CAROL GUZY `77 - Northampton Community College
Transcription
CAROL GUZY `77 - Northampton Community College
WINTER 2001 VOLUME IV NUMBER II Northampton C O M M U N I T Y C O L L E G E M A G A Z I N E “You sense the resilience & beauty in the human spirit, even in the most desolate of times...” CAROL GUZY ‘77 A unique world view — pages 12-18 L E T T E R T O T H E E D I T O R Northampton was touching to me was that I COMMUNITY COLLEGE MAGAZINE knew her late truly enjoyed husband, of whom reading the she wrote. Brent Northampton and I struggled Community through Speech College Magazine OOKING 101 and other with the “Looking ORWARD classes. He was a Forward — good friend. Looking Back” OOKING Northampton article (Issue — ACK Community Fall 2000 — Vol. College was, to IV, No.1).As a me, a LIFESAVER! graduate of NCC’s My father at that second class (’70), time (1969-1970) I related to many became disabled, and money was a of the memories your “grateful gradumajor problem in our home. Added to ates” recalled.Your fine magazine this, I did not want to be too far away evoked pleasant, nostalgic thoughts at any college with my dad so ill. for me. NCC’s closeness to my hometown and I especially liked Earl “Dutch” its reasonable tuition was the perfect Ihrie’s profile since he’s a Phillipssolution.Thank God for those Army burg, N.J. High School graduate like I barracks! Without them I could not was, and Joann Kostenbader’s, because have become the English/Drama she and I share similar, happy recollecteacher I’ve been for the last 20+ tions of Northampton’s past president years. I transferred to West Chester and professors. I, too, remember Dr. State College (now West Chester Richardson’s open door policy — University) after NCC to complete my a wonderful thing for the befuddled, education. Northampton Community confused freshman that I was! (Mary College provided me with a wonderJane Hook, Daniel Larimer and Fred ful start, a great foundation for all my Thomisser were three other great profuture academics — not to mention fessors that I’ll also always revere). the lifelong friendships I acquired Like Mrs. Kostenbader, Dr. de los there. I’ll always be grateful. Santos was a favorite of mine, too, Therefore, because of all this, and mainly because of two things: he the other interesting profiles and NCC lovingly had a framed picture of his news, you can see why I really loved 4-year old child’s crayon drawing in this issue of your magazine. I intend to his office; and, we would often test save it. As Bob Hope sang,“Thanks for each other’s Shakespearean knowlthe memories!” edge. He could recite and quote verbatim numerous passages from the Weda M. Mosellie Bard’s plays like a true scholar! Phillipsburg, NJ Another reason Joann’s profile Dear Editor, I Northampton L F L B Volume IV No. II Editor Paul Joly Contributing Writers Marlene Bayer Heidi Butler Emily Eider Carol Guzy ’77 James W. Harper James L. Johnson ’89 Michael E. Nagel Sandy Stahl Alumni Notes Brian Leidy Design Susan Williams & Associates Photography David Coulter Carol Guzy ’77 Thomas James Hurst Randy Monceaux Philip Stein ◆ President Dr. Robert J. Kopecek Vice President Institutional Advancement Susan K. Kubik Northampton Community College Foundation Board Chairman Paul J. Mack Publisher Northampton Community College Foundation 3835 Green Pond Road Bethlehem, PA 18020 F R O M T H E E D I T O R T A B L E O F C O N T E N T S T he scene is the Northampton Community College alumni awards a few weeks ago. In the room are some people who have lifelong relationships with the college. There are a few like me who are fresh initiates to “The Northampton Way.” And there are others in the room, like the world-traveling three-time Pulitizer Prize winning photo journalist, Carol Guzy, and C.F. Martin, the unassuming CEO of Martin Guitar, who I figure are there to graciously accept another award from yet another community organization ...“Thank you so much ... this place has always been very special to me, good night.” But that’s not what happened.These famous professionals we were honoring were in awe of what we have accomplished. Carol Guzy, The Washington Post photographer who documents wars, disasters, and unimaginable human atrocities, was overcome by emotion at the podium. She couldn’t finish delivering the remarks she had been writing minutes before on a spiral steno-pad in a quiet corner of the reception room. Then C.F. Martin gave a personal testimonial about how much Northampton’s extended influence on him and his employees has meant for the international growth and success of the Martin Guitar Company. Their remarks and those of the other alumni awards recipients made a realization snap into focus. Northampton isn’t a place to them like the colleges I attended are for me. These people weren’t talking about hallowed halls; they were reflecting on Northampton more as a personality or a way of thinking — more as an attitude than a place. If Northampton is an attitude, it’s a darn confident one. It’s the sort of attitude that ignores boundaries and apparent obstacles. It’s the sort of attitude that makes the whole world its backyard. Our theme for this issue of the magazine is Northampton in the World. Think of Northampton as an attitude instead of a place, and the theme makes perfect sense. FEATURES 9 FACULTY CONTRIBUTION: KEEP MOVING Read about the world travels and teachings of several Northampton faculty members. 12 MYSTERY AND HORROR; POETRY AND WONDER Step into the shoes of Pulitzer winner Carol Guzy as she documents powerful moments in time with her camera DEPARTMENTS 2 CAMPUS NEWS 21 ALUMNI NOTES AND PROFILES 31 DONOR SPOTLIGHT These images of compassion, refugees, and nomads show the range of emotion witnessed by three-time Pulitzer Prize winning photojournalist, Carol Guzy, ’77. Her work is featured in this issue. Cover background photo, photos on this page are by Carol Guzy, copyright The Washingtn Post. Cover color photo by Thomas James Hurst. 1 C A M P U S N E W S COLLEGE HONORS ALUMNI AWARD WINNERS D r.Arnold Cook summed it up well. After listening to the reflections of this year’s other Alumni Award winners he observed,“This is a mutual admiration society.We all love the school.” Cook was one of seven people selected to receive the Alumni Association’s highest honor this fall.All seemed genuinely moved by the recognition.As the Alumni Association paid tribute to their achievements, they paid tribute to the role the College has played in their lives. Winners are: Paul & Eileen Colahan ’72: Distinguished Service to NCC Paul and Eileen have been involved in many activities at the College, both as alumni and as parents.Their son Trevor graduated from NCC in 1999; Ryan enrolled this fall. Like their mom and dad, both boys intend to go on for bachelor’s degrees.They may return. Since earning a bachelor’s degree in engineering at the University of Akron, Paul estimates he has taken close to 50 credit and non-credit classes at NCC. The former president of the Alumni Association credits the College with keeping him at the top of his field. Eileen concurs.“NCC gave us the foundation to go on with our education and our careers.” She too was a founding member of the Alumni Association. Marta Boulous Gabriel ’83: Distinguished Service to the Community As director of community relations at Binney & Smith, and now as manager of community relations and philanthropy at Air Products & Chemicals, Inc., Marta has made working for the good of the community a career. But she also devotes much of her personal time and energy to fostering the revitalization of downtown Easton, helping cultural organizations like the Allentown Art Museum and the State Theatre, promoting the Crayola Visitor’s Center, and chairing Easton’s Heritage Day.“When my family and I came to this country and to the Lehigh Valley,” she recalls,“the community embraced us. We feel a responsibility to get involved.” Alumni Award winners from left to right: John Michael, Carol Guzy, Christian Martin, Marta Gabriel, Paul and Eileen Colahan, Dr. Arnold Cook. Carol A. Guzy ’77: Professional Achievement Award Professor Emeritus John Michael: Educator’s Award Carol Guzy’s former nursing professor remembers her as a quiet, unassuming, unpretentious, hardworking student. Today she is an unassuming, unpretentious, hardworking Pulitzer Prize winner, with not just one, but three Pulitzers to her credit. Her career as a photojournalist has taken her around the world. Carol credits her nursing education with giving her photos of the victims of war and natural disasters their edge.“I like to think that photos heal wounds,” she says.“You can see the attributes of a good nurse — compassion, attention to detail, caring for humanity — in her work,” says Barbara Roper, the former director of nursing at NCC. “A kind and caring individual who made the complex simple.”That’s how former students describe the man who built NCC’s architectural technology program.They also remember his integrity, the respect students had for him, his dedication to NCC, and his ability to multitask “well before the age of computers.”A practicing architect who taught at NCC for 29 years, John Michael has received awards before for his teaching and for his architectural designs, but this one has special meaning.“To have your students give you the award, it can’t get better than that,” he beams. He gives a lot of credit to people who worked with him.“You don’t do this alone,” he insists. Christian F. Martin IV: President’s Award Dr. Arnold A. Cook: Honorary Alumnus Award Chris Martin began his college education at UCLA. He finished at Boston University’s School of Management. Along the way he attended NCC at night while working in the family guitar factory.“I love the school,” he says.“I got so much out of it.” Chris put what he learned to good use. At 30 he became chairman and CEO of the Martin Guitar Company, producers of acoustic instruments deemed the finest in the world. He came back to NCC to share his expertise with students through the “Executive-in-Residence” Program, and his company continues to be a “rapid user” of the resources available to employers through the Center for Business & Industry. A well-known orthodontist, Dr.Arnold Cook has studied at Temple, Northwestern, Loyola,Tufts, the University of Southern California, Fairleigh Dickinson, Penn and Pitt. His reaction to being named an honorary alumnus of NCC? “I finally have arrived.”The fact of the matter is, he earned the distinction. In addition to serving on the board of trustees, he started the dental hygiene program, raised money for the dental clinic, established the College’s first endowment, and helped to organize the Foundation and the Alumni Association. Like other alumni,Arnie may be just a little bit biased when it comes to NCC. “This is the most wonderful school in the country,” he says. 2 C A M P U S N E W S CAUSE FOR CELEBRATION IN MONROE D espite good plans and the best of intentions, major construction projects often lag behind schedule. Not so with the $4 million renovation and expansion of NCC’s Monroe Campus. The “new and improved” facilities opened on time this fall to thumbs up from students and the delight of the community. The latest changes triple the size of the blouse factory the College converted to classrooms in 1992, adding 10 new classrooms and computer labs, a modern science lab, a spacious community room, a student lounge, on-campus child care, and a library outfitted with the latest technology. At a dedication ceremony held in October, Janet Weidensaul, former chair of the Monroe County Commissioners, called the completion of the project “a tribute to what can be done when people work together.” Weidensaul described the commissioners’ commitment to contribute $1.5 million towards the expansion as an “investment in human capital that is a nat- ural step for a county that is pursuing a healthy economy.” Mario Scavello, current chair of the commissioners, hailed the opening of the expanded facilities as a “milestone in the history of Monroe County” and predicted that NCC will “be an intricate piece” in the county’s future. Speaking for students, Casey Melcer captured the excitement she and her classmates experienced when seeing plant cells projected from a microscope onto a big screen in the science lab. She also acknowledged that students appreciate being able to get a real meal on campus rather than having to “stave off hunger with a candy bar.” Enrollment at the Monroe Campus has been growing rapidly. Close to 900 students now take credit courses in Tannersville, an increase of 15 percent from a year ago. The College also is a major provider of adult literacy classes and of customized training for local businesses. ALL IN THE FAMILY If you visit the Monroe Campus you will see the latest in educational technology. You will also see a rocking chair. The chair holds a place of honor in the child care center that opened this fall. Here, teachers and early childhood education majors read stories, sing songs, and provide lots of TLC for the youngest students on campus: the preschool set. The new center serves as a safe haven and stimulating learning environment for little ones while their moms and dads attend classes or work. It also provides a learning lab for NCC students preparing for careers in early childhood education. The rocking chair and other equipment in the center were made possible by a gift from the Hannig family. A Monroe County businessman, Chuck Hannig has been involved with NCC since the College first began offering classes in Tannersville. As construction began on the latest addition to the Monroe Campus, Chuck decided he wanted to do something special to celebrate NCC’s success. He talked it over with his three grown children and they were of one mind: endowing the child care center seemed like the perfect choice. The only family member not in on the plan was Joan Hannig — Chuck’s wife and the children’s mother. A guidance counselor, Joan had been devoted to children all her life.The rest of the family wanted to surprise her by naming the child care center in her honor. They pulled it off.When the “Hannig Family Children’s Center” sign was wheeled out in a wagon midway through the dedication ceremony, Joan said she was “shocked.” Had she needed to sit down, the rocking chair was handy. 