REUNION 2009 - Alumni News
Transcription
REUNION 2009 - Alumni News
PEOPLE August 2009 Reunion 2009 Society of Alumni Officers President Sarah Mollman Underhill ’80 Vice President Christopher F. Giglio ’89 Secretary Brooks L. Foehl ’88 Assistant Secretaries Juan G. Baena ’07 Rex M. Lybrand Robert Swann ’90 Paula Moore Tabor ’76 Executive Committee Retiring 2010 Cesar J. Alvarez ’84* H. Mercer Blanchard ’55 Kendall Eugene James ’84 Stephen Alexander Martin ’91 Rebecca D. Salazar ’89 Marcia Toll ’89 Jonathan Vipond III ’67 Retiring 2011 Walter S. Bernheimer II ’61 David C. Bowen ’83* Thomas Peter Kimbis ’93 Bernard Lau ’85 Gregg C. Peterson ’72 Kate Boyle Ramsdell ’97 Sarah Barger Ranney ’02 RETIRING 2012 Jennifer C. Bees ’08 James Gerard Christian ’82 Beth-Anne C. Flynn ’81 Aaron R. Jenkins ’03 Laura Moberg Lavoie ’99 Frederick M. Lawrence ’77* Norma Lopez ’95 Williams magazine (USPS No. 684-580) is published in August, September, December, January, March, April and June and distributed free of charge by Williams College for the Society of Alumni. Opinions expressed in this publication may not necessarily reflect those of Williams College or of the Society of Alumni. Periodical postage paid at Williamstown, MA 01267 and additional mailing offices. Postmaster: Send address changes to Williams magazine 75 Park St. Williamstown, MA 01267-2114 RETIRING 2013 Kate L. Queeney ’92* RETIRING 2014 Joey Shaista Horn ’87 *Ex Officio as Alumni Trustee Alumni Fund ChairS Katie Chatas ’88 Ted Plonsker ’86 Alumni Offices 75 Park St. Williamstown, MA 01267-2114 tel: 413.597.4151 fax: 413.458.9808 e-mail: alumni.relations@williams.edu http://alumni.williams.edu The Williams College Society of Alumni was established in 1821 and is the oldest continuously operating alumni organization in the U.S. The Executive Committee is its governing board, charged with representing and building closer bonds among alumni, advancing the interests and reputation of Williams College and furthering meaningful relationships between the two. The Executive Committee conducts the business of the Society of Alumni between annual meetings, held on campus each June during Reunion Weekend. On the Cover Reunion 2009. Photo by Scott Barrow. CONTENT S 2 Reunion Scrapbook 18 Class Notes Click on text and photos to jump to the corresponding page 1932 • ’36 • ’37 • ’38 • ’39 1940 • ’41 • ’42 • ’43 • ’44 • ’45 • ’46 • ’47 • ’48 • ’49 8 1950 • ’51 • ’52 • ’53 • ’54 • ’55 • ’56 • ’57 • ’58 • ’59 1960 • ’61 • ’62 • ’63 • ’64 • ’65 • ’66 • ’67 • ’68 • ’69 1970 • ’71 • ’72 • ’73 • ’74 • ’75 • ’76 • ’77 • ’78 • ’79 1980 • ’81 • ’82 • ’83 • ’84 • ’85 • ’86 • ’87 • ’88 • ’89 1990 • ’91 • ’92 • ’93 • ’94 • ’95 • ’96 • ’97 • ’98 • ’99 2000 • ’01 • ’02 • ’03 • ’04 • ’05 • ’06 • ’07 • ’08 34 78 125 W edding Album Editor Amy T. Lovett 130 Births & Adoptions 132 Obituaries Assistant Editor Jennifer E. Grow Student Assistant Amanda Korman ’10 Design & Production Steve Parrish Jane Firor & Associates Editorial Offices P.O. Box 676 Williamstown, MA 01267-0676 tel: 413.597.4278 fax: 413.597.4158 e-mail: alumni.review@williams.edu http://alumni.williams.edu/alumnireview PEOPLE August 2009 Address Changes/Updates Bio Records 75 Park St. Williamstown, MA 01267-2114 tel: 413.597.4399 fax: 413.458.9808 e-mail: alumni.office@williams.edu http://alumni.williams.edu 126 Volume 104 Number 1 On the Back Cover Bagpipers in the alumni parade. Photo by Scott Barrow. Society of Alumni Officers President Sarah Mollman Underhill ’80 Vice President Christopher F. Giglio ’89 Secretary Brooks L. Foehl ’88 Assistant Secretaries Juan G. Baena ’07 Rex M. Lybrand Robert Swann ’90 Paula Moore Tabor ’76 Executive Committee Retiring 2010 Cesar J. Alvarez ’84* H. Mercer Blanchard ’55 Kendall Eugene James ’84 Stephen Alexander Martin ’91 Rebecca D. Salazar ’89 Marcia Toll ’89 Jonathan Vipond III ’67 Retiring 2011 Walter S. Bernheimer II ’61 David C. Bowen ’83* Thomas Peter Kimbis ’93 Bernard Lau ’85 Gregg C. Peterson ’72 Kate Boyle Ramsdell ’97 Sarah Barger Ranney ’02 RETIRING 2012 Jennifer C. Bees ’08 James Gerard Christian ’82 Beth-Anne C. Flynn ’81 Aaron R. Jenkins ’03 Laura Moberg Lavoie ’99 Frederick M. Lawrence ’77* Norma Lopez ’95 RETIRING 2013 Kate L. Queeney ’92* RETIRING 2014 Joey Shaista Horn ’87 *Ex Officio as Alumni Trustee Alumni Fund ChairS Katie Chatas ’88 Ted Plonsker ’86 Alumni Offices 75 Park St. Williamstown, MA 01267-2114 tel: 413.597.4151 fax: 413.458.9808 e-mail: alumni.relations@williams.edu http://alumni.williams.edu The Williams College Society of Alumni was established in 1821 and is the oldest continuously operating alumni organization in the U.S. The Executive Committee is its governing board, charged with representing and building closer bonds among alumni, advancing the interests and reputation of Williams College and furthering meaningful relationships between the two. The Executive Committee conducts the business of the Society of Alumni between annual meetings, held on campus each June during Reunion Weekend. On the Cover Reunion 2009. Photo by Scott Barrow. CONTENT S 2 Reunion Scrapbook 18 Class Notes 78 8 34 125 W edding Album 130 Births & Adoptions 132 Obituaries Editor Amy T. Lovett Assistant Editor Jennifer E. Grow Student Assistant Amanda Korman ’10 Design & Production Steve Parrish Jane Firor & Associates Editorial Offices P.O. Box 676 Williamstown, MA 01267-0676 tel: 413.597.4278 fax: 413.597.4158 e-mail: alumni.review@williams.edu http://alumni.williams.edu/alumnireview PEOPLE August 2009 Address Changes/Updates Bio Records 75 Park St. Williamstown, MA 01267-2114 tel: 413.597.4399 fax: 413.458.9808 e-mail: alumni.office@williams.edu http://alumni.williams.edu 126 Williams magazine (USPS No. 684-580) is published in August, September, December, January, March, April and June and distributed free of charge by Williams College for the Society of Alumni. Opinions expressed in this publication may not necessarily reflect those of Williams College or of the Society of Alumni. Periodical postage paid at Williamstown, MA 01267 and additional mailing offices. Postmaster: Send address changes to Williams magazine 75 Park St. Williamstown, MA 01267-2114 Volume 104 Number 1 On the Back Cover Bagpipers in the alumni parade. Photo by Scott Barrow. On the Cover Reunion 2009. Photo by Scott Barrow. CONTENT S 2 Reunion Scrapbook 18 Class Notes 78 8 34 125 W edding Album 130 Births & Adoptions 132 Obituaries Editor Amy T. Lovett Assistant Editor Jennifer E. Grow Student Assistant Amanda Korman ’10 Design & Production Steve Parrish Jane Firor & Associates Editorial Offices P.O. Box 676 Williamstown, MA 01267-0676 tel: 413.597.4278 fax: 413.597.4158 e-mail: alumni.review@williams.edu http://alumni.williams.edu/alumnireview PEOPLE August 2009 Address Changes/Updates Bio Records 75 Park St. Williamstown, MA 01267-2114 tel: 413.597.4399 fax: 413.458.9808 e-mail: alumni.office@williams.edu http://alumni.williams.edu 126 Williams magazine (USPS No. 684-580) is published in August, September, December, January, March, April and June and distributed free of charge by Williams College for the Society of Alumni. Opinions expressed in this publication may not necessarily reflect those of Williams College or of the Society of Alumni. Periodical postage paid at Williamstown, MA 01267 and additional mailing offices. Postmaster: Send address changes to Williams magazine 75 Park St. Williamstown, MA 01267-2114 Volume 104 Number 1 On the Back Cover Bagpipers in the alumni parade. Photo by Scott Barrow. 2009 Reunion o b p a Scr From fireworks (courtesy of the Class of ’59) to fishing to frisbee, fun was the name of the game during Art Evans Reunion Weekend, held June 11-14. Nearly 1,500 alumni returned with their families and friends. Photos by Scott Barrow unless noted. 2 | Williams People | August 2009 Art Evans Art Evans ook For more reunion photos, visit http://bit.ly/1kHn16 August 2009 | Williams People | 3 4 | Williams People | August 2009 Art Evans Sue Rankin Art Evans Art Evans 2009 Reunion Scrapbook 50th Reunion Class 1959 celebrated in style with 200 classmates and their guests. In addition to Outrageous Purple Night (with some of the best photo ops of the weekend), the class hosted an art show and reception at the ’62 Center and a book exhibition at the Center for Development Economics that featured 19 authors and 30 published works. Other highlights included a surprise purple and gold fireworks display at the Clark Art Institute, two showings of David Earle’s The Movie Movie at Images Cinema and a campuswide seminar by Bill Moomaw on the challenges of creating a sustainable future. The class presented the College with $10.5 million to support the Alumni Fund, the Class of 1959 Great Teachers Initiative Sue Rankin Art Evans and the Class of 1959 Scholarship. Photos by Scott Barrow unless noted. August 2009 | Williams People | 5 Sue Rankin Art Evans 2009 Reunion Scrapbook Photos by Scott Barrow unless noted. 6 | Williams People | August 2009 Art Evans 50th Reunion Class August 2008 | Williams People | 7 Scott Barrow Scott Barrow 2009 Reunion Scrapbook Photos by Art Evans unless noted. 8 | Williams People | August 2009 25th Reunion Class The Class of ’84 welcomed back 229 alumni and 331 family members and friends. A highlight of the weekend was the 25th reunion panel discussion “Sustainability at Williams Log,” featuring Mara Bún, CEO of Green Cross Australia; Bill Edmonds, director of environmental policy and sustainability for NW Natural in Portland, Ore; Jim Neumann, environmental Scott Barrow and Around the World: How Best to Use Mark Hopkins’ economist with Industrial Economics of Cambridge, Mass.; and Peg Stevenson, city services auditor for San Francisco, Calif. In keeping with the theme, the class presented the College with a $7.3 million 25th reunion gift, including more than $1 million Scott Barrow Scott Barrow for the Class of 1984 Sustainability Fund. August 2009 | Williams People | 9 2009 Reunion Scrapbook Photos by Art Evans. 10 | Williams People | August 2009 25th Reunion Class August 2009 | Williams People | 11 2009 Reunion Scrapbook Awards & Honors 1 2 4 5 3 Photos by Art Evans. 12 | Williams People | August 2009 For a list of Alumni Fund trophy winners, visit alumni.williams.edu/af0809report Ephs bid adieu to Williams’ first family at the annual meeting by honoring President Morty Schapiro (4) and Mimi Schapiro (6), who received the Ephraim Williams Medal for exceptional service and loyalty to the College. Also recognized were retiring VP of Alumni Relations & Development Steve Birrell ’64 (5) and Joseph’s Coat winner Alex Carroll ’39. Other awardees were: 1 William A. Finn ’74, Kellogg Award for career achievement 2 Pete Wilmott ’59, Rogerson Cup, the highest award for alumni service 3 Nat White ’99, Thurston Bowl for exceptional service as class secretary (shown with Dave Thurston ’44, son of the award’s namesake) 7 Donna Ching ’84, Copeland Award for effectively representing Williams to high schoolers 6 7 August 2009 | Williams People | 13 2009 Reunion Scrapbook Scott Barrow Scott Barrow Photos by Art Evans unless noted. 14 | Williams People | August 2009 August 2009 | Williams People | 15 Scott Barrow Scott Barrow Scott Barrow 2009 Reunion Scrapbook Photos by Scott Barrow unless noted. 16 | Williams People | August 2009 Art Evans Art Evans Art Evans August 2009 | Williams People | 17 CL ASS NOTES 1932 John P. English 3226 Heatherwood Yarmouth Port, MA 02675 1932secretary@williams.edu Did you folks of 1932 who, like me, survived the four-yearsof-Latin entrance requirement back in 1928 experience a quiver when you read that the College Board recently decided that preparatory schools no longer even have to offer Catullus, Cicero, Horace or Ovid (Virgil did survive)? I did! Another of us, Jim Goodwin, celebrated his 99th birthday with a gathering of 20 at the home of his son Tony ’71 in the Adirondacks. There were many testimonials, and the birthday boy responded that he was too old to compose a speech. Instead he recited the rather lengthy Adirondack classic “Allen’s Bear Fight Up in Keene” verbatim. 1936 Richard U. Sherman Jr. Friendship Village Dublin 6000 Riverside Drive, Apt. A109 Dublin, OH 43017 1936secretary@williams.edu Class President Dar Wales wrote a letter to each of the 14 living members of the Class of 1936 concerning the feasibility of a 75th reunion in 2011 and other matters: “I do not see planning for another reunion. Attendance at the last one was two or three. The biggest reason for nonattendance was driving; few of us drive anymore (myself included). Many of us need walkers to move from room to room. I use my walker constantly. I walk with it every day at a local supermarket. I go around the perimeter three times. This is my exercise.” Dar continued, “I also have had the good fortune and good health enabling me to continue the practice of law, nothing controversial and no court appearances except Surrogate’s Court. There are 100 lawyers in the firm of Hinman, Howard & Kattell, LLP, where I am an associate.” In his letter Dar also thanked Jerry Langeler, Jim Laubach, Stan Strauss, Win Robart and Dick Sherman for their help in handling class and College affairs over the years. Dar also reported having a delightful lunch recently with Elima and Paul Higgins at their home in Cortland, N.Y. 18 | Williams People | August 2009 Jim Goodwin ’32 (left) met up with his former Kingswood School student Peyton Mead ’50 in Keene Valley, N.Y., in September 2008. Lev Davis wrote from his home in Damariscotta, Maine, “Am now recuperating from a fall on the eve of my 95th birthday (April 5), broke no bones but landed a nasty blood bug, which kept me on IV in Maine Medical Hospital, then in rehab. Didn’t make it out to Harbor Island last summer but hope to for a few days this [summer]. My children all well. Lost a wonderful sonin-law (Andrew Janover) in November ’08 to a nasty cancer. Have a new great-grandson, Wyatt Andrew Janover, born on his deceased grandfather’s birthday. Son Sandy and daughters Ann and Caroline have all relocated to Damariscotta. Wonderful to have my family close by.” Jerry Langeler, always a faithful correspondent, reported, “It took six years to get patent approval for ‘Pill Down,’ a gadget I invented to facilitate pill taking for young and old. Estimated sales of 20 million a year have been projected. Williams surely did give me a superb education! A high school graduate, I was one of the youngest in our ’36 class; I turned 93 last December.” I am sorry to have to report the deaths of Russ Stoddard and Edith Karelis. Russ died on March 17; he was a close friend of mine and was married to my wife Jinny’s sister Janet Stanley, the mother of his only child, Sarah Stoddard McKay. Edith Karelis died on Jan. 4 and was the widow of our long-serving class treasurer Saul Karelis, who died in 2007. 1937 Edwin B. Heyes Jr. 448A Heritage Hills Somers, NY 10589 1937secretary@williams.edu A little late, but Happy New Year to all. While Sonnie and Bun Dawson are braving out winter in St. Paul, they are still undecided whether to settle in La Jolla, Calif., or Scottsdale, Ariz., for the remaining “Golden Years.” Meanwhile New York Times crossword puzzle, bridge, occasional trips to Boston and a physical trainer who visits home on a regular basis keep them both in good shape. Farney Fowle is keeping house OK as his legs are doing well. (Thanks to his many years of soccer?) Gave up his car in 2000 but doing well with public transportation. Visited at his sister’s and brother’s home for Thanksgiving in Princeton. Still enjoys music of Fats Waller and Hazel Scott. Regrets he can no longer celebrate mutual birthdays in person with Mary and John Reeves. The latter are celebrating their sixth year at Farmingdale, Conn. Visits not only from nearby friends but also the many far-flung members of the Moore and Reeves families help keep spirits up. Judge Irv Goldman is carrying on volunteer activities “in good shape for the shape he’s in.” Jack Selvage passed his 94th in good style, keeps check on the “market,” enjoys many hours of bridge and once in a while visits his chalet in Manchester, Vt., where he still retains membership in the country club. On the Cover Reunion 2009. Photo by Scott Barrow. CONTENT S 2 Reunion Scrapbook 18 Class Notes 78 8 34 125 W edding Album 130 Births & Adoptions 132 Obituaries Editor Amy T. Lovett Assistant Editor Jennifer E. Grow Student Assistant Amanda Korman ’10 Design & Production Steve Parrish Jane Firor & Associates Editorial Offices P.O. Box 676 Williamstown, MA 01267-0676 tel: 413.597.4278 fax: 413.597.4158 e-mail: alumni.review@williams.edu http://alumni.williams.edu/alumnireview PEOPLE August 2009 Address Changes/Updates Bio Records 75 Park St. Williamstown, MA 01267-2114 tel: 413.597.4399 fax: 413.458.9808 e-mail: alumni.office@williams.edu http://alumni.williams.edu 126 Williams magazine (USPS No. 684-580) is published in August, September, December, January, March, April and June and distributed free of charge by Williams College for the Society of Alumni. Opinions expressed in this publication may not necessarily reflect those of Williams College or of the Society of Alumni. Periodical postage paid at Williamstown, MA 01267 and additional mailing offices. Postmaster: Send address changes to Williams magazine 75 Park St. Williamstown, MA 01267-2114 Volume 104 Number 1 On the Back Cover Bagpipers in the alumni parade. Photo by Scott Barrow. 2009 Reunion o b p a Scr From fireworks (courtesy of the Class of ’59) to fishing to frisbee, fun was the name of the game during Art Evans Reunion Weekend, held June 11-14. Nearly 1,500 alumni returned with their families and friends. Photos by Scott Barrow unless noted. 2 | Williams People | August 2009 Art Evans Art Evans ook For more reunion photos, visit http://bit.ly/1kHn16 August 2009 | Williams People | 3 4 | Williams People | August 2009 Art Evans Sue Rankin Art Evans Art Evans 2009 Reunion Scrapbook 50th Reunion Class 1959 celebrated in style with 200 classmates and their guests. In addition to Outrageous Purple Night (with some of the best photo ops of the weekend), the class hosted an art show and reception at the ’62 Center and a book exhibition at the Center for Development Economics that featured 19 authors and 30 published works. Other highlights included a surprise purple and gold fireworks display at the Clark Art Institute, two showings of David Earle’s The Movie Movie at Images Cinema and a campuswide seminar by Bill Moomaw on the challenges of creating a sustainable future. The class presented the College with $10.5 million to support the Alumni Fund, the Class of 1959 Great Teachers Initiative Sue Rankin Art Evans and the Class of 1959 Scholarship. Photos by Scott Barrow unless noted. August 2009 | Williams People | 5 Sue Rankin Art Evans 2009 Reunion Scrapbook Photos by Scott Barrow unless noted. 6 | Williams People | August 2009 Art Evans 50th Reunion Class August 2008 | Williams People | 7 Scott Barrow Scott Barrow 2009 Reunion Scrapbook Photos by Art Evans unless noted. 8 | Williams People | August 2009 25th Reunion Class The Class of ’84 welcomed back 229 alumni and 331 family members and friends. A highlight of the weekend was the 25th reunion panel discussion “Sustainability at Williams Log,” featuring Mara Bún, CEO of Green Cross Australia; Bill Edmonds, director of environmental policy and sustainability for NW Natural in Portland, Ore; Jim Neumann, environmental Scott Barrow and Around the World: How Best to Use Mark Hopkins’ economist with Industrial Economics of Cambridge, Mass.; and Peg Stevenson, city services auditor for San Francisco, Calif. In keeping with the theme, the class presented the College with a $7.3 million 25th reunion gift, including more than $1 million Scott Barrow Scott Barrow for the Class of 1984 Sustainability Fund. August 2009 | Williams People | 9 2009 Reunion Scrapbook Photos by Art Evans. 10 | Williams People | August 2009 25th Reunion Class August 2009 | Williams People | 11 2009 Reunion Scrapbook Awards & Honors 1 2 4 5 3 Photos by Art Evans. 12 | Williams People | August 2009 For a list of Alumni Fund trophy winners, visit alumni.williams.edu/af0809report Ephs bid adieu to Williams’ first family at the annual meeting by honoring President Morty Schapiro (4) and Mimi Schapiro (6), who received the Ephraim Williams Medal for exceptional service and loyalty to the College. Also recognized were retiring VP of Alumni Relations & Development Steve Birrell ’64 (5) and Joseph’s Coat winner Alex Carroll ’39. Other awardees were: 1 William A. Finn ’74, Kellogg Award for career achievement 2 Pete Wilmott ’59, Rogerson Cup, the highest award for alumni service 3 Nat White ’99, Thurston Bowl for exceptional service as class secretary (shown with Dave Thurston ’44, son of the award’s namesake) 7 Donna Ching ’84, Copeland Award for effectively representing Williams to high schoolers 6 7 August 2009 | Williams People | 13 2009 Reunion Scrapbook Scott Barrow Scott Barrow Photos by Art Evans unless noted. 14 | Williams People | August 2009 August 2009 | Williams People | 15 Scott Barrow Scott Barrow Scott Barrow 2009 Reunion Scrapbook Photos by Scott Barrow unless noted. 16 | Williams People | August 2009 Art Evans Art Evans Art Evans August 2009 | Williams People | 17 CL ASS NOTES 1932 John P. English 3226 Heatherwood Yarmouth Port, MA 02675 1932secretary@williams.edu Did you folks of 1932 who, like me, survived the four-yearsof-Latin entrance requirement back in 1928 experience a quiver when you read that the College Board recently decided that preparatory schools no longer even have to offer Catullus, Cicero, Horace or Ovid (Virgil did survive)? I did! Another of us, Jim Goodwin, celebrated his 99th birthday with a gathering of 20 at the home of his son Tony ’71 in the Adirondacks. There were many testimonials, and the birthday boy responded that he was too old to compose a speech. Instead he recited the rather lengthy Adirondack classic “Allen’s Bear Fight Up in Keene” verbatim. 1936 Richard U. Sherman Jr. Friendship Village Dublin 6000 Riverside Drive, Apt. A109 Dublin, OH 43017 1936secretary@williams.edu Class President Dar Wales wrote a letter to each of the 14 living members of the Class of 1936 concerning the feasibility of a 75th reunion in 2011 and other matters: “I do not see planning for another reunion. Attendance at the last one was two or three. The biggest reason for nonattendance was driving; few of us drive anymore (myself included). Many of us need walkers to move from room to room. I use my walker constantly. I walk with it every day at a local supermarket. I go around the perimeter three times. This is my exercise.” Dar continued, “I also have had the good fortune and good health enabling me to continue the practice of law, nothing controversial and no court appearances except Surrogate’s Court. There are 100 lawyers in the firm of Hinman, Howard & Kattell, LLP, where I am an associate.” In his letter Dar also thanked Jerry Langeler, Jim Laubach, Stan Strauss, Win Robart and Dick Sherman for their help in handling class and College affairs over the years. Dar also reported having a delightful lunch recently with Elima and Paul Higgins at their home in Cortland, N.Y. 18 | Williams People | August 2009 Jim Goodwin ’32 (left) met up with his former Kingswood School student Peyton Mead ’50 in Keene Valley, N.Y., in September 2008. Lev Davis wrote from his home in Damariscotta, Maine, “Am now recuperating from a fall on the eve of my 95th birthday (April 5), broke no bones but landed a nasty blood bug, which kept me on IV in Maine Medical Hospital, then in rehab. Didn’t make it out to Harbor Island last summer but hope to for a few days this [summer]. My children all well. Lost a wonderful sonin-law (Andrew Janover) in November ’08 to a nasty cancer. Have a new great-grandson, Wyatt Andrew Janover, born on his deceased grandfather’s birthday. Son Sandy and daughters Ann and Caroline have all relocated to Damariscotta. Wonderful to have my family close by.” Jerry Langeler, always a faithful correspondent, reported, “It took six years to get patent approval for ‘Pill Down,’ a gadget I invented to facilitate pill taking for young and old. Estimated sales of 20 million a year have been projected. Williams surely did give me a superb education! A high school graduate, I was one of the youngest in our ’36 class; I turned 93 last December.” I am sorry to have to report the deaths of Russ Stoddard and Edith Karelis. Russ died on March 17; he was a close friend of mine and was married to my wife Jinny’s sister Janet Stanley, the mother of his only child, Sarah Stoddard McKay. Edith Karelis died on Jan. 4 and was the widow of our long-serving class treasurer Saul Karelis, who died in 2007. 1937 Edwin B. Heyes Jr. 448A Heritage Hills Somers, NY 10589 1937secretary@williams.edu A little late, but Happy New Year to all. While Sonnie and Bun Dawson are braving out winter in St. Paul, they are still undecided whether to settle in La Jolla, Calif., or Scottsdale, Ariz., for the remaining “Golden Years.” Meanwhile New York Times crossword puzzle, bridge, occasional trips to Boston and a physical trainer who visits home on a regular basis keep them both in good shape. Farney Fowle is keeping house OK as his legs are doing well. (Thanks to his many years of soccer?) Gave up his car in 2000 but doing well with public transportation. Visited at his sister’s and brother’s home for Thanksgiving in Princeton. Still enjoys music of Fats Waller and Hazel Scott. Regrets he can no longer celebrate mutual birthdays in person with Mary and John Reeves. The latter are celebrating their sixth year at Farmingdale, Conn. Visits not only from nearby friends but also the many far-flung members of the Moore and Reeves families help keep spirits up. Judge Irv Goldman is carrying on volunteer activities “in good shape for the shape he’s in.” Jack Selvage passed his 94th in good style, keeps check on the “market,” enjoys many hours of bridge and once in a while visits his chalet in Manchester, Vt., where he still retains membership in the country club. n 1 9 3 2 –4 0 Ed Heyes has not heard from Bob Meyersburg and Phil Mantius. All other 16 accounted for. We are sorry to have to report the passing Betty and Bob Lord, Rev. Frank Sayre, Charlie Russell, Jane Whitehead and Betsy Hawn. In closing, Ed appreciates seasons greetings from the Selvages and the Guttersons. Ad hog Volantes. 1938 George McKay 2833 Wind Pump Road Fort Wayne, IN 46804 1938secretary@williams.edu A phone call to Doug Johnston found him still in Houston quite healthy, happy and surrounded by three of his four sons and their families, including two new great-grandchildren. In another call to Salt Lake City, Ted Noehren reported that he had lost his wife Madeleine a year ago but has remained in the same assisted living facility there. He said he had been back to Williamstown last fall and watched our team defeat Amherst. In addition to Ted’s loss, I regret to report the deaths of two more classmates, William B. Dayton III and Dr. George Carter. Our condolences go out to their families. 