Inspector in Tupper Lake in the Adirondacks. He was required to inspect two hogs a day instead of 300 for the same salary. At this time he opened his own veterinary practice. Sam had been deferred from military service but, because of his job as a milk inspector, he was deemed necessary for the war effort. There being a meager population at Tupper Lake, Sam found there was not enough to do. He heard that they were searching for a veterinarian, in Greenwich, NY (where Grandma Moses was born.) Sam went to Greenwich, put an ad in the local paper, and started to build his practice, which became quite large. His wife and newborn baby joined him. Sam became engrossed in tending to all the animals of the area, large and small. Shirley was a big city girl, both culturally and educationally. She was also very petite physically. While Sam was out tending to the farm animals, all the chores of the rural home fell upon her. She was a good sport about it, but gradually the situation began to take its toll, and they made the decision to move back to the city. The Benders found a nice location for a veterinarian practice in Riverdale (Bronx). Sam began as a meat and poultry inspector for the City of New York, but that didn’t last very long. He, of course, started a Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 4 veterinary practice, which grew steadily. He counted more and more clients including a number of celebrities. The renowned big band drummer and composer, Gene Krupa, became one of Sam’s clients. Sam would see his wire-haired terrier on a regular basis. Another of his clients was a good friend of the Kennedys. He had a spread in Virginia, which the President and First Lady used as their getaway when they didn’t go to Hyannisport. Their children, Caroline and John, had been given a pony by then VP Lyndon Johnson. This pony injured itself on the White House steps. He was treated, but was not healing properly. They called Sam, who sent down a medication for the pony’s injured leg. It did the trick, and the pony healed completely. The Benders eventually bought a lovely home in Yonkers, where they lived from 1946 to 1984. Sam always concentrated on large animals, but had his share of house pets too. He says that country folk love their animals as animals; city folk love their animals as members of the family. But whatever kind of love was expressed, Sam’s kindness and compassion as well as his understanding and expertise put him in great demand. His relationship with his clients was of utmost importance to him. After retirement, the Benders moved to Smithfield, RI, to be near their daughter. Sam spent time developing his hobbies. One was weaving. He designed and produced wall hangings, scarves, pillow covers and other artistic items made from fabric. He also got involved in making silver jewelry. He would design it, then heat the silver, hammer it, and cast it into a lovely bracelet, earrings or other piece of jewelry that women would wear with pride. When Shirley’s health began to fail, they decided that she should move to Epoch, Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 5 and Sam came to Laurelmead to be close. Now alone, he dabbles in photography and has embarked on an interesting project involving the restoration of photographic scenes that were damaged in a flood. His two children (the third son passed away prematurely), and grandchildren visit him frequently. He also looks back on 75 wonderful years with his beautiful wife, Shirley. Sam is a great asset to Laurelmead, and (he’ll kill me for saying this) everyone who meets him loves him. — J.D. Ames J. D. Ames is a frequent contributor to the Laurelmead Journal. She is pictured here with her beloved companion, Scheffield. Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 6 A Watchmaker’s Epitaph Here lies in horizontal position The outside case of George Routleigh, Watch Maker, Whose abilities in that line were an honor To his profession. Integrity was the Main-spring, And Prudence the Regulator of all the Actions of his life. Human, generous, and liberal, His hand never stopped Till he had relieved distress. So sincerely regulated were his movements, That he never went wrong Except when set agoing By People Who did not know His key. Even then he was easily Set right again. He had the art of disposing his time So well That his hours glided away In one continual round Of pleasure and delight, Till an unlucky moment put a period to His existence. He departed this life, November, 14th, 1802, Aged 57: Wound up In hopes of being taken in hand By his Maker, And of being Thoroughly cleaned, -- repaired, and set Agoing In the world to come. — Contributed by Martha Sherman Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 7 Portraits by Jerry Corwin. Our own Jerry Corwin just celebrated a very special birthday (his 102nd!). Since Jerry is a respected and accomplished artist, the festivities included a sampling of his amazing artwork... Photographs of Jerry’s beloved wife, Phyllis. Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 8 Jerry in his home here at Laurelmead. Sketches that Jerry did during his service in WWII. Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 9 ELSA BAER ZOPFI Switzerland is a country of towering mountains, deep intertwining Alpine lakes, grassy valleys dotted with farms and villages and a few thriving cities which blend the new with the old. If you would visualize a diminutive figure in the Alps, enjoying nature, climbing, hiking, running, skiing, skating and even dancing, you would be imagining the subject of this profile, Elsa Zopfi, nee Baer. The 26 autonomous cantons of the Swiss Confederation offer four official languages: French, German, Italian and Romansh. Elsa speaks all four of them, as Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 10 well as English. Until recently, Elsa walked from Laurelmead to the Boulevard to Seven Stars and back; she hiked along the banks of the Seekonk River. She ran along the corridors of Laurelmead where no one could catch up to her; she had been known to cross-country ski in the open fields in back of Laurelmead; and she cultivated local flora. Today she is a beautiful dancer, which can be attested to by Laurelmead’s Ron Bruno and Dave Alves. Elsa, who spent the first 23 years of her life in Switzerland, comes from the canton of Glarus. It is known for its manufacturing plants and emphasis on industry. The first textile mills in the country were established in Glarus. Elsa’s father founded a window factory which manufactured windows to the specifications of the world’s finest architects. These windows were mostly marketed in Zurich which was fast becoming one of the world’s largest financial centers. Skiing in Switzerland was not popular at the time. Elsa’s father took advantage of the situation and brought to Switzerland Norwegian skiers as instructors. He eventually established the first ski club in the area. One of the most promising members was his daughter, Elsa. Textile mills were springing up all over the country. Elsa became friendly with a highly skilled young textile engineer by the name of William Zopfi. They decided to emigrate to the US, so in 1935 Bill sailed to Webster, MA, where he could get employment in a prominent textile mill there called the Slater Company. Elsa joined him, and within 24 hours of her arrival in the States they married, which was the requirement for attaining the proper immigration papers and, eventually, citizenship. Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 11 Elsa and Bill prospered; Bill ending up with his own mill. Following is a poem written by a friend, Bob Burroughs, on the occasion of their 37th anniversary (I have quoted only the portion pertaining to Elsa): Here’s to Elsa! Here’s to Bill! The Belle and Squire of Kennedy Hill! Elsa is surprising, so gentle and sweet, Yet underneath her skin: real muscle and meat! She can climb the high mountains, ski with the best, And start off any minute at Bill’s slightest behest. She runs the Zopfi budget, and keeps track of all their pelf, And sometimes carries hay to the manger by sliding down herself! And with all the family cooking, and housekeeping beside, She still has time, to the Institute and Currier to ride! So here’s to a wonderful couple, one of the very best we know – At their 37th Anniversary, with (we hope) 20 more years to go.” (The reference to “Institute” and “Currier” in the poem refers to the Currier Institute Art Center in Manchester, NH, where Elsa used to spend a lot of time). Elsa and Bill had three daughters (now living in California, New York and Rhode Island). Over the years Elsa has travelled to Switzerland many times to visit the members of her family who live there. Having grown up near placid lakes and Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 12 spectacular alpine vistas, and then completely enjoying her American family lifestyle, Elsa Zopfi, at the astonishing age of 103, can look back at a wonderful life in every respect. We wish her many more happy years. — J.D. Ames Many thanks to Jim, Ron, Marco, and the rest of the kitchen and dining staff for preparing buffet dinners for the residents during a this winter’s worst snow storms. They did a fabulous job! We also extend our gratitude to Maintenance, Housekeeping, Transportation, Security, and all the other wonderful Laurelmead employees who took such good care of us during this harsh winter. Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 13 A MATTER OF RELATIVITY It was no real surprise to learn that, at ages 87 and 89, Marie Clarke and Banice Webber recently decided to get married. It was the culmination of a beautiful relationship which had its roots in intersecting years in Providence, RI. Marie was an apparel designer and member of the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) faculty and Banice was a practicing physician in Providence. A New Jersey native, Marie graduated from Pratt Institute in 1949. Her first job was as a designer for Max Schenk and Brothers in New York City where she designed for the “Plus Size” woman. In 1950 she married Joseph H. Clarke. In 1957 he was offered a position as Professor in the Department of Engineering at Brown University, and they moved to Providence. Within the next two years they had two Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 14 children and Marie concentrated on family life. After her children had completed high school, she was asked to teach a course in Draping in the Apparel Design Department at RISD. This led to a full-time faculty position in the Apparel Design Department and her appointment as Professor in 1981. Prior to teaching full time at RISD, she worked as a designer for Bancroft Sporting Goods, famous makers of tennis rackets, who wanted to start producing stylish tennis dresses. Marie also served as Head of Design for India Imports of RI. Of her twenty years on the faculty at RISD, Marie remembers most fondly the two she spent in Rome as Chief Critic of the European Honors Program. Modestly, Marie claims that her main qualification was fluency with the Italian language which she had acquired during two sabbaticals spent in Italy with her husband. Marie was honored in her retirement as Professor Emerita. During her years in Providence Marie, her husband and two children often met socially with Banice, his wife Sherry and their