3 The business community and private donors provided generous support for the expansion project. Contributors honored at the dedication ceremony included Aventis Pasteur, Bell Atlantic Foundation, East Stroudsburg Savings Association Foundation, Instrument Specialties, Inc., the Hughes Foundation, PPL Corporation, PenTeleData, the Pocono Record, Spread Eagle Associates,Weiler Corporation, Joan and Chuck Hannig, Mario Scavello, and Sue LaRose and Roy J. Starner. Speaking on behalf of the faculty, Elizabeth Bodien paid tribute to the workers who toiled through all kinds of weather to complete the project. The sociology instructor said she was reminded of a West African proverb which describes risk-taking as “mouth does not know that its owner is afraid.” Bodien said,“This was a big undertaking. It happened because many mouths said so and planned it. This is the community in community college.” C A M P U S N E W S FEEDBACK Grads Grade NCC Six months to a year after graduating from NCC, 96 percent of the members of the class of ’99 who responded to a survey conducted by the office of planning and human resources were employed or continuing their education. Of those going on for further study, 99 percent said NCC prepared them adequately or better. Eighty-seven percent of those in the workforce gave the College a similar rating. Overall, 97 percent of the survey respondents ranked the quality of education at Northampton as equal to or better than that of other colleges, with 34 percent saying better. High Praise from Middle States Reviewers from an outside accrediting agency gave NCC high marks during the College’s most recent evaluation.The team appointed by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools found Northampton Community College to be “a treasured resource throughout its entire service region,” according to its written report. “The college’s academic and non-credit programs are viable and responsive, fiscal management and accountability have been demonstrated; much progress has been made in delineating institutional objectives; and ... administrative leadership exists at Northampton to ensure the college’s continuing excellence and responsiveness,” the reviewers concluded. Students Excel in Licensing Exams Graduates of NCC’s allied health programs continue to find themselves well prepared for national licensure exams and state boards.The most recent graduates of the dental hygiene, radiography, and veterinary technician programs all achieved 100 percent pass rates on their exams. A pass rate of 88 percent for RNs and LPNs also topped the statewide average. RIDING THE WAVE OF THE FUTURE T his fall Time magazine hailed community colleges as ‘the place to train for dotcom jobs,’ noting that postgraduates are ‘flocking’ to them for technology training. NCC is no exception. Enrollment in computer information technology has doubled in the last two years. New concentrations have been added in networking and software development.A third option — web development — will come on line soon. The growth of these programs has been aided by a $228,000 Link-to-Learn grant that enables the College to provide specialized advising and internships for students interested in high tech careers. NCC has also moved quickly to respond to a critical shortage of electronics technicians. Nationally, the Semiconductor Industry Association estimates that 17,000 4 technicians will be needed in the next two years. Over 1,400 of those openings may occur locally.Working with firms like Lucent Technologies, NCC has put together an accelerated electronics program to prepare students to enter the job market after six months of full-time study. Once employed, they can complete their degree on a part-time basis.The next class starts in February. C A M P U S Nursing is also a career in which demand is expected to exceed supply in the next few years. When officials at the Monroe County Area VocationalTechnical School decided to discontinue the licensed practical nursing program there last spring, NCC stepped in.The College now offers an LPN program in Monroe, as well as in Bethlehem.The College is also giving RNs an opportunity to further their educations through a new partnership with Temple University. Temple officials have agreed to accept all credits from NCC’s RN program towards its bachelor’s degree program and to offer all the additional coursework required for the BSN degree on the NCC campus. Another allied health field experiencing shortages is radiography.According to Skip Zile, director of NCC’s radiography N E W S GOING GLOBAL W program, salaries are increasing and some hospitals have begun offering signing bonuses to attract qualified candidates. Zile fields many calls from employers looking for radiographers because NCC is the only college in the area to offer an associate’s degree in this field.The closest other programs are in Reading and Wilkes-Barre. NCC recently began offering advanced skills internships for students who want to specialize in computer tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), interventional radiography (IR), or nursing skills. 5 hen it comes to learning English, practice means progress. Caregivers in families who come to the United States with young children often have difficulty mastering the language because they are isolated at home while their spouse is at work. NCC's family literacy programs give parents and children a chance to become comfortable communicating in English by pairing literacy classes for adults with childcare. While their moms, dads or grandparents work on their reading skills, children become bilingual by interacting with other youngsters in NCC’s early childhood education program. “Parents are a young child’s primary teachers,” explains Program Manager Nancy Leary. “By working with the parents, we can develop literacy in both the adults and children at the same time.” State grants enabled the College to start family literacy programs in Wayne and Pike counties and helped fund the addition of a second site in Bethlehem. C A M P U S N E W S SO MUCH TO DO, SO LITTLE TIME N CC students, faculty and staff had some hard choices to make this fall. Finding it impossible to “do it all,” they had to pick and choose among the many tempting programs and activities that took place on campus last semester. Beginning in August.... Quadfest got the new academic year off to a lively start as some of the hottest bands in the Lehigh Valley performed in the Quad during the first few weeks of classes. NCC’s version of Musikfest also featured free food. Rumor has it you can look forward to a reprise toward the end of the spring semester. On to October... No one got voted out of the dorms, but residence hall students formed strong alliances with their hallmates as they competed in a monthlong series of challenges in the NCC version of “Survivor.” Victory went to the “Tabun,” but other tribes are busy plotting new strategies for this spring’s sequel. Stay tuned! ◆ The Cohen Lecture brought liberal political commentator Jeff Cohen and his conservative counterpart Cliff Kincaid to NCC for a spirited debate about the presidential campaign just weeks before Election In September.... Close to 300 guests savored a taste of Southern elegance at “Music, Menus & Magnolias,” a black-tie dinner sponsored by the NCC Foundation. The soiree showcased the skills of NCC’s culinary arts and hotel/restaurant management students and raised more than $30,000 for scholarships, lecture series, faculty development, and other enhancements to the academic program. ◆ Classical musician Martha Curtis inspired an awestruck audience with her virtuosity on the violin and the true tale of how she risked losing her musical ability and her life by undergoing radical brain surgery to stop epileptic seizures that impeded her training and performing. 6 Day. One thing on which they agreed was the importance of students getting involved in the political process. “A good economy has caused young people to think politics doesn’t matter,” Kincaid said. “We have the illusion of peace and prosperity, but all that can easily change.” C A M P U S Students took over the world at the World Game Workshop, negotiating to solve problems ranging from drought to disposal of toxic waste. In this interactive exercise, which has been staged in 35 countries around the globe, students learn the realities of interdependence. Being a world leader is “stressful,” said one participant. “I had to make hard choices.” Still, most left the “game” more optimistic about the future than they had been when they started. N E W S And in November.... NCC’s theatre season opened with a production of “Three Sisters,”Anton Chekhov’s classic drama about coping with change and lost dreams. ◆ The first-ever “Chef-in-Residence” program brought Jack McDavid of “Grillin’ & Chillin’” fame to NCC’s kitchen. Known as “Philadelphia’s most colorful restauranteur,” McDavid had a capacity crowd drooling in Lipkin Theatre as he demonstrated techniques for preparing dishes like “Sweet Potato and Chipolte Quesadillas” that have made his restaurants so popular. The next day, McDavid shared more of his secrets with culinary arts students as they worked with him in preparing a $100 a plate dinner that showcased his innovative approach to American cuisine. The Chef-in-Residence program has been endowed by The Wood Company, a Lehigh Valley-based leader in hospitality and food service management, to enhance the education of students in NCC’s culinary arts and hotel/restaurant management programs and to highlight the College’s role as a quality provider of employees in the field. ◆ The golf team brought home a state championship, edging out Penn StateMont Alto in a match played under blustery conditions in Happy Valley. All four NCC golfers — Chris Gebhart, Mike Moran, Mike Pankovits and Jake Stefani — earned berths on the PCAA’s all-state team. Pankovits was selected from golfers in the eastern conference as the first winner of the Wes Olson Memorial Award.The award recognizes good charactors, honorable behavior and an appreciation for the values of the game.All the college’s sports teams posted impressive records.The baseball team finished its regular season with a perfect 18-0 record and won the EPCC title, and the women’s volleyball team and men’s soccer both reigned supreme in the EPCC’s northern division.Way to go, Spartans! 7 C A M P U S N E W S PINCH ME NOW By Heidi Bright Butler I magine this: You’re 20 years old. You’ve worked hard for as long as you can remember. You started helping out on your great grandfather’s farm when you could barely lift a hay bale. When you turn 16, you get hired at Wendy’s. For 3 years you go directly from high school to work every afternoon, flipping burgers until closing time. You buy your own clothes and scrape together enough money to buy a 1987 Tempo. Although your job doesn’t leave much time to study, you manage to graduate. You always wanted to go to college, but you assume it’s financially out of reach. Instead you find yourself working at a series of temporary jobs. One day at work your manager pulls you off the line. You put down the box you’re assembling and step outside, where cameras are rolling. They announce you are one of four finalists eligible for the $10 million grand prize in an Internet contest you entered. The next week you board a plane for L.A. with your mom and dad and your kid brother. When you land, there’s a chauffeur holding a sign with your name. They put you up at a hotel on the Avenue of the Stars. President Clinton checks in a little later.You don’t hang around for his autograph because they gave you $1,000 spending money to “do the town” before the drawing. After a stop at Universal Studios, it’s on to Mann’s Chinese Theatre where you discover that your hands are a perfect match for Clint Eastwood’s. Lunch at the hotel the next day costs $65.The food is good, but what a waste. You lose your lunch because you’re so nervous about the drawing. It’s going to be on national TV, and you don’t know how to act. At the rehearsal you get to meet talk show host Leeza Gibbons. She’s nice. And down to earth. They tell you a model will escort you on the set. She’s so skinny you’re afraid to take her arm for fear you’ll break her. The moment has arrived. You don’t win the $10 million, but...You do win a brand new baby blue Mercedes 2000 SLK convertible. After the show, you get whisked off to a Hollywood party where you run into Adam Carolla of “The Man Show.” You know some pretty perverted people, but “this guy is 100 times worse.” You meet one of the show’s Juggy Girls who’s wearing a pink thong. Here comes Cameron Diaz. She’s not perverted. She’s fine. About this time you’re saying,“Pinch me now. I must be dreaming.”You’re not. But you’ve got other dreams. Before heading home, you thank the producers. You tell them you want to sell the car and use the money to go to college. They give you a chance to test drive it, but you know that car won’t take you where you want to go. You stick with your decision, and they respect you for it. Not only do they sell the convertible, they offer to pay the taxes for you. You take your winnings and invest some for 8 retirement and some as a “nest egg,” so you’ll have it when you’re ready to start a family. When you get back to Bangor, you go