1939 Roger Moore 39 Boland Road Sharon, CT 06069 A recent telephone conversation with Doug Surgeoner’s wife Lois tells about their living in Peterborough, N.H. Doug unfortunately is in a senior Rivermead Retirement Home with Alzheimer’s disease. Lois thought that Doug would not recognize my name. She was impressed with the Class of 1939’s recognition in recent fundraising. A communication from the Gottleibs was entertaining enough that I will attempt to record it verbatim. “Several years ago my wife and I founded a mythical organization called the Sidewalk Diver’s Club. My credentials include a broken arm on a tennis court, an international dive on a street in France on the way to a laundromat and a double dive with Jean in the Atlanta airport. The ultimate is a dive into an empty swimming pool. Jean and I are the only members, and we came up with this motto for the club: DON’T! Be sure to hang on to stair railings and to each other, but if you thought it might be a good idea to join the Sidewalk Diver’s Club, don’t.” Signed: Harry Gottleib, Fort Myer’s Beach. This is a note from Karl Mertz. “Dear brother Roger: This change of address, not to mention person, had me phoning [Larry] Whittemore and [Alex] Carroll to see if you were OK or had a stroke or something. Potty said it is probably a foul-up in the Alumni Office. (More explanation anon.) Contrary to wide speculation Barack has not called me east for a briefing, nor has Arnold. Did find out something that might interest you. If you ever want to know what our weather is out here in Aptos (which is on the sunny north side of Monterey Bay) look for Monterey, Calif., which is 35 miles or 45 minutes around the Bay from us, and the center of Carmel and Pebble Beach. You know when you’re ice bound or hot and humid.” From Alex Carroll: Alex encourages me to try to do something about the Alumni Office. (See above for references to the mistaken return of my query for news.) Alex and Marion were, according to plan, to fly from Indianapolis to Hartford, rent a car and come here for overnight and then drive up to Williamstown at the beginning of our reunion. He added, “If I somehow don’t make it, you may understand.” Larry Whittemore adds congratulations on straightening out the communications, or lack of, in getting this column done. His only news is about their trips to medical personnel and playing a lot of bridge. Bruce Burnham reports good health although he walks with a slight tilt toward the ground. His tennis continues notable having made the semi-finals of a lawn tennis match held in the area of Longmeadow near Springfield, Mass. Bruce recalls close associations in the past with Howie Bushman and Gaynor Calister. Bruce states that he wins all of his tennis matches from his easy chair in front of the TV. 1940 REUNION JUNE 10-13 Martin Brown 7926 Sand Ridge Road Barneveld, NY 13304 Bill Egelhoff 1500 Westbrook Court, Apt. 1104 Richmond, VA 23227 1940secretary@williams.edu Bill Egelhoff writes that he interrupted Bill Brown as he was about to go out and feed the horses on their Far Hills, N.J., farm. Bill seems to enjoy farm life over Wall Street, especially these days! Bill received a nice e-mail from Win Todd, who with his wife Mary Lou has wintered in the Florida Keys for the past 25 years. Now they stay in Kalamazoo, where they enjoy flights of migratory birds that use their lake as a refuge. Win says his good friend Pete Parish ’41, who was a WWII pilot, has established a fascinating Air Zoo there featuring WWII planes—all in flying condition. Steve Cobb and Frances enjoyed a barge trip along the Texas coast entertained by lots of whooping cranes along the way. He adds that they joined the ranks of retirement-home living about a dozen years ago. He and Bill enjoyed reminiscing about their Elderhostel experiences. Bill also writes that he and Dorothy enjoyed a spring cruise crossing the Atlantic to Europe. One of the highlights was a visit to the fascinating Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, created by Frank Gehry. Bill says he also managed to get in some skiing on his 91st birthday. A call from Bill Budington brought the news of another of us moving into a retirement complex. (It would be interesting to know how many of us are still living independently.) Back in WWII Bill was one of the soldiers working at Oak Ridge, Tenn., under the supervision of atomic physicist Werner Von Braun on that world-shaking Manhattan Project. Impressive! Ted Hoffman and his wife Polly have moved into cottage with life care in Peterborough, N.H. Ted says he’s recovering from a four-brokenrib fall. Other than that he says life is fine. John Tomb e-mailed Bill that he and Helen are looking into Westminster Canterbury, Richmond, the same complex August 2009 | Williams People | 19 CL ASS NOTES where Bill and Dot have been living for the past two years and where the CEO is Don Lecky ’72. Bill says if a few more alumni move in, we’ll start a Williams Alumni Club of Richmond. Brooks Hoffman notes that failing eyesight may soon mean giving up driving. But, thank goodness, it doesn’t keep him from his generosity to Chapin Library. Brooks has established a fund to add to and protect the collection. Bill also received a letter from Ben Kauffman’s widow Anne telling of Ben’s death last December. Ben was president of National Wholesale Drug Co. and, Anne writes, was very proud of his life at Williams. Steve Cobb says he and Frances don’t travel much anymore, especially after a barge trip on the Mississippi was canceled because of the economy. They have moved into a life care retirement community outside Hartford. Steve also remembered the Rev. Doug Burgoyne ’50, now retired and living in Richmond, Va. Steve and Doug both attended Trinity School in NYC. John Tiebout says he’s recovering from a fall last September, resulting in a fractured femur. After lengthy physical therapy, John is now able to get around with the help of a walker but isn’t able to go outside. In good weather he and Ruth enjoy sitting on the patio in their retirement community. Charlie Price and Nancy maintain a fairly active life in his native Jamestown, N.Y. He works out at the Y several times a week, as he has for the past 30 years. It’s one way to keep his arthritis from taking over. As he and Nancy have done over the years, they spend two weeks at nearby Chautauqua, staying in the old hotel and enjoying the symphony and opera. Sounds like a great way to enjoy retirement. Finally we regret to note the passing since the last People of one-time classmate Eliot Asinof as well as Oz Coates, Al Hopkins and John Hubbell. How mighty are the fallen. 1941 Kim Loring 173 Lakeview Ave. Cambridge, MA 02138 In the order of things, this opening paragraph of the August People is ideally positioned. It serves as a reminder of the 20 | Williams People | August 2009 1941 minireunion Oct. 9-11. If you haven’t already decided to attend, it leaves enough time to come to that richly rewarding decision. Seriously though, the last few have been well worth the effort of getting there. This one will help tune you up for the 70th, a mere year and a half away. After having to report on the loss of so many classmates in the previous People, it seemed prudent to request an updated class list from the Alumni Office before venturing further. With two painful losses in this period, we are now down to 53. A look at the attrition evident in reports from older classes in People makes one realize how precious this time is. Come spend some of it in Williamstown in October. Meantime these notes will be focusing on classmates too often missing from them in recent years. One comes to mind via a personal history of five years as a Marine Corps pilot, 1941-46, which somehow found its way to your secretary. Written by John Hardy Clark at the behest of his daughter, it is a vivid evocation of those years. Imagine barely a year after entering flight training (and our graduation) finding yourself flying wing on Joe Foss on your first mission after arrival at Guadalcanal. (Foss, in case you don’t remember, shot down 26 Zeros and was awarded the Medal of Honor.) After surviving the Solomons, John was allowed a year in the States instructing instrument flying. Then it was overseas again, flying all over the Pacific before eventual discharge as major, USMCR. It is fascinating stuff, even the inevitable breaks in the action, and recalls in many ways what life was like in those times. Thereafter, John never quite got away from airplanes. After five years with Eddie Rickenbacker’s Eastern Air Lines in sales and traffic, he left for a brief stint at Olin Corp. He left to buy part of a manufacturer’s rep outfit, where again he put aviation to work. They bought three airplanes to cover eastern U.S. John left in 1958 to form Rader Cos., with major customers in the pulp and paper industry, again with dependence on aircraft to support Rader’s worldwide growth. In a terrible year in 1967 his son was killed in an auto accident. John was divorced. He remarried Marjorie Miller in 1970. They had a daughter in 1971. Rader was bought by Beloit Corp. in 1984, and John retired but continued consulting, which he enjoyed. Now fully retired, he and Marjorie would like to move out of their large house in Memphis but not in this real estate market. His main contact with Williams in recent years has been bird hunting with Craig Huff ’42, but now he thinks his footwork is not up to that. Prospects of getting the Clarks to a minireunion are dim. Another we have missed for far too long is Tom Tenney. Perhaps that is partly because after the war he and Maggie were so disenchanted with New England weather they bought a 30-foot house trailer, packed up their two boys and decamped for California. With their shared love of music, high fidelity the coming thing and Tom’s electronics experience in the Navy, they bought a record store in Berkeley. The business grew, and they entered the musical scene there. Both were musicians, Tom clarinet, Maggie piano, although Tom says they no longer play. But in Tom’s philosophical view, nothing lasts forever, and they closed the business in 1964. Tom went full time into photography, combining magazine work and special projects of his own, including museums. He got a start doing pictures for The New York Times Magazine through Pierce Fredericks, who edited our 25th reunion class book. Tom and Maggie went all over the country, photographing as they went but always returning to Berkeley. Eventually the escalating technology became too much to keep up with, and Tom retired. They are in reasonably good health and happy where they are. Unfortunately the next phone call was not so positive. George Prince announced at the outset that he has Alzheimer’s. Until recently he has been active in his chosen field of exploration into the creative process and its relation to thinking and learning. The Alzheimer’s began about three years ago. Dealing with that has taken its toll. One of the rare classmates still engaged in his profession, Edgar Nathan carries on in the law practice he started in 1951. He and Ruth still live in the apartment they bought about that time overlooking Central Park and have no plans to move. They have a country house in northwestern Connecticut, where they often n 1 9 4 0 –4 2 Members of the Classes of 1941 to 1971 enjoyed a Williams travel-study trip to Tunisia, where they donned native garb and took a camel trek in the Sahara Desert. spend weekends. Their son and daughter are also lawyers. Over the years Edgar has been active in political life, including work on Eisenhower’s campaign staff and a run for State Assembly, losing narrowly as a Republican in a Democratic district. His other pursuits included service on the State Board of Mediation and many years as president of Congregation Shearith Israel, the Spanish and Portuguese synagogue founded by his ancestors in 1654. Possibly because he has been flying under the radar, so to speak, all these years Win Pike is making a rare appearance in these pages. Win spent the war years working mostly on radar in the Army Signal Corps. In 1946 he began a 40-year career at RCA’s David Sarnoff Research Center in Princeton, N.J., working on circuit and system design for TV. He and Nancy Peakes married in 1954 and have six children and nine grandchildren. Aside from his work at RCA, which encompassed 20 issued patents, Win had an important role in local politics which included 14 years on the school board, president of it for six, and four-and-a-half years as mayor of Princeton Township. Since suffering a stroke in 2001, he has been using a walker and occasionally a wheelchair, but there’s no sign his spirits have been dampened any. With abundant local family support he recently celebrated his 89th birthday with a trip to Manhattan to see the revival of South Pacific. That brought to mind his experience with the open air performances of Oklahoma’s road company in Hollandia, where the Japanese came out of the jungle to sit in the back rows. On successive months over the winter ’41 lost two of its stars with the deaths of Bill Sebring and Oz Tower. William M. Sebring Jr. died Feb. 16 in Naples, Fla. Bill climaxed his Williams career in the spring of 1941 as class marshal (paired with Wayne Wilkins) and co-captain of lacrosse with Oz Tower. After four years of heavy cruiser duty in the Navy aboard the USS Baltimore, he returned to work for Inland Steel in Chicago. While in the Navy he met and married Theodate (Teddy) Belcher of New London, Conn. After a short stay with Inland, Bill joined Columbia Mills in NYC as labor relations director and later as division manager in Kansas City. In 1956 he resigned to launch Sebring & Co. in Kansas City, a wholesale distributing company. Bill and Teddy settled at Lake Quivera, Kan., where they raised their three children and were active in building the community on a small Kansas lake. In 1988 they retired to Naples, Fla., where Bill continued in community activity. Living at a golf resort, but insisting he was still not old enough to play, Bill instead continued his inveterate walking, becoming known for the number of golf balls he contributed to charity. The class extends its sympathy to his three children and their families. Oswald Tower died March 24 in Williamstown. After a college career distinguished in athletics and helping others, Ozzie enlisted in the Army. In 1942 a courtship, which began in the fifth grade in Andover, where he grew up, culminated in his marriage to Eleanor Daniels. After four years of service as a captain in the Pacific with the 10th Army, he returned to civilian life. Oz began a career in the copper business with Chase Brass & Copper Co. in Waterbury, Conn. After seven years he moved to Bridgeport Brass. When that company was bought out after two years, he decided there was a better future in steel and began a 19-year career with Michigan Seamless Tube in Birmingham, Mich. Faced with a move of headquarters to Houston in 1974, Oz opted for early retirement. The family moved to his beloved Williamstown. Befitting his moving man nature he bought Connors Brothers Moving and Storage Co. By that time they had lived in nine different towns and owned 15 different houses. The essence of Oz can be drawn from the 50th reunion class book, though it was by no means intended as a memorial at the time. When it seemed possible we might not hear from Oz in time for the publishing deadline, Craig Lewis wrote a capsule biography as a substitute. It begins, “If you remember Cabe Prindle, Chief Royal and other Williamstown characters of our day, the word around town is that Oz Tower may be equally memorable for making his effervescent presence felt at virtually every level of local affairs. He came here as a moving man … and moving and shaking have been his happy pastimes ever since. He shook out one town manager, but most of his civic energies have given a positive charge to the Board of Trade, the Youth Center, The Sideline Quarterbacks and almost any sidewalk group on Spring Street. Williamstown wouldn’t be the same without the Wizard of Oz.” A memorial service was to be held in Williamstown May 31. The class sends its sympathy to the many generations of Oz’s loving family. 1942 Bruce Sundlun Carlotti Admin. Bldg., 001 75 Lower College Road Kingston, RI 02881 1942secretary@williams.edu I started my telephone conversation with John Wolf by asking him whether he was August 2009 | Williams People | 21 CL ASS NOTES able to graduate from Williams or whether he dropped out to enlist in military service at the commencement of WWII. He explained that as a student of history, he felt certain that the events in Europe were leading up to a war in which the U.S. would be engaged. Therefore, in the summer of 1940, he volunteered for the first V-7 Naval Training Course. After a monthlong cruise to Guantanamo and Panama, he returned to Williams to complete his junior year. When he was later called to active duty, he was medically discharged due to asthma. John decided he was ready to leave Williams and attend Harvard Business School. He arranged through Williams’ administration to take comprehensive exams and write a thesis. He successfully completed the comprehensive tests at Williams. At Harvard, he joined the Army Quartermasters Service and after Pearl Harbor tried to once again to join the armed services but failed due to a service medical discharge. After graduation from Harvard Business School, he returned to Pittsburgh to work for Dravo, a company that manufactured LST and destroyer escort vessels. He worked there as an industrial engineer for a year and a half. At the end of WWII, John went to work for Kaufmann’s Department Store in the city of Pittsburgh, which was his family’s business and one of the premier and most innovative department stores in America. He worked there as the menswear merchandising manager for 19 years. In 1963 he left Kaufmann’s and bought a company called NAPCO, which manufactured specialty aluminum and vinyl products for the building industry, such as aluminum and vinyl siding, and windows. The business was a great success and was eventually taken over by his youngest son until it was sold in 1998. While working at Dravo, John married Gene Gottlieb (her father was expecting a boy) and they had two boys and two girls. Unfortunately, Gene died in 1980, and John married Leatrice Kagan, “a great addition” to his life. She has two children, a boy and a girl, and presently the Wolfs have 11 grandchildren. They have been married for “27 happy, fulfilling years.” John and Leatrice spend their winters in Palm Beach, Fla., and 22 | Williams People | August 2009 he knows some longtime friends of mine from Providence, R.I. John’s Providence ties go even deeper. Leatrice, two daughters, a stepson and his wife, and four grandchildren have all graduated from Brown University. This fall, another grandson will be entering the Class of 2013 at Brown. In Pittsburgh, John headed the Jewish Community Center and held executive positions in the United Jewish Federation and was generally very active in the community. He has been the recipient of the most prestigious Jewish philanthropic awards in Pittsburgh and has also received the Community Builder’s Award, which is the highest award proffered by the Jewish Community Centers of America (formerly the Jewish Welfare Board). John served on the National Board of the JCCA for many years. Thomas Hedley Reynolds lives at Cape Porpoise, Maine, and has a very superior academic distinction that exceeds anyone else in the Class of 1942. He has been president of two colleges and taught at a third one for 18 years. He first taught history at Middlebury in Vermont for 18 years, followed by the presidency of Bates in Maine from 1967 to 1989, retiring at age 70. Following that, Hedley was invited to be president of the University of New England at Biddeford, Maine, for four years. In 1943, Hedley married Jean Lytle, a Smith graduate, and they had three boys and one girl. They divorced after 33 years, and Hedley married Mary Bartlett. Hedley and Mary are sailors and keep a 30-foot sailboat at South Freeport, Maine. His children run farms, one son at Stannard, Vt.; his daughter owns a farm in Randolph, Vt.; and another son is a ski instructor at Aspen, Colo., in the winter, and runs a farm on Martha’s Vineyard in the summer. F. Thomas Ward Jr. lives in Sedona, Ariz., and when I telephoned him, I caught him just about as he was going to go swimming in his pool, where the weather was warm and hot. Tom left Williams after sophomore year and entered the V-7 Officer’s Training Course at Northwestern University in Chicago. After 90 days, he was commissioned an ensign and spent three years in the Pacific, serving as a fighter director on the battleship Pennsylvania and the command ship Appalachian. When he left military service, Tom went back to Williams for one year and got his degree. Tom entered the banking business with National City Bank and First National CITI Bank, both in New York. He spent his entire career in banking. He is a friend of Fred Rudolph and spent reunion three years ago with the Rudolphs. Tom has been married twice, first to a lady named Ruth, with whom he had three children, and subsequently to Cornelia Futrel, to whom he is now and still married. The high point of Tom’s life at present is painting, an art he acquired and developed after he retired and settled in Arizona. His principal subjects are landscapes of the Southwest U.S. He sells his paintings through Osprey Originals, 150 Eagle Lane, Sedona, Ariz. The latest Biographic Summary Report from the Williams College Alumni Office showed the class now has 53 male members still living and active. Of those currently listed, I was unable to contact six members by telephone due to absence of a listed phone number or existence of a number, but “disconnected,” so I wrote each of them a letter asking them to call my office “so we can talk about what you’ve been doing with your life since you left Williams.” The members I was unable to contact either by telephone or letter are: Robert B. Barnet III from Champaign, Ill.; David L. Hart from Oak Bluffs, Mass.; Joseph Lintz Jr. from Reno, Nev.; William B. Robinson of Friendswood, Texas; and George Worthington IV of Charlottesville, Va. If any other member of the class knows these people and is in contact with them, I would appreciate your calling them and asking them to get in touch with me at 401.874.4000. I found out on May 11 that Henry C. Ely from Palo Alto, Calif., regretfully died on March 27, after I had already failed to contact him by phone and letter. When I first became class secretary, I was trying to get educated on the class, and I read the report the Alumni Review sent me. It showed a total of 141 active members of the class and four “lost” classmates. Today’s checking shows a loss of 88 members in the class in three years, or a reduction of 62 percent. So far I have reported on 94 members of the class or their widows, and the only living members that I n 1 9 4 2 –4 3 have not reported on are those listed above. In the future, it is my intention to report on all the widows and many members of the class, because I know that most of the class is now entering a new stage of life where they are retired from employment and are trying to develop new interests. Right after I sent the draft of this class review, I received a telephone call from Barbara Swane Barnet, the wife of Robert B. Barnet III, one of the group I could not reach by telephone. She said WWII prevented Bob from graduating, but he went into the Navy and served on three aircraft carriers as a communications officer. He was being discharged as a lieutenant at the end of the war. Shortly thereafter, he married a woman named Dede Thaten, and they had three boys and a girl. After the war he went back to school and obtained college degrees from both Columbia and Rutgers. Bob spent most of his life working as a personnel officer at the University of Illinois. He developed Alzheimer’s and is now in the medical residence Carle Court in Savoy, Ill., near his home in Champaign. In 1980 he divorced Dede, and he married Barbara four years later. She resides in the home that she shared with Bob. 1943 Fred Nathan 180 East End Ave., Apt. 22G New York, NY 10128 1943secretary@williams.edu Among those opting for various types of senior citizens’ communities or considering doing so are Mimi and Murray Cole, who have just taken the plunge “and are slowly getting acclimated.” Betty and Ken Moore went to Santa Barbara and “applied to an elite funny farm.” They are still “on hold” five years later and are “thinking about the alternatives” (don’t). Pauline “Polly” Kosar moved into the Dunlacter Retirement Home in Bloomfield, Conn., after Walter died. She was happy to find congenial Williams folks there. Nick Fellner reports: “Shirl and I considered moving to Essex Meadows, but we failed the cognitive tests. Alec Robertson ’52 and Mary Lee moved there last fall. We are happy to be remaining here in our great town, New Canaan.” Nick adds: “Forty years ago I played golf in California with the West Coast head of A&P. He shot his age, 87. Now I have difficulty shooting my age in 9 holes—must be that the A&P food is not so good as it was 40 years ago.” Now we know why Nick can still afford the green fees. Our classmates who have not already downsized will be interested to know that the College archivist needs “Williamsiana,” especially from our period, including “unique items which help illuminate our college days in a vibrant and personal way. For example, correspondence with family and friends, course notes and papers, photographs, films, scrapbooks and albums.” These items are said to be “of interest not only to undergraduates, alumni and their families but also will support a multitude of projects undertaken by undergraduates and outside researchers focusing on things such as classroom teaching methods, religious movements and student responses to WWII.” Contact Sylvia Kennick Brown, College archivist, Southworth Schoolhouse, 96 School St., Apt. 3, Williamstown, Mass. 01267; tel 413.597.2596; fax 413.597.2929; e-mail Sylvia. Kennick.Brown@williams.edu. Fran and I discovered the archives’ temporary home during a family reunion in Williamstown last June. Our three young grandchildren’s mother discovered a magnificent playground at the new Williamstown Elementary School on Southworth Street. (We understand that construction of both the school and the playground were partially supported by the College.) The inevitable bathroom search took us to the former school building, which is now a living space for faculty and staff and houses the Chapin Library and College Archives until the new library building is finished. Among the exhibits was a July 8, 1859, newspaper headlining the first collegiate baseball game—between Amherst and Williams. Amherst prevailed 73 to 32 (under the original rules of the game). An equally large headline reported the simultaneous victory of the Amherst chess team over Williams. Times have changed. Bob Crane and Alex Westfried both are living in Heritage Village in Southbury, Conn. (not an “assisted living” community). Alex writes that he was to give a talk on “The New Militant Brazilian and American Women” at a conference in Rio de Janeiro in June. Any classmates who happened to be in Rio during that period might confirm that Alex has remained the discreet person we knew and did not refer to any of our “militant” wives. Nip Wilson reports that he and Topper and Bill Schram are enjoying the Fort Myers, Fla., region. Nip mixes tennis with being a useful member of the community, e.g., as a “Big Brother” for a Hispanic youngster and a sharer of “what we can spare” with the local food bank. A daughter will keep her eye on Nip at their Ontario Island retreat during July and August, to be followed by Nip’s retirement community’s Thanksgiving cruise to the Caribbean. He was sorry to miss our 65th reunion and will “try to stay awake for our 70th.” Your secretary’s phone conversation with Doc Phillips confirmed that, thanks to the ministrations of Nurse Marty, he has recovered from a minor but annoying ailment. The Doc is still applying his many diverse talents to needlepoint and other things. Len Eaton, with Ann’s help, has figured out what plants survive the salt winds of Depoe Bay, Ore. Their garden now consists of several hardy perennials. Al James and Marjorie have an easier time keeping the gardens surrounding their Bethesda, Md., home up to a high standard. The Nathans look forward to visits from Al when he comes to the New York area to attend Hackley School board meetings. Tex Smith writes that when they met at a wake in Houston, Jeffrey Hines ’77 offered to fly him to Williams to watch Jeff’s son Adam ’11 play lacrosse against RPI. Williams won, but Tex has never been so cold, “even during the past 15 winters in Colorado.” Tex’s visit to the Clark with Ralph Renzi warmed him up. He enjoyed “every minute” in Williamstown, including a tour of a couple of the new college buildings. Tex concluded that “Williams College is a special place, and I was lucky to go there, even if only for three years.” Bill Wilson checked in from Palo Alto. He again spent a week skiing at Jackson Hole, Wyo., in February with his eldest daughter Linn and family and generally keeps in shape at a fitness center called “Vivre.” Viva Vivre. August 2009 | Williams People | 23 CL ASS NOTES Malcolm MacGruer writes, “It seems that now being a bachelor I am in demand for various functions, dinners, luncheons, making motions at annual meetings, lecturing on U.S. wars to the astonishment of audiences who are ignorant of U.S. history, and making plans to go to Williamstown in June for Reunion Weekend.” We are glad that McGurk continues to be hyperactive, although we have no indication that he has started his third novel (the first two raised the bar too high for any of his classmates to hurdle). The Class of 1944 was “kind enough” to invite McGurk to their 65th reunion in June. His dominant presence there may have caused some of that younger class to think that they had showed up at the wrong reunion. Bernie Boykin sold his 42-foot sailboat to his daughter Bobbie and her husband Jim Holland ’85. “Maybe we’ll get a smaller one, as we love being on the water,” he writes. The word “maybe” suggests that the Boykins are waiting to see whether they will be welcome onboard the big boat as “crew” after they have off loaded the upkeep duty by the sale. Carter Hall writes from Aspen, Colo., that he is looking forward to publishing a book, On My Life Experiences As An Educator and A Human Being. He is optimistic that it will be more legible than his handwriting (no problem). He also hopes that other classmates will fess up to having written or planning to write their memoirs. (Your secretary must fess up to a brief one—as a postscript to a book on public service which is about to be published. Free copies are available to classmates who promise to send me theirs—if and when written.) Sadly, three of our classmates have died since the last edition of our class notes. Two of them were among the many who went directly from Williams graduation into Navy officers’ training: Edward F. Engle and Leonard “Larry” C. Thompson. Ed, a junior Phi Bete, earned six Battle Stars commanding a landing craft during island invasions in the South Pacific, including Iwo Jima and Okinawa. His first postwar career was in advertising and sales promotion. He served as head of the National Retail Merchants Association. In mid-life, Ed changed careers. 