family. Banice’s own story began in Providence where he attended Henry Barnard School and Classical High School. His father was a surgeon, an obvious model for the son who was one day to operate at his side. Because of World War II, Banice, a medical student, was drafted and had to leave Brown University. The army sent him to Tufts Medical School from which he graduated in 1947. By that time, the war was over and he completed his internship and residencies in surgery. Although he did not then serve overseas, in 1952, as a member of the army reserve, he was recalled to serve as a surgeon in the Korean War. He was assigned to an Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 15 evacuation hospital. Once out of the army, Banice completed a final year of surgical training at Roswell Park Memorial Institute, the New York State Cancer Hospital in Buffalo, NY. Subsequently, he headed back to Providence and opened his own practice in general surgery. It lasted for 15 years, during which time he served on the staffs of both Miriam and Memorial Hospitals. In 1970 Banice took a daring and life-changing step to launch a new career. He left his practice of general surgery to become a fellow in radiation oncology at Tufts New England Medical Center. Because of advances in new hardware and computer applications for planning and treatment, it was a time of exciting and rapid change in the field of radiation. Commuting daily to Boston, Banice completed his radiation oncology training in 1974, joined the radiation oncology staff at Rhode Island Hospital and became assistant, then Associate Professor of Radiation Oncology at Brown Medical School. Still looking for new fields to conquer, Banice left Rhode Island Hospital in 1978 to open a private practice in radiation oncology. Founded by Banice and named Radiation Oncology Associates, it continues today as North Main Radiation Oncology. Banice and his wife Sherry moved to Laurelmead in 1997. Unfortunately, her illness resulted in death two years later. Meanwhile, Marie, newly widowed, had had a succession of three operations for an infected knee. It was then that her old friend Banice suggested that she give up her home and move into Laurelmead. “First, come to the beach and I’ll take care of you,” he said. “And he did,” Marie interjected, “and we Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 16 lived happily ever after.” Both Marie and Banice feel fortunate to be at Laurelmead where they have been active participants on committees and the Board. They feel grateful to have found each other. Their living room reflects a previous active life and a scientific curiosity. A long-time collector of geological specimens, Banice donated his rock collection to Roger Williams Park Museum, but kept some decorative large pieces that he bought in his travels. Handsome quartz crystals and amethyst are displayed on shelves, with special attention given to a rare white selenite which resembles an artistic rendering of fish tails. A veteran volunteer for good causes, Banice once joined Dr. Elihu Wing and David Burnham on a trip to the Dominican Republic. There they helped run the La Romana Clinic for sick natives. Now, faithfully each week, Banice goes to the Paul Cuffee school to tutor young children and to read to them, smiling, perhaps in recognition of the fairy tale’s ending “…and they lived happily ever after.” — Martha Sherman Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 17 THREE CHEERS FOR DR. LEWIS LIPSITT who received the “President’s Award for Excellence in Faculty Governance” from Brown University on March 3, 2015. Judging by the letter that Lew received from the Nominating Committee (read below), he certainly has an outstanding record of service to be proud of. Congratulations Lew! The following is the letter Lew received informing him of the good news: Dear Professor Lipsitt: On behalf of the Committee on Nominations and the Faculty Executive Committee, it is my great pleasure and honor to inform you that you have been selected to receive this year’s President’s Award for Excellence in Faculty Governance. The Awards Subcommittee of the Committee on Nominations noted your service on the Prizes & Premiums Committee, the Awards & Benefits Committee, the Graduate Council, the Library Committee, the Advisory Committee on Honorary Degrees which you co-chaired, the Nominations Committee, the Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 18 Faculty Committee for the Campaign (08-10), and your second term on the Advisory Committee on Honorary Degrees. What an impressive record of service to Brown’s Faculty, students and administration! Your dedication and your accomplishments are greatly appreciated by our entire university community. These awards will be announced at the next Faculty Meeting on March 3rd. I hope you can attend to receive your award and enjoy the applause. Thank you and congratulations. Bill Simmons Chair, Nominations Committee RHODE ISLAND SETS RECORD FOR SNOW FALL… This past February Rhode Island had a record amount of snowfall topping off at 31.8 inches in just 28 days. That’s nearly 2 feet more than the usual February snowfall! From December through February we set another record with a total of 58.3 inches of snow. Whew! Aren’t you glad that spring is finally here? Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 19 IN THE BLACKSTONE LIBRARY A word of warning: I picked these two books to talk about, not because they are pleasant reads, but because the main characters in each moved me and challenged me to think about how I see the world. Neither of them is difficult and the subject matter of both is, I believe, timely. *** Matthew Thomas’s We Are Not Ourselves is in some ways an old-fashioned family saga. At times while I was reading it, I felt there was just too much of it. The book, however, has stayed with me because of the depth and strength of the main character, a woman I can’t forget. This is Eileen Tumulty, born in Queens in 1941 into an Irish-American family just one generation away from the old country. Determined to escape her background and make a better life for herself, Eileen graduates from college and gets a degree in nursing. Then she falls in love with Ed Leary. He’s a sensitive man, a research scientist who specializes in the brain, and unlike the rough Irish men with whom she has grown up. The two marry, and although they will always love each other deeply, their goals are different. Ed wants only to work, and turns down better job offers to stay with his students at a community college because, he believes, they need his help the most. He thinks that “even minimal indulgences were best lived without.” Eileen, on the other hand, longs to move up in the world and to have nice things. She wants to escape the neighborhood of her childhood. Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 20 The conflict between Ed and Eileen is embodied in a scene in which they take a trip to Fifth Avenue to see the Christmas windows. Ed is repelled by the excess of the displays, but not Eileen: “It would be lovely,” she thinks, “not to have to make every decision in life, to be part of a spectacle brought out once a year for the safest of seasons.” The irony is that it’s Eileen who believes that life is what you make of it. And it is she who makes the big decisions in their life. The couple has one child, Connell. A few years after his birth, Eileen takes a nursing job at a hospital in Bronxville, the sort of community where she would most like to live. But first she realizes her goal of owning a house in Queens, even if to carry it they have to rent out the second floor. But not too long after this—Connell is in high school—Ed, at 51, develops early onset Alzheimer’s. From then on it is Eileen who carries the burden of the household, and indeed she does, even embarking on the insane purchase of a rundown house in her beloved Bronxville. The last third of the novel details the cruel course of Ed’s illness and Eileen’s heroic measures to maintain a degree of sanity and order in their lives. There are long, and I found distracting, sections about Connell and his efforts to deal with his father’s decline. I was always impatient to get back to Eileen because she is such a compelling character and the depth of her struggle to keep Ed going is so beautifully depicted. Near the end of the novel, during one of her visits to Ed’s nursing home when he hardly knows her, she thinks to herself, “This was life: you went down with the ship. Who wasn’t to say that wasn’t a love story?” Who indeed? Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 21 Station Eleven, by Emily St. John Mandel, imagines the world in the aftermath of a flu pandemic that wipes away much of “civilized” life as we know it. Paradoxically, although this is a “dystopia,” the novel manages to convey a strong love of this world, so strong that at moments it brought tears to my eyes. The novel opens in Toronto, during a performance of King Lear just hours before the pandemic begins. The role of the king is played by Arthur Leander, an actor who will have a major role in the novel, even though he dies on stage that night. With him on stage when he collapses is Kirsten, a child actress who will be the central figure in the book. One review complained that the world after the pandemic is not portrayed as “apocalyptic,” enough; I disagree. Generally speaking, there is no order. There is no transportation, no communication, no government, no commerce. Survivors are reduced to living or wandering in small groups, making do as best they can. We meet Kirsten again as a young woman who has thrown in her lot with a group called the “Travel Symphony,” a collection of artists, musicians and actors who put on performances of Shakespeare, reminiscent of traveling players in medieval times. Their motto, borrowed from “Star Wars,” is “Survival is insufficient,” which could well be the theme of the novel, except that to some extent, survival turns out to be sufficient. It’s clear that Mandel sets the novel up this way, not so much to show us what the world could look like after a disaster, but to isolate her characters to make their relationships and emotions clearer. Moreover, the novel moves between the past and the present, the characters as they were in their former life and as they are now. There turn out to be myriad connections, some Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 22 recognized, some not, between them, in both the past and the present, so that we see the two worlds “civilized” and “uncivilized” side by side. There is even a prophet in the novel, a Jim Jones-like figure, who is out to get Kristen, although in the end he fails. Again, the connections between the two of them go deeper than even they imagine. It’s in this weaving of past and present that Mandel builds the emotional impact of this novel, which I found considerable. The characters’ longing for their lost world and their attempt to rebuild their lives are encapsulated in a community that begins again amidst the ruins of a major airport; one of its features is a “Museum of Civilization,” filled with bits and pieces of what used to be. of the world in tatters manages to suggest a deep love of THIS world, our world. At the very end, one of the characters imagines that somewhere “there are ships setting out” again. He likes “the thought