back to your job at Wendy’s. You’ve always worked. You believe people enjoy life more when they earn their own way. “It teaches responsibility,” you say. Over the summer you enroll at Northampton Community College. Sadly, your mother dies before she gets to see you start classes.You dedicate your education and all you hope to accomplish to her. She would be very proud. Your name is Dave Achenbach. And this wasn’t a dream. Dave Achenbach is studying criminal justice at NCC with the goal of becoming a state trooper. F A C U L T Y C O N T R I B U T I O N S KEEP MOVING “Keep Moving! Steam, or Gas, or Stage, Hold, cabin, steerage, hencoop’s cage — Tour, Journey, Voyage, Lounge, Ride, Walk, Skim, Sketch, Excursion, Travel-talkFor move you must! ‘Tis now the rage, The law and fashion of the Age.” BY LEN ROBERTS Professor of English T he phrase quoted above was written by Samuel Taylor Coleridge in 1824, long before travel tourism sprang up as an industry that annually sends millions of people to near and distant destinations around the globe. The impetus for such travel, however, remains the same these days as it did back then: to put considerable distance between us and our homes so we can see our lives from a fresh perspective and return renewed. In the past several years, four professors from Northampton Community College joined this traveling show, but with a particular goal: education. Elizabeth Smith, professor of chemistry; Craig Kilpatrick, professor of psychology; Duncan Howden, professor of culinary arts; and I took to the road to teach and to absorb what we could learn, bringing back our experiences to enrich our own and others’ lives. Liz Smith visited the 64th latitude in Joensuu, Finland, during March, just managing to escape the 18-hourlong nights by about a month, although she couldn’t avoid the dwindling, 10-foot-high remains of snow piled everywhere she looked. The winter over, Liz recalled, the Finns were ecstatic to see the sun and such small snow mounds! During her two weeks of teaching chemistry to environmental/ engineering students and culinary/nursing 9 students at the University of Joensuu, Liz also experienced the personal silence which the Finns are famed for internationally. “Although my students were hard working and intelligent, they didn’t talk or laugh much,“ Liz said, adding with a wry smile that, with the help of Tastykakes, Lance crackers and Hershey Bars, she managed to “melt the ice,” so to speak, and get the students not only to warm to her lectures but to speak out during class sessions. Craig Kilpatrick visited several colleges and universities during his sabbatical leave in order to evaluate possibilities for student and faculty exchanges with Northampton Community College. His travels took him to England, Ireland, Spain, Italy, Austria, Germany, and the Netherlands. Although his days were filled with meetings with faculty and administrators, and in some cases with students, Craig also managed to see some sites, one of his favorites being Freud’s home in Vienna. During his visit there he attended a lecture in Freud’s former living room along with other psychologists and psychiatrists from many parts of the world. “It was a highlight of my trip,” he said, adding that “Freud, although neither alive or generally doing very well, is apparently doing better in mainland Europe than in the United States.” With international contacts made Professor Len Roberts (third from left) with students in Finland. I have also had the good fortune to travel and teach abroad: twice as a Fulbright Scholar and once as a Fulbright translator of Hungarian poetry. My first teaching appointment was for a year at Janus Pannonius University in Pécs, Hungary; my wife, Nancy, and two sons accompanied me, which made the excursion as personally delightful as it was academically stimulating. Although the overall experience was exciting, sometimes frightening, and always renewing, there are particular images which stand out, such as one afternoon in mid-winter — it seemed it was always winter there — when I was teaching on the fifth floor of the university building. It was about 4 p.m., bitterly cold, the sky blue-red with approaching sunset and the wind whistling through several broken window panes. Wearing coats, hats, scarves, gloves, the 10 for possible student and faculty exchanges, Craig returned home bearing a new-found love of Austrian ale as well as new and exciting perspectives he intends to integrate into his work at the College. students bundled up, hunched over their desks. Steam rose so thickly from their mouths that, when a discussion occurred, the classroom air seemed to be one big cloud. And still they listened intently to the lecture, wrote notes with those gloved hands, and learned as much as they could, grateful to be there, not one complaining. Or another image: 24 graduate students in my American poetry class came to our apartment weekly to watch videos about major American poets. (I was the only instructor at the university to have the American Embassy’s one color television set in my apartment, so I used it to full advantage.) The first night each of the students, who were generally so poor they slept six to a dorm room and hung their food out the windows in winter to keep it refrigerated, brought a gift, as is the custom in Hungary when visiting someone at Duncan Howden, professor of culinary arts at Northampton Community College, also had a terrific, albeit cold at times, teaching experience during his stay in China. Based at the University in Tinjin, Duncan taught various “Western” cooking techniques to a four year Hotel/Restaurant Management class and a two year culinary arts class. His hosts and students were welcoming and warm, he recalled, but the building that housed the teaching kitchen had no heat at all. This kitchen/classroom also had several broken windows, so, when it snowed — which it did often — the flakes would sweep in gusts across the room. One afternoon the snow fell so heavily, and there was such a strong wind, he and his students spent most of their time sweeping and shoveling the aisles so the snow would not settle and ice over. Still, they persevered and learned, Duncan said, even when it came to cleaning up, having to wash the pots and pans in cold water, for there was no running hot water in the entire building. When he wasn’t teaching, Duncan spent much of his time shopping for the food products needed for his classes. Hopping on his bicycle, snow or no snow, he would peddle to the local outdoor market with at least three Chinese colleagues — an interpreter, a money manager, and a member of the cooking program. One time Duncan pointed to a live fish which the vendor instantly picked up and delivered, wildly flapping, into Duncan’s hands. Another day, in the same market, Duncan selected a particular cut he wanted from an entire carcass of beef lying on a table, and the butcher hacked it off, bone and all, and once again plopped it, dripping, into Duncan’s hands. Luckily, members of his group were prepared for such fresh goods, carrying plastic bags and paper wraps. “In the history of my career I have never had the opportunity to do such teaching and traveling,” Duncan said, and then added that “these memories are still very clear to me. I feel privileged to have had such a terrific experience.” I can only nod my head in agreement, as I know Professors Smith and Kilpatrick would, grateful to have lived and taught in other cultures, to “keep moving,” snow and all. home: flowers, a handmade card, a bottle of wine which probably cost the student a few days’ wages, etc. The remarkable image that stays, though, is that, when I offered the students pizza and Cokes, each student took only one slice and only one can of soda — for the entire night. I well remember going from each to each during our break, asking if he or she would like another slice, another can, and all 24 politely saying no. My wife and sons have their images, too, but one that stands out, and will relate to some of Duncan’s experiences in China, concerns bananas. A local market had tacked posters up announcing that a truckload of bananas was coming to town, and, since we had not eaten fresh fruits or vegetables for a few months, Nancy determined she would lay her hands on some of these bananas. So she and my sons, Josh and Brad, rose the next day at 4 a.m. to stand in line for the store to open and the fruit selling to begin. Now this was in January, bitter January, and when they got there, they found a good hundred hardy Hungarians in line before them. After waiting for five hours, they watched as the last three bananas were sold to a woman just in front of them. To this day, we all remember the banana story, and resurrect it at those times when we say we need a half dozen éclairs or $20 to eat at the mall. Would a banana do? brings us back to our senses. I found the same love of learning, the same work ethic, during my sixmonth Fulbright to Finland, although the students were much better off, with intact windows, refrigerators in their dorms, and yes, somehow, plenty of bananas. Because, as in Hungary, only the top eight to 10 percent of all high school students are given the opportunity to attend university, and because, as a Fulbright Scholar, I was given the top 15 literature majors in their fifth year (equivalent to our first year of graduate study), I had terrifically intelligent and motivated students. I, as Liz, found the students to be quiet initially, but once they got used to the “talky”American, the discussions flourished. One of the personal highlights of our six-month stay there was a four-day dogsled safari on the Arctic tundra during the darkest nights of the year, December 20-23. My sons and I drove our own dogsleds from station to station, our nightly lodgings consisting of canvas pole tents with a hole cut at the top where our fire smoke escaped and we could espy the brightest stars — at 30 degrees below 0 Farenheit — we’d ever seen in our lives. — Len Roberts 11 B Y C A R O L G U Z Y ’ 7 7 Photojournalist, The Washington Post genuine courage.You sense the resilience and beauty in the human spirit, even in the most desolate of times. That moves you deeply.And you continue to record their plight. It’s haunting to voyage into so many different souls. What we witness never leaves us. It clings to us. It changes us, sometimes in a small way, sometimes greatly. We see people’s most intimate moments — their joys and sorrows, their triumphs and tragedies. Always, trying to translate what you experience becomes a challenge. It’s never, ever the same as being there, walking in someone else’s shoes. But if we capture those moments and communicate them successfully, it can provide greater knowledge and enrich the spirit. It can strengthen our sense of purpose. It gives us a deeper compassion and respect for all life. Black and white. Rich and poor. Men and women.Yes, it draws us closer even to the animals with whom we share this earth — the most silent of victims. We’ve proven selective compassion doesn’t work. There’s a quote I love. It goes:“Tell me, I’ll forget. Show me, I may remember. Involve me, I’ll understand.” Lately, new technology has grabbed everyone’s attention. Digital cameras. Faster computers. But remember, they are merely tools. It’s eyes and minds and hearts, passion, and commitment that make the most compelling images. It’s the people in the pictures and those who view them that are the important ones. Photographs can be an important tool in these times of increasing divisiveness and separatism. They can build bridges of empathy.They can show our differences. They also can T he more time passes, the more I realize what a privilege it is for us to bear witness to history — both the major news events and the small moments of humanity. Photographers spend a lot of time looking for the right light. But the most important light we glimpse and attempt to capture is the radiance within every being. They call it soul. At times I reflect on just why we do this.There’s certainly an emotional toll from witnessing man’s inhumanity, especially covering stories in places like Haiti and Rwanda. I’ve seen wretched poverty there. Men beaten to death by mobs. Refugee children watching their parents die on the side of a road, their raspy moans giving way to eternal silence. Children suffering for politics and ethnic hatreds they do not comprehend. In my life I’ve seen the eyes of evil, the hands of injustice, the face of repression. I hear people say,“Oh, no. Not another story on Haiti!” “We’ve seen enough of refugees.” “Cliché; been there, done that.” But it’s hard to tell that desperate woman holding her starving child she’s a cliché.These people can’t turn the page when they don’t like the story.They can’t change channels.They remain mired in reality long after the headlines fade away. There’s guilt:You know you can get on a plane and fly home to comfort while others remain trapped in their own personal hell. How many pictures can you take until someone really sees? How many times can your own heart break? Are there any lasting answers? But then you see a gesture of tenderness. Or witness 12 Photo by Carol Guzy © The Washington Post MYSTERY AND HORROR; POETRY AND WONDER show the qualities that make us all part of the human family. Seeing too much death and destruction can generate a helplessness that numbs or angers readers, and fingers start pointing at the media for running those disturbing images. It’s easier to criticize a photographer or editor than to address the root of the problem. But there is a great danger in censoring reality. As long as abuse and conflict and inequality remain, it is our responsibility to have a social conscience and bring these issues to light, for others to judge and make educated choices. As Eugene Smith once said,“Let truth be the prejudice.” A photograph can be a powerful witness and an eloquent voice for those who have none. Pictures inform, educate, enlighten, captivate, spur governments into action.They are historical documents and poignant reminders of our human frailties. Sometimes they touch our very souls. And, yes, at times they make a difference. Perhaps a small difference to one person for one moment on one day, but meaningful nonetheless.They’re our life’s work, our legacy. Sometimes on the pages of a newspaper we see things that tear at the very fiber of civilization.We are repulsed at the sight of a man’s brutal death at the hands of a vigilante mob in Port-au-Prince, desperate for revenge after the killing of their beloved community leader.We taste his fear, hear his last heartbeat, and mourn the loss of hope in a land where the only justice is that of the streets. We join in the revelry of a democratic convention, and journey into the world of nomads, living with grace and elegance on the harsh desert sands of Africa.We smile at the tender innocence of a baby’s bare bottom wrapped in the warmth of family. With pictures we can weep for Rwanda and rage at injustice everywhere.We also celebrate the daily life around us. It’s mystery and magic. It’s poetry and wonder. 13 Photos by Thomas James Hurst The photojournalist regularly works in conditions others would find impossible. These photos of Carol Guzy in the field were taken by a freelance associate, Thomas J. Hurst. In the page 12 photo, a Haitian man’s trial and sentencing is carried out by an angry mob. Ethnic Albanian families were put to flight by the Serbs’ policy of “ethnic cleansing.” The flood of humanity into neighboring Albania and Macedonia was massive. Fenced camps became small communities with evidence of the tenacity of the human spirit in the strong family bonds that endured the hardships. 14 Photo by Carol Guzy © The Washington Post 15 “Remember” Photo by Carol Guzy © The Washington Post Photos by Carol Guzy © The Washington Post In Zaire, Rwandan refugees, many of them children, are fed by international aid workers (above). In Haiti, the photographer bears witness as American soldiers step in to stop mob violence (right). S T U D E N T F E A T U R E S NIGERIA TO NORTHAMPTON B Y S A N D Y S TA H L W hen Fatima Adamu arrived in this country from Nigeria to start college, she pretty much kept to herself. “When I got here in the spring of 99, I was just terrified. I was a very shy person, very introverted. I used to be miserable because you’re adjusting to people, and the way people communicate is very different,” she explained. “Over there (in Africa), people are more quiet. Here, people are more vocal. Something as simple as common courtesy — when you pass someone you smile at them — was hard to deal with.The first time someone did that I was like, ‘You don’t know me.What are you smiling for?’ I thought that was extremely weird at first.” These days, you’d never know that Adumu had any trouble adjusting.The bubbly 19-year-old has integrated herself well into student life at Northampton. She is the current chairperson of the student senate, and is planning to transfer to Temple, Lehigh or Drexel to study electrical engineering or architecture. “I knew I was going to be applying to other colleges, and a good GPA is not enough.You need something more,” she said of her decision to join the senate.“I’m starting to feel comfortable in the role. I was so used to being passive and not being the one who has to control everything.The first meeting I wondered what had I gotten myself into, but by the third meeting it was much better.” Though Adamu was born in Philadelphia and is an American citizen, she considers herself an international student. She moved to Nigeria as a preschooler, and lived there until a week after graduating from high school at age 16. Her American mother and Nigerian father had met in college in the U.S., so Adamu says it was always assumed that she would come to the U.S. for college. “When I was little and I would visit the states, my grandmother would always bring me to NCC,” she said.“It seemed like a natural progression to come here.” When Adamu graduates, she will be the third generation to attend 19 Northampton: both her mother, Kathryn Holmes-Adamu, and her grandmother, former NCC coordinator of tutorial services Louise Johnson, preceded her. Growing up with American ties in Africa has afforded Adamu the ability to speak three languages: English, Nupe and Hausa, the most widely spoken language in West Africa. It has also allowed her to explore two different schooling systems. On a return trip to Nigeria last summer,Adamu discovered that her friends were jealous that she could pick out her class schedule at Northampton. “They thought I was so lucky. In Nigeria, they just hand you a schedule and you have to be there,” she said. Though she said she’s enjoying her time in the States,Adamu misses the food she grew up with. “There’s a certain flavor you can’t replicate.When we used to cook, the tomatoes would be blended fresh.Then you’d have to go to the market, buy the spinach and cut it up,” she said.“Most of the time you’d buy a chicken, then bring it home and pluck it and clean it. The taste is totally different. I mean, when we had lamb it was fresh because my dad killed it!” Adamu tentatively plans to live in the U.S. after graduation, because she feels she’ll have more opportunity here. She said she’d love a job that would allow her to travel, especially to Europe. “I think I got it from my mom, who was in the Peace Corps,” she said.“I want to see the world!” S T U D E N T F E A T U R E S A STUDENT LEADER AND A WORLD AMBASSADOR J A M E S W. H A R P E R A ltaf Visram finds himself in Pennsylvania, a long way from his home in Kenya. Vishram is one of many students on the NCC campus who come from abroad. Natural questions arise. How did he get here? Why did he enroll here? What are his impressions and where will he go from here? Altaf’s brother left Kenya for Kutztown University in 1995. Only a third of the 60,000 high school gradu- ates in Kenya are accepted by Kenyan universities. According to Visram, they must be the “top level exceptional” students. Many serious students seek opportunities in the United States. The older Visram brother searched many schools, and found Kutztown offers both the international student aid and curricula he was looking for. So when Altaf was ready for college, he came to the Lehigh Valley to live with his brother so that he might apply to a school that met both his educational and financial criteria. 20 It was Northampton that was the clear winner. Computer science has always been his career choice, and he was impressed by NCC offerings. He also met a friend who studied at NCC and encouraged him to apply. It has been a positive match. Visram plans to complete the Northampton associate degree program in 2001, then transfer to an area four year college to complete his bachelor of science degree. Then he would like to return to Africa and do “community work.”After all, he states,“Citizens of the world have no option about where they will be born. It’s time to help move us all toward one community.” What has been the most difficult transition from Africa to Bethlehem Township? “Cold weather,” is an immediate response. Next most difficult — food. Altef is a Muslim and his diet is of necessity determined by his religion. He and his brother shop in New Jersey for the specialties they need, but attempting to eat on campus has been a real challenge. Currently, Altef serves as president of the International Students Organization and as a member of the Student Senate. He has also developed a Web site for Northampton students to buy and sell used books. Altaf Visram is clearly an international student who is taking a leadership role while he is here in America and a person who believes in giving back to the world in which he finds himself. A L U M N I ACCOUNTING ◆ 1996 Janis E. Strohl has received a bachelor of arts degree in accounting from Muhlenberg College in May 2000. Janis lives in Allentown with her husband. ◆ Ana Silva Martins obtained a civil engineering degree from Villanova University in 1988. In 1994 she obtained her Pennsylvania P.E. license. Currently she works as a senior project manager/engineer at The Newton Engineering Group P.C. in Allentown. She lives in Bethlehem with her husband, Fernando Martins, and their two children, Ashley and Nicole. ◆ Richard Allen Beegle, Jr. and Jean Ann Henshaw were united in marriage in St. Anne’s Catholic Church in Bethlehem on September 2, 2000. Richard is employed by RC Cement. The couple lives in Bethlehem Township. ◆ Cathy A. Williams is an administrative assistant for Armenti Planning Company in Allentown. She resides in Hellertown. ◆ 1973 Stephen J. Raykos is an audit manager for Sovereign Bank,Wyomissing. He and wife Barbara live in Northampton. ◆ 1978 Susan (Seiple) Michalek is employed by the state of Delaware’s Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, Division of Water Resources. The division of water resources awarded Susan the 1999 Award of Recognition in the Office Support Professional Field for her leadership and commitment to the division’s accounting branch. ◆ 1993 Judy Ann Brimmer-Stoll is employed by the U.S. Postal Service and is married to Robert Jeffrey Stoll ’95 (criminal justice). Robert works in the customer service department at Intermedia Marketing Concept in Whitehall. ADVERTISING DESIGN ◆ 1994 Theresa Ann Butler of Bethlehem is employed as a secretary in the alumni office at Lehigh University. ◆ 1995 Amy Hrizuk of Northeast Harbor, Maine, is a graphic artist at The Ellsworth American newspaper in Ellsworth, Maine. She works in the composing room, specializing in ad building and page layout. She also does design/layout work for the monthly newsletter of the Ellsworth Area Chamber of Commerce. Amy, who received a bachelor’s degree at Millersville University, has been very successful in her career and credits this to her education at NCC. N O T E S ◆ 1996 Janet Jensen is a graphic designer for Silhouettes in Easton and lives in Riegelsville with husband, Eric. ARCHITECTURAL TECHNOLOGY ◆ 1976 Scott M. Higgins of Northampton is employed by Lucent Technologies. ◆ Warren F. Knight of Mashpee, Mass., works in Sagamore, Mass. as a landscape architect for Atlantic Design Engineers. He is professionally associated with the ASLA of Massachusetts. ◆ Bryan Allen Silva and Dana Lynn Dominko were married on October 1, 2000 in St. Paul’s Lutheran Church in Catasauqua. Bryan works at the Jack Creek Steakhouse restaurant. Bryan and Dana live in Allentown. ◆ 1982 Carla M. (Frable) Binder is the owner of Creative Framing by Carla, Palmerton. She lives in Palmerton with her husband, Philip. ◆ 1986 Todd Ginder is a drafting instructor at the Wilkes-Barre Vocational Technical School. Todd and his wife’s new baby, Stephen Todd, was born March 24, 2000. AUTOMOTIVE TECHNOLOGY ◆ 1982 Stephen T. Duna of Quakertown is attending Villanova University graduate school in pursuit of his master’s degree. He graduated cum laude in 1999 from Cedar Crest College, where he obtained a bachelor of arts degree. ◆ 1992 William Strubinger is employed by Kovatch Chevrolet Cadillac in Lehighton. He lives in Lehighton with his wife, Jessica. ◆ 1995 Jason A. Kornhausl and Julie A. Woolever exchanged vows at Sacred Heart Church in Bath on September 25, 1999. Jason works for Saturn of Route 33 as an automotive technician. The couple lives in Danielsville. ◆ 1996 Kevin Ferenchak and Michelle Shope ’95 (early childhood) were married in Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church in Whitehall in September 2000. Michelle works for Adams Outdoor Advertising as an administrative assistant. Kevin is an automotive technician at Saturn of Route 33. The NCC couple lives in Northampton. ◆ 1987 Brian Beck is an automotive technician employed by Rentschler Chevrolet, Slatington. He and his wife, Victoria Ann, live in Palmerton. ◆ 1995 William Rodriguez of Allentown 21 works as an automotive technician at the Strauss Discount Auto store, Bethlehem. BANKING ◆ 1992 Donna Jean Roseberry Weaver is the owner/partner of the Nazareth Hardware Company. She and her husband, Bruce, live in Nazareth. ◆ 1996 Dava S. Krall has a new job at First Union National Bank in Allentown. She is an assistant portfolio manager at its financial center, and is professionally associated with AIB as a director. Dava continued her education at Penn State University. Dava and her husband, David, live in Andreas. BIOLOGICAL SCIENCE ◆ Maureen E. Winch lives and works in Bangor. She is a physical therapist at Lehigh Valley Physical Therapy. BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION ◆ 1975 Mitchell R. Huston, Northampton, is a marketing supervisor at Ingersoll-Rand, Washington, N. J. ◆ 1977 Viera M. Hummel is a supervisor for D’Angelo’s Services, Bethlehem. He lives in Bethlehem with his wife, Debra. ◆ 1988 Dolores Stanton, Bethlehem, works as an operations director for Lehigh County. ◆ 1994 Duane W. Morris and Michele L. Kneller ’93 (fashion merchandising) were married on October 2, 1999. Duane is employed by Applebee’s Restaurant. Michele is a graduate of Centenary College and is employed by M&T Bank.They live in Fishkill, N.Y. ◆ Jennifer Brockman is an adoption social worker for Adoptions From the Heart, Hellertown and is a graduate of Pennsylvania State University. BUSINESS MANAGEMENT ◆ 1989 Trevor J. Hahn is enjoying his new home in Macungie with his wife, Kathryne. Trevor has landed a great job with Mack Trucks, Inc. of Allentown. In addition to his education at NCC,Trevor attended Allentown College of St. Francis de Sales and has completed training at the Dale Carnegie Institute. ◆ 1995 Christine Marie Holland Sleeman and Dr. Geoffrey Scott Holland were married September 18, 1999 in Palmer Moravian A L U M N I N O T E S CHEMICAL TECHNOLOGY COMPUTER INFO SYSTEMS ◆ 1995 Debra D’Alessio of Nazareth is working toward her bachelor of science degree in business at Allentown College of St. Francis de Sales. She also works as a precision technician for Binney & Smith, Inc. of Easton. ◆ 1996 June A. Crane lives in Orlando, Florida, where she is employed by Parkway International, Orlando.A licensed realtor, June specializes in vacation ownership packages. ◆ 1993 Helen F. Lakatos of Bethlehem is employed by Lehigh University as a senior computing consultant in the information resources department at the Linderman Library. Helen was a former member of the NCC computer services staff ◆ 1995 Hatice Adar, her husband, Nihat, and their two children live in Eskisehir, Turkey. Hatice is employed by Anadolu University in Turkey. ◆ 1996 Debra Kaczmar of Walnutport reports that she is very content working for the Bureau of Information Systems in Harrisburg. She pursued her associate’s degree after working 23 years with the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. In 1998, she took a job doing COBOL mainframe programming without any classroom experience. She loved it but knew that her real love was fixing computers. She transferred in September of 1999 to the Commonwealth’s user support area as a distributed systems specialist, where she is today. ◆ Peter Golian of Freemansburg works at InfoNXX, Inc. in Bethlehem as a developer. COGNITIVE RETRAINING Dale Knisley, a former Northampton nursing student, was profiled in the Neighbors section of The Morning Call, October 19, 2000. ◆ 1991 Dusty Draffen Browne of Wimberley, Texas, is employed at Texson Management Group in Austin, Texas. Since graduating from NCC, Dusty has earned a bachelor’s degree in nutrition and a Ph. D in psychology. She is doing an internship at a treatment center for drug and alcohol abuse and plans to work as a counselor in this field when her internship has been completed. COMMERCIAL ART Church, Palmer Township. Christine works as a human resources representative for Elementis Pigments, Inc. of Easton. ◆ 1999 Kimberly E. Davis is employed by Altec Lansing Technologies, Inc. in Milford. She is doing marketing and product development research. In addition, Kimberly is attending Penn State University, pursuing a bachelor of science degree in business. ◆ 1989 Trevor J. Hahn of Macungie works in the marketing/distribution department of Mack Trucks, Inc., Allentown. ◆ 1992 Melissa F. (Manazer) Hess is married to Christopher Hess ’93 (criminal justice). Christopher is a member of the NCC Alumni Association board of directors. They live in Easton. ◆ 1995 Duane Hoch of Northampton is a mail handler for the U.S. Postal Service at the Lehigh Valley office. ◆ 1998 Lisa J. (Heath) Bledsoe and husband, James, live in Mount Bethel. Lisa is a brokerage margin clerk, Summit Financial Services. ◆ 1998 Kristen Sterner is assistant manager for Party City, Bethlehem. She lives in Bethlehem with husband, Jeffrey. ◆ 1985 Lorri (Kulp) Woodward has recently become the art director at Lehigh Valley Magazine in Bethlehem. She and her husband, John, and their two children, Rebecca and Lindsey, live in Bath. COMPUTER AIDED DESIGN ◆ 1991 Donald Lynch and his wife, Doris Lynch ’00 (medical transcription), are residents of the city of Easton. Donald’s new employer is Greenman-Pedersen, Inc. of Lebanon, N.J., where he is a project engineer. Donald continued his education at Fairmont State College in Fairmont,W.Va. He graduated in 1994 with a bachelor of science degree in engineering technology. COMPUTER GRAPHICS ◆ 2000 Jacqueline Karpow of Bethlehem is an editorial assistant at Rodale Press in Emmaus. COMPUTER INFO SCIENCE ◆ 1995 Victoria (Fritzinger) Alban of Whitehall is an information analyst employed by EDS of Bethlehem. 22 COMPUTER INFO TECHNOLOGY ◆ 1998 Nereida DeJesus of Bethlehem is employed as a clerk typist II by the County of Northampton in Easton. ◆ 1999 Lisa Paffrath of Effort is working for Sales Plus, a division of Dendrite International, in Stroudsburg. She was certified as an A+ technician at NCC in May 2000. Her plans are to go back to school at Penn State University to receive a bachelor’s degree in either information technology or systems management. Lisa is married to Rudy Paffrath. COMPUTER SCIENCE ◆ 1997 Richard Michael Bauer of Bethlehem is employed by Pentamation in Bethlehem. ◆ 1994 Christopher Charles Boscia is employed by the Harleysville Insurance Companies, Harleysville. He and his wife, Julie, live in Alburtis. CRIMINAL JUSTICE ◆ 1994 Daniel C. Reenock of Northampton was a member of the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Team in training. He par- A L U M N I ticipated in a 100-mile bicycle ride at Lake Tahoe, Nev. in June 2000. Daniel is employed by Progressive Insurance in Allentown. ◆ 1997 Gary Michael Infante of Bethlehem is working for Flores Air Conditioning in Catasauqua. ◆ 1999 Cory A. Marsteller of Easton was sworn in as a police officer by Allentown Mayor William Heydt at a July 2000 ceremony at City Hall. Cory is attending the Gerald M. Monahan Sr. Police Academy in Allentown. ◆ 1999 Michelle Richie and her husband, William, are the very happy parents of Sabrina Nina, born on February 18, 2000. Michelle works for Warren Hospital and Northampton County. She and William are residents of Saylorsburg. ◆ 1998 Ella Kiefer of Bethlehem graduated Allentown College of St. Francis de Sales with a degree in criminal justice in January 2000. CULINARY ARTS ◆ 1997 Kelsey M. Strohl of Emmaus is a chef for the Wood Company at Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. DATA PROCESSING ◆ 1980 Thomas R. Miller is employed as an information services application manager at Pechiney Plastic Packaging in Washington, N.J. Thomas and his wife, Mary Beth, live in Pen Argyl. ◆ 1985 Philip Maro is working in his field of study. He is a computer network administrator at the Virginia Baptist Children’s Home in Salem,Va. Philip is a resident of Moneta,Va. DENTAL ASSISTING ◆ 1993 Rebecca (Shaffer) Remaly and her husband, Craig, live in Allentown. Rebecca works for Lehigh Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery. ◆ 1987 Denise L. Melvin, Allentown, is a staff therapist at Lehigh Valley and Muhlenberg Hospitals. ◆ 1981 Sheila (Groeger) Miknyoczki, Ph.D. is a research scientist at Cephalon Inc., in West Chester. Sheila makes her home in Easton with her husband, Jules. ◆ 1990 Amy Sue Walkiewicz is employed as a dental hygienist and lives in Allentown. ◆ 1991 Amy (Evans) Cziraky’s full-time job is raising her children, Emily, 4, Megan, 2 and newest family member, Sara, born May 8. Amy and her husband, Mark, live in Wilmington, Delaware. N O T E S ◆ 1998 Angie Lee (Knepper) Fureman is married to Patrick Fureman. They live in Dallastown. Angie is employed as a hygienist at North York Family Dental. DENTAL HYGIENE ◆ 1980 Gail M. (Zmarzley) Kucherich is an employee of the Bath Area Dental Associates in Bath. She lives in Coplay with her husband, Thomas, and their two daughters, Rachel and Melissa. ◆ 1982 Kathy (Fehnel) Watters is a dental hygienist for Dr. Robert Brennan in Bethlehem. Kathy and her husband,Thomas, live in Easton. ◆ 1985 Jane Halley and her husband, Lewis, live in Easton. Jane works as a dental hygienist at Easton Periodontal Associates. ◆ 1986 Lotti Tobin-Deiter of Pottsville has two working careers that she enjoys. She is employed by Dr. David Wasilewski in Minersville and is also employed by her husband David’s roofing company. ◆ 1987 Lisa Rennick Kurilla is employed by Dr. H. Bruce Fellows and Associates in Pottsville. She and her husband, Jim, live in Port Carbon. ◆ 1989 Jennifer S. (Dierwechter) Hollister and her husband, Joseph, are Orwigsburg residents. Jennifer works in the dental office of Dr. J. S. Hottenstein in Leesport. ◆ 1989 Heather (Mitzel) Leiphart is the mother of Hannah, 8, Paul, 6, and Olivia, 2. Heather and her husband, Craig, celebrated their 10th wedding anniversary with the family at Disney World in October. She is employed by Dr.William Baile of York. ◆ 1989 Deena Rae (Valeriano) Weise is employed by David M. Causa, DDS in Mohnton. She and her husband,William, live in Oley with their daughters Courtney, 3, and Sydney, who was born on May 22. ◆ 1990 Claudia (Mastrolia) Clark has been working for Dr. Kerry Wentling as a dental hygienist for the past 10 years. Claudia and her husband, Steve, have recently moved to the countryside of Fredericksburg. They enjoy their seven-acre property with their boxer, Gretchen. ◆ 1992 Kimberly M. (Fritz) McFarland of Zionsville married Jason Robert McFarland on May 13, 2000 in Macungie. They spent their honeymoon in Tortola, British Virgin Islands. Kimberly is employed by Dr. Bonano of the Red Hill Dental office. 23 ◆ 1992 Sherry Marie McDonald-Menet lives in Reading with her children, Christian and Michal. She is employed by Jon M. Kanegawa, DDS. ◆ 1993 Jackie (Finlayson) Crane, RDH is a surgical assistant for oral surgeon Dr. Gary Vitale. She and her husband, Chester, are the parents of Benjamin G., who was born on December 30, 1999. Jackie lives in Westfield, N.J. ◆ 1993 Tracie M. Brunner and David W. Lembach were married in Easton on November 13, 1999. Tracie is employed by the dental office of Dr. Christopher B. Hill. ◆ 1993 Wendy (Bittner) Sensenig and Brian Sensenig (’93 Business Management) are living in Bernville. Wendy is working for Harold Fries, DDS. Brian has completed his master’s degree in business from Allentown College of St. Francis de Sales. He is working at Lucent Technologies in Allentown. ◆ 1994 Melissa Booth of Willow Street is preparing for an October 27, 2001 wedding. She works for Charles King, DDS in Willow Street. ◆ 1996 Sandra J. (Davies) MacIntosh and her husband, Fred, live in Lansdale. Sandra works for North Penn Pediatric Dental Associates. ◆ 1998 Michele L. (LaBar) Leon works on the dental team of Dr. VanDragt as a dental hygienist. She and her husband, Christopher, relocated to Traverse City, Mich. in 1999 so that Christopher could open a nuclear pharmacy in partnership with PharmaLogic MI. Both Michele and Christopher are planning to continue their educations. ◆ 1998 Angie Fureman and her husband, Patrick, are the proud parents of a new daughter, born on September 7, 2000. Angie works for Dr. Christopher Paluch in York. The Furemans live in Dallastown. ◆ 1999 Jennifer A. (Wilson) Marakovits and her husband, Jason, live in Northampton. She is employed by Dr. Daniel Milavec. Jennifer also received an associate’s degree in general studies in 1997. ◆ 1999 Shannon E. (Altorfer) Pysher and Neil Pysher exchanged wedding vows in Trinity United Church of Christ in Mount Bethel on April 29, 2000. Shannon is a dental hygienist at Rose Dental Center in Easton. She and her husband reside in Martins Creek. ◆ 2000 Kathy Cortright and her husband, Wayne, live in Germansville. Kathy works as a dental hygienist. A L U M N I M N O T E S decided to immerse myself in the culture.” Armed with a three-month scholarship for a language school in Mérida on the Yucatan Peninsula, Facciponti set out on a voyage of self-discovery. Her three months turned into a two-year odyssey in Mexico and Guatemala that went beyond learning Spanish. By the time she returned she had also honed her storytelling skills and decided to make it a full-time profession. “Everybody’s got their own shows going on in their head,” says Facciponti.“Tell a story and everyone hearing it sees different images.Yet there’s an energy going on between the listener and the teller.That’s the special thing about the oral nature of storytelling.” In addition to spreading the gospel of responsible ecology, Facciponti is an active community volunteer. In 1998, she established the Lehigh Valley Storytellers Guild. Facciponti also teaches dance, from folk to ballroom, African and Caribbean hand drumming, and the art of storytelling itself.“I love to teach anything I’ve learned,” she says.“Right now I teach non-credit courses at Northampton — earth science to kids and dancing and drumming to adults. I’ll also be teaching storytelling at the College in the spring.The College gave me my start. I share what I’ve learned to increase social tolerance and for the stewardship of the earth.” — By James L. Johnson ‘89 aster storytellers can throw a spellbound hush over a crowd. Their stories draw us in, entertain us, make us laugh or cry.The best stories also teach. For more than 10 years, Lisa Facciponti ’82 has been telling stories to teach people to care for each other and our planet. Passing along her green message has always been important to Facciponti. Storytelling, however, was not her first choice of career.“I always thought I’d be able to work in the earth sciences,” says the former NCC environmental studies major.“I wanted to do something for the earth — to teach others that its wellbeing is our responsibility.” Toward that goal she continued her education at East Stroudsburg University, where she carried a dual major in marine science and biology. But after nearly a decade of teaching in environmental programs in Connecticut and Rhode Island, Facciponti came to a hard realization about her chosen field.“I found the jobs I was attracted to were low paying and very confining,” she says.“I needed time to grow the rest of my life — to take care of family, friends, my body, my spirit. What I was doing just wasn’t flexible enough for me.” So Facciponti served notice at her job, packed a backpack and took off for Mexico.“When I was a kid I’d listen to Spanish language records my mother had,” she explains.“I was fascinated by it. But even though I studied on my own and in college, I never was fluent. I finally 24 A L U M N I DESIGN ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY ◆ 1973 Raymond Gilberry of Bethlehem works as a valve technician at Hydal Corporation in the Lehigh Valley. EARLY CHILDHOOD ◆ 1974 Dot Butler Dmytryk is a certified professional community association manager for Mid-Atlantic Management Corporation. Dot and her husband, John, are residents of the city of West Chester. ◆ 1977 Susan Mary (Mitchell) Kish and Robert Kish have been married for 18 years. They have two children, Jamie and John. Susan works in the special education department of the only elementary school in the Philomath School District in Oregon. Susan enjoys travelling. In 1999, she and Robert visited Germany, and they plan to go to New Zealand. ◆ 1978 Karen Klein was the recipient of the 2000 Mae DeJesus Award given by Community Services for Children of Bethlehem. The award is for excellence in preschool teaching. Karen teaches at the children’s center at NCC. ◆ 1979 Betty Hepburn and her husband, John, have been married for 54 years and have four children. She started college as a 49-year-old employee of Head Start. Betty, who taught at the Hamilton School in Bethlehem and taught preschool at the YWCA in Bethlehem, is retired. She spends her time as a volunteer and mentor at the grade school level. ◆ 1983 Lori B. (Stoudt) Kotze and Michael A. Kotze of Bethlehem have three children: Elizabeth Ann, 7 years old, Samantha Jean, 3 years old and Amanda Nicole, 2 years old. ◆ 1983 Cathleen D. (Drescher) Campbell and her husband, David, live in Easton. ◆ 1984 Linda W. Clark of Phillipsburg, N.J. works as a certified program assistant at the Third Street Alliance Adult Care in Easton. ◆ 1992 SuzAnne Messer of Cartersville, Ga., has been a special education teacher for the past three years in the Bartow County School District in Georgia. After graduating from NCC, she continued her studies in education and received a bachelor of science degree. She is planning an April 2001 wedding. ◆ 1993 Ira Ghosh and her husband have become new residents of Richland, Wash., where Ira has a new job teaching kindergarten at the Children’s Garden Montessori School. N O T E S ◆ 1994 Staci M. (Falcone) George of Bangor continued her education at East Stroudsburg University, graduating in 1998. Staci is a substitute teacher in the Pen Argyl Area School District. She and her husband, Robert, were married on October 2, 1999. ◆ 1994 Amy Strauss works for Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown. She plans to return to NCC to continue her studies in early childhood education. ◆ 1995 Deborah Ann Lamson is employed by Ark II Nursery School of Christ Hamilton Lutheran Church in Stroudsburg. Deborah was promoted from nursery school teacher to director in September 1998. She and her husband, Bruce, live in Saylorsburg. ◆ 1996 Deidre Sacco received a bachelor of arts degree in English/elementary education at Moravian College. Deidre, who lives in Easton, works for the Easton Area School District. ◆ 1998 Natalie Klinepeter is a teacher at the Citicorp Family Center in Hagerstown, Maryland. Natalie lives in Big Cove Tannery. ◆ Janet Auman and her husband, Harry, live in Easton, Md. In 1990, Janet received a degree in general studies from Chesapeake Community College in Wye Mills, Maryland. Janet, a recipient of a kidney and pancreas, writes articles for the newspaper concerning transplants and organ donations. ◆ 1974 Jane (Ganssle) Ronyack is a 3rd grade teacher in the Bethlehem Area School District. Jane and her husband, Robert Ronyack ’99 (Safety, Health and Environmental Technology) live in Bethlehem. ◆ 1994 Staci M. (Falcone) George and her husband, Robert E. George, Jr., live in Bangor. Staci is a substitute teacher for Pen Argyl School District. ◆ 1996 Maria R. (Lancellotti) Picarello is a senior at East Stroudsburg University. Since graduating from NCC, she has worked as a secretary and daycare teacher. She will student teach in fall 2000. Her son, John, is a student at NCC. ◆ LouAnn (Bray) Fehr is a 5th grade teacher at DeFranco Elementary School, Bangor. She and husband, Robert, live in Bangor. EDUCATION ◆ 1969 Susan C. Kovacs of Bethlehem is a systems representative at Sungard Pentamation, Inc., in Bethlehem. ◆ 1970 William R. Johnson works for the Mechanicsburg Area School District. He is a 1972 graduate of Bloomsburg University. In 1997, he received the Business Teacher of the 25 Year Award from the Pennsylvania Business Education Association, and in 1998 he was named the Educator of the Year by the Eastern Business Education Association. Currently, he serves on the EBEA board. Johnson was named conference chair for the 2002 National Business Education Association Conference, which will be held in Philadelphia. He and his wife, Janet, also an NCC graduate, live in Mechanicsburg. ◆ 1970 Weda M. Mosellie is a retired high school English teacher who lives in Phillipsburg, N.J. The year 2000 has proven to be a rewarding year for Weda. She has received numerous poetry and essay awards and has won some cooking contests. She also enjoyed a cruise to Bermuda. ◆ 1976 Curt Wesser of Northampton is working for Dun & Bradstreet in Bethlehem. He has been recently promoted to project analyst for information quality. ◆ 1990 Carol A. Manzi and her husband, Jeffrey, live in Mount Bethel. Carol has been working in the Bangor Area School District for the past eight years as a special education teacher in the Carbon Lehigh Intermediate Unit 21. Carol also teaches classes at NCC and East Stroudsburg University. ◆ 1990 Gregory A. Cook and his wife, Andrea live in Whitehall. Gregory is employed by PPL in Martins Creek. ◆ 1991 Tina Louise (Mammana) Schutt and John Schutt ’95 (accounting) live in Easton. Tina pursued a bachelor of science degree after NCC and works from her home. John has a new job as an internal auditor for Victaulic Company of America. ◆ 1992 Holly Gambler of Nazareth is a 7th grade social studies teacher in Nazareth Middle School. She is a graduate of East Stroudsburg University. ◆ 1992 Heather Helfrich of Bethlehem is a graduate of Cedar Crest College in Allentown. She is employed by the Hopewell Elementary School in Center Valley as a 1st grade teacher. ◆ 1992 Lila J. Metz of Pen Argyl teaches special education for Allen High School in Allentown. She earned her graduate degree from East Stroudsburg University. ◆ 1995 Maria (Parmigiano) Perna of Phillipsburg, N.J. teaches 2nd grade at the Holland Township School in Milford, N.J. She graduated magna cum laude from East Stroudsburg University in 1998. Maria and Giovanni Perna were married on May 6, 2000. ◆ 1997 Marlen Ramona Elias of Easton is a 2000 graduate of East Stroudsburg University, where she received a bachelor of science degree in secondary education mathematics. She is working in the Phillipsburg School District as a substitute teacher. A L U M N I ◆ 1997 Jason L. Harhart of Nazareth is employed by Moore Township in Bath. ◆ 1999 Marlene Michelle Hargrove was hired at Saints Tabernacle Christian Academy as an after-school program assistant, and was promoted to an academy teacher within one month. She lives in Philadelphia. ◆ Nicholas Geary and Julie M. Stuck were married on April 29, 2000 in Christ Lutheran Church in Allentown. Nicholas is employed by Lafayette Ambassador Bank. The couple lives in Lehigh County. ◆ 1970 Fred J. Gainer is employed by Cape Fear Community College in Wilmington, N.C. Fred and his wife, Nancy, live in Wilmington. ◆ 1972 Richard S. ‘Dick’ Arnold is a captain with U.S. Airways. He is also owner of Arnold Estates, a 50-acre log home development. Richard lives in Sevierville,Tenn. ◆ 1974 Luz N. Jorge-Rosario is a 7th grade teacher at East Hills Middle School, Bethlehem. Luz lives in Bethlehem. ◆ 1976 Gary F. Toth and his wife, Rosalie, live in Bethlehem. Gary works in Bath as an estimator for A. J.Trunzo, Inc. ◆ 1987 Mary Louise Hutchinson of Bethlehem received a bachelor of science degree in elementary education from Kutztown University. An English teacher for eight years at Whitehall Middle School, she is now assistant principal. ◆ 1993 Kathy L. (Epperson) Krause and husband, Nikolas, live in Nazareth. ◆ 1996 Jennifer (Luisser) Griffin and husband, Joseph Griffin ’98 (Criminal Justice) live in Northampton. Jennifer is a dental hygienist. ◆ 1997 George S. Apostol, Jr. is a senior at East Stroudsburg University, is majoring in elementary education and special education. ◆ 1997 Jamie L. Nastasee works as a therapist for Moss Rehab DBIC-CRP, in Philadelphia and resides in Bethlehem. ELECTRONICS TECHNOLOGY ◆ 1969 Michael W. Sandbrook is a retiree of the Lehigh Portland Cement Company located in Cementon, N.Y. He received a bachelor of science degree from the University of New York. Michael and his wife live in Saugerties, N.Y. ◆ 1987 Nancy G. Reinbold of Bethlehem is a 2000 graduate of Moravian College, where she received a bachelor of science degree in computer science. Nancy works for Electronic Data Systems of Bethlehem. N O T E S E aston resident John Allem was one of the non-traditional, older students who brought their life experience with them as they entered the first class at NCC. During the Vietnam War,Allem was stationed on an aircraft carrier at sea, repairing the electronic systems of planes damaged in the war. In the Navy he got his career training start, working on aviation electronics. Allem came home in 1967 and spent his first year out of the service working as a laborer for local manufacturer Bell & Howell, but he soon wanted a better job. “With my electronics background, I wanted to get into Metropolitan Edison (Met-Ed) Power and Light (now GPU), and not as a laborer,” said Allem.“I had a friend who had been accepted to NCC, so I thought I’d give it a try.” Allem entered the electrical engineering program, which he remembers as being very competitive. “The program started with almost 20 people. By graduation, we were down to four,” he said. The VA paid for Allem’s tuition. But he was married and had a child, so Allem went to school from 8 am-4 pm and worked 5 pm-12 am at his laboring job to support his family.Telling, perhaps, of the kind of man Allem is, he mentions working full time and going to school full time as being a favorite memory of his days at NCC. One of the four electrical engineering graduates in 1969,Allem realized his goal of being hired at Met-Ed. Allem worked at Met-Ed in engineering and construction for over 10 years, then went on to work for several electrical manufacturing firms. He is currently a senior sales representative at Joslyn Manufacturing Company based in Chicago, selling to major utilities like GPU Energy,Verizon, and cable TV stations, covering ◆ 1974 Wayne D. Mabus is a glass worker at Triton Services, Inc., Easton and lives in Easton with wife, Frances. FOOD SERVICE ◆ 1993 David M. Chabak is serving an assignment at Kunsan Air Force Base in South Korea until June 2001. He has been promoted to the rank of Staff Sergeant. ◆ 1987 Amy Jo (Swartz) Korpics is employed by the Schuylkill Valley School District in Leesport. She was promoted to supervisor of the Schuylkill Valley Middle School cafeteria for the 2000-2001 school year. Amy and her husband, Michael, live in Mohrsville with their two children, Samantha, 8 and John, 6. ENGINEERING FUNERAL SERVICE ◆ 1978 Gary J. Stolz of Northampton is employed by Lucent Technologies in Allentown. ◆ 1996 Mark J. Hummel of Bethlehem is a funeral director at Bean Funeral Homes in Sinking Springs. ◆ 1998 Christina Kulik of Emmaus is EMERGENCY INSPECT 26 A L U M N I a wide territory of east coast states. “Now I sell to the utilities,”Allem said. “Since I worked for a major utility company like GPU, it really breaks the ice. In fact, Allem had a part in the utility industry’s most notorious disaster — the Three Mile Island nuclear reactor failure in 1978. “I was working there in construction management,” Allem said, “overseeing the electrical contract, installing and maintaining the security devices that were meant to keep people outside the area of the two nuclear units. When the accident happened, we were all told to leave the island. But I went back and for the first week for about 100 hours I helped set up the electronics for the “trailer city” that was constructed for the people still working out there.” All of his experiences not withstanding, Allem is most proud of the fact that with his associate degree from NCC he has always been able to raise a family as the sole breadwinner. He credits his wife of 33 years, MaryAnn, for his success, saying “Behind every good man there is a wonderful woman!” Allem has been back to the NCC campus over the years for several reasons, to take a computer class, or even once to look up his former electrical engineering teacher, Reg Tauke, who now serves as a dean and registrar. He said,“The campus is 100 percent different now — there is no comparison.” Allem and his wife have two grown children, Scott (32) and Nicole (29), both of whom attended NCC. He has two grandsons with whom he enjoys fishing. employed as a funeral director/supervisor at the Bachman, Kulik & Reinsmith Funeral Home in Emmaus. ◆ 1999 Jeff Harvey and his wife, Mary, live in Hughesville. Jeff is a registered nurse/manager of the nursing service at Susquehanna Health System in Williamsport. ◆ 1987 Maurice J. McDonald and wife, Cheryl, live in Benton with their three children, Connor, Kieran and Cullen, born November 3, 1999. Maurice is employed at Kriner Funeral Homes of Benton, Bloomsburg and Danville. ◆ 1989 Grace S. Keller is vice president of Keller Funeral Homes, Inc., Fogelsville and is married to Gilbert F. Keller.The couple lives in Fogelsville. N O T E S He is a serious hunter and fisherman, and owns a cabin with friends in the mountains of Wyoming County where he spends his free time. He also creates stained glass and crafts with his wife, but said “it’s all just a giveaway, like at the holidays. If I sold them, it would become work!” — By Marlene Bayer ◆ 1994 David M. Sitbon is a forensic technician with the Philadelphia medical examiner’s office with responsibilities for autopsies, taking forensic photographs, transporting the deceased and computer data entry. ◆ 1997 Harold C. Schisler is a funeral director at the Schisler Funeral Home Inc., in Northampton. Harold’s home is in Palmerton. GENERAL EDUCATION ◆ 1971 William T. Frey and Jane Lipsky Frey ’72 (registered nursing) are residents of Hellertown. William is employed by the Hellertown Post Office as a letter carrier and Jane is the director of nursing at Lehigh County Cedarbrook in Bethlehem. 27 ◆ 1973 Peter Klotz is a staff engineer for Raytheon System Company in Baltimore, Md. Peter and his wife, Deborah, live in York. ◆ 1977 Gayle F. Hendricks presented her graphic designs at the AMFA Exhibit in Easton. A reception was held on June 14 at the CentreSpace Gallery in Easton. ◆ 1978 Richard A. Bartholomew is a project architect on the Sprint World Headquarters Campus project in Overland Park, Kansas. He is employed by The Hillier Group. Richard received a bachelor’s degree from Kansas State University and is affiliated with the American Institute of Architects. Richard and his wife live in Overland Park, Kansas. ◆ 1978 Gloria V. Kristof Pavlik continued A L U M N I her education at Moravian College after graduating from NCC. She is married and lives in Bethlehem. ◆ 1981 Donna Marie Moore is employed by the Richmond Public School District in Richmond,Va. Donna, a resident of Highland Springs, Va. graduated from the Virginia State University with a bachelor of science degree. ◆ 1974 Dianem (Hofstetter) Jenny is director of Westgate DayCare, Bethlehem. She and her husband, Douglas, live in Coopersburg. ◆ 1983 Maureen C. (Negrete) Bruneio is a senior teller and customer service representative at Summit Bank, Easton. She and her husband, Charles A. Bruneio, Jr., live in Easton. GENERAL STUDIES ◆ 1995 Denise A. Schwab of Portland received a bachelor of arts degree in American and British literature from New York University in 1998. She works for Waste Management, Inc. in Pen Argyl. ◆ Beth Lynne Ritter and David James Guth, Jr. were married on April 29, 2000 at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church in Whitehall Township. Beth is employed by NCC, Allentown College of St. Francis de Sales and the Pennsylvania State University. Beth and her husband live in Fountain Hill. ◆ Mary Ann Zakeski of Breinigsville works in sales as a territory manager for Fort Dodge Animal Health. ◆ Nicholas Parmigiano and his wife, Virginia, were married on July 2. They live in Long Island, N.Y. Nicholas is attending Stony Brook University, where he is a student in the physical therapy program. ◆ Coleen Joswick of Bath received an associate in applied science degree from Lehigh Carbon Community College’s occupational therapy assistant program. She works at the Nazareth Area Middle School, assisting in the special ed department. Coleen is also pursuing a bachelor degree in education. ◆ 1992 Carol T. Perez, Easton, is a manager in the bakery department at Laneco, in Phillipsburg, N.J. ◆ 1995 Marianne (Lota) Wied works for Jim Bobal Appliance Service, Bethlehem. She is married to Kevin Wied ’94 (Education). They live in Allentown. ◆ 1997 Richard H. Blumberg, Fogelsville, is an electronic assembler for ABB Automation, Allentown. ◆ 1998 Kathleen A. Decker,Allentown, is a junior at Drexel University, Philadelphia. ◆ Jody M. Kerr is a staff accountant at the Book-of-the-Month Club, Mechanicsburg. N O T E S Jody’s home is in Mechanicsburg. ◆ Lori McCarthy is a student/counselor at East Stroudsburg University. Lori resides in Tobyhanna. ◆ Chad Erik Horvath and Jocelyn Merie Graham exchanged wedding vows in September 1999. Chad is a manager of Party City, Lancaster.They live in Dover. HOTEL/RESTAURANT ◆ 1991 Michele Sciascia married Matthew John Burnard on July 17, 2000 in Packer Chapel at Lehigh University. Michele works for Dr. Robert F. Chisdak. ◆ 1997 Ronald William Hand and Jeanna Rose Spezzacatena were married at First United Methodist Church of Westfield in Westfield, N.J. Ronald is employed by Applebee’s in Livingston, N.J. The couple lives in Flanders, N.J. INDIVIDUALIZED TRAINING ◆ 1998 Jan E. Berry is a 2000 Cedar Crest graduate, where she received the Lecie G. Machelle prize in social work. She is attending Marywood University in Scranton, working toward a master’s degree in social work. She is also doing an internship at Good Shepherd Rehabilitation Hospital. INTERIOR DESIGN ◆ 1995 Jo Anne (Richardson) Rodgers obtained a bachelor of arts degree from Lafayette College with honors in history. She was a member of the Alpha Sigma Lambda and Phi Alpha Theta honor societies while attending Lafayette. Jo Anne and her husband, Ron, live in Easton. ◆ 1998 Maria Dontas of Bath graduated from the New York Institute of Technology summa cum laude with a bachelor of fine arts degree in interior design. There, she received an Outstanding Service to the Department Award and the Presidential Honors Award from the New York Institute of Technology. LIBERAL ARTS ◆ 1969 Earl J. Ihrie and his wife, Mary Ann, live in Ringoes, N.J. Earl is a quality assurance manager for Merial in Iselin, N.J. ◆ 1972 Anthony Altenbach has worked as a licensed psychiatric social worker for the past 24 years in San Bernardino, Calif. Anthony graduated from Kutztown University with a bachelor of arts degree, and 28 obtained his master’s degree in social work from Scranton University. He lives in Redlands, Calif. with his wife. ◆ 1978 Sharon D. McGeehan and Carmen Gerrone exchanged wedding vows on February 26, 2000 in St. Magdalen’s Catholic Church in Flemington, N.J. Sharon, a graduate of Penn State University, is an assistant manager at ProSource of the Lehigh Valley. Sharon and Carmen live in Flemington, N.J. ◆ 1987 Dawn Duckworth Carl and Dennis Carl ’90 (Math/Physics) are residents of Giddings,Texas. Dawn received her bachelor of science in education/math from Kutztown University. She is teaching calculus for the 2001 school year in Lexington,Texas. Dennis received a bachelor of science in computer science from Lamar University. He is working for the Texas Department of Public Safety in Austin,Texas. He was recently promoted to a network specialist III, whose responsibility it is to oversee and design a statewide area network and all local area networks. ◆ 1991 Suzette B. Reilly of Bethlehem is employed by the Family Guidance Center in Washington, N.J. as an intensive family support services specialist. ◆ 1992 Gracinda Glick of Bethlehem is the community affairs administrator at Just Born, Inc. of Bethlehem. ◆ 1995 Jodi Quick of Easton received an undergraduate degree in history from Cedar Crest College in 1997, and a master’s degree in political science from Lehigh University in 1999. Jodi works for Rodale, Inc. of Emmaus as a copywriter in the creative department. ◆ 1995 Jennifer Burke is employed at Software House International, Inc. in Somerset, N.J. as a marketing assistant. She lives in Highland Park, N.J. ◆ 1996 Jeffrey D. Fenstermacher married Ellen Elizabeth Moyer on May 21, 2000 in Emmanuel Lutheran Church in Bath. Jeffrey, who is employed by Voice Stream, and his wife, Ellen, live in Pen Argyl. ◆ Ed Bloss completed his master’s degree in social work. He is a licensed social worker for Monroe County. He also conducts a private practice in his home for family and individual therapy, and facilitates a domestic violence group for men. Ed and his wife, Patti Jo, live in West Easton. LIBRARY ASSISTANT ◆ 1983 Marie Frances Sterlein of Bethlehem is employed by Bethlehem Steel Corporation. A L U M N I MARKETING DISTRIBUTION ◆ 1973 Richard T. Olah is a fleet manager for Werner Enterprises. He is the former president of the Lehigh Valley Traffic Club. Richard and his wife, Kathleen, are residents of Bethlehem. Richard’s son has continued in the footsteps of his dad with a college career start at NCC. MATH/PHYSICS ◆ 1987 Patricia M. Hann of Bethlehem is employed as a quality control supervisor in the Waste Water Treatment Plant by the city of Bethlehem. She received a bachelor of science degree in 1996 from Lafayette College. MEDICAL LAB TECHNOLOGY ◆ 1986 Joseph A. Cugini lives in Breinigsville with his wife, Sandra, and their two children, Kayla and Natalie. Joseph works for Health Network Laboratories in Allentown. MEDICAL OFFICE ◆ 1999 Candace E. (Stecker) Frasier and her husband, Arthur, are residents of Phillipsburg, N.J. Candace works as a personal care coordinator in Washington, N.J. MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION ◆ 1982 Linda Morone-Silfies of Bath returned to school in 1991 to obtain a massage license. She is working at NCC teaching a massage program that she developed. She is also working part-time toward a general studies degree. ◆ 1997 Shannon A. (Rogers) Roberts is employed by the Northwood Surgery Center in Easton. She also manages her own business, which provides transcription services to three area doctors. Shannon and her husband, Scott, were married on October 9, 1999. They live in Bangor. ◆ 1998 Leisha M. Otto of Beverly Hills, Fla., is working full-time at Citrus Memorial Hospital and part-time for Dr. Dalkallitsis. MICROCOMPUTER SPECIALIST ◆ 1995 Felix VonBaldas and his wife, Maria, live in Bethlehem. Felix spends his days enjoying retirement. N O T E S NURSING/PRACTICAL ◆ 1974 Beth L. (Yeakel) Holsinger is a staff nurse at the Maine Medical Center in Portland, Maine. Some of Beth’s time is spent teaching nursing clinicals at the University of Maine. After NCC, she continued her education and received a bachelor of science in nursing and is working on a master’s degree in nursing education. She is a very active member of Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society for nurses. She is also running for president-elect of Kappa Zeta Chapter-atLarge. Beth and her husband, Robert, live in Waterford, Maine. ◆ 1977 Lisa (Feldman) Retorico is a neonatal nurse at Memorial Herman of the Woodlands Hospital in Woodlands,Texas. She was the recipient of the nursing clinical excellence award. Lisa and her husband, Henry, are residents of Woodlands,Texas. ◆ 1995 Amy E. Fehr is employed as a charge nurse by the Cedarbrook Nursing Home of Lehigh County. She is engaged to Joseph K. Bleier of Bethlehem. Their wedding date is planned for September 22, 2001. ◆ 1996 Karen E. (Valentine) Neas and her husband, Robert, live in Trexlertown. Karen returned to NCC in August 1999 to pursue her degree in registered nursing. She will be graduating in December 2000. ◆ 1997 Jennifer Lynn Cox of Whitehall is a licensed practical charge nurse at HCR Manor Care Health in Bethlehem. NURSING/REGISTERED ◆ 1970 David Kenneth Moyer of Allentown works for the City of Allentown in its health bureau. He is the current president of F.A.C.T. (Fighting Aids Continuously Together). He is retired from the U.S. Naval Reserve career of 30 years. ◆ 1971 Virginia V. (Wieder) Slocum is employed as a manager, infection control by Shore Health System in Easton, Md. She enjoys traveling, and one of her latest adventures has been a cruise/land trip to Alaska. Virginia lives in St. Michaels, Md. ◆ 1972 Debra A. (Dankel) Getman of Mays Landing, N.J., works at the Mainland Manor Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Pleasantville, N.J. She is the director of staff development/infection control. ◆ 1975 Richard Lee Fuller and his wife, Karen, live in Gainesville, Fla. They are the parents of Nicholas Samuel. Richard works for Survey Associates, LLC in Birmingham,Ala. ◆ 1979 Marcia R. Smith is a certified registered nurse practitioner. She works for Planned Parenthood in Johnstown, where she also resides. 29 ◆ 1985 Stephanie A. (Kerbacher) Malitzki of Bethlehem is an operating room nurse at Sacred Heart Hospital in Allentown. She married John P. Malitzki (general studies) on May 20, 2000, in Northampton. John is the director of career placement for Berks Technical Institute in Wyomissing. ◆ 1986 Kathleen Bernini Knapp and her husband,William, live in Slatington. Kathleen is a registered nurse. ◆ 1988 Marie Murling is a staff nurse at the Pocono Medical Center in East Stroudsburg. She and her husband, John, live in Saylorsburg. ◆ 1990 Lisa (Caesar) Fehnel is currently working towards a bachelor of science degree in nursing. She is employed by the Pocono Medical Center in East Stroudsburg. Lisa and her husband, Randy, live in Pen Argyl. ◆ 1990 Gloria Wagner works at Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown. She and her husband, Charles, live in Walnutport. ◆ 1991 Anne Williams of Lancaster is a nurse at the practice of Drs. May Grant Associates in Lancaster. ◆ 1991 Laura L. (Bruch) Michael of Northampton is the proud parent of Anthony Joseph Christiano, who was born on June 4, 2000 in Easton Hospital. She is employed by the Easton Nursing Center. ◆ 1992 Susan Elise Fitch and Richard Charles Walk, Jr. were married on July 7, 2000 in an outdoor ceremony at Saucon Valley Acres. Susan is a registered nurse for the Visiting Nurses Association of Eastern Pennsylvania. Richard is attending NCC’s registered nursing program. Susan and Richard live in Nazareth. ◆ 1994 Karen (Simons) Schaller is employed by St. Luke’s Hospital in Bethlehem. She and her husband, Steve, live in Danielsville with their son, Seth. ◆ 1995 Cynthia L. Engler is working as a nurse aide instructor at Harrisburg Area Community College. She received her bachelor of science in 1997 from Hahnemann University. Cynthia also received an associates’s degree from NCC in 1973 in secretarial science. She and her husband, Francis, are residents of Bangor. ◆ 1997 Jean Bronson Conway works at the Cancer Specialists of Tidewater in Virginia Beach,Va. In 1999, she passed her boards and became certified in oncology nursing. She and her son, Mat, love living near the ocean. ◆ 1998 James Tunnessen is a Reading Hospital and Medical Center employee, working in the surgical intensive care unit. He has completed training of the open heart patient and is a board member of the Greater Reading Chapter of Critical Care Nursing. A L U M N I OFFICE ADMINISTRATION ◆ 1991 Cathleen A. Minardo and Brian C. Strohl were married on June 3, 2000 in the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Catholic Church in Slatington. Cathleen is an administrative assistant at Ashland Chemical Company. The couple lives in Slatington. ◆ 1994 Jennifer Marie (Gardner) Galvin and her husband, Michael, live in Bethlehem. Jennifer works in the billing division at St. Luke’s Hospital in Bethlehem. ◆ 1994 Kristi L. Van Horn and Larry A. Angney II of Exton were married on May 27, 2000 in Christ Lutheran Church in Hellertown. The bride is an account assistant for an insurance company in Malvern. OFFICE ADMINISTRATION — LEGAL ◆ 1989 Debra A. Smith of Allentown is employed as an administrative assistant to a director at Merck & Co., Inc. of West Point. She is continuing her education at Cedar Crest College in the business administration program. Debra has received awards in 1998 and 1999 for excellence in her departmental work at Merck. RADIOGRAPHY ◆ 1987 John C. Posh works in the MRI Department of St. Luke’s Hospital. John and his wife, Dorothy, are residents of the city of Bethlehem. ◆ 1998 Maria H. Kistler and her husband, Brian, live in Rochelle Park, N.J. Maria is employed by the Hackensack University Medical Center in Hackensack, N.J. RADIO/TV ◆ 1991 Marie S. Ford Clemens of Coopersburg is the director of public relations for Hospital Central Services, Inc. (HCSC) in Allentown. She received a bachelor of arts in communications from Muhlenberg College and is an MBA candidate at De Sales University. She married Matthew Clemens on October 30, 1999. ◆ 1994 Marc Fisher and his wife, Mona, live in Deerfield Beach, Fla. Marc is employed by Multi Image Group of Boca Raton, Fla. N O T E S ◆ 1994 Matt Griffith works for The Trentonian. He lives in Langhorne with his wife, Jeanne, and their sons, Gabriel and Noah. ◆ 1996 John C. Schroter II lives with his wife, Kimberly, and daughter, Hannah, in Bethlehem. He is self-employed. of Dr. Lauro S. Geronimo of Bethlehem. She also works-part time as an independent kitchen consultant for The Pampered Chef. Terri and her husband, John, live in Bethlehem. SECRETARIAL SCIENCE ◆ 1997 Michelle L. Kucheruck of Easton is an assistant business manager at Citadel Communications in Bethlehem. ◆ 1998 Frank Charles Huch of Bethlehem is employed at the Lehigh Valley Racquet and Fitness Club in Allentown. ◆ Jason Brown of Nazareth continued his education at Allentown College of St. Francis de Sales. He is employed at Lehigh University. He is planning an October 2001 wedding to Michelle L. Geiger of Whitehall. ◆ 1976 Sharon (Mohring) Hippensteal has been an employee of Bethlehem Steel Corporation for 18 years in the accounts payable department. She and her husband, David, live in Bethlehem. Their daughter, Jennifer, is a 1999 graduate of Liberty High School. SECRETARIAL SCIENCE — ADMINISTRATIVE ◆ 1980 Jennifer P. (Giles) Gifford and her husband, Peter, live in Bethlehem. Jennifer works at G&S Fastening Systems, Inc. in Whitehall. SECRETARIAL SCIENCE — LEGAL ◆ 1979 Candace A. (Brown) Hoffman is employed as a program evaluator at the Ben Franklin Technology Center in Bethlehem. Candace and her husband, Kurt, live in Bethlehem. ◆ 1980 Patricia S. Jones is an alumni coordinator at Lehigh University in Bethlehem. Patricia lives in Bethlehem with her husband, John Flenner. ◆ 1983 Marta Boulos Gabriel of Bethlehem has recently made a change in her professional career. Formerly employed at Binney & Smith, Inc., she is now the manager of community relations at Air Products & Chemicals in Allentown. ◆ 1989 Diana (Tosdevine) Page works as a marketing coordinator for Century 21 Alliance Realty in Springhill, Fla. She and her husband, Joseph, have been married for seven years and are the proud parents of Samantha, 3.They live in Springhill, Fla. SECRETARIAL SCIENCE — MEDICAL ◆ 1987 Terri (Sigley) Wykosky is a full time office manager for the medical practice 30 SPORT MANAGEMENT TRAVEL/TOURISM ◆ 1990 Michelle (Schramel) Laky has worked for the medical practice of Dr. Melvin L. Steinbook for the past 10 years. She has been promoted to administrative assistant in the office. Michelle lives in Walnutport with her husband, Bill, and their one-year-old son. ◆ 1991 Lisa Marie Weaver Epler is employed by Dataworks International of Bethlehem. She and her husband, Jim, are residents of Bethlehem. I N M E M O R I A M ◆ Raymond Rawson Sr. Raymond, a volunteer at Northampton, served as director of plastics technology at the College after retiring from Pfizer Inc. He died Nov. 10. ◆ Robert V. Haas Robert was a faculty member in the Business Technology Division of Northampton Community College, until retiring in 1992. He died Oct. 10. ◆ Robert L. Brotzman Robert, who passed away Sept. 26, was a custodian at Northampton Community College, Bethlehem, for three years before retiring in 1990. D O N O R MICHAEL E. NAGEL B ruce Palmer believes in being of service, both in business and in the community. As a shareholder in the accounting firm of Buckno Lisicky and Company, where he specializes in freestanding and hospitalbased medical practices and 20-40 employee entrepreneurial companies, Bruce strives to give his clients the highest levels of service. “I enjoy my area of practice because of the challenges and diversity,” says Palmer,“Medical practices are being redefined through a variety of factors and working with entrepreneurs gives me a chance to literally see ideas evolve into companies.” Palmer earned an associate’s degree in accounting NCC in 1977 and a B.A. degree in business with a concentration in accounting from Kutztown State College in 1979. He joined Buckno Lisicky & Company in January of 1980, qualified as a CPA in August of 1984 and became a shareholder in 1989. “It was fairly clear to me, early in my college career, that I was going to pursue accounting,” recalled Palmer. “I was very influenced by Professor Dan Bayak, who was my advisor at Northampton. Upon completion of my two-year degree, he encouraged me to enroll at Kutztown, where they were just beginning a new accounting major. I enjoyed the program and consider myself fortunate to have gotten the opportunity to start working in the field upon graduation.” S P O T L I G H T S Why does Palmer support Northampton Community College in so many ways? “I think the college has a track record of doing good things for students, which in turn benefits local employers,” says Palmer, “Northampton is part of the community infrastructure, and employers depend on the college as a source of skilled, dedicated employees.” Palmer’s commitment to the community is impressive. He serves on the College’s board of trustees as the Nazareth area school district representative, the board of the Northampton Community College Foundation, as treasurer of the Bethlehem Rotary Club and as co-chair of the Rotary Foundation Committee, and on the board of the Bethlehem Boys and Girls Club, among others. Historically, he served as a director, treasurer and president of the Kutztown University Alumni Association, where he also served as alumni liaison to the 31 Kutztown University Foundation board of directors. “I’m a firm believer in the Rotary motto of service above self.While it’s important to support your causes financially, it’s also important to devote your time”, says Palmer.“Once I take on a challenge, I don’t stay on the fringes. I take pleasure in accomplishing goals, and I’m very results oriented, which is an outlook that has served me well, regardless of the endeavor. Northampton Community College has helped me to achieve results in my life, and I’m very happy to be a part of making sure it can happen for others.” P A R T N E R S LEHIGH VALLEY AUTO DEALERS TEAM UP WITH NCC BY MICHAEL E. NAGEL A ndy Scott brings a unique perspective to the auto business. Intense, focused and engaging, he describes doing business with the Scott dealerships in terms of a total buying experience whose parts make up the whole. It is the quality of those parts that Scott obsesses about. Most car dealers have difficulty in recruiting and retaining skilled service technicians. Scott and other dealer representatives are keenly aware of the problem and of the leadership role that Northampton Community College’s automotive technology program is playing in meeting the need for service technicians. Working in partnership with Daimler Chrysler, Northampton offers CAP (Chrysler Dealers Apprenticeship Program), which offers students employment at a local Chrysler dealership while they complete an intensive course of technical study emphasizing Chrysler vehicles and service practices. General Motors technicians are trained through the Automotive Service Education Program (ASEP), which features 32 weeks of diverse classroom instruction and 32 weeks of service experience, offered in alternating eightweek segments. “Repeat business is the key to success for our dealerships,” said Scott. “How the customer is treated over the long haul often has as much or more bearing on their loyalty to a dealer than their original experience in buying the car.” A critical aspect of this relationship is the service department. As the president of the Greater Lehigh Valley Auto Dealers Association, Scott has a great Andy Scott poses with two of his employees, Jason Smith and Steve Nederostek, who are also students in the GM program at Northampton. respect for the service department, and the power that it has over customer relations. “The association’s initial project was the Lehigh Valley Auto Show, and our continuing success with this event has demonstrated the benefits of working collaboratively,” he said.The experience has encouraged the association and its members to turn their attention to other issues. The dealer association members are sensitive to the need for skilled service technicians and they recently voted to provide scholarships for students in the program.“This is a initial step for the association, and one we hope will lead to other collaborative training in the years ahead,” said Scott. “We’re convinced that excellence in the service department pays dividends for the entire dealership, and we’re pleased 32 that Northampton Community College’s automotive technology program is helping us achieve results in an area that is critical to our continued success.” The service department has come a long way from grease pits and wrenches. “The mechanic has become the service technician, and service itself has entered the high-tech world,” notes Scott. “Customers expect their cars to work, and if they don’t, they expect the problem to be resolved with a minimum of inconvenience. Trained technicians are a must to succeed in the face of these expectations, and meeting this standard is a day-after-day issue for any dealership. Simply put, each visit adds or detracts from the whole relationship. Keep in mind that our goal is 100 percent customer satisfaction in every aspect of our business.” An Opportunity to Make a Difference for Northampton D r.Aaron Litwak appreciates opportunities. “Throughout my college years, I worked full-time at Bethlehem Steel to support myself ,” recalls the retired Easton area dentist. After graduating from dental school, he interned at St. Luke’s hospital before beginning his practice in Easton.Although his early career was interrupted by a stint in the Air Force, he eventually returned to Easton where he developed a practice to which he devoted five decades of what he refers to as “delightful” service. Dr. Litwak is grateful to those who helped him and he wants to help others. “Through provisions I’ve made in my will to help favorite charities, of which Northampton Community College is one, my lawyer was aware of my desire to lend a hand. He suggested that I explore gift annuities which help the charity while also benefiting the donor. I quickly realized that annuities are a great opportunity to do something special for others while also helping to secure your future,” said Dr. Litwak.“I strongly recommend that everyone take the time to find out more about gift annuities at Northampton Community College and why an annuity might be the ideal gift to consider.” For information on bequests or for assistance in creating a planned gift, please contact Michael E. Nagel, senior planned giving and major gifts officer at 610-861-5449. Northampton Community College Foundation H A P P E N I N G S JANUARY 9 25 26 Financial Aid Night for High School Students, 6:30p.m. Opening Reception: Chloe Hansson Art Exhibit, 11a.m. Classical Cuisine: “An Evening of Jazz,” 6 p.m. FEBRUARY 7 24 Winter Play Opening: “Lysistrata,” 1 p.m. Doo-Wap Concert, 7:30 p.m. MARCH 10 22 26 30 Spring Crafts Fair, 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. Opening Reception: Chris Christofo Art Exhibit, 11 a.m. Open House: Arts, Education & Social Work, 6:30 p.m. First day of Kraus Drawing Awards Exhibition, 8 a.m. APRIL 2 4 6 Open House: Business & Office Systems, 6:30 p.m. Poetry Day: Herbert Martin, Noon Spring Play Opening:”Saturday, Sunday, Monday,” 7 p.m. SAVE THE DATE: May 6 SpringFest (formerly Family Day Expo) Visit our new web site at www.northampton.edu For additional information and details, please call the Information Center at 610/861-5300. Northampton Community College 3835 Green Pond Road Bethlehem, Pennsylvania 18020-7599 www.northampton.edu Change Service Requested Non-Profit Org. U.S. Postage Paid Permit #513 Bethlehem, PA