24 | Williams People | August 2009 After obtaining a master’s from New York University, he became associate headmaster and teacher of government and constitutional law at the Dwight School in Manhattan. He is survived by his wife of 60 years, Eugenie, and sons David and John. Larry Thompson grew up in Ithaca, N.Y. After the war he graduated from Cornell Law School and worked for the Glens Falls Insurance Co. in Glens Falls, N.Y., Philadelphia and Pittsburgh before moving to Kansas City in 1961. He was an active Sunday school teacher for more than 45 years and engaged in many other community activities. Larry and Marge had three children, four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Murray Cole has shared his reminiscences of the Thompsons: “After Williams, we were in the same Navy midshipman class. Then we each received orders to our first ships, which were berthed on opposite sides of the same pier. We constantly crossed paths and after the war were in the same class at Cornell Law School, where I babysat for Larry and Marge so they could get out on occasion. After that we remained in constant communication by correspondence and telephone as well as infrequent visits. And there were other personal episodes that further cemented our relationship. Larry and Marge were two of the finest people I have known, and they will be greatly missed.” Linc Allan of West Chester, Pa., is survived by his wife Nita, six children and 13 grandchildren. Linc was a member of the large and outstanding group of our classmates who had graduated from Walnut Hills High School in Cincinnati, and he was president of the Williams news bureau and a member of the editorial staff of the Record. Despite this promising start, Linc eschewed a career in journalism and became a corporate executive after the war. In addition to Polly Kosar, we have received nice letters from Jean Dickinson, Genie Engle and Martha Tolles. Martha was kind enough to send us an obituary/ news article about Roy from the Los Angeles Times of Feb. 1, 2008. Fran and I remember with pleasure a dinner with Martha and Roy at the home of neighbors whom they were visiting in NYC. Roy was a founder of the famed LA law firm Munger Tolles & Olson, counsel to Berkshire Hathaway and Warren Buffett, among others. Roy was a Marine pilot in the Pacific in WWII and a graduate cum laude of Harvard Law School. Thanks also to Genie Engle for her report on Ed’s post-Williams career. 1944 Hudson Mead 8 Stratford Place Grosse Pointe, MI 48230 1944secretary@williams.edu “The Last Hurrah” is over but not so fast: The Class of ’39 had about a dozen stalwarts at reunion, so if they can do it, so can we. Those of us extant in 2014 can give the situation an agonizing appraisal at that time. The weekend was rainy and foggy but the good Lord lifted the curtain for the moment, that of the parade of classes on Saturday morning. Needless to say ’44 was the most sartorially resplendent with our blazers and hats from as far back as 1954, our 10th. Remember the hard straw with the caption inside reading “Stolen from Phinney Baxter”? Hud Mead had his, thus proving his wife Mary’s adage, “Hudson never throws anything away.” There were 16 of us on hand plus assorted wives, S.O.’s, a widow or two plus one son who appears to have adopted us: Mike Berdan. Notwithstanding the braggadocio registered in my most recent newsletter as to which of us would be redblooded and walk, only one of us did: Jim “Strongman” Lester. The rest of us rode in an open walk-in vehicle dragged by a truck. Ignominious but greatly relieved were (from West to East) Nancy Schlosser from Santa Barbara, Phoebe and Jack Talbot from La Jolla, and Emily and Dave Thurston from Tucson; from east of the Mississippi, Mary and Hud Mead, Marty and Gerry Oberrender, Irene and Bill Koegal, Monk Stanley, Dick Acker, Bobbie and Dave Bradley, Elaine and Gene Connally, Mary and Hank Flynt, Gloria and Don Hammond, Irene and Jim Lester, Toni and Percy Nelson, Jack Reed, Nancy Hart and Elaine Schwartz. The Meads brought guests Jack and Nancy Renick, who reciprocated their first-time visit by taking us to Portsmouth, N.H., and Maine, a historic and welcome first. The College meeting after the parade saw the 50th reunion n 1 9 4 3 –4 5 In October, Ephs from the Class of 1992 visited Bob Stone ’44 (center) and his wife Sheila at their home in Williamstown. Also pictured, from left, Chenoweth (Stites) Allen, Ashley (Edgar) Milliken, Bissell (Gioia) Duffett and Heidi Sandreuter. Stone passed away in Februray. class come up with 10 mil, a tidy sum, one which I do not think ’44 equaled when Joe Stiegman led us. Numerous farewells to Morty Schapiro were well received, as was his final address. What a bright mind and engaging personality we are losing to Northwestern. Other events included some very interesting lectures, the jazz band concert in Chapin Hall, the Ephlats concert in the Log and a closing service on Sunday at Thompson Memorial Chapel. Alas it was all too quick, but memories of the parade and the “Last Hurrah” at the top of the Clark linger. This latter event was really nifty: We had the Clark penthouse, the view from which is unsurpassed. We were served the usual libations and a catered dinner. Dave Bradley entertained us with his timeless assortment of jokes with the Maine accent. Hud Mead read one of those “remember when” pieces. He also played a DVD of slides from 1940-43 with voiceover. They include graduation in October 1943. Hud has some left, should anyone be interested. Gerry Oberrender’s “Farewell to the Troops” was, of course, well received. Hud Mead had planned on reading the names of those of our class who had died since the 60th reunion and making a comment or two by way of reflection. It turns out that 53 left during that period; thus ended that plan. Incidentally, we started out with about 240 in the class, of which we lost 18 in the war. We now have less than 80 left. Grim, but thus is the way of the world. My letter bag includes one from Al See, who laments not only his absence but the health of Klippy, the lack thereof occasioned his absence. Carolyn Bridgewater responded to my recent plea for memorabilia by sending some class reunion pictures, which I think makes the collection complete. She also sent a photo of needlepoint of the Williams seal, which, after John’s death, she had given to Sinc Hart. He had sent her a photo of it hanging in his living room, and that is what Carolyn sent to me. We will have to leave it to Nancy Hart to tell us “the rest of the story.” I thank Nancy for ushering your keepsakes into the hands of the College archivist. You folks were most gracious in donating them. They were displayed at the Clark, not exactly on the same floor as its Renoirs, but they made the top of the mark. Bob Benson sent regrets and a couple of cartoons. Too bad we can’t print ’em. Shep Poor sent his regrets, noting that he is battling raccoons—something, incidentally, which your author is about to do courtesy of his local police department, which lends out traps but does not dispose of the contents, if any. Any ideas, nature lovers? Helen Coroon has a son, Peter, who has just been reelected mayor of Salt Lake County (wherever that is) and a daughter, Holly, who has climbed to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro: the height of power (kind of), and the latter feat speaks for itself. Likewise Percy Nelson, himself justly proud, gave me a photo of his wife and two daughters. His family bios read like a who’s who, with his wife graduating from Wellesley and Simmons, one daughter from Wellesley and another from Lake Forest, and two boys from Williams. Katie and Gil McCurdy sent regrets, as they attended the graduation of a granddaughter, Katie, from Williams the week before reunion. Congrats, Katies, and you too, Gil. Losses detected since the first of the year have been John Copley, Larry VanDoren, Bryan Bostwick, John Sharpe, Bill Brewer, Bob Stone, Ray Kirkpatrick, Matt Williams, Charles Allis and Irv Day. Regrets to family and friends. 1945 REUNION JUNE 10-13 Submitted by Gil Lefferts: Ev Gidley has had to resign as class secretary after a fall and a broken hip. His recovery has not been as kind to him as anticipated. We thank Gid for his services and wish him a speedy recovery. In the meantime, the position is open if there are any volunteers out there. You should have all received a report on our ’08 mini. Rick Spalding, College chaplain, presided over a discussion with assembled students on “Religion at Williams Today.” Their personal experiences were as diverse as the students. This was followed by presentations of the ’08 recipients of the Class of ’45 World Fellowship Awards. Included in the presentation was one by Emily Button ’07, a recipient of the Florence Chandler Fellowship, a yearlong study program, also underwritten by the Class of ’45. Ms. Button’s subject was on “Ships & Sagas from Greece to Greenland” and investigated countries with similar maritime and archeological heritage but very different modern cultures, exploring how things differ in their uses and interpretations of the past and SENDNEWS! Y our class secretary is waiting to hear from you! Send news to your secretary at the address at the top of your class notes column. August 2009 | Williams People | 25 CL ASS NOTES what role they have in their identities today. We are planning similar discussions for our 2009 mini, Sept. 26-27. We trust that many of you will be able to attend. And don’t forget June 10-13, 2010, when we will be celebrating the class’s 65th reunion. The years 2008 and 2009 have not been kind to the great Class of ’45. We lost a number of distinguished classmates. Among them was Hank Toll on Oct. 14, 2008. Hank was our class planned-giving chairman. We are grateful to Art Stevenson for taking over that position. Hank’s service was attended by Gil Lefferts and John Tyler, representing the class. John, a resident of Denver, also served as host to Gil. Presenters at Hank’s service included his brother Giles Toll ’48 and his daughter Ellen Toll ’77 and her husband David Blanchet ’72. Henry’s career combined both a practice in medicine and law. He served at the Denver coroner’s office and was associated with the law firm of his late father, Henry Toll, Class of 1909. Bruce McClellan died in Peterborough, N.H., on Oct. 31, 2008. He was an educator “extraordinaire,” having served as headmaster of The Lawrenceville School from 1959 to 1986. He was a former class officer and was instrumental, together with Jim Hill, who predeceased him, and John Chandler, honorary member of the class, in establishing the Class of 1945 World Fellowship Program for both students and faculty. Art Stevenson attended Bruce’s memorial service, representing the class. Andy Knox died of congestive heart failure on Nov. 13, 2008. After working as a chemist at the DuPont Co. for 27 years, Andy served in the Delaware State Legislature for 28 years and as U.S. senator for 20 years. His wife Cas reports that the Delaware flags were lowered across the state in his honor. Dick Marshall was a VP of our class. He and Chrissie attended our mini in September ’08. It was a shock to hear that he died on Dec. 1 of congestive heart failure. Lynn Waller represented the class at Dick’s memorial service. Dick had been active in recruiting high school students from the Seattle area on behalf of the Williams admission office. He was a avid aviator and sailor, inventing a special life jacket after the near fatal accident of a fellow sailor. 26 | Williams People | August 2009 He was active in the Museum of Flight, where he was a docent. Another class VP, Jake Winant, died on Jan. 13. The service was held at St. John’s Parish in Williamstown and included a Marine Honor Guard, which presented Katey with a U.S. flag in honor of Jake’s heroic conduct in the battle of Okinawa in WWII. He was the recipient of the Bronze Star Medal and Presidential Unit Citation. “Remembrances” were presented at the service by Carl Vogt ’58. Representing the class were Gil Lefferts, Stu Coan, Ed Bloch and Gay and Fred Scarborough. After working at Sprague Electric Co. in North Adams for 18 years (1953 to 1971), Jake Winant embarked on a long career in aviation, receiving an honorary Doctor of Aviation Management. Despite ’45’s sad loss of a number of classmates in recent months, there is still plenty of life left in our Old Guard: Hal Edwards (Maine) is still imbued with his rigorous Navy training and maintains a strenuous physical program, keeping his mind alert at the same time by watching Teaching Co. videos. Charlie Pinkerton (Maine) keeps healthy and strong shoveling all that snow. Stu King (California) is recovering from a lung cancer operation and swims nearly every day. Dave Nash (North Carolina) plays lots of golf. Art Dodge (Pennsylvania) is stronger every day after a heart operation. Joe Varley (Illinois) is fine and working on a book about his passion for fishing. Fritz Henry (Vermont) has a great collection of old farm and hand tools and loves his beautiful town, St. Johnsbury, where his wife is active in the art scene. Stu Coan (Connecticut) plays tennis often, splits his firewood and copes with snow in the driveway the old-fashioned way—with his Armstrong Engine. Keep us posted on your own news of events. And don’t forget to note June 10-13, 2010, for our 65th reunion. Cheers. 1946 Gates McG. Helms 5 Troon Court Maplewood, NJ 07040 1946secretary@williams.edu I have been very fortunate to have seen a number of Ephs during the last few weeks. To be sure, they were not all members of the great Class of 1946, but, hey, at this stage of the game, one can’t be too choosey. Alberta and I caught up with Morgan Murray ’50 not long ago at the Morristown Club, where he very kindly hosted a delicious luncheon for Toni and Jerv Brinton and us. Jerv and Toni—Antonia MarottaBrinton—were honored by Partnership in Philanthropy at a dinner at the famed Baltusrol Golf Club for their many years of community service. We were invited, but previous obligations prevented our attending. Toni is co-chair of PIP. The news from our classmates isn’t great these days. Brayton Wood’s son Mark Williams Wood very kindly sent me word of his passing, together with an obit in English from what must have been the English-language Guadalajara Colony Reporter for which Brayt wrote. Now you may think that Mark’s middle name was a tribute to Brayt’s alma mater. Not so. Mark’s great grandfather was named Williams. After the war and a stint with Kemper Insurance in Boston and Chicago, Brayt heeded the call of JFK’s “Alliance for Progress” and left the U.S. in 1962 for Latin America, where he served the U.S. Information Agency (USIA) for more than 10 years as the director general of the Bi-National Cultural Centers in Lima and Trujillio, Peru, San Salvador and Guadalajara. In Lima he met and married Graciela (Chela) Caballero. At the end of his tour of duty with USIA in Guadalajara, he and Chela decided to stay there and raise their two sons, Mathew and Mark. He returned to the insurance business as an agent for a Mexican company. In the interest of generating some additional interest in our fall minireunion, I want to let you know that the turnout looks pretty good so far: We expect to see in Williamstown on the weekend of Sept. 25-26 the following stalwarts: Norman Birnbaum and Mrs. Terry Flood, Jerv Brinton and Antonia Marotta-Brinton, Trina and Dick Debevoise, Sam Fuller and maybe Mary Crary, Alberta and yours truly, Nancy and Andy Hunter are a possibility, Mary and Tom Hyndman, Lois and Bob Lesser, Bunny Lothrop and her daughter Louisa Affleck, Helen and Rich Schneller, Joyce and Lew Scheffey and last but not least Barbara n 1 9 4 5 –4 9 and Bill Schellenberger. Welles Adams, Bud Morrow, Gene Detmer, Wally Thompson and Jack Fitzpatrick have sent their regrets. Bobby Earle sent warm greetings; Jan Jeffcoat wished us a successful reunion and said: “I enjoy reading the class notes by Gates Helms.” (I couldn’t resist putting that in!) Jean Magnusson wrote: “Glad to hear ’46ers are going strong— since Phil died, I have sold villa Florida, bought on Cape Cod and sold my favorite house in Rhode Island. Missing all of the pleasant people and events at Williams but moseying along.” Speaking of moseying along, that’s what I shall do now, but not until I wish you all good health. Your devoted classmate, Gates. 1947 John C. Speaks III 33 Heathwood Road Williamsville, NY 14221 1947secretary@williams.edu Finally, a bit of correspondence interrupting the obituaries I have been receiving. Norm Singer (V-12) is looking for information on other V-12s. Although not listed as members of our class, he remembers Frank Scott, Bob Shertzer and Jimmy Dean. Anybody with information on any of them can reach Norm at ack43@comcast.net. I had a pleasant afternoon with Mike McKay recently. He and his wife finally decided to escape from the Florida hurricanes and moved to Harrisonburg, Pa. 1948 John A. Peterson Jr. 5811 Glencove Drive, Apt. 1005 Naples, FL 34108 1948secretary@williams.edu “Slim pickins” as far as class news goes. Sorry about that. As you have read from letters from our prexy George Kennedy and Jerry Teran (who graciously has taken over from Noel Melvin re the Alumni Fund), 1948 not only went over its participation and dollar goals but now ranks in the top 12 percent of all Williams classes. Congratulations and many thanks to all who made this possible. We’re down to 124 living members with the death last November of Wilder Pickard. And Herb Chisholm sent me a touching printed memoriam upon the passing of his wife Norma. To both families we send our deepest sympathy. Recently, I addressed a group of juniors at a local private school here in Naples. In my files I’d found a quote from the 1939 class notes of some years back. Since it seemed pertinent, I closed my remarks with it: “With a liberal arts education you are qualified for nothing, but you are prepared for anything.” 1949 Chuck Utley 1835 Van Buren Circle Mountain View, CA 94040 1949secretary@williams.edu Since the Alumni Review’s deadline is only hours away and Reunion Weekend has just concluded, this notes column will be an amalgam of contributions from outgoing Secretary Pedro Stites, Class Agent Dick Wells and this humble scribe, your new class secretary-in-training. As scheduled, 26 members of the Class of 1949 began arriving in Williamstown on June 11 for our 60th quinquennial reunion, ready to connect again with old friends, greet classmates long unseen and fondly remember those no longer with us. Including all attendees, both families and friends, 45 of us made it a wonderful weekend. Weather in the Purple Valley was not ideal, but Saturday was a warm and sunny New England delight, both for the morning parade to the Alumni Society meeting and for the afternoon’s discretionary activities. The alums and their spouses/companions that gathered included: Janice Adkins, Wally Barnes, Cynthia Blandy, John Brown, Carolyn and Alec Clement and son Kirk, Donna and Herb Cole, Sheila and Joe Dorsey, Patricia and Jim Geer and daughter Suzanne, Pete Geier and Lib Stone, Aggie and Gene Harling, John Herndon, Emily and Charlie Jarrett, Lisa and Ed Maynard, Jane and Bob Messimer, Constance and Jerry Page, Anita and Oren Pollock, Carolyn Reynolds, Michael Robbins, Joan and Jim Smith, Tay and John Thoman, Chuck Utley, Dick Warner and Jane Sturges, Mari Wells, Ann and Dick Wells, Dick Whitney and Barbara McKinney and June and Bob Worley. We learned that our eternally upbeat and innovative class secretary, the aforementioned Señor Stites, would not be present and had also decided to withdraw from that position after 20 years of service coaxing news from ’49ers. At our Saturday evening class dinner and business meeting, retiring President Herb Cole gracefully handled the transition to a new set of officers: Charlie Jarrett, president; Wally Barnes, VP; Bob Worley, treasurer; Oren Hatch, class agent; Chuck Utley, secretary. When Pedro’s resignation as secretary was formally announced, he received the resounding thanks of the class for his 20 years of happy diligence and dedication to covering the world of ’49. He had a zest for wordplay, and there wasn’t an acronym he wouldn’t create if it might help bring in more class news. Thanks, Pete. We missed seeing you at reunion this time around. After 14 years, Dick Wells also stepped down from his challenging position as class agent. By living in Williamstown, he had a close connections with Williams and the local community that I’m sure helped our class/college relationship far beyond his work as chief ’49er fundraiser. At Saturday night’s dinner, and with deep appreciation for his service, the class presented Dick with a handsome wall mirror incorporating a hand-painted picture of West College as seen through the “Climb High, Climb Far” gates. His energy and commitment to Williams will surely carry on. Dick sent his own submission after Reunion Weekend: “Dear friends of the Class of 1949, for the past 14 years I have been telling you what a great class you are. On Friday evening, June 12, at our class dinner celebrating our 60th reunion, you were beyond ‘great’ in my eyes. The gift that was presented to me that evening for my 14 years as your class agent was overwhelming. I was brought to tears and almost speechless. The mirror with an ’Eglomise design of the Mark and Albert Memorial Stairs and gate with West College in the background will be cherished forever in the Wells family. I wish I could thank you all personally but know that is impossible, so I’m using our class notes to convey my deepest thanks for a beautiful thought and gift.” All news did not come out of Williamstown, of course. Other classmates were in touch with Pedro prior to Reunion Weekend: Theodore F. Brigham August 2009 | Williams People | 27 CL ASS NOTES died March 18. His wife Olga can be contacted at 476 Abbot Hill Road, Wilton, N.H. 030865910; 603.654.2055. John Dalton: “Betty and I are surviving the current economic malaise in good shape physically and fiscally—so no complaints. … Oldest daughter and son-inlaw moved from a small condo in Chicago to a 23-acre farm 50 miles from Akron, Ohio. The good neWs: They’re only an hour’s drive away. The bad neWs: They’ve put us to work!” Dominick Dunne wrote in February: “I’m temporarily living at my country house in Connecticut full time in order to finish my new novel called A Solo Act. Almost there. Great strain. I have been diagnosed with bladder cancer. I covered the O.J. Simpson armed robbery trial in Las Vegas for Vanity Fair. Collapsed in courtroom. Have had a close call or two, one on Christmas night which sort of rooked things for the holiday spirit. I have declined chemotherapy. All that vomiting! At my age (83), people die of the chemo, not the cancer. I have gotten interested in stem cells. I have twice gone for treatments at a stem-cell clinic in the Dominican Republic. I am fascinated, and I feel so well.” When he wrote, Dominick was about to leave for the Academy Awards, which he has attended “for the last 27 years or so.” He continued, “Then I am going to a stem-cell clinic in Germany, in the forest on a lake outside Munich, for a three-week stem cell treatment. Very Thomas (Magic Mountain) Mann. I’m going to keep a diary of the experience. I still fill up halls when I speak in public about the murder trials among the rich and famous I have covered for Vanity Fair for 25 years. I’m giving myself a few treats these days. After all, I’ve worked hard for the money. I’ve had to give up driving—failing eyes—and now have a driver who takes me back and forth from New York to Connecticut and also takes me about in the city when I have a lot of doctor appointments or parties to attend. I’m really enjoying my 80s, except for the cancer.” Samuel H. Graybill: “Following a stroke in 2003 I was largely incapacitated, but a lot of P.T. has made me more mobile, not yet with much grace—no Boston Marathon, but getting about with a cane.” (Pedro: Join the ’49 Class Cane Reign with me, Sam). “Still running a guest 28 | Williams People | August 2009 house, with help.” Mrs. Charlotte Lynch wrote: “Brad Lynch was really looking forward to his 60th class reunion. The four years at Williams College meant a lot to him. But, sadly, he died mid-September 2008 of lung cancer. He’d been fighting other ailments too— particularly Parkinson’s. The big bad C finally got him. Williams People April 2009 printed his obituary—p. 132.” (Pedro: Please review the other ’49 Class obituaries printed on this page: Robert W. Herbert, Richard I. Hornbeck, Richard N. LoPresti and Thomas I. Webb Sr.) Douglas (Sandy) Shaw: “Since I lost my two buddies Jack Mason and Bob Stanley much too early, I’ve been remiss in my relations with Williams College (other than donating to Alumni Fund as best I could). My wife (she passed away three years ago after 53 years of putting up with me) and I , however, drove up to those lovely hills many times, and I just recently had, with a daughter who skis, an excellent dinner at the old ’96 House. (It was nice to see that the bar hasn’t changed with the glasses still on the ceiling.) My career was varied and interesting, if not successful. I ran a weekly newspaper for some years, among other ventures, and ended up in the banking field when you could safely advertise ‘full-service banking.’ I have no sympathy for that industry—they brought it on themselves. Blessed with three fine children, all of whom live within an hour’s drive, who keep an eye on me and are a big help as my health is a little shaky with a triple bypass and two bouts with angioplasty (six stents) as my major accomplishments. All three children were married, but all resulted in divorces. They didn’t learn anything from my wife and me, although, to their credit, two were married for more than 10 years and one for more than 20 years, so they hardly were fly-bynight or one-night stands. Thank you for keeping me informed all these years thru class notes. I do appreciate it and have a warm spot in my heart for Williams and the Purple Hills. Actually I lived in South Williamstown for several years.” Sandy sent his best to all classmates and said he’d be thinking of ’49 during Reunion Weekend even though he wasn’t able to make it to Williamstown. He concluded, “My warmest regards and my sincere thanks again to all those who have served and will now serve as class agents and in other capacities.” Nevill Smythe by way of Ann Smythe: “The last five years have been something else. Nevill has had three right-hip replacements and six pop out along with the falls that go with his current situation. He now has dementia and lives in the health center but still gets up to the apartment and to dinner with friends when I have the strength to get him there—not the way we thought retirement would be! So glad we got to our 50th—that was wonderful!” And concluded, “We’ll be thinking of you all at your 60th wonderful Williams weekend!” That’s all from your old ’49 class secretary, who noW asks ALL Williams College ’49 Class graduates to PLEASE support your neW class officers. 1950 REUNION JUNE 10-13 Sidney C. Moody Jr. 220 Chestnut Ave. Bernardsville, NJ 07924 1950secretary@williams.edu If you have passed a hearing test lately, the sound you are hearing is the band striking up. The Williams Alumni Jazz Band, with whom Mrs. Moody and I passed a most enjoyable riverboat passage into the deepest precincts of the American southland. The fact that the cornetist is a graduate of Amherst Class of 1952 should be no deterrent. John Bucher also serenaded me on the occasion of my 80th birthday, a milestone we all have passed with the exception of a couple of Class Babies whose anniversaries must be just around the corner. Anyway, Class President Doug Colman has contracted with the musicians to play at our fete. Kibitzers welcome. Incidentally, one of the tasks that awaits us is to find a worthy to replace Mr. Colman, whose term in office will have expired. Mr. Colman is no relation to the Colman of the same name who engaged in an effort to win a contested U.S. Senate seat in Minnesota, where both happen to come from. Our Colman will go quietly and with our blessing for a job well done. Andrew Heineman also tells me that he has confirmed our agreement with Professor Michael Lewis, former head of the College art department and a n 1 9 4 9 –5 1 noted architecture critic, to take a no-holds-barred tour of what the school has been up to in our absence building-wise. From remarks he has uttered on a number of trips we have taken with the good professor to Europe, he has not always been pleased with the construction. The College informed me that Bill Ward passed away in Baltimore just shy of his 81st birthday Jan. 7. He had been living in Westminster, Md., after a long career as an analyst for the National Security Agency. He was long an aficionado of mental puzzles and was unbeaten at two-handed canasta. He and his second wife leave three children. His ashes will be spread in Chesapeake Bay, the Grand Tetons and the Cayman Islands. We also lost Dr. Peter Nielsen, who died at age 82 in Trumbull, Conn., March 11. Dr. Nielsen, a native if Evanston, Ill., was a graduate of Columbia University, where he received his MA. He retired as a biologist with Procter & Gamble. He leaves his wife Barbara and two children. Dr. Nielsen had been head of the Housatonic Power Squadron. I received an aggrieved note from Fred Lanes addressed to “a big fat moo from Newton, Mass., where three more inches of mucky slush” was falling. Fred forecast spring would eventually arrive so that we might board a bus to the Mill on The Floss so as to avoid gendarmes en route. This comes at the suggestion of Tom Leous, who prefers that eatery (as do I) over more local dispensaries. Tom, incidentally, is being honored by his former high school with a plaque for Sportsman of the Year on the school’s Wall of Fame, and not just because it will be his first visit to Lafayette High School since he graduated in June 1944. The Mill on the Floss will not be present. Without anyone’s permission I enlarged my staff with the addition of Jan Meagher, wife of Henry, who noted that a lot of class doings in Florida were unreported. Since Jan and her husband winter in Eastern Florida I’ve unilaterally expanded my domain. She provided a program from Chick Brashear’s funeral. In violation of not including class wives in these notes I must note the passing of Nan Alberti, who was a sort of class mother throughout our years as alumni. Her house was our house as she entertained from year to year as wife of Charley Alberti, our treasurer more often than not. She died in May just as she was to undergo surgery for stomach cancer. Nan and Charley were married after she graduated from Bennington. Nan was an uncomplaining hostess time and time again as her home was made available during reunion times to the class of invaders. It was Nan who drove Charley to the mountaintop village on a class trip to Sicily to hunt for kinfolk, if any remained, of the Alberti clan. They found a distant cousin who happened to be a Communist party member. Nan took it in stride as she did most else. Our sympathies to the family. 1951 Dick Siegel 229 Golf Edge Westfield, NJ 07090 1951secretary@williams.edu Hold the presses! The latest news from the White House is not about the economy, the banks, a Supreme Court nominee or Pakistan. It’s that the Obama’s new dog Bo is related to the Whitehead family, being a nephew of Peggy Whitehead’s recently deceased Mr Big Boy. Peg says, “It is the first good choice Obama has made. Always knew a Whitehead relation would make the White House sooner or later. Just never thought it would be a dog. … I now have ties with Ted Kennedy and Barack Obama.” At the suggestion of Don Gregg, I asked Dave Ruder if he would be willing to give our class the benefit of his thoughts on the current financial crisis and the underlying reasons therefore. Dave most graciously agreed, and the following are his comments: “In a very brief period we have witnessed a crisis in the U.S. banking system, a rapidly declining economy and large declines in stock market values. In 1987, when I was chairman of the S.E.C., the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 23 percent in one day. Today’s crisis is different and much more serious. The problems in today’s financial markets began with major defaults in home loan mortgages and were followed by the collapse of the values of collateralized debt obligations secured by those mortgages, and the prospect that issuers of credit default swap insurance policies on those debt obligations would be unable to meet demands for payment. We saw the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers, the fire sales of Bear Stearns and Merrill Lynch, and the conversion of Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs to investment banks. We witnessed government takeovers of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the sale of Wachovia and other banks. Fears of bank and counterparty insolvencies created a crisis of confidence in our banking system, and lending came to a standstill. As credit became unavailable, business and consumer spending declined dramatically. A potential depression similar to the 1930s became a real possibility. The resulting stock market decline was not a sudden revision of market values as occurred in 1987 but a reflection of negative attitudes about the future of the U.S. economy. “Blame for the financial collapse extends to the many market participants and government agencies who failed to anticipate the tremendous risks in the home loan mortgage market and related structured debt obligations. Home loan mortgage originators, investment banks, commercial banks, insurers and banking and security regulators in the U.S. and worldwide failed to understand the risks involved in the widespread sale of collateralized debt obligations whose values depended upon an overpriced housing market. Other factors also contributed to the breakdown in the financial system. Growth of a lavish compensation system encouraged financial firm executives and traders to make risky bets, sometimes using excessive leverage. National and international financial markets were closely interlinked, and computers allowed almost instantaneous transmission of market orders. Complicated opaque derivative instruments were sold to both retail and institutional investors. The likelihood that our credit markets would fail has led the federal government to invest massive sums in U.S. banks and to guarantee commercial paper, money market funds, and to expand levels of bank deposits. Efforts are being made to reduce the number of home mortgage foreclosures. The Obama administration seeks to increase government spending dramatically in order to stimulate the economy and avoid a severe depression. We also are seeing legislative proposals for reform of our financial regulatory system. A ‘systemic risk regulator’ will probably have August 2009 | Williams People | 29 CL ASS NOTES power to impose limits on the risk activities of banks, broker dealers, hedge funds and other pools of private capital. Closer supervision of risk management systems can be expected. Regulation of derivative instruments will be increased.” Dave concluded, “Hopefully the efforts to save our economy will be successful so that in 2011, when we celebrate our 60th reunion, we will all feel happy and prosperous.” Dave is professor of law emeritus at Northwestern University School of Law and remains active teaching one seminar each year and participating in numerous conferences. This past fall he testified on hedge funds before Congress, appearing on the panel that preceded the five billionaires’ panel. By the time you read this, Wally Bortz will have competed in the San Francisco Marathon on July 26. Perhaps he will have set a record for an 80-year-old. Gordie Clark has done some research on marathon records and found that Australian Robert Horman set one for an 80-yearold with a time of 3:39:18 in Brisbane in 1998. All of which leads Gordie to the conclusion that “the important result is not one’s time; rather, it is finishing the race.” Gordie adds, “I now use the aches in my ankles, legs and hips (plus shoulders and wrists) for forecasting the Maine weather. However, in honor of Wally’s effort, I pledge to cut, split, haul and stack one full cord of oak by July 26. As I approach 80, among other changes, I find that tasks take longer than they used to. This will keep me moving.” Bob Griffin writes, “My very dear wife Jamie and I live in Sarasota on Lido Key. It is an attractive place to live, with Sarasota Bay and St. Armands Circle nearby. I stay in touch with Paul Shorb, Chuck Halleck and Jack Horner as well as Jack Cremeans ’50. Despite numerous diseases and illnesses and replacement of worn-out parts, I am very well, except for some neuropathy in the feet from chemo treatment. Still, I play golf and like to write, to argue politics, to meet strangers and play some with my grandchildren. I did not enjoy Williams very much— especially its ingrown fraternity structure—but I liked the students and very much appreciate the broad liberal arts education that it gave me. After I left 30 | Williams People | August 2009 Former members of the Williams lacrosse team attended the NCAA lacrosse championships at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass., in May. From left: Tim Blodgett ’51, Gordon McWilliams ’51, Doug Foster ’52, Gordon Clarke ’51, Brad Purcell ’51 and Jack French ’51. Williams, I had a misadventure at Yale Law School, worked for a New York magazine and then CBS TV, became an urban planner, ran an urban research center in Florida, and later a PhD at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, served on the faculty at Penn State and did research in social epidemiology. I also ran the Florida chapter of the Concord Coalition, a grassroots deficit-reduction organization, for a while under Paul Tsongas and Warren Rudman, who to me are models of bipartisanship.” Tim Blodgett and Howie Smith invited themselves to lunch at Linda and Bob Cremins’ home in Stamford. “Linda served up delicious frittatas and sozzled tomatoes while Bob told fascinating stories about their neighbors. A good time was had by all.” Bob, unfortunately, has been struggling with health issues for some time. Don Gregg had another speaking engagement in Williamstown. On April 30 he spoke to the Class of ’61, which was having a pre-50th reunion dinner at Mount Hope Farm, and urged them to support the Center for Development Economics with part of their reunion gift. Don told them how much he enjoyed speaking to a younger audience. Dick Chinman reports that all is well. Their grandson Nicholas won the 2009 NCAA foil fencing championship, and his Penn State fencing team won the NCAA title for the second time in the last three years. The semi-final and final bouts can be seen on YouTube. Betsy and Bob Bergen went on the Williams trip led by Meg MacDonald ’80, “Insiders’ New York City: Through the Eyes of Williams Alumni.” Bob states “five days in NYC in art galleries and museums and walking around viewing all the great art deco buildings, which we New Yorkers usually walk by without looking up. We were the senior alums on the trip followed by Jerry Schauffler ’54, one of the original founders of Outward Bound, and his wife Barbara; Ted Cobden ’57 and his wife Nancy, who brought us greetings from Howie Smith; and Susan and Stuart Crampton ’58 of Williamstown, he a retired physics professor and dean, and she a retired pastor. … Many years ago if you had ever suggested to us that we should go on a group trip we would have said that you must be smoking something! Then we went on a trip to Northern Italy led by E.J. Johnson ’59 and have been hooked ever since. Last year we went to Holland for the tulip season and were joined by Sheila and Stan Hazen.” The Bergens met Jean and Michael Luther at the Hawthorne Inn in Connecticut in April to help Michael celebrate his birthday, and they continue to be in touch with Janet and Dick Wood. Bob is president of the Loomis Village Residents’ Association and chairman of its finance and budget committee. Betsy is the volunteer chaplain of Loomis Village. The Bergens expect to become greatgrandparents for the third time in September, all by the children of their daughter Alice. Like most n 1 9 5 1 –5 2 of us Bob could go on at great length about medical matters, but since both he and Betsy did very well walking in NYC he believes they remain in reasonably good shape. Jackie and Alfred Schlosser had a great time on the Elbe River cruise with visits to Prague and Berlin. Claire and Ted Curtis were scheduled to go but had to cancel because of a health problem Claire was having. Alfred advises that fortunately Claire is recovering. Also aboard were Tucker and Jack Harris ’52 and Priscilla and Jack Taylor ’52. Lectures were given by Dan O’Connor, retired professor of philosophy and dean. The Schlossers traveled to some rebuilt cities, notably Dresden and Berlin, and it seemed to them that the Germans have gone a long way to attempt to expiate their sins of WWII and the Holocaust. Berlin in particular has many monuments to murdered victims of the Nazi regime. Jackie and Alfred had to cancel a planned vacation in Florida when their daughter-in-law, wife of their son Andrew ’83, suffered a ruptured brain aneurysm. Fortunately, a prompt airlift and surgery at Hartford Hospital saved her life, and happily she is on the road to recovery. The Schlossers will be attending the graduation of their grandson Evan from the Westminster School. Although not accepted at Williams, Evan will be attending the other Williams, the one with Mary appended to its name. George Dorion writes that he is looking forward to seeing everyone in October at the mini. He met Fred Goldstein ’52, Doug Coleman ’50 and Doug Foster ’52 in Williamstown while attending the meeting of the Alumni Fund Vice Chairs Committee. In February Dottie and George hosted a lunch for the Williams Jacksonville regional association at the Ponte Vedra Inn and Club. George reports that the event was well attended “in part because of the presentation by Will Dudley ’89 entitled ‘Big Games—The Huge Significance of Sport in America.’” The Dorion’s daughter Lisanne ’87 was in the area at that time and joined them at the event. Brad Clarey, having married off all of his daughters, will be off to San Diego in June to give away in marriage his granddaughter Hannah Louise Vyse. Except for a few of his six grandchildren and one grandchild, the Clarey clan will be attending the wedding en masse. Brad reports he is in good health and remains active in condominium affairs. Our class president Tom Kent played in his first 80-plus tennis tournament in his old stomping ground of Morristown, N.J., the home of his former employer and payor of his pension, Allied Signal Co. Tom suffered from my malady and got knocked out in the first round, but Rich Allen did much better, winning his first-round match before losing to the number-one seed, who was a former national champion in the 75s. Tom and Rich may play doubles together in the National Grass 80s in September. Pete deLisser hopes to complete a second book before his 80th. He has the pleasure of having as his co-author his son Michael, who is executive education faculty member at the University of Utah School of Business. Pete sings in a choir called the Christianaires twice a month at celebration events at local churches. He spoke with Bill Rodie and Gordie Clark but promised not to say anything about their political views on current matters in Washington. Pete has taken up writing poetry while sitting at the edge of the Hudson River, and if classmates do not send me enough news for class notes in the future, I threaten to fill up the space with some of the poems. Not much new with the Hazens other than their daughter Ellen ’90 giving birth to their third grandchild, Lila Jane. On a sad note, Ted Childs’ wife Suzi died in January. Ted is very grateful for the support given by Hospice when it was most needed. Ted is selling his condo in Naples and planning to move back to Maine, where he will be closer to his children and where he can keep a better eye on the Red Sox and Patriots and “beat Dean Webster in golf.” Betsy Edgeworth sent a note advising of the death of Ernie May’s son Tom on May 5 at the age of 50 after a long illness. Betsy attended the service in Wilmington, and she said it was a beautiful celebration in a family chapel and cemetery. An e-mail from Ted Garver advised of the death of Fritz Zeller after a long illness. Harry Sheehy died on July 2 after a long struggle with Parkinson’s disease. The class sends its condolences to Ted Childs, Betty and Ernie May, Suz Zeller and Florence Sheehy, and their respective families. Do not forget our mini in Williamstown the second weekend in October. Let’s have a big turnout. 1952 Alec Robertson 3 Essex Meadows Essex, CT 06426 1952secretary@williams.edu After an exceptionally cold and lengthy winter, spring sprang, and our classmates responded with some enthusiasm, in spite of the poor economic times in which we are now living. A new administration is in place, and perhaps a mitigation of this bad period is under way. Time will tell. Prexy Fred Goldstein reported he had just returned from a May weekend in Williamstown. Accompanied by Marigold and Bob Bischoff and John Hyde, Fred represented the class at the College Scholarship Luncheon. “Met the young woman who is the freshman who received the ’52 class scholarship (as a result of our 50th reunion gift). The scholarship students really are outstanding.” Fred attended the Alumni Fund Leadership Dinner with Ann and Doug Foster on Saturday night. “Unfortunately, ’52 came in third for participation this year behind the classes of ’39 (100 percent) and ’49, who just edged us out for second place. However, this is the fourth year in a row that we have gone over 90 percent participation. Ed and I had a wonderful threeweek trip to Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos this past February and early March. It was fascinating to see bustling Vietnam, meet hardworking young people and view the temples that have been uncovered in Cambodia. Will see Nicki and Paige L’Hommedieu … for our regular Lyrics and Lyricists series at the 92nd Street Y in New York. Finally, the minireunion weekend is all set for Oct. 10-11. The Class of ’51 will join us for dinner on Friday night at the Williams Inn and lunch at the Log on Saturday. John Hyde will host cocktails at his house for ’52 on Friday night again before dinner, and the Fosters will host ’52 at dinner on Saturday night. Rooms are scarce, so everyone should make arrangements as soon as possible.” Fred also commented that Pete Gurney’s new play Children opened at the Westport Playhouse at the end of May August 2009 | Williams People | 31 CL ASS NOTES and was the opening play at the Williamstown Theatre Festival this summer. Bob Huddleston reported: “Vicki is completing her stint with Brookings as co-director of the project on U.S. policy toward a Cuba in transition, following the very successful launch of the report entitled ‘Cuba: A New Policy of Critical and Constructive Engagement’ in April. After Memorial Day she began work as deputy assistant secretary of defense for Africa in Secretary Gates’ foreign policy office, where she will attempt to balance the relationship between development, defense and diplomacy. As ambassador to Mali and Ethiopia she worked closely with the military on these issues. To that end we’ve rented an apartment in Washington. At least initially, I’ll continue to reside in Santa Fe and commute while we determine her travel schedule.” Pat and Bill Hatch had a good winter and headed for Cleveland in mid-May. Bill has been working for United Way, allocating resources in the Ft. Pierce area. Their families visited them in Harbour Ridge last winter. With a list of international heavy breathers, including Warren Buffet, Philip Glass and Emanuel Ax, Pete Gurney was elected a member of The American Philosophical Society, the oldest learned society in the U.S. It was founded in 1743 by Benjamin Franklin for the purpose of “promoting useful knowledge.” Today the Society has 987 elected members, 821 resident members and 166 international members from more than two dozen foreign countries. Since 1900, more than 260 members have received the Nobel Prize. Congratulations from the class to Pete! “Now that we live in North Beach (the Italian section of San Francisco), we have access to amazing restaurants,” wrote Kent Barber. “Once a week I volunteer at a K-5 public school. I am in a classroom of fourth and fifth graders, helping the teacher wherever she needs me. I continue to be involved in our Episcopal church, where we have been members for 38 years. Most Sundays my wife sings in the choir and I usher. Once a month I take blood pressure readings at the Telegraph Hill Neighborhood Center. There is a group of older Chinese men and women who come regularly for different 32 | Williams People | August 2009 activities. This is part of the service that is offered to them. I am close enough to Chinatown to walk there and get dim sum. It is delicious and made fresh each day.” (Kent sounds active!) Peter Ochs reported, “Never thought I’d get this old. Vegetate most of the year in Vienna, Austria. Will spend summer in Gay Head (now Aquinnah) on Martha’s Vineyard. Sold my house there (Ochsmark, à la Chilmark) before the giant market drop, thank God, or I would not be eating now. A million dollars ain’t what it used to be. It was really the beach rights that did it, unbelievable what those are priced at these days. And goodbye to the floor-to-ceiling glass looking out over 15 acres of wild land and a bit of Atlantic blue. Never no mind. Never look back. At the minireunion last fall that Fred Goldstein masterminded. Quite a deal. Clark museum great. Bob Aliber, my old Emile Dupres seminarmate, did a drop-in think-tank talk about the eco situation. (I always thought Bob would end up as a Mr. Tutt-type lawyer in Vermont, instead of the eco bigwig of our time, but apparently Prof. Dupres turned him the eco way.) Wish brother Aliber had talked to me before Sept. 24 when Lehman Bros dragged the Reserve Fund to semi-Drano status. Seventy-seven years! Too much?” Bob Kimberly and Nancy are fine in Kirkland, Wash. Bob is writing upbeat poetry. “I just want to tell you about a delightful experience I had this past February/March when a friend and I traveled to Jordan, Egypt, Israel and Cyprus,” wrote Marlene Rice, wife of Kingsley L.”Jim” Rice. “On our first full day at Le Meridian Hotel in Amman, I noticed a lovely couple in the lobby. We were not five minutes into our meeting when we discovered the Williams connection. Bill Moore ’54 and his wife Sue quickly became good friends for the duration of our travels. We visited Amman, Jerash, Mount Nebo, Madaba, Petra, the Wadi Rum and joined our small ship, Monet, in Aqaba. We sailed from Aqaba to Sharm El Sheikh on the Sinai Peninsula, traveling to St. Catherine’s Monastery at Mount Sinai, among other places, and across the Red Sea to Safaga. Then Luxor for a night’s stay. We started up the Red Sea, crossing the Suez Canal before heading to Israel where we visited Jaffa and Tel Aviv, the Mount of Olives and Jerusalem, Haifa, Nazareth and the Sea of Galilee. Trip ended in Limmasol. A great time.” Hank Norton reported that he and several classmates traveled to Columbus, Ohio, to bid farewell to Peter Mykrantz, who died after a two-month struggle with cancer. “John Montgomery, Paul Doyle, Ted Taylor and I were the contingent. Also Chuck Hebble ’53 gave a moving and amusing eulogy. Peter’s cousin Tad Jeffrey ’51 gave Mimi and I a ride to the airport, for which we were grateful, as our cab driver could not find the club where the reception was held. Great to see everybody, but not the preferred circumstance for a reunion.” (Pete’s obituary is in this issue.) Ray George said he played golf with Bob White in an event at the Country Club of Florida. They won some money, but it did little to offset losses in the market. The good news from the Jay McElroys is that they are well. They went on a Viking River cruise from Budapest to Nuremberg for a week in May and will be going to New Zealand and Australia in early 2010. “Other than that, Mary keeps playing tennis and I work out six days a week.” “Talk with John Hyde, John Chandler and others at lunch regularly,” reported Sam Humes, “so am catching up on the interesting history of Williams over the last decades. Recommend John as a speaker at our next fifth reunion. One year after moving from Brussels (after 24 years) Lynne and I are adjusting to Williamstown—even though she has kept her Brussels-based job and consequently spends a few weeks in Europe several times a year. Enjoy playing with grandchildren. I hope that at least one of the five make it to Williams. Looking forward to seeing many of you at the fall minireunion.” Gus Campbell had some sage and positive advice for us all: “Everybody fusses and frets about the market. Let’s be realistic—I have been investing in stocks since I was 15 years old. I am now 79. While the market goes up and down, in the 64 years that I have been investing, it ALWAYS comes back and ALWAYS continues an upward movement, although the speed of moving upward may vary. So tell the naysayers to stop their n 1952 whining and invest in common stocks. They will be ahead in the long run. (Go Gus!) Judy and Roger Corwin visited the Tutankhamun display at the Dallas Museum of Art before its May closing. “This tomb collection from about 5,000 years ago is amazing.” Bob Riegel says of the current gloom: “Yes, a lot of gloom. Some people have said to me, ‘You have always preached that we are too connected with money and try to get our happiness from it. Now I believe you.’ My dad lost several million in 1929. Instead of jumping out of a window my parents decided on two things. First, to have a child that turned out to be me. Second, that whatever happened in the future they would tithe. I think that how my Dad related to money and connected it to faith influenced me in becoming a priest. For a moment this month I did have some glee about money. I received back a lot of money from prepaid taxes. I was about to celebrate until I realized that the reason for the refund was that I had lost about 40 percent of my savings. I am really happy to be working full time at a great cathedral with over 4,400 members. We are in the middle of a $7 million restoration. My wife Keren has retired from 20 years work as a counselor in one of South Carolina’s poorest schools. Now set free, but with less money, she wants to travel. We are doing a tour of the western parks in June and hopefully next year a couple of weeks in Egypt.” Emerson Stone wrote, “This may be of interest to … those my late brother Jon Stone knew in his college years or later. A new book, Street Gang, by Michael Davis (Viking) is the best and fullest account yet of the making of the TV broadcast Sesame Street. Page after page, Street Gang cites Jon as a—perhaps even the—vital spark of Sesame Street. The book tells of his imagining and making that revolution in children’s broadcasting and of his battles against those who would degrade it. He went on to guide the revolution’s evolution until his death, some 30 years later. As you may know, Williams conferred an honorary degree on Jon in recognition of his centrality to the creative uniqueness of Sesame Street, to which his education there surely contributed.” “Just had successful cataract surgery—first, right eye. Two weeks later, left eye,” chimed in Bob Bischoff. “To me that qualifies as good, upbeat news. Even better, our grandson Michael Ormsbee has been accepted in the Class of 2013 at Williams. He’s excited, and so are his parents (’83 Williams graduates), and so are we. Marigold and I are doing well.” Bob was looking forward to a major family reunion in the Adirondacks in August. Don Wyman chimed in: “Not much going on here. We are doing our usual activities: Florida in January at the Hillsboro Club, Virgin Gorda for 10 days in March with friends in a rental villa, and platform tennis this winter at our club here on Cape Cod, morphing into tennis this summer. Cape Cod is now our year-round residence and very satisfying, with a busy summer social season at both The Beach Club and The Wianno Club. We have cut back on some expenses that in retrospect seemed extravagant in light of current economic conditions. Condos in Brookline and Osterville that we occasionally used as secondary residences are now rented. It reminds me of the ’30s. Hard to believe that I was born at the start of the Great Depression and am experiencing another one at the other end.” Dave Peck wrote: “Ginny and I live in Boynton Beach in winter and northern Michigan in the summer. I see Frank Weeks in Florida. We roomed together in reading the class notes.” Jack Brody: “Celebrated my 78th birthday going scuba diving with my son. We have been doing this for the last 25 years. My big dive is next month on the Turks and Caicos with my ancient buddy. This is our 50th annual dive. I am now an emeritus professor of epidemiology at the University of Illinois at Chicago and retain a few small grants and graduate students. I’ve been also fielding lots of questions about the swine flu. I too am flunking retirement, although I have noticed that all the phone calls and e-mails that I used to complain about are diminishing. I am hoping the get Arthur Levitt to go to the Penn Relays next April where we found fields of glory while at Poly Prep in ’47 and ’48.” Betty and Howie Martin reported: “If you haven’t visited an Islamic country, Morocco is an intriguing (and safe) one. Lacking oil money, they are eager for hard-currency tourists are friendly to Americans (a new university teaches only in English) and the country’s infrastructure is surprisingly good. Besides interesting sights in Marrakech, Fez and Casablanca, we visited their film capital (site of Lawrence of Arabia and 100 subsequent films), rode camels on the northwest corner of the Sahara and crossed a 7,500-foothigh mountain pass with nearby ski resorts.” Spoke to Dave Evans in New Jersey. He and Debbie are EPHCOMPLISHMENT In April playwright and novelist A.R. “Pete” Gurney ’52 was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society, the oldest learned society in the U.S., founded by Benjamin Franklin to promote research and discussion in the sciences and humanities. Williams Hall his freshman year and, regrettably, my only year at Williams. Had lunch with Dick Whitney ’49 last month. He lives in Stuart. We grew up together and played high school sports. He reminded me of the time the football coach came to him before a game and told him he was to play quarterback even though he’d never played quarterback. Said he did OK. We won the game 14 to 13. And he threw four touchdown passes. How so, you ask? Well, two of the passes were intercepted and run back for touchdowns. I enjoy considering a move to a CCRC. Of course they want to sell their home first. Dave’s brother Jack lives in Essex Meadows with us. Jack’s daughter Wendy Knight ’80 is very active in High Hopes, a riding facility for people needing assistance. I am sorry to report that Walt Palmer passed away in February in Edmond, Okla., after a brief illness. Born in China, Walt graduated from Williams and achieved a BS in petroleum engineering at UC Berkeley. Walt retired as a captain in the Air Force Reserve, became a August 2009 | Williams People | 33 CL ASS NOTES petroleum engineer and real estate operator and was active in the church and aiding kids to better their math. He is survived by a brother, Mike Palmer (Amherst ’53), a son, son-in-law, and three grandchildren. Walt’s obituary is in this issue. We will miss him. I am sorry to report that after a brief illness Steve Gribi passed away on June 6. He was born in Berlin, spent his early years in Bern, Switzerland, and immigrated with his family to Rye, N.Y., in his early teens. Steve went into the Navy shortly after graduation and became a lieutenant. After a long and distinguished career at Wells Fargo Bank, he retired in 1984. An avid RV enthusiast, he enjoyed cruising the back roads of the U.S. and Canada. We will miss him greatly. Our condolences go out to his sister Madi and his four sons and five grandchildren. Steve’s obituary will be in the next issue. 1953 Stephen W. Klein 378 Thornden St. South Orange, NJ 07079 1953secretary@williams.edu Stan Miller happily conveyed the news that his oldest granddaughter, Hollis Miller, has been accepted at Williams as a freshman for the class of 2013. Hollis’ dad is the celebrated dermatologist Stanley J. Miller ’78. Marge and Slim Harkins decided to downsize their home. After considering moves to South Carolina, Florida or Texas, they decided on a condo approximately 10 miles from their home of 38 years. Unpacking, Slim was astonished at all the things they still have that he believes he’d never seen before. John Beard and Sandra Clark Sisk were married May 24 at Emmanuel Church in Greenwood, Va. Many had a chance to meet Sandy at our 55th reunion. Bob Howard was in Williamstown June 12 on the occasion of the 25th reunion of youngest daughter Kathryn Curtis ’84. George Hartnett suffered a line fracture in the odentoid vertebra (top of the spine and just below the skull) as the result of a freak accident on Feb. 19 and was consigned to a neck and head brace—the original design dating from the Spanish Inquisition where it served a different purpose—until May 5. Now on the road to full recovery, 34 | Williams People | August 2009 Hollis Miller (third from left), who will be attending Williams this fall, celebrated her high school graduation with, from left, Stanley Miller Jr. ’53, Peter Miller ’80, Stanley Miller III ’78, Howard Simpson ’50 and Howard’s wife Kitty in Baltimore, Md. he will be able to repay some of Marianne’s nursing as she will be having hip-replacement surgery. And then back to Illinois. Bob Howard noted a reference in The New York Times to a book found some years ago in the late John Larson’s New Hampshire book store. Mention of this led Boine Johnson to remember his one-time Theta Delt roommate’s Halcyon days as an attorney in Paris, France. John subsequently returned to the U.S. and opened the bookstore called Ephemera. Bob Howard visited John there in 1997, possibly being the last Eph to call at Ephemera. Soapy Symington, well remembered at Williams for many reasons, including his outstanding squash and tennis and as one of the stellar ’53 cheerleaders, died on March 4. Soapy’s survivors include his wife Bailey, three children, including daughter Gaye Symington ’76, and five grandchildren. Among classmates attending a Celebration of Life service in New York were Charlie Mott, Art Murray and John Allan. Seth Schapiro, a pillar of our class, died March 11. Seth was a longtime active associate class agent, a former class president and, as our beloved Minister of Culture, was the initiator and organizer of the annual midwinter in New York theater, telethon, cocktail party and dinner. A memorial service for Seth played to a standing-room-only audience, including Mike Lazor, Susan and Peter Connolly, Joy and Walter Flaherty, Kathleen and Boine Johnson, and John Allan and Jim Tompkins. Seth is survived by wife Jill, four children—including son Joshua Schapiro ’83, who drew high praise as Master of Ceremonies at Seth’s service—and seven grandchildren. Paul Clifford died April 9. Paul was an executive of the Baltimore-based Monumental Life Insurance Co., a venerable family business. Paul is survived by wife Carol, four children, two stepchildren and seven grandchildren. 1954 Al Horne 7214 Rebecca Drive Alexandria, VA 22307 1954secretary@williams.edu For those who missed our 55th, here are some highlights: The occasion inspired Bob Seaman to create yet another of his memorable reunion logos, a gracefully aging purple cow peering over half-glasses, and his latest class motto, Nil Desperandum, roughly translatable from the Latin as “Never Despair.” Some of us, of course, are still Semper Ludendi. At our ’54 headquarters next to Dodd House, the Williams Inn of our college days, arriving classmates coming in out of the rain picked up gift bags that included straw hats with the Seaman-designed reunion buttons and coasters, plus yet another reunion-inspired labor of love: Dan Tritter’s entertaining history of our era, from 1929 to 2009. n 1 9 5 2 –5 5 Five emeritus trustees hang out with a familiar purple friend. From left: Paul Neely ’68, Ray Henze ’74, Allan Fulkerson ’54, former president Carl Vogt ’58 and Joe Rice ’54. Under the Nil Desperandum banner, about 50 of us accompanied by wives and significant others took advantage of a rain-free Saturday morning to follow our elders in the reunion parade down Main Street to Spring Street and the Chandler Gymnasium. There our Class Agent Guy Verney accepted the Sawyer Trophy, awarded to 1954 for the fifth year in a row as the post-50th-reunion class with the highest Alumni Fund performance (total gifts multiplied by rate of participation, in this case more than $135,000 and 82 percent). By Saturday night it was raining again, but that didn’t spoil our closing dinner, at which Russ Carpenter stepped down as class president to a standing ovation, and an unopposed slate of class officers was chosen democratically without objection. Our new president is Hugh Germanetti; Bob Murdock takes over Hugh’s spot as VP; and Guy Verney and I continue as class agent and secretary, respectively. Our reunion chairman, Jim Carpenter, also received a well-earned ovation, as did his wife Shirley and Russ’ wife Mary Jo. The following is, I hope, a complete list of reunion attendees. It includes three California couples in a virtual tie for the long-distance record and one returning veteran (sorry, no more clues): P.J. Adolph; Janet and Rit Ames; Sue and Don Bayer; Molly and John Beard; Ada and Rob Brandegee; Dianne and Jack Brennan; Nancy and John Brownell; Shirley and Jim Carpenter; Mary Jo and Russ Carpenter; Stu Chase; Buzz Eichel; Wendell Elmendorf; Janet and Dana Fearon; Joe Foote; Joanne and Charlie Foster; Lois and Reed Foster; Judy and Allan Fulkerson; Nancy and Hugh Germanetti; Sally and Dick Hollington; Ann and Al Horne; Beth and Graham Humes; Miriam and Ted Irwin; Pokey Kalker; Mal Kane with Barbara Denney; Dorothy and John Lewy; Elisabeth and Pete Loizeaux; Daphne and Bob McGill; Susanne and Ed Miller; Emily and John Miller; Barry and Jim Moltz; Harry Montgomery; Sonnie and Bob Murdock; Connie and Jack O’Kieffe; Peyton Pinkerton; Patsy and Hal Pratt; Barbara and Jerry Schauffler; Myrtle and Marv Schiff; Joan and Steve Selig; Charlie Sheldon with Brenda Hoffman; Ken Sperling with two granddaughters and Adele Bildersee; Gail and David St. Clair; Tom Stephens; Bill Stott; Dan Tritter; Julie and Guy Verney; John Walsh; Doris and Dick Whitehead; Madalene and Tom Woodbury; and Siju and Hal Zimmerman. A couple of footnotes: The golf tournament was rained out, but the all-star wives’ team of Molly Beard and Patsy Pratt won an abbreviated tennis tournament. In the real world, meanwhile, Bob McGill has been working with a northern Berkshire County charter high school and reports that all of this year’s graduates received college acceptances. Reed Foster’s current project is as an adviser to Vino Volo, a growing chain of airport wine bars. And Elisabeth and Pete Loizeaux are moving from New Jersey to Boston. Reminiscing a bit, the June issue of South County Living, a Rhode Island magazine, includes an interview with John Miller about his college summers as a Narragansett Beach lifeguard, with a photo of our John guarding a bathing beauty. Back in February, the South County Independent newspaper had included Emily and John Miller in a Valentine’s Day feature headlined “Still Sweethearts: Four couples give their recipes for love.” John’s advice, after nearly 49 years of marriage, stressed the art of compromise. “We don’t insist on victories,” John said. “I accept the defeats.” One more look back: Phil Smith ’55 sent Russ Carpenter a final report on the scholarships established in honor of Taylor Briggs by a Williams group including Jane Briggs that traveled to Nepal in 2000. The WilliamsNepal connection dates back to the 1970s, and one of the first Briggs Scholars, in the Williams class of 2004, was a nephew of the first Nepali Williams graduate in 1975. The Briggs fund helped put talented students through Nepal’s best secondary schools and enabled them to go to Williams and other top U.S. colleges. At least six of the Briggs Scholars are now in American PhD programs, and Williams continues to be enriched by applicants from Nepal, the former admission chief reported. We’ve lost two more classmates since my last report. In June Dick (Lumpy) Miles died in Amelia Island, Fla., after a long illness. His freshman and sophomore roommate Harry Montgomery recalls, “We shared good talk but did not see a great deal of each other, in part because he slept in even later in the mornings than I did.” In April, Worthington Flowers, briefly a member of our freshman class, died in Buckingham County, Va. 1955 REUNION JUNE 10-13 Charley Bradley 103 Meadow Road Briarcliff Manor, NY 10510 1955secretary@williams.edu One of our most reliable correspondents, Chuck Morey, writes that he has five great-grandchildren, three from grandchild Roxanne Bill and two from grandchild Ryan Morey. A lengthy e-mail from Ted August 2009 | Williams People | 35 CL ASS NOTES Oviatt (also a very reliable correspondent) says, in part, “My track kids did well again this year. We set a bunch of school records—especially a distance runner who also served as captain of the basketball team competing during the same season. Fun to hear from my son Pete, just turning 40, who is coaching in Washington after a few state championships in Connecticut. Since my school has taken me out of the classroom, I have more work and less fun than in the classroom. Sixty percent of our school is Korean, and it poses some special challenges. My daughter Angel has had a beautiful experience at Brent, starting with no English at age 5 and now is definitely one of the best fifth-grade students. She also runs on my track team, winning the 800 at this elementary invitational in Manila for the third straight year. She got a second in the long jump and ran on two super-passing relay teams (all gold!)—two fourth graders and two fifth graders. Looking forward to a rest—broke two bones in my back in a fall in January, but they were small and healed by themselves—a bummer after almost a year of spasms from the fall I took when I tripped being chased by wild dogs in the province the year before! Wife Marilyn has made it through two years of law school in Baguio five hours away, and I’ve made it through two more years of single fatherhood!” Tom Stark wrote that he is “moving to Selma, Ore., to live with my daughter Jody and her two children.” Tom suggests that we all be prepared to manage our own care when we become ill. “Easter Sunday, after a week in the hospital, the docs were offering me intubation or hospice, both of which I declined.” He made a deal with the night nurse regarding his medication, and, somewhat cynically, he says his condition improved overnight: “Having risen again, the stigmata having also disappeared, I walk among you once again.” Jeff Henriques sent a Bradley Byte to say, “Spent a delightful week in San Francisco (my favorite city) in early April. Stayed with Frank Rosenbach for three days and then shared a wonderful father/daughter weekend with Laura ’85. The weather cooperated, too. Kate and I are doing well and plan to be at the 55th next year.” Mark Cluett wrote that he and 36 | Williams People | August 2009 Libbie “spent three wonderful weeks in November in Madagascar. Fascinating (and very poor) country. All the mammals and 90 percent of the reptiles and amphibians are endemic, i.e., found nowhere else. In January we cruised for three weeks visiting the Falklands, South Georgia and Antarctica. We made 18 landings. This trip was breathtakingly beautiful. It’s difficult to describe the majesty and enormity of it all. One particular highlight was hiking part of Ernest Shackleton’s crossing of South Georgia to the whaling station of Stromress. Of course we did it in Antarctica’s summer while he did it in the winter.” John Newhall reported that he “had a pleasant visit with Betsy and Whitey Perrott in Vero Beach, Fla., in March. Saw Sandy and Ted Bowers, Pinky and Bill Regan, Cherry and Don Everett and Ronnie and Bob Wilkes. All are thriving in varying degrees in spite of health and financial issues endemic to aging and tough times. Also had a nice visit with Laurie and Freddy Towers at their beautiful home in Naples, Fla. I survived a ski trip to Jackson Hole, Wyo., also in March.” (I hope John realizes that John D. Rockefeller Jr. fought with the U.S. Congress for over 30 years to get Congress to accept his gift of 55,000 acres in Jackson Hole to complete Grand Teton National Park.) Bill Prime also used a Byte to say: “Just finished bringing Prime Time (my 37-foot catamaran) up from San Juan to Turks and Caicos with Mel Bearns where we were met by honorary classmate Fifi Prime for a little R&R, this after cruising from Chesapeake to Grenada via Bermuda over last three years. Still playing as hard as we can.” George Rounds wrote a Byte to report: “In April I returned to ‘the mother country’ of Connecticut and Vermont and Massachusetts to lead a men’s workshop weekend (very powerful experience) and spend time with daughter Heather in Stamford, Conn., and sister Sal and her husband Frank. Felt good to be back in New England where I grew up (that’s an assumption)! The hills filled my heart with the sound of music and sweet memories. On a more immediate note: We are expecting grandchild number seven in May. And I’m launching a new career in commercial voice-over this month! It’s never too late!” Tom White sent Bytes: “Greetings from Charlotte, N.C. All goes well here. Have been retired from a thriving OB-GYN practice for 10 years and enjoying every minute. Do lots of volunteer work, run a free women’s clinic for Hispanics monthly and play much tennis and golf. My heart attack and stroke in 2004 have left no residual damages. Five grandchildren in town keep me active in sports. My oldest grandson is considering Williams and made a recent trip there with his mother. Sue, my wife, is doing well (Skidmore graduate), and we spend a lot of the summer at a home in Brandon, Vt. … I am working hard for the conservative movement in hopes of restoring sanity, fiscal responsibility and free enterprise to DC. I am fearful of the direction the U.S. is taking here and abroad.” Ed Wilkens, one of my Psi U brothers, wrote, “With great sadness, I write to report the recent death (1.26.09) of my dear wife and best friend Joy; we were married for 16 years but together for over 25.” I did speak to Ed, and he said he was doing fairly well, but that it has been a very difficult adjustment. J.J. DuBois e-mailed me with two pieces of news: “One, we have a new e-mail address. It is jsdubois28@live.com. Long story, but we had a home invader that entered our house while we were asleep. Both my dog and I awoke at the same time and he fled the house, but not without my laptop computer. Our e-mail ended up somewhere over Africa! Second, I will no longer be totally retired! I am going to join an internist in Lenox, Mass., and help him during his busy summer season. We will stay in Tyringham, and I will be working June 15 to Sept. 15. I plan to catch up with Marty Deely in Lee and Terry White and Bob Behr in Williamstown. Our life in Panama continues to be good. We are living in a volcano crater, which is cool and quiet. I now have two dogs that spend their day barking at our 10 Cochin chickens. This is a nice place to retire to!” Gene Latham also e-mailed: “After 50 years in Mexico, Gloria and I have decided to leave the country and become U.S. residents. This decision was motivated principally by wanting to be closer to our seven children and 11 grandchildren living in the U.S. For Gloria, who n 1955 Class of ’55 President Merce Blanchard (second from right) outside Harper House, the new home of Williams’ Center for Environmental Studies. With him are (left to right) Doug Gollin, economics professor; Wilberforce Kisamba-Mugerwa, the first Class of 1955 Visiting Professor of International Studies; and William Lynn, visiting professor of environmental studies. was born here, the move will be especially difficult, however we did not want to wait until nearness to our children, when one of us had passed away, became a necessity rather than a desire. There is much to be done before we can move, and this will take some time. I have resigned my position at our orphanage, Nuestros Pequeños Hermanos, but we will continue to remain close to its growth and progress as the years pass. We intend to spend about half our time in Rhode Island and half in Centennial, Colo., where we have bought an apartment. Hopefully we can catch up with some Williams friends and activities once we have gotten settled. The last few months in Mexico have been exciting. An economic crash; the devaluation of the currency by 40 percent; a rather large earthquake; and now the influenza scare. We are holding our breath (behind our face masks), awaiting the arrival of locusts. We look forward to being closer to old friends as we leave the country and friends we have come to love and admire. Viva Mexico!” Phil Smith, who always comes through with news, e-mailed: “Maureen Sze spent the night with us on the way down and back to see her new grandson, Julian Savadove, in Pennsylvania, son of Tom Savadove ’93. Bill Savadove ’91 and his wife also presented Maureen with a grandson in China, so she became a grandmother (for the first time) twice in the same month. I put together a lunch meeting for Wilberforce Kisamba-Mugerwa, the Class of ’55 visiting professor for the spring term, with Williams students from East Africa, and we had a great time over an Indian buffet on Spring Street. The undergraduates included six Kenyans, two Ethiopians, one Ugandan and one from Burundi. We had two CDE students from Rwanda with us as well as my neighbor Kenda Mutongi from Kenya, who is history professor at Williams and chair of African studies. Speaking of Africa, Susie and I are just back from a two-week trip to South Africa, Swaziland and Mozambique with our youngest daughter Holly and family. The parks and animal sightings were first rate, and we survived the fact that Mozambique is the only country in the world without paved roads. I’ve just finished reading the international applications to Williams for the 50th year, and I’m happy to say that the Class of 2013 came in right on target.” Two minutes later, he e-mailed “a couple of other tidbits I forgot. Bill Montgomery was in town in April bringing his granddaughter to visit Williams. He stayed with Alleson and Terry White, and we had a great dinner with our Williams sophomore granddaughter. That same day, Tom White’s son was in town looking at Williams with his mother.” Mel Bearns had written in January for the spring issue of People, but I forgot to include it. My apologies to Mel, who wrote: “I’d been looking for some nine months for a specific light plane I wanted to buy after I sold the Kitfox. Finally found it in Santa Paula, just north of LA, got it checked out and made the deal. Meanwhile, I’d gotten Bill Prime into the project (he’s always had a burning desire to learn to fly). Once the deal was sealed, I flew commercial out to LA at the beginning of April and picked up the plane—a classic 1946 Ercoupe 415-C in mint condition. Left Santa Paula after lunch and made it to Kingman, Ariz., where I overnighted. Next day over the continental divide just north of Albuquerque, managing to get the coupe up to over 10,000 feet to clear, and on to Borger, Texas, in the Panhandle. Overnight there, then the next day made it to the southern tip of Illinois. Home to Warrenton on the final day, arriving around 4 p.m. after a major hassle scud running to get over the Blue Ridge mountains. All in all, some 2,300 miles in 22 hours flight time without a single problem. Not bad for a 62-year-old plane with an 85 hp engine. Bill started taking lessons and progressed in short order to solo with an almost perfect first solo landing. … We’re sort of shut down now with winter, but are taking to the skies when we can. Bill and Fifi wisely headed south last week to spend a couple of weeks bringing Prime Time up from St. Croix to San Juan, first leg of getting her back to the Bahamas, of which we may be writing you later. No plans to go back to Bermuda, for sure!” Rick Smith wrote that his and Susan’s “great environmental adventure came to a climax in April with the broadcast on PBS Frontline of our two-hour documentary on Puget Sound and Chesapeake Bay—‘Poisoned Waters.’ It’s been great fun out with the NOAA teams sampling Orca whales off the San Juan Islands, boating with watermen working the crab pots on the Chesapeake, working with scuba divers in Seattle’s Elliot Bay, watching USGS scientists dice up the smallmouth bass on the Upper Potomac, etc. Lots of outdoor filming. Great people, terrible news. The whole project left me seriously worried that our grandchildren or their children will not be able to survive on this earth if we keep ravaging our natural resources at the present rate. I never understood how bad August 2009 | Williams People | 37 CL ASS NOTES the situation is, and I don’t think most people do, even those of us who thought we cared about the environment. And it’s a shock to find out what is in the drinking water systems of most places around the country. If anyone has an interest, you can see the whole documentary online at your leisure at pbs.org/frontline/ poisonedwaters. It’s not all bad news. There are some successes. But it’s an eye opener—at least it was to me, going through all that reporting.” President Merce Blanchard sent me copies of correspondence he had between February and June with Dr. Wilberforce KisambaMugerwa, the Class of 1955 Visiting Professor of International Studies. Merce met with him when Merce attended the spring meeting of the Executive Committee of the Society of Alumni. In the professor’s letter to Merce on April 22 he said he “had met Phil Smith and two other members of the 1955 class at the welcome reception, but little did I know that I will have an opportunity to meet the president of the class.” He also asked that Merce “please pass my sincere appreciations to the 1955 class and your wife.” REMEMBER: The 55th of 55 is in 2010! Plan to be there. 1956 Vern Squires 727 Ardsley Road Winnetka, IL 60093 1956secretary@williams.edu Hopefully everyone received and took to heart Buster Grossman’s letter, which included the news about the Class of ’56 minireunion in Williamstown Oct. 9-11. Sig Balka has been working hard to make this a memorable event, and it would be great to see a large turnout. Sig has lined up: a class dinner on Friday night; a symposium and then a tailgate lunch before the football game on Saturday; a class dinner on Saturday night; and a spectacular brunch on Sunday at the home of Carol Adler (a WCMA Fellow). More information will be coming out as we get closer to the event. My article in the April Williams People noted the passing of Fred Sabin, but the date of his death and the deadline for the article did not allow for much reflection on Fred’s life. Tink Campbell and Bob Bethune, both roommates and fraternity brothers 38 | Williams People | August 2009 at Williams and close friends thereafter, provided additional information. Fred was plenty smart: summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, with highest honors, while (according to his daughter Robin) “playing golf for most of his senior year.” Fred joined the Marines after one year in law school and then went on to serve with distinction in the CIA for more than 25 years, nine of which were in the Middle East. He retired in 1989, although he continued to work part time on contract for the agency. He loved golf, and he and Tink played many a round at the Taconic in Williamstown. Both Tink and Bob were mentioned in Robin’s eulogy at the memorial service. Besides his comments regarding Fred, Bob Bethune added some interesting personal details. He is now fully retired and in the course of having two cataracts removed. The goal: so “I can see the golf ball again both before and after is struck!” Bob and Tink got together on Bob’s visit to Hilton Head Island, and Bob looked forward to his annual reunion with Bill Jenks and Kirt Gardner and their families in the beautiful cottage country of Ontario, Canada. Another of Tink’s roommates was Pete Zentay. Tink and Pete were in each other’s weddings in the late 1950s and were together from time to time in St. Louis and Chicago after Pete’s tour of duty in the Air Force and remained in contact for many years. Pete is now fully retired and can be contacted, care of his son Tim, at 5630 Pershing Ave., St. Louis. Honors continue to descend on Sig Balka in recognition of his many contributions in the world of art. He has had a long relationship with the Queens Museum of Art in Queens, N.Y., and in June his support for the museum was recognized in a ceremony in which Williams President Morty Schapiro provided an introduction. It was good to hear from Tim Hanan. Unlike many of his classmates, Tim says: “Retire, never.” After retiring from Mobil, he went into the real estate business in the DC area, selling both residential and commercial properties. If you are looking for property for investment or otherwise in or near Washington, call Tim. He reported—and I was very glad to hear this—that the Washington area is currently one of the few markets not hit by the country’s economic problems. Nick Sperling has been retired since 1998. But that hardly translates to inactivity. He and Mickey live in Pine Island, Fla., where they spend the winters on and in the water, fishing and beaching, kayaking and keeping fit, volunteering for charitable organizations and environmental outfits. When summer arrives, it is off to Blowing Rock, N.C., in the mountains along the Blue Ridge trail. There, they climb the mountains and listen to some of the best country and blues music, bar none. With their eldest daughter and family nearby, they can enjoy watching their two grandsons play soccer. It is always a joy to read a closing line in a note like Nick’s: “Life is good!” Bob Spaeth is another veteran retiree. He retired from corporate life in 1990, and he and Linda settled in Amelia Island, Fla., on property they purchased in 1980. Life remains very busy for both of them: travel, tennis, aerobics, volunteer work and staying in touch with three children in Dallas, Greenwich and Lyon (France). Bob complimented the Williams development staff for a dinner they hosted in the Amelia Island area for local alumni. Noni and Jock Duncan are fellow residents of Amelia Island, so the couples see each other frequently. The ability to recollect may be fading for some (including me on too many occasions), but not everyone is experiencing this frustration. Witness this note from Gates Helms ’46, who with his wife was attending a fundraiser in New Jersey when he spotted Mark Saulnier. Gates wrote: “As we neared one another, I stuck out my hand silently to share [Mark’s hand] because I could not remember his name. As soon as he saw me, he greeted me by name. That’s what I call having a great memory and being 100 percent on the ball.” John Mattice is also retired with, he said, nothing of special interest to report. However, he said that he liked class notes, so I viewed that as definitely of special interest. Williams alumni in the Chicago area are singularly fortunate in having access to the Peter and Alicia Pond Lecture Series, an annual event usually in May. Each lecture features a member of the Williams faculty who gives a brief report on the College and then moves to his or her sphere of interest. This year’s lecturer was Ed Burger, mathematics n 1 9 5 5 –5 7 professor and Gaudino Scholar. His presentation was absolutely fascinating. He proved mathematically that if you had enough monkeys pounding typewriters and no time limits were imposed, one of the monkeys would eventually emulate Shakespeare’s composition of Hamlet. If this proposition seems preposterous, go to Wikipedia and look up the “infinite monkey theorem.” In the audience were Laurie and Bill Troyer, Toni and Ken Harkness and Judy and Vern Squires. I received a nice letter from Dick Perry that included an amazing “small world” observation. Dick lives in Harwich on Cape Cod with wife Pat, daughter Tana and grandson Chase. Cape Cod has long been the subject of concern and scientific inquiry due to the relatively high incidence of breast cancer among women on the Cape. The statistics show a 20 percent higher rate than the rest of the country. Dick is about to start writing a book on the relationship between a large radar installation and cancer on the Cape. He notes, “My experience in mapping the sea floor gives me some unique insight into what may be causing the problem.” As to the “small world” observation, Dick noted from the December 2008 issue of Williams People that Dana Kelly had been able trace his family lineage all the way back to the arrival of a Kelly at Yarmouth 1637. It turns out that Dick is descended from the same person, an Irishman who settled on the headwaters of the Bass River in what is now Dennis, Mass., less than 10 miles from where Dick lives. As Dick said: “It is indeed a small world, since Dana was a close friend at both Deerfield and Williams, and I never knew that we were related.” Remember the minireunion in October. And thanks to those who contributed to this article. 1957 John S. Pritchard 150 Candlewood Drive Williamstown, MA 01267 1957secretary@williams.edu The end of May produced some welcome sunny and warm weather at long last. I just read news of another national championship women’s tennis team who beat Amherst 5-4 in the final match. And our undefeated women’s crew repeated as national champs, which wrapped up another Director’s Cup for the 24 men’s and women’s teams competing for this top athletic slot. We are proud of student achievements in Billsville, not only in sports and academics but in music, where we heard fabulous violin, cello and flute concerts last spring. Nearly 50 percent of the Berkshire Symphony is composed of undergrads, and we witnessed the first Williams opera featuring Act I of Mozart’s Cosi fan Tutte in front of a full house in Chapin Hall. What a performance! President Obama is not the only one with a new dog as Pete Fleming, after a decade without one, was to be the proud owner of a Golden Retriever puppy by mid-July. “It has taken me this long to convince Cary that I will share 50-50 in the care and training. During my working years, complete with travel, most of the ‘heavy lifting’ of pet care fell on her shoulders. If you return for the ’57 Scholars and Interns Weekend Oct. 10, you will be able to judge for yourself if I am upholding my end of the bargain. Speaking of the ’57 October mini, I hope you will return for lectures, activities and opportunities to reconnect. We will return to the Taconic Golf Club for our dinner on Saturday. The ‘Late Night Jazz’ at the Faculty House sounds compelling if I can find a dog sitter! Prior to the WilliamsBates football game, the classes graduating during the decade of the ’50s will enjoy lunch and the Reunion Jazz Band at a ‘Tent Gate’ on Weston Field. The ’59-’64 minireunion classes will join us with more information to follow. In the meantime, don’t delay your motel reservations.” News from Steve Bullock, whom I see for breakfast several times each month: “I’ve been cleaning out a lifetime of stuff that’s accumulated in our family home in South Williamstown. I was making progress when I happened across a cardboard box filled with the Williams Record from 1936 to 1942. I had a moment or two, so I started to read a few of them … and then a few more … and a few more … and by then I was hooked and read these wonderful old issues for the days that followed, completely derailing me from my cleaning task. While at Williams I was not a Record subscriber; generally I read it to catch up on the sports and to see when the movies Bomba the Jungle Boy and One Summer of Happiness were returning to the Walden. But from these old copies I learned a lot about the College and its legacy. These copies covered the controversial era of President Tyler Dennett, Class of 1904, and arrival of President Phinney Baxter, Class of 1914. They covered the reactions of the trustees to campus activities, the annual fall fraternity issues and Williams’ role in the national scene. The impending entrance of WWII was getting increasing commentary from Fred Schuman as well as increased anxiety everywhere on campus. The advertisements were also of interest. Williams students must have spent a fortune on trips to NYC to hear Guy Lombardo and several more fortunes on cigarettes. There was a full-page testimony by some charming operatic soprano who (pictured exhaling), said, ‘As a professional, take it from me, Chesterfields, unlike other brands, really help your throat.’ I’ve given a stack of copies to some local friends, to Nick Wright, who has been following the life of a member of the Class of ’37, one of a very few who became involved in the war in Spain, to Sheila Mason in the College’s 50th reunion office for placement in the older class’s reunion HQ, and to our fearless Class Secretary John Pritchard for his review and enjoyment. Next time you are in town, drop by the library and read through a few of them. They are hard to put down. Maybe at first the names are not familiar, but the setting and the culture are. “According to the Record, Williams was a national player in the events leading up to WWII. The College faculty, alumni and trustees had the ear of those in power. And as a cultural center, it is wonderful to read about the visitors, lecturers and artists that frequented the campus. Williams was a vital force of reason, thought and action. Maybe a lack of cars, TV and the Internet helped support these extraordinary activities, and certainly from these editions one can see Williams enjoyed national focus.” Steve continues: “First, I wonder if Williams today is as involved nationally and internationally as it was in the years leading up to WWII. Second, because the Record’s early-warning awareness of events leading up to the war was impressive, I wondered if the Record had the same early-warning awareness August 2009 | Williams People | 39 CL ASS NOTES about economic threats to America prior to the Great Depression. Reading 1928 through 1930 Records I looked for similar warnings that the country was headed to economic meltdown but never found mention of the possibility of the depression. I’ve since learned from Nick Wright that even The New York Times missed the ’29 collapse, so one can’t be too critical of the Record. Maybe the Record was more inward looking in that era, and the idea of a depression was so new no one saw a growing threat. People seem better at understanding a physical threat from a Hitler than recognizing exuberant speculation as a harbinger of economic disaster. I enjoyed the review of the old Records. The only downside to this is that I have made zero progress cleaning out the house.” Peggy and Dick Towne visited Williamstown May 2 to celebrate his 74th birthday with a round of golf at Taconic. Kathy and I were treated to breakfast at the Orchards and an update on their busy lives. They had been in Florida and briefly ran into Ed Hines at the Hillsboro Club. He and wife Marsha were enjoying life away from the Chicago winter. The Townes were there “thanks to a nice lady Peggy and I befriended on a Williams alumni society tour to Holland. We stayed at the club located near Ft. Lauderdale and ran into the Hines at the manager’s cocktail party, where they are regular members.” Incidentally, Dick and I are working on genealogy projects, which for me has evolved into our meanderings over 50 years of marriage and before. Hard work but enjoyable, and I encourage all of you to consider such an effort. Dick Marr has not retired or missed a beat for years with his multiple involvements. Lefty wrote to me regarding his deceased brother Jack ’54 and the establishment of the John Daniel Marr Educational Fund, which Dick has overseen since the 1990s. Ten members of ’57 supported this fund last year which now exceeds $100,000 and annually selects an outstanding scholar-athlete for financial support during their undergraduate college education. The Marrs split their time between Pittsboro, N.C., where he coaches the U. North Carolina hockey team, and Cape Cod, where he has among other projects administrated the 40 | Williams People | August 2009 Summer College Baseball League. Lefty devoted 46 years to teaching, coaching and administrating and since “retirement,” he has been a lawyer, educational consultant, mediator, board director, ice hockey coach and independent school trustee. “Ginny and I remain fortunate and thrive both on the Cape and outside Chapel Hill despite a new hip and major rotatorcuff surgery last spring. She has been active as a doula and is exploring hospice work. One of the enjoyments of being involved with the John Marr Educational Foundation is the number of past associations that have been rekindled.” Contact Dick via cell phone (508.560.9379) if you are interested or have questions. Continued success and good health to the Marrs! Brad Tips left beautiful southern Florida last May for their home in Chicago, where the weather was the worst spring in 68 years with rain and cold. They were “taking a Kalos Golf Cruise with our golf pro and wife up the Danube River from Budapest to Prague in June. In August, we are coming your way with family from California and Massachusetts to Marblehead and then to the Cape. Staying in a neat place that Libby Motter found for us near Chatham. We then may head to Montreal to see our good Canadian friends from Florida. We do hope to attend the … minireunion in October.” Sad news to report, as Rupe Lowe died on April 21 in Englewood, Fla. In addition to his wife Penni, Rupe leaves his daughters Amy Nooden and Carolyn Lowe, his son Charles Lowe and three grandchildren. Penni can be contacted at 10 Dover Drive, Englewood, Fla. 34227, and Pete Fleming has contacted Penni on behalf of the class. I refer all of you to our 50th Reunion Book and Rupe’s terrific essay and reflections on his unique life. His good friend Bob Fishback was kind enough to refresh my memory of our recently departed classmate and his special contributions. During early May, the Cobdens’ enjoyed a weeklong program entitled “New York City for Williams Travel” coordinated by Meg McDonald ’91. The experience included tours of landmarks, museums, theaters, etc., and meetings with Arthur Levitt ’52, David Tunick ’66, Max Davidson ’61 and E.J. Johnson ’59, among others. They were delighted by the insights and impressions from Williams people. I trust you have seen the March article in the Williams Alumni Review featuring Phil Fradkin and his research into the writings of Wallace Stegner. Phil is an awardwinning journalist, author of 11 books and an environmentalist. The Applefords are fine and continue to enjoy their unique home on Lake Michigan, where we have visited several times over the years. Bob is still playing tennis after rotator-cuff surgery, and he and Molly bought a condo in nearby Frankfurt, where part of their family lives. Hoping to lure them to Williamstown in August. Nina and Tom Slonaker visited the campus in April with their California granddaughter and her parents to check out Williams and other New England prospects. We hope she enrolls so we will get to see more of the Slonakers. Dick Towne e-mailed Skip Cole following the May wildfires in and around Santa Barbara and here is his reply: “Thanks for your concern re: the recent fire, now more than 80 percent contained but scary, as they always are. Our old house was within a half mile of the fire, and our tenants had to evacuate. Our new one is near the water, on what is called the ‘Mesa’—probably always will be safe except if some careless old man like me leaves the stove on and a fire ensues! Yates Satterlee lives near Cottage Hospital, and I believe this to be a very safe area. Probabilities are rash where fire is concerned but so much of the foothill tinder has burnt in the last year from three different fires that we ought to be safe for a few years to come, at least. Let’s hope that is the case.” Looking forward to seeing those of you returning for the ’57 Scholars/Interns Weekend Oct. 10! 1958 Dick Davis 5732 East Woodridge Drive Scottsdale, AZ 85254 1958secretary@williams.edu Bill Dudley has completed his book Maritime Maryland: A History, now at the Johns Hopkins Press. Bill hopes for publication this year. Bill’s daughter Jennifer Bee was married in February to Michael Fiore. Jennifer is a three-year Tonga Peace Corps veteran with a master’s from Columbia, n 1 9 5 7 –5 8 working in New York. Bill and Donna are sailing on the Chesapeake this summer while the economy recovers. Prof. Charley Dew and a stellar group of other scholars presented a strictly 1859 perspective on the nation about to split and the regional economies in April at the University of Richmond. This format, with the blinders on here to anything after the raid at Harper’s Ferry, is gaining currency. Sandy Fetter reports starting to teach his last course to honors students at Stanford. Sandy’s note bespeaks a very active and vibrant Eph and ’58 presence around the Bay Area. For one thing, kids are apt to go and live there. Ask, just for example, the Carl Vogts and the Chip Wrights. Dave Phillips reports that the Wrights planned to host a Williams-oriented party in July. Carl Vogt strongly endorses the contingency plan announced for an interim president and provost, pending selection of the next Williams president. He knows the territory. Carl was in Williamstown recently to celebrate the splendid overgoal results of The Williams Campaign. Chet Lasell reports that the contingent of ’58ers in and around Vero Beach was active in Eph events last winter despite the economic malaise! In the 14th alumni golf tournament featuring members of the Williams men’s team, no fewer than one-third of the 24 alumni players were our classmates—John Hutchins, Ed Hughes, Joel Greeley, Bob Kingsbury, Jim Kolster, Walt Kasten, David Sims and Skip Martin. Chet, who runs the tournament, says, “It was great to see everyone, and I much appreciate their strong support!” Chet added that Bob Kingsbury and Fred Clifford again led the local performance by the Williams Reunion Jazz Band attended by 60 people from Williams, Amherst and UVA. “Thanks to Bob and Fred, this terrific group just gets better with age.” Chet, wearing his class president’s hat, reminds us that the annual ’58 minireunion will be held Oct. 9-11 in the Purple Valley. In April Jim Bowers and Walt Kasten went fishing with Chet. Chet’s craft has an electronic fish locator; however, opinions seem to vary somewhat as to the consistent efficacy of this New Age device. Sounds good to me! Becky and Sam Jones traveled to Texas to the LBJ Ranch and Library, the Big Bend National Park and the west Texas mountains and observatory. Sam had a good conversation with Lucy Baines Johnson, who is restoring the White House West. Sam was a part of the LBJ administration. Sam and Becky’s next trip is with their church choir to Ecuador. They are handling the Spanish but find the native dialects challenging. Maine and Ecuador make an interesting contrast. Sam sent me photographs via Facebook. I am now a Facebook member. Feel free to share any thoughts you have on these growing social networks. Our alumni office says recent grads make use of them, but not so much classes nearer our vintage. Vintage. It was news to me, via Sandy Fetter, that George Vare sells much of his Ribolla Gialla production to the great restaurants, The French Laundry and Per Se. These are 500 ml bottles. I’ve heard that if you get reservations to one of those, you can be in for a wait. Gourmet! Dave Cook, Tom Shulman and Ollie Stafford were out here in January savaging the local links with Larry Nilsen. Tom will be here again next April but maybe even sooner if the Buckeyes keep monopolizing one side of the Fiesta Bowl. How about you, Bill Moore? Do you go to the bowls? Phyllis and Bob Young mightily enjoyed touring Israel with Bill Harter’s 43rd tour of the country in March. As a part of the tour, Bill re-baptized tour members who so chose in the Jordan and held a Communion service at the Garden Tomb in Jerusalem. I have a picture of Bill and Bob boating on the Sea of Galilee. Bill retired as a principal pastor in January and will spend much of his time heading tours to Israel, Greece, Turkey and Egypt. He has a new residence: 1551 Alexander Ave., Chambersburg, Pa. 17201-1337. Phones: 717.264.3828 (home); 717.816.4914. E-mail: wharter1551@comcast.net. I had an exchange with Dave Wood (and others) over the Super Bowl. I had a severe case of Migrant’s Dilemma and opted for our local Cardinals over my longtime favorite Steelers. Woody could not see rhyme or reason for this and offered vigorous counseling, including directions to one or more of our local Steelers bars. At least I had great company. Roger Headrick was in the Cardinals corner not because of the franchise but to see Kurt Warner ice the Hall and, mostly, because Larry Fitzgerald learned to pull in those aerials while he was a ball boy for Roger’s Vikings in the ’90s. Jim Kolster was a Cardinals rooter, too. Tim Smith had a heart attack in April. He was quickly back home after repair at Yale New Haven. A line from Hank Dimlich strikes a chord: “Tim just needed a breather. Can’t keep the irrepressible down for long.” Tim says it’s great to be home with Dica. Ira Kowal was down for a spell with a gall bladder removal. He’ll wind down his cardiology practice, but he’s up and skiing and especially looking forward to spring creek fishing in Montana this summer, Nelson Spring Creek to be exact. Ira was at Phil Wilcox’s lecture in Denver. Denny Doucette informs that Gretchen’s recovery has progressed well, and he is making plans to take her home. Denny’s sons are there a lot. Denny also keeps busy with the Suncook Valley Chorale. Down the seasonally hardfrozen Merrimack, Jock Purcell has striven to help his neighbor Lowell’s Boat Shop Est. 1793 win a National Preservation Trust grant. 