of ships moving over the water, toward another world just out of sight.” So yes, there is hope. — Rosemary Colt Again, Mandel’s depiction Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 23 PROFESSOR EMERITA OF BIOLOGY, ANNETTE W. COLEMAN & PROFESSOR EMERITUS OF BIOLOGY, JOHN R. COLEMAN The Department of Molecular Biology, Cell Biology and Biochemistry at Brown University, where both Dr. Annette and Dr. John Coleman were professors, is the largest on-campus department in the Division of Biology and Medicine. It offers a wide range of undergraduate and graduate courses that form the core of modern experimental biology. The faculty offers training in genetics, biochemistry, developmental biology, cellular biology, molecular biology, genomics, proteomics and related subjects. The distinguished faculty, well-represented on editorial and professional boards and societies, directs undergraduate, graduate and postdoctoral work in the Department. Dr. Annette Coleman’s training in biological research included cell differentiation in Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 24 cell cultures of vertebrate muscle and extensive work in both plant and algal cell biology. She has taught courses in subjects ranging from birds to bacteria, and her classes were from freshman to graduate level. She has this to say about her work, Most recently my laboratory has examined the nature, quantity and mode of distribution of DNA genomes of mitochondria and plastids. The second area of laboratory concentration concerns the species problem, how separate species evolve. The work examines particular species and genera of the volvocales, freshwater green algae and abalones, and the analysis includes mating compatibility, chromosome number and DNA relatedness as determined by sequencing. Dr. John Coleman’s research career involved the regulation of gene expression in cells differentiating in vitro, especially skeletal muscle. His teaching at Brown involved embryology and developmental biology at all levels. Recent research endeavors have concerned (a) functional organization of the nucleus of differentiating cells; (b) patterns of gene expression that lead to cell type specification in the developing chicken embryo; and (c) the roles of cell signaling molecules in the forming mouse placenta. The lives and careers of both professors moved steadily eastward. John grew up in Portland, Oregon, but moved to Minneapolis when his mother married a Northwest Airlines pilot, and he graduated from the University of Minnesota. Annette hailed from Iowa, moving to New York City where she attended and graduated from Barnard College. After graduation they each went to Indiana University to do postgraduate work, John in zoology and Annette in botany. They met and fell in love. After two years at Indiana, John moved to Johns Hopkins in Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 25 Baltimore to finish his PhD. They both realized that they did not want to be apart, so after Annette finished her PhD at Indiana, they married and set up household in Baltimore. John finished his PhD and they welcomed their first child at about the same time. Then it was on to post doctorate work at the University of Connecticut for further research training. Annette was at home with their baby, but soon was tapped by the head of John’s research laboratory to work part-time taking care of muscle cells in culture. She actually worked exactly 1/3 of full time to get around nepotism rules. Working together at the University of Connecticut shaped their careers for the next decade. Their next move was to Brown University where they both taught. John was made head of a research lab, and Annette worked in the lab as a research associate who could actually direct the entire lab. By coming to Brown they had achieved their goal of working together while pursuing their careers. At the same time they were very much involved in raising their family, which now consisted of three children. Annette found herself working half-time in the lab, while spending the rest of the time raising her family. They lived close enough to the Brown campus so they could walk to their lab. The financing for the lab came from grants, in particular the National Institutes of Health. They both realized how important it was to keep the grant money coming, and they acted accordingly by balancing their home life with their lab work. One criterion for becoming a full professor at Brown is that you establish an international reputation in your field. John has won competitive fellowships from the National Cancer Institute, the National Institute for Child Health and Human Development, and the Fogarty Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 26 International Center of the National Institutes of Health. The Fogarty sent the family to Stockholm, Sweden, where they again both worked in the same lab while their three children attended public schools and learned to speak Swedish like natives. Upon returning to Brown, John went back to the lab that had been established for him there, and Annette, who had been appointed to an independent faculty position at Brown, started her own lab on plants and algae. Annette subsequently won a prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship which took them and their daughter to Australia (their sons had flown the nest). While there, she worked in the CSIRO, an important national research organization in Australia. John worked in the Biochemistry Department at the University of Adelaide. Drs. John and Annette both retired in 2003 as full professors. They both retain offices at Brown, and use them with some frequency. John has an active association with two lab groups at Brown, and Annette is involved with a botany group and attends their meetings. Annette has been active at Laurelmead on the Building and Grounds Committee. She has organized walks to identify the different trees on the Laurelmead grounds, and supervised labeling them as a means of identification. When there is a question relating to botany, Annette Coleman is the authority from whom to seek advice. John is an active bicyclist and tennis player. He can be seen on many occasions riding on the Boulevard or to his office with his dog, Little, in his basket. He is currently on the Health & Fitness Committee, and is the vice chair of the Budget & Finance Committee. He was a founding member of two ad hoc committees: the Committee on Admission and Retention (CAR), and the Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 27 Committee on Elections (COE). Also, he was just elected to the Laurelmead Board of Directors. John’s professional field, developmental biology, is the parent discipline of stem cell research. He gives a presentation on stem cells, their biology and medical relevance circa annually at Laurelmead. His next presentation, Diseases in a Dish – How Stem Cell Biology Is Being Translated into Clinical Medicine, will be on May 14th in the Odeon. Each year Annette and John host a Winter Solstice Party, for which they keep the wine and the conversation flowing. They cordially invite everyone to attend the next celebration. — J.D. Ames ****** GOVERNANCE AT LAURELMEAD According to the dictionary the word governance means “the way a city, company, etc., is controlled by the people who run it,” or “establishment of policies and continuous monitoring by members of the governing body.” Other definitions are “the rules, practices, and processes by which an organization is directed and controlled,” or “the mechanisms an organization uses to ensure that its constituents follow its established processes or policies.” Several years ago I wrote an article on the structure of the government at Laurelmead. Since we have a large number of new residents I thought I would write another article about the governance here. No one reads the By-Laws for entertainment, and I have heard a number of Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 28 erroneous interpretations at dinner, in the Great Room or in the gym. Since I had to familiarize myself with the By-Laws when I was Board President, I would like to share some thoughts with you. As you all know, Laurelmead is a cooperative independent-living community. As a cooperative residence for seniors, it is unique in Rhode Island. We are not only residents here, but also shareholders/ owners who manage the facility. We are run by an elected Board of Directors (BOD). The major duty of the BOD is to determine and set policy. In addition the BOD engages professional management to take care of the day-to-day operations on a contract basis. The BOD also approves, enforces, and monitors the performance of any contracts for the management of Laurelmead. It decides whether to renew, revoke, or modify such contracts. Among the other responsibilities listed in the By-Laws, the BOD is to establish and/or review an operating budget for the cooperative to be administered by the professional staff at Laurelmead. In other words, “the business of the cooperative is to be managed by the BOD who may exercise all the powers of the cooperative.” The President of the Cooperative is the chief executive of the Cooperative and subject to the control of the directors, has general charge and supervision of the affairs of the Cooperative. The President sees that orders and resolutions are carried out, and makes all decisions and performs all acts necessary to the conduct of the Cooperative between meetings of the Cooperative. The six committees at Laurelmead are advisory in nature. They were formed by the BOD to advise or present new ideas to the BOD. Section 14 in article II of the By-Laws states Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 29 that, “the BOD in its discretion, designates such standing or advisory committees as it may choose. Each committee shall consist of one or more of the BOD Directors and such other persons as the Board may determine.” The BOD is not required to act on all the suggestions presented by the committees, nor is it required that all actions of the BOD come through a committee. However, many of the actions of the BOD that have changed Laurelmead significantly over the past 20 years have been channeled by residents through a committee to the BOD. Laurelmead is a model of democracy in action. I am grateful to the founders for writing such a thoughtful instrument to structure our governance. The By-Laws, which are the basis of the structure of our organization are well thought out, beautifully written, and allow us to exist in order and harmony. Residents who wish to see the By-Laws may read the copy posted in the library, or they can ask Lucinda in the front office for a copy of them. — Phyllis Brown Phyllis has been a resident of Laurelmead since 2002. She was BOD President for 3 years, and served on the BOD for a total of 6 years. Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 30 Oh! How we are all looking forward to the warm, sunny days of spring. The winter of 2015 has been brutal. February was the coldest on record. We had close to 3 feet of snow in just 28 days! The Seekonk River was partly frozen, as was a large part of Narragansett Bay. Little icebergs float to the sea as the rivers thaw. Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 31 Now it’s time to get your gardens ready for their blossoms! Laurelmead Journal • April 2015 • Page 32