1793 as we all know was a great year! Jock is on the board of a very active women’s crisis center and is compiling a curriculum for education on the subject. Joe Young visited Barbara and Ron Anderson in Boston. Ron is still very active in rheumatology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. Joe and Betsy also visited Judy and Matt Donner and Minkie and Bruno Quinson in New York. Matt is still very much full time at Credit Suisse. Bruno paints three to four days a week, and Minkie runs the Barrington Stage Co. in Pittsfield. They attended the Eudora Welty centennial in Jackson, where Governor Barbour cut the cake. Zay and Ben Foster play a lot of tennis and rhapsodize (I wish I could quote, it’s beautiful) about the floral glories of Jekyll Island, where Ben paints. They will be back in Litchfield for a more “austere” spring. Lil and Bill Taggert enjoyed Puerto Vallarta and will return to Mexico next year. They plan to fly rather than drive. Bill says that if you stay in the tourist areas it feels quite safe. August 2009 | Williams People | 41 CL ASS NOTES Bill and Lil also visit folks in Green Valley, south of Tucson. Poppy and Karl Hirschman live in Tucson, about a mile from the landmark Arizona Inn, a Howard Hughes hangout. Karl doesn’t favor the traffic in Phoenix. Jack Kent’s daughter Katie— Kathryn Ruth Kent ’88—became a full professor of English at the alma mater, effective July 1. We know how good she has to be. Jack and his partner Mary drove cross-country and back to visit kids and grandkids, other family and friends. Jack Platt’s daughter Leigh Platt Rogers has written a book of fiction titled Sticky Situations, about teenage Americans growing up in foreign countries. Present-day teenagers like it—the acid test. As Jack says it’s a “steal” on Amazon.com. Connie and Dave Allan did the two-week Williams-sponsored tour of the Czech Republic and Germany. They greatly enjoyed the company of Suzie and Jim Bowers. Probably the Vltava and the Spree were a little too cool for Manatee activities. It’s got to be good to have a classmate aboard one of these tours. Strong thumbs up from Dave and Connie, who went Northwest this summer. Bob Kingsbury says he doesn’t sweat the three squares but savors every moment of the breaks between the sets. Jim Conlan and son Matthew ’91 took in the second home game at the new Yankee Stadium (had he gone to the first I might not have heard about that). Jim and Virginia spent the week before Easter in Puerto Rico with their son JP and family. JP is a professor at UPR. Jim doesn’t think Virginia will ever retire from teaching kindergarten. She was introducing biology to the class and awaiting a bunch of chicks to hatch. I understand John Ross’ son is a Mets season-ticket holder at the new stadium. We’ve got some Mets fans, too. Some more important history: Carl Smith is to present a paper at Oxford on the American position in the 1967 Middle Eastern war. Carl was doing research on Robert Anderson, our commencement speaker, father of our late classmate Jim and President Johnson’s envoy to Egypt’s General Nasser. Jim passed away in Austin in 2001. Carl’s address at Oxford will be published later in the year. 42 | Williams People | August 2009 Tom Connolly attends the games of four grandchildren in three sports. He says he goes back to the office to rest up. Tom says Whitey Kaufmann will be off to Russia for a U of Arctic convocation. We’ll hope to hear about it. Jim Becket is into rowing “8s” on Lake Casitas and swimming competitively—he copped seven first places in a recent masters meet! Jim saw Sheela and Dave Plater again on a second business foray to New Orleans. Bruno reported that Dave and Sheela were to be in Virginia for some of this summer. I understand that Csilla and Don Morse’s publication of Hungarian plays in English is going well. This has been a major project, and I need to catch up on details. Trice and Bill Booth have hopped around points south and, to some extent environmentally speaking, will be glad to be back in Seattle. Some of our metro areas need work. Bill particularly enjoyed fishing in the San Juan River in New Mexico and viewing Anasazi ruins. I’m wondering if Bill or any of us will be going to the Vancouver-Whistler Winter Olympics in 2010. Wow, the time flies! Jack Talmadge spends the summer (May through September here in the Southwest) in the Carmel Valley area of San Diego in the Signature Point complex on Del Mar Heights Road. Karen and I hope to see Jack and Zeke Knight this summer. Zeke hopes California can do something about its acute fiscal crisis. Terry Carney lives in Indian Wells, and Dick Gladson lives in Fairfield, Calif. Terry’s address is 75326 Purple Hills Road, #R, Indian Wells 92210. Dick’s is 4159 Rowland Drive, Fairfield 94533-7742. To the many, many who recently have or will soon celebrate your 50th anniversaries, the heartiest of congratulations, and keep on collecting those many happy returns. If your name hasn’t been in these pages for a while, you can bet that there are plenty who would like to hear from and about you and yours. Sadly, I have to report the death of Karl Schoeller in Vero Beach on April 28. Marcia’s address is 312 W. Lyon Farm Drive, Greenwich, Conn. 068314361. Memorial donations can be made to the Williams Class of 1958 Scholarship Fund in Karl’s honor. 1959 Norm Walker 15 Vin Mar Court Rye, NH 03870 1959secretary@williams.edu At the 50th reunion of the Class of 1959 we embraced our classmates, our college and our universe! Our leaders—President Jerry Tipper, VP Dan Rankin and reunion co-chairman Geoff Morton established a good crowd and a good time. Just prior to reunion Dan wrote, “The gala is almost here, and we have a terrific crew gathering in Williamstown for the 50th.” He was right. We also had some terrific individuals. The Class of ’59 appreciated Williams honoring Pete Wilmott with the highest award for alumni service, the Rogerson Cup. Tony Volpe, Bart Robinson and Tom Hayne (Tom, a kind treasurer, but more a music than money man in his key role in the Williams Reunion Jazz Band) have been work-horses in a culture where dealing with money has become a tough job; yet they’ve all essentially come through. (At $10,539,514 the Class of ’59 gift is now the fifthhighest 50th reunion class gift in Williams history.) Tony’s communication with classmates was a lot of work up until the reunion. Then he said, “Reunion is not the time to be asking people for money.” Good attitude, Tony. By the way, Hayne’s Williams Reunion Jazz Band (along with John Halsey and Bob Kingsbury ’58 and Freddy Clifford ’58) did some major playing throughout reunion, particularly at the annual meeting, where in Chandler Gymnasium they stood and swung out mightily, blasting Dixieland style on the second chorus of “Yard By Yard.” Another major moment was a beautiful talk at the Alumni Memorial Service by a profound minister in our class, Robert Gould. Pete Wilmott chaired the attendance committee while Jack Dietze arranged the splendid meals, Jim Richardson supervised the reunion HQ, Pim Goodbody organized our website, John Mangel contributed the special large chocolate Williams seal found among our check-in materials, and our now-deceased classmate, the thoughtful and organized Bruce Listerman, planned our uniform. Jim Reynolds and Chip Ide n 1 9 5 8 –5 9 created a first-rate biography book where most of our classmates have in a short space given us a good look at their lives. The book is readable because it gives images from the youth and also the older years of our classmates. Fortunately, some 59ers have also written bios of many of the classmates we have lost during the past 50 years. Sadly, just prior to reunion we lost Bruce Listerman and Tom Longstreth. An added positive aspect to this reunion book includes the effort of Ernie Imhoff, a first-class reporter who covered many events from our four years in Williamstown. Reading Ernie is always meaningful. Our leaders and alumni development leaders (Emily Bourguignon, Lew Fisher ’89 and Sheila Mason) created a basic schedule that enabled ’59ers and many wives to reach out to friends and classmates we have not seen for years. One of the nicest parts of the reunion was the appearance of many relatives of classmates we have lost over the years: Charles Jankey’s son Doug, Dave Batchelder’s wife Sian, Bill Hedeman’s wife Peggy and daughter Holly Hedeman Lovvik ’92, Woody Burgert’s wife Judy with Aimee and Acacia Burgert Savage, Bruce Listerman’s wife Beth and daughter Lisa ’91, Geff Fisher’s wife Lonnie, and Bruce McEldowney’s son Bruce Jr. ’84. Emily Bourguignon spoke with John Szufnarowski’s wife Emily the week before reunion; Emily wasn’t able to make it, but she said she would be thinking of the class and be there in spirit. She’s sure John wouldn’t have missed reunion for the world if he were still with us. On the first day, Wednesday afternoon, from 3:30 to 5:30, Tom Davidson ran informal conversation on our 1950 Williams days in extracurricular activities and athletics. After Geoff Morton placed some top-notch athletic pics on the blackboard and Chip Ide shared a chock full of ’50s sports scrapbook, much was said about the influence of coaches in our years at Williams. Naturally, we talked about teachers and parents, especially Tom about his dad in the military. Much more emphasis was placed on the strength and noble influence of adults in our lives than on our own accomplishments. It didn’t hurt throughout the reunion to get an occasional statement by Geoff Morton, master story-teller, who would often make us smile over our own loopiness as adolescents or young adults in the ’50s. Henry Foltz and Chip were smart to stay overnight at Geoff’s abode, getting a night’s full of Geoff’s endless, humorous tales about our years at Williams. Thursday was a great morning to take part in a seminar with key educators Ernie Fleishman, Ted Oppenheimer and Stu Wallace. They focused on the tough new world where the education of children may be the most significant challenge facing us as we tackle economic, environmental and deep worldwide spiritual battles. It’s clear why Ernie and Hank Cole have made the The Great Teacher’s Initiative the class gift. In the afternoon watching Bill Moomaw’s seminar (“A Legacy for the Next Half Century; What Will it Take to Create a Truly Sustainable Future?”), for sure we were seeing first-rate teaching. Bill stayed away from sweeping generalities about the environment and offered countless specifics to demonstrate significant changes over the centuries. A trip to his home in Williamstown offered even more striking economic, environmental and, perhaps, even spiritual specifics. The next focus group occurred on Friday at 9:30, a 1959 class discussion: “Where Have We Been, Where Are We Going?” in Bronfman Auditorium. Dan Rankin ran another discussion in which we looked at what we’ve done in the past and what the odds are in the future. Dan does a good job at these discussions. At 4 p.m. a dialogue occurred with President Morty Schapiro in the ’62 Center for Theatre and Dance MainStage, followed by a 1959 reception and dinner with the president as guest of honor on the Clark Art Institute Lawn. To listen to President Schapiro was to again witness an excellent teacher who has offered to students, faculty and alums intelligence, humor and directness over the past 20 years, nine as president. It’s a bit of a mistake for me to focus on the big events and the big folks, for there were a number of small events that were meaningful: fishing with Barry Mayer and Alex Reeves; a book exhibit organized by David Earle with books by countless classmates (Peter Bradley, Richard Crews, Kirk Emmert, Robert Gould, Harry Gratwick, Jack Hyland, Ernest Imhoff, E.J. Johnson, Raymond Klein, Richard Moe, William Moomaw, Joe Prendergast, Peter Tacy, Victor Van Valin, Stephen Webb, Richard Wydick, two wives—Dale O’Leary and Marilyn Webster— and the class secretary); an art show by E.J. Johnson —art by Bill Yankus, by children of Terry O’Leary (Kevin), David Earle (Sasha) and Tony Harwood (Sarah), and by the wives of Dave Thun (Barbara), Steve Bachand (Phyllis) and Pim Goodbody (Pandy); Tom Haynes’ and John Halsey’s band playing grand ’30s through ’50s music; Dave Earle’s deeply moving emotional film Movie Movie; a ladies’ lunch at the Clark Institute’s new Stone Hill Center; much golf with Dan Fanning, who organized 30 people: his wife Sue, Dan Rorke, Chuck Dunkel, Sheila and Tim Enos, Adair and Kearny Hibbard, Terry O’Leary, Chip Ide, Al Benton, Hank Foltz, Ingela and Bart Robinson, Hanse Halligan, Denise and John Palmer, Frank Read, Phyllis and Steve Bachand, Bob Lowden, Jerry Tipper, Kate and Bill Miller, Joe Turner, Jack Dietz, Dick Klein, Fred Webster, Tom Christopher and pre-reunion Sam Parkhill, Bob McAlaine; tennis with Cliff Colwell; hiking; and, finally, a gathering in front of reunion HQ, thanks to Dave Sack and Bob Greenspan’s effort to urge Dorothy Kagan to bring in on Friday a much admired and loved classmate, Richard Kagan, who is wrestling with a tough family disease, Huntington’s. Rich still has a subtle sense of humor and a caring spirit. Another event that has to be mentioned is Outrageous Purple and Gold night at Thursday’s dinner. Fun and funny. Winners: “Most Purple”—1st Betsy Tipper, 2nd Nancy Read, 3rd Bob O’Neill; “Most Williams”— 1st Vic Van Valin, 2nd Tony Volpe, 3rd Pete Willmott; “Wildest”— 1st Frank Read, 2nd Bob Gould, 3rd Dave Moore. At this Purple Night about 10 wives, “The Berkshire Babes,” sang “Deep Purple” and then led us in “Yard by Yard.” The dinner in the tent at Clark was striking, concluded by a magnificent fireworks display in the southern sky. Like children we rushed out of the tent to watch the night sky fill with spectacular, brightly colored starbursts. The next morning at Norm Cram’s memorial service we saw on the front cover that August 2009 | Williams People | 43 CL ASS NOTES the fireworks splashing across the night sky had in a way given us a preview of the Gustave Dore painting of the Empyrean. We had been watching our lost friends return, angels rising above our tent to join us on that ethereal Friday night. The final boom of the fireworks captured a deep beat in our hearts; we now knew that our friends had spiritually risen, thanks to Pete Wilmott’s generosity. Though only able to offer a half-hour service prior to the alumni parade, Norm Cram may have in that brief time captured the essence of the 50th reunion. After witness of our angelic friends in Dore’s Empyrean on the cover, Norm Walker read a poem he had written about the Empyrean here in the valley; Ernie Fleishman, in his deep, powerful voice, read the dynamic poem “Ithaca”; then the words of four verbally gifted ministers—Norm Cram, Jerry Rardin, Robert Gould and Donald Hart—lifted us to the spiritual world; as they spoke, clearly the valley and mountains were again embracing us and calling us home. After the deeply spiritual memorial observance, we began our slow-moving parade around campus and down Main Street behind the Scottish Pipe Band, en route to the annual meeting, a grand entrance for us in Chandler Gymnasium as the last class to be seated, to the enthusiastic applause of the rest of the reunion classes. Saturday flew by after that: Earle’s emotional movies in the afternoon; the grand meal, fireworks and dancing in the evening. If we did not hug goodbye that night, on Sunday many, having heard the beautiful talk by the profound minister Robert Gould at the Alumni Memorial Service, did so and headed home, finally coming to grips with the fact that for the past five days we had been living in the valley of dreams more than we had realized. Before closing I must mention the grand guests at Sunday’s brunch: John Chandler, Fred Greene, Frank Oakley, Fred Rudolph ’42 and Irwin Shainman. Except for Oakley all were teachers when we attended Williams; Oakley came soon after us and was also president of the College. It’s important to let you know who attended this wonderful 50th reunion; yet if someone has been mentioned in the class 44 | Williams People | August 2009 notes above, they will not be on this list: Yseldah, Becki and Bill Applegate; Sherri Benton; David Boothby; Anne and John Coffin; Marian, Cameron and Bev Compton; Deirdre Cram; Sean ’89 and Peter Culman; Margaret and George Dangerfield; Maureen Dietze; Suzanne Cassell; Alix Earle; Elizabeth and Kirk Emmert; Amy Fleishman; Elizabeth and Jack Foster; Patty and Nick Frost; Sheila Gould; Tita and Henry Gratwick; Jane and Tony Harwood; Elizabeth and Don Hart; Elaine Halsey; Martha Hayne; Jay Hodgson; Hilda Imhoff; Doc Johnson; Dick Jackson; Terry and Jed Honigfield; Leslie Johnson; Marion and John Kimberly; Janet Kirschen; Sally and Dick Lee; Heidi Mangel; Anne Mc Alaine; Sue and Grey Mc Gown; Julia Moe; Margot Moomaw; Pris Moore; Diana and Hugh Morton; Ruth and Marc Newberg; Bill Norris; Susan and George Northrup; Ingrid Cronin; Judy Parkhill; Susan Rankin; Sue Rardin; Nancy Read; Janet Reynolds; Barbara Richardson; David Rodgers; Mary Ann Rorke; Kurt Rosen with Guido and Christina Schilling; Bea, Jay ’05 and Steve Ross; Happy and Nick Smith; Averil and Ty Smith; David and Scotty Taylor; Betsy Tipper; Pat Turner; Jule and Buzz Van Sant; Liz Van Valin; Amy Volpe; Phyllis Walker; Jennie Wallace; Margaret and Steve Webb; Marilyn Webster; Shannon and Steve Weidemann; Kuhrt Wieneke; Ron Williams and son Mike; Michele Willmott with Audrey Prieboy, Matthew Willmott and Catherine and David Willmott ’92; Slate Wilson; El and Fred Winston; and Jean and Bill Yankus. A word from the secretary of the last 14 years, Bo Kirschen, who helped me with this report. Bo wrote, “The campus is truly impressive, a far cry from the somewhat seedy and run down place we entered in 1955. However, one nit to pick. I’m sure the new academic buildings will function admirably, but they are a true blight on the landscape. They look like they had been built by a quarrelsome group of demented children with a defective erector set. As a quick fix I’d suggest covering them with termite tents or surrounding them with a lot of very fast growing trees. Long term the exteriors will have to be redone, next time, hopefully, by someone who actually studied architecture.” As always, Bo is straightforward and clear; there, we are hearing a real secretary’s voice. 1960 REUNION JUNE 10-13 Ron Stegall 50th 102 Old Place Road Deer Isle, ME 04627 1960secretary@williams.edu I was in Williamstown for the beginning of the 50th reunion of the Class of ’59. Along with seeing some friends in that class, the draw for me was the chance to learn how their art show has been organized and displayed as we prepare for our own show, “The Creative Side of the Class of 1960,” which will open next June. We anticipate that we can handle up to three or four submissions from each of you and/ or from your partner. Please communicate with me about your willingness to consider participating. This kind of event has been a highly successful feature of recent reunions. Books, poetry and creative projects as well as sculpture, painting, drawing, photography and other products of your craftsmanship are welcome. Earl Anderson was in the process of mentally outlining his biographical statement for the website when I reached him in his Vermont home. He and Barrie blended families for a total of seven sons spread across the U.S. with a concentration in Vermont. Earl graduated from Yale Divinity School in the same class as Newell Bishop and served for several years as a parish minister for the Methodists. He then began a 30-year career in the vocational rehabilitation field with the Vermont state agency dealing with the disabled. He retired more than a dozen years ago and spends part of the year at their home in Naples, Fla. The Rotary Club and the Council on World Affairs have kept him involved in global issues both in Naples and Hinesburg, and he is particularly engaged in an international men’s discussion group in Naples. He asks for help from you in collecting a variety of dispassionate opinion pieces on the legalization of recreational drugs as a focus topic for the group. Barrie followed a career in early childhood education with a master’s in counseling that she used professionally before retiring. They plan to join us for the n 1 9 5 9 –6 0 50th if the date can be shielded from competing events from their widely scattered family. The Anderson conversation led me to a lovely half hour with Newell Bishop and Seya, whose name I can almost put in bold letters, because she grew up in Williamstown during our time there. Seya is the one of the famous “Harper Girls,” the daughters of Professor Harper. The Bishops live in North Stonington, Conn., in the house that served as the manse while he was a UCC minister there. About three years ago Newell received a diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease, and his life now reflects the realities of this unwelcome visitor. He retains considerable mobility and was headed out to help Seya plant peas after our conversation. Their daughter is married with two children, and Newell Jr. is a track and cross-country coach, and both kids are not far away. Years ago, Seya fulfilled a childhood ambition to own a horse, which she uses to offer riding lessons as a home-based business. Seya’s wit and humor and Newell’s wry and knowing chuckle (which I still remember from Williams days) have kept perspective alive, I sensed, through a number of challenges. Although their lives in the parish ministry have not left them with a lot of time or energy to focus on relationships from the past, they will join us for the 50th if possible. Cotton Fite is spending more time in Israel/Palestine and has continued organizing in this country to try to “bend” our foreign policy in the Middle East in a more enlightened direction. “The more time I spend there, the more impressed I am with the courage of Israelis and Palestinians working for a just peace!” This spring, he and Diane spent 11 wonderful days birding Costa Rica with a small Elderhostel group and recording 312 species! Cotton now wonders why he waited until May to have two cataracts removed, since birding vision is now greatly improved and the world looks much brighter. With his usual acute insight and generally improved eyesight, Cotton reports on recent conversations with others in the class: “I reached Tony Doughty in Minnesota who reported enjoying grandchildren (with whom he had just been playing kickball) and spending the winter months in Arizona, where he tinkers with old cars. He reminded me that we had bought a fine old Ford complete with running boards when we worked together at a summer camp in Maine and tried to drive it back to Williamstown in the fall. The tires didn’t make it, and we were forced to leave it at a salvage place on the way. Tony told me he got a letter from the salvage company several years later asking for $1 a day boarding for our car. He sent them the title. Because Tony is now on the board of the PierceArrow Society, which will be holding their annual convention in Minnesota next June, he’ll not be able to join us at the reunion. Cotton also reached Ed Eggers, who, with Lynne, had just arrived and was unpacking at their summer home on top of a mountain in Hendersonville. “Ed reminded me of his tendency toward excess, which now means he has become an avid fan of the Carolina Hurricanes, located in his hometown, Raleigh. Quite proudly he noted they were 2008 Stanley Cup winners and [were] in the semi-final playoffs. … Ed described getting a standing ovation when, at an Elks Club karaoke event, he sang Frank Sinatra’s ‘My Way.’ Can you just imagine Ed performing that for us at our 50th?” For the first time in four years, two of your correspondents interviewed the same person for news for these class notes. Cotton and I both contacted Paul Galvani at his home in Winchester, Mass. “Patient Paul” waited until near the end of our most enjoyable conversation to say that I might have a more detailed answer to a question I had asked when I received Cotton’s notes! Paul also has completed his assignment to submit a biography with pictures for the website. When you read it, scroll down to see the picture of a Purple Cow weather vane on his summer house in Wolfeboro, N.H. I caught him as he arrived home from picking up his 6-year-old granddaughter from school. He confessed that he had just had a conversation with her about going to Williams! Add these two pieces of evidence to the fact that both of his daughters went to Williams over an eight-year period, and you have a new standard of Old School loyalty. Paul and Sheila spend the winter in Charleston and are in touch with classmates in that area such as Hal McCann and Becky. Golf has become a big part of Paul’s retirement years, and he hopes to play with some of the other Williams retirees in the Charleston area. He is a member of the U.S Senior Golf Association. Paul still does some work for Ropes & Gray, where he was a partner for many years. They had 90 lawyers when he joined the firm after serving as an assistant U.S. attorney, and there are now more than 1,000 in the firm. As a trial lawyer, Paul worked on both corporate and civil cases and sometimes misses the intensity of that activity. He serves on hospital and foundation boards in more than one community. Paul recalled to both Cotton and me his participation in a 25th reunion activity in New York, when the group was at Yankee Stadium. A game ball found its way to the box, and Paul had everyone sign it. Visitors to his home sometimes examine the ball and wonder what team this was. “The best team,” he proudly says! He notes sadly that two of the team, Dick Gallup and Fred Ducey, are no longer with us. Paul and Sheila will definitely be in Williamstown for the 50th. Several of you have noted how much you appreciated reading Lester Thurow’s bio on the website and learning something about his challenges and triumphs. Please, please complete your biographical statement, and include a picture if possible, and forward them to Win and John. I can assure you that there are people waiting to read it and to refresh a connection to you. To learn how to access the website and forward your information contact Win Healy at 1921 Route 2, Mohawk Trail, Shelburne Falls, Mass. 01370 or HailWin@ alumni.williams.edu. John Klem can be reached at 43 North Lake Road, Armonk, N.Y. 10594 or jjkeek@optonline.net. Finally, Jim Briggs has asked me to reiterate a commitment that has been made by the Class of 1960 to all its members. We want everyone who is physically able to be at the reunion. Adequate funding is available to assist anyone who needs to draw on it for transportation or other reunion expenses in these difficult economic times. Transport by car, from airport or home is available for those who cannot drive or need assistance for other reasons. You are all part of our Williams experience, and we need you to be part of the 50th celebration of that August 2009 | Williams People | 45 CL ASS NOTES experience. Jim can be reached by phone at 413.458.4310. He will be the only person with knowledge about recipients of this assistance. You will find the website a delight to use and an easy way to contact old friends by commenting on their bios and stories. Please remember my need for recent news of you for these notes! ronst7@gmail.com. 1961 Bob Gormley P.O. Box 3922 Westport, MA 02790 1961secretary@williams.edu In my e-mail plea to you this time, I made reference to the ’61 diaspora. Gil Kerr jumped all over that and sent the following poetic response: Reading class notes e-mails Dictionary close at hand, The eruditional use of diaspora, Really sounds quite grand. A sesquipedalian tactic, By a publisher of fame Makes me feel quite challenged To reciprocate in same. If I didn’t know the author Was a Williams grad “Poseur,” I’d loudly holler, “just a euphemistic fad.” ’Twas this or a limerick, doggone it! A common English sonnet. Gil’s wife says he has too much time on his hands, and I believe it. He did send me to the dictionary for “sesquipedalian.” But let’s give him credit—it’s not easy to get bad poetry published these days. Two fine reports on the ’61 mini-reunion gathering in Boca Raton, Fla., Feb 20-22, from Wally Bernheimer and Dave Whittemore. Bob Sleeper organized and hosted the group at his Boca golf club where all stayed. Eleven classmates, some with spouses, made the trip. Sheila and Jim Hodges drove down from S.C., while Sam Weaver came over from Jupiter one day. He and Lou Guzzetti joshed about going one-on-one but ultimately couldn’t decide whether it be on the bocce or shuffleboard courts so they passed. Ellen and Steve Lazarus were down from Cleveland, where Steve teaches con law at Cleveland State. Wally got him to concur that Obama was actually quite good on the subject. Linda and Bill Whiteford made a dinner appearance. Whitey has 46 | Williams People | August 2009 retired from his Baltimore law practice and now spends more time with the grandkids. Paul Mersereau still dabbles in his law practice but golf is his passion and he lost no time playing every day down South. Clyde Buck (Houston) and Walt Henrion (Dallas) represented Texas. Clyde has retired from his investment banking career but remains an expert consultant on family limited partnerships and is still active with the Young Presidents Organization. We know of Walt Henrion’s entrepreneurial successes, but in Florida he was devising crazy golf games (“Thomasville game of threes” and “pig/wolf”). Williams philosophy professor Will Dudley ’89 was on hand to share a light talk with the group. They vow to do it again in some warm clime next year. Back in the frozen Northeast, Tom Fox checked in from DC, where his work in the international development field has been buoyed by the Obama election. Tom serves on several nonprofit boards and chairs one on African children’s challenges. He and wife Elizabeth have converted their “empty nest” into a joyful three-generational household. Daughter Adair ’89 and her partner (both Williams grads, as is Tom’s son) and their two boys, 6 and 4, share the space. Ralph Epstein wrote from Danvers, Mass., where he still practices medicine, “but more slowly.” He and his twin (“wombmate”) Ruthie were planning their joint 70th for May 30, with attendees from 5 months in age to 95. Son Stephen was due in from New Zealand with wife Mi-Young and their daughter Sonia, 3. Sonia already carries three passports (N.Z., U.S. and Korea) to show how life’s changing. Daughter Lisa (NYC) and son Jeremy (just finished graduate studies in environmental science at Wash State) will also be on tap. Ralph is mentoring two 16-year-olds, getting challenged by fifth graders in Scrabble and is involved with KIPP Academy (www.Kipp.org, which Bill Gates evidently hails as the best schooling in the country). Ralph is living life to the fullest! Anyone else on their 70th? My brother turned 75 this year and with my 70th coming up in October I’ll be taking him to Ireland in September, accompanied by a nephew and a “niecelet.” I have the coordinates on the location of the Gormley family farm in the mid-19th century in County Tyrone, so we’ll do a roots thing and see what’s around. Probably a strip mall. Recession be damned; we only go around once. John Logie was awarded an honorary Doctor of Public Service at Central Michigan University in May. John was an outstanding longtime mayor of Grand Rapids, Mich. He and I wonder how many others in our ranks have been granted honorary degrees over the years? I’ve noted several. Dick Beckler caught the mention in our last notes that Paul Mersereau had a first-year granddaughter at Trinity. Dick has two daughters at Trinity now, plus three who are out of college and one who’s a high school freshman. Many daughters, many tuitions, never mind the weddings! Dick is still practicing law in DC and plans to be at it for quite awhile. Al Nugent sent word that Brian O’Leary, our former astronaut, is putting the finishing touches on his retreat center in Ecuador. Check it out at www.montesuenos.org. Need a head/heart clearing retreat? Only $25/night once you get there. Maine’s Eliot Coleman was cited in a Boston Globe piece on vegetable gardening for his yearround “cool house” methodology. He has a new book out, The Winter Harvest Handbook (Chelsea Green Publishers). Eliot continues to be one of America’s leading gardening innovators. The piece noted Martha Stewart as one of his acolytes with her “cool house” in Bedford, N.Y. Bob Marrin has become a regular correspondent. He sent on a copy of a poetic tribute he had done for former Lawrenceville headmaster Bruce McLellan and a Kansas City Star cartoon playing off Chuck Webb’s The Graduate facing today’s non-job market. Not even in plastics! From April 30-May 2, some 25 of us were in Williamstown for a run-up to our 50th in the form of a presidential colloquium at Mount Hope farm. We received “Williams Today” kind of briefings from College officials and bittersweet farewell remarks from Morty Schapiro, and we continued our planning for June 2011. In addition to committee members were several guys we hadn’t seen in a while—notably Gardy Brown, Pete Hager, Clyde Buck, Dorrie and Bruce Hopper, Judy and Bill Ryan, and Marcy n 1 9 6 0 –6 2 and Bruce Shilling. I took the opportunity to zero in on Bill and Bruce, two guys I hadn’t known well in college, since they were science whizzes while I stuck with the non-lab, word-oriented courses. One of the great discoveries of these later-life gatherings is that we get the chance to spend time with interesting people we never really knew. Bill had been a College trustee for several years until ’89. He is still active as an eminent senior scientist at Columbia’s LamontDoherty Earth Observatories, and he served Williams primarily as a science adviser in the expansion years for science on campus. Bill is a dedicated teacher and devotee of lifelong learning, and he’s proud of the advanced high school and select college students who study summers with a discovery learning method that employs “virtual ocean” computer graphics and application data sets for discoveries on the ocean floors. He’s all for online learning. He did a widely read book on Noah’s flood (Simon & Schuster ’97) that reflects Black Sea discoveries and is in the best style of cross-disciplinary science writing. He’s also very proud of daughter Sarah ’89, who teaches math. Bruce was a tougher interview since he resists the spotlight, though wife Marcy promised to work on him for a bio sketch. Bruce is the archetypal Midwestern nice guy, laid back and placid. He has had quite a career as a pediatric plastic surgeon in Minnesota. Not the kind of plastic surgeon who specialized in cosmetic stuff for the well-to-do, but one who tackled the challenges with often badly deformed kids. One has to be calm and collected for that sort of work. It was fun getting to know him. Tom Millington and I spent a Boston weekend together in late May. Tom is emeritus professor of political science at Hobart/ William Smith Colleges and has three remarkable sons I’ve had the pleasure of watching grow up. His middle son Ken is an accomplished artist, a graduate of Rhode Island School of Design, now married to another budding artist and working out of Brooklyn. Ken specializes in large murals of social significance. Tom’s youngest, Greg, is a Syracuse graduate and computer ace working in Ithaca, N.Y. The oldest, young Tom, is director of international programs at Emmanuel College in Boston, on sacred turf near Fenway Park. With so many college students spending study time abroad these days, that’s an exciting field to be in. Muz himself is in the process of completing a book he’s had in him for some time on “Hispanic Race, Culture and Politics in America.” His charming wife Rosario is Bolivian, and Tom has specialized in Latin American politics so he has been immersed in the topic. I also had brief responses from Dave McCabe and Frank Gluck. Dave has found a comfort zone in life, enjoying his grandkids and kicking back; Frank is getting closer to retirement, giving up patient care this summer but still doing some teaching. Two sad announcements: Wes Wong of Honolulu died in November ’07. He had been librarian at the Library of Economic Botany at Harvard. And Dick Smith passed away March 23 in Philadelphia of heart failure related to lung disease. He was living in Garnet Valley, Pa., and leaves his beloved wife of 46 years, Judy, two sons and a daughter. He and Judy were active in Covenant United Methodist Church, the church in which he grew up. He received an MBA from Wharton in 1965, worked in sales/marketing with Procter & Gamble and Benton & Bowles advertising and had been a VP, marketing, at both Lorillard and American Tobacco. At Williams he had been president of Phi Gam. Dick will be missed by all, and our condolences go out to Judy. Hope to see many of you Oct. 9-11 at the fall minireunion, where we join classes ’60-’64 for a football game and festivities. Last year we drew 60 classmates and were blessed with perfect weather. Let’s keep it going. 1962 William M. Ryan 112 Beech Mountain Road Mansfield Center, CT 06250 1962secretary@williams.edu Road work: Bonnie and I completed our California swing in October ’07 with visits to Sally and Steve Huffman and John Hengesbach. Steve began his Williams tenure with the Class of ’61, dropped out for a year (“too much partying”) and joined us in September 1960. He enrolled in OCS with Bob Nevin and spent six months on a destroyer in Vietnam. In ’66, Steve joined the family business, Huffman Manufacturing (Huffy bicycles) and spent five years in their manufacturing operation in Laverne, Calif., and attended night school at Claremont, where he obtained a master’s in economics. He wanted to move to Sacramento, home of Sally (his wife since ’64), and joined the Blue Diamond Growers, the largest producer of almonds in the world. He ran their gift-pack division for a while and eventually took over most of the administrative duties in the company. He retired in ’95 but remains busy in strategic planning, consulting for the private sector and a host of volunteer duties. He served as executive director of the Historic Old Sacramento Foundation for five years and as trustee and chairman of the board of the Episcopal Seminary in Berkeley. Sally and Steve have four children, one of whom, Mark, is Williams ’88, and five grandchildren. Why did he go to Williams? “It came down to Williams and Dartmouth. Dartmouth was 111 miles from Smith and Williams was 52.1 miles.” Memories of Williams include Psi U brother Rick Seidenwurm’s response to the question: Why do you Jews work so hard? Rick’s answer: “It’s the Protestant ethic.” Rick lost his wife Carol in December 2008 to cancer, a disease she had been battling courageously for several years. Carol was an esteemed family therapist with a passion and a great talent for stone sculpture. I know that Rick and his children miss her greatly and that you join me in expressing our sadness and sympathy. Our class speaker at graduation, John Calhoun, died on March 22 of metastatic cancer. His wife Claudia Cupp wrote, “Mercifully, his battle was brief. He chose not to pursue aggressive treatment, which would not have cured the cancer and would have had terrible side effects. He maintained his dignity and character through the whole ordeal.” John and Claudia attended our 2008 mini-reunion. Claudia reported, “He greatly enjoyed being there, and I am so grateful that he got to spend time in a place and with people who were very important to him.” And we greatly enjoyed him, Claudia, and will miss him dearly. Our condolences. John is the 36th member of our class who has passed away. August 2009 | Williams People | 47 CL ASS NOTES Back on the road, it was a delight to see Jon Hengesbach again after 45 years. He has never returned to Williams but promises an appearance at our 50th. He and his friend Astrid Gehrke were wonderful hosts, putting us up in his marvelous self-designed and self-built home on 20 acres in California wine country. (Aside: I’m rooting for Jon and Astrid to marry, which will break a tie and put him into the lead for most wives.) Jon claims to have graduated last in our class, but his life has been a series of major successes since college. After stints with three manufacturers of containers, he moved to San Francisco to join Kidder Peabody in 1972. In ’77 he became an independent financial adviser and began teaching security analysis and financial management and public speaking. He attracted a large and diverse clientele and hosted his own TV show on investment strategies on CNBC in LA for 13 years. He learned about his dyslexia late in life (à la Toby Cosgrove) when building his home in Glen Ellen with his son. He taught himself how to live with it, largely through becoming an accomplished oil paint artist, and is now semi-retired, handling the portfolios of a few long-term clients. He has three children and six grandchildren. Williams was a tough road for him (because of dyslexia), but he feels the preparation he received was outstanding. He maintains contact with his best man Jim Dufty and would love to see Jimmy Bell again. I enjoyed very much my meeting with Jim Gordon, because, despite my college nickname, I had never met a practicing Zen Buddhist before. Jim spends a minimum of two hours a day in meditation at his home in Roxbury, N.Y., “seeking enlightenment.” His religion has helped him understand himself and “cope with the difficulties in life.” He began going down this path as a result of a Winter Study course he took in 1970 from John Eusden at Williams. By that time he had studied at Harvard Medical School and Duke University Hospital and was headed for a service commitment at Walter Reed. He decided to fight this requirement because of his conversion to Buddhism, and, after six weeks locked up as an AWOL at Fort Dix, he prevailed. He then attended Columbia as a psychiatric resident and spent the next 30 years in that profession in the Bronx and Long 48 | Williams People | August 2009 Island. Jim developed a course for doctors on how to interact with patients and continues to teach this class three days each week but spends most of his time learning about himself in Roxbury. He has been married twice and has three children and two grandchildren with Robin Gramlich (sister of Ned ’61). Two of his kids (Caleb ’91 and Jed ’99) are Williams alums. He thinks he would like Williams now better than then but has no regrets. “If you see Bob Fayfield, tell him there is a hearts game brewing.” His advice to a current graduate: “Learn to breathe abdominally; it makes all the difference.” Jill and Henry Sachs maintain a lovely second home in Shokan, N.Y., not far from Jim Gordon. Their primary residence is NYC, where Henry works at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine as the director of the Thomas Chalmers Research Lab. After Williams (where he was the youngest person in our class), he went to Tufts Medical School (where he was the youngest person in that class). He left after two years to help run the family business, the Sachs Lodge in Woodstock, N.Y. His lodge served as the HQ for the ’94 Woodstock Festival 25th reunion. Henry finally finished his med school work at Albany (where he was the oldest person in his class). He has been at Mount Sinai since ’79, engaged in clinical research and teaching. Most of his work has involved analyzing treatments for HIV infection (he has a postdoc in biostatistics from Stanford). For the past several years he has been examining, treating and learning about 9/11 responders, i.e., studying the most effective means to treat their pulmonary and psychological disorders. He and Jill (maiden name, Wachs—I’m not making this up) were married in ’65 and have no children. Jill has served as an administrative law judge in Albany. Henry found Williams a tough place for a 16-year-old and felt socially inept. He values the education he received but thinks he might have been better off at a larger school like Columbia. He has fond memories of a cross-country trip with Steve Brumberg in a Peugot with reclining seats, trips to see the Mets with Dave Goldberg and hearing Martin Luther King speak in the chapel. January ’08. Heading south. Lucy and Charlie Iliff live in Charlie’s childhood home in Arnold, Md., overlooking the Severn River close to Annapolis. Boating on the Chesapeake has been a lifelong avocation, and Charlie was featured in an article in Proptalk (published by daughter Mary and edited by Lucy) describing the very famous Wye Island Electric Boat Race. He sailed in the 1960 Bermuda Race (with Tovi Kratovil and against Dick Pierce), held a private pilot’s license and helped his brother race cars on the Bonneville Salt Flats. His vocation is the law, and after three-year stints in both the Army and UVA law school he joined the Baltimore law firm of Semmes, Bowen & Semmes. Most of his work involved defense in civil actions and medical malpractice. Burned out with the administrative duties in a large law firm, he formed his own practice, Iliff & Meredith, first in Baltimore and now in Pasadena, Md. He continues to work almost full time, defending lawyers in legal malpractice suits. (“Still paying off college tuitions.”) Three of these tuitions went to Williams (Mary Ewenson ’89, Elizabeth ’93 and Charles ’96.) Their fourth child went to Princeton. The Iliffs have three grandchildren. After excellent preparation at Gilman, Charlie found Williams too easy and “goofed off” and wishes he had taken some time off before entering. “I enjoyed it a lot but I should have worked harder.” His Williams recollections include “wondering why Andy Hess always got different results in his chemistry labs than I did” and “traveling to Vassar with Tony Way with our shotguns in the car and inviting girls to come shoot with us.” On to the Eastern Shore, where Janey and Dick McCauley have retired to a lovely home on Peach Blossom Creek. They have renovated it to hold their entire family, which makes it of considerable size, as they have three daughters and seven grandchildren, all of whom live within easy weekend travel distance. Like Charlie, Mac also matriculated at Williams from Gilman and “had no real problems with the adjustment. I was terrified, however, that I’d lose my scholarship, so I spent most of my first year studying in the library.” Janey attended Bennington and did most of her studying at Williams. They were married immediately after graduation. Like Charlie, Mac n 1 9 6 2 –6 3 a visit to Williamstown, she told them: “All the interesting people are drunk, and the sober people are not very interesting.” Fenner thinks the College made a mistake in disbanding fraternities and applauds the move to a more fraternity-similar residential system. Ned Dougherty has created a new 1962 class website for all of us at www.tinyurl.com/ williams1962. This will keep us posted on upcoming class events and news. Thank you, Ned! Hope to see many of you at our October minireunion. Second weekend of the month. The wedding of Michelle Froning to Thomas Darwin Wales (third from left) brought together (from left) Bob Nevin ’62, Ellen Wales, Roger Wales ’62, Linda Nevin and Bill Ryan ’62 in Dayton, Ohio, in October 2008. attended UVA law school and joined the large Baltimore firm Piper, Marbury. He served a twoyear stint as assistant attorney general of Maryland. “It was a very exciting time. I was part of the team that sent our Gov. Marvin Mandel to jail.” They moved to Columbia, a Rouse & Co. development, and he joined that firm in 1971. He remained there until his retirement in ’95 and participated in some of the most renowned urban developments in the world, including Faneuil Hall in Boston, Harbor Place in Baltimore and the planned communities of Columbia and Reston, Va. Janey taught at a private school in the area. After retirement, Mac took on a number of demanding civic duties, including serving as the founding president for 10 years of the Howard County Community Health Foundation. “We help with health care for those who can’t afford it, including free clinics and allowing the elderly to age in dignity in their own homes. It has been a very rewarding time for us.” Dick served as president of the Williams Society of Alumni from ’90 to ’92 and introduced the Bicentennial Medals during his term. He’d very much like to renew friendships with Robin Reyes, John Randolph, George Rogers, Jon Hengesbach and Dick Pierce. His advice to an entering freshman: “Try everything in the College, particularly stuff you are not familiar with.” On to DC to meet with my college physics guru Fenner Milton and his wife Ina. Fenner is one of several who made their college major in physics into a lifetime career (Jim Dufty, Jeff Rosendhal, Dave Hamblen and Mike Yessick are others). Fenner went to Harvard from ’62-’68 and obtained his PhD in solid state physics. “Others were better prepared technically, but none were as well prepared conceptually. I’m a big fan of the Williams education.” Indeed, Fenner has lectured to Williams students about what they should know about a physics career. He has spent most of the remainder of his career, except for a six-year stint at GE, in Syracuse as an employee of the federal government in technical positions. He served for eight years in the Pentagon as director of technology for the U.S. Army, a “very high pressure job.” Currently, he is director of the Army’s Night Vision Lab in Belvoir, Va. He describes his work as “standing between technology and ‘the system.’ Lots of conferences, papers and congressional briefings. I enjoy it very much, and my Williams background has enabled me to become very good at it.” He and Ina have involved themselves very much in the theater and art scene in Washington. They collect Russian art of the 1920s and Alexander Calder mobiles (six of them in their home). Elaine Swainton, wife of our deceased classmate Ollie Banks, serves as their art consultant. Ina and Fenner serve on the board of the Studio Theater and as trustees of the Phillips Art Collection. They have one child, Lisa, whom Fenner very much wanted to go to Williams but who chose Columbia. After 1963 Jim Blume 1708 Shattuck Ave. Berkeley, CA 94709 1963secretary@williams.edu I begin this issue with a few comments on some of our classmates, some former classmates and some “new” classmates, who have either appeared infrequently or not at all in our class notes. Let me start with Bob Frasier, who sent a lengthy and informative note. Bob is a retired VP of the Bayer Corp., where he worked for 38 years. He and his second wife Joan (whom he married in 1990) each have two children from their previous marriages. His two daughters, who are 40 (plus or minus), both live in the Bay Area, and between them they have four children with one on the way. Joan and Bob together have seven grandchildren. Feeling somewhat at sea after he retired, he and Joan purchased two houses— one in Florida and one in Bridgehampton, N.Y. “In the midst of this terrible real-estate market,” Bob decided to try his hand at real-estate sales in Bridgehampton and in Florida. Bob exchanges occasional e-mails with Bob Taylor, his freshman-year roommate. He also expressed a desire to reconnect with some of his Phi Delt fraternity brothers—particularly Art Faris, John Durocher, George Hardy, Frank Warfield and Ed Warren ’62. In response to my inquiry about the election, Bob enthusiastically endorsed the presidency of Barack Obama, adding, “I really did not think I would see the day that the American people would elect anyone other than a white male. … I am August 2009 | Williams People | 49 CL ASS NOTES impressed with Obama’s intellect and his vision for the country.” Thanks, Bob, for such a lengthy and revealing response. I hope it encourages other “lost” or “partially lost” classmates to write to me about their lives. Speaking of lost classmates, Bruce Buck wrote, “Forty six years down the road, it is A.P. and ABC in NYC” until he married his wife Melissa and moved to Silicon Valley, where he “started a few small companies by virtue of luck and low overhead.” Peter now lives in Santa Fe with his five children and five grandchildren. Peter is writing a “shoot em up” about how global economic EPHCOMPLISHMENT Allen Mondell’s ’63 award-winning documentary A Fair to Remember, which chronicles the history of the Great State Fair of Texas, was recognized as one of 30 films in the 2009 American Documentary Showcase, a touring program of the U.S. Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs that debuted in April in the Czech Republic and Poland. certainly great to read about my Williams classmates.” Bruce added, “Five years ago we moved from Connecticut to The Villages in Florida. It is sort of a retirement community on steroids. I divide my time between hunting, clay shooting, fishing, golf and kayaking, plus I continue to write my columns for a couple of outdoor magazines. I retired from the NY bar on moving to Florida, but the magazines have kept me busy, with shooting trips on four continents. My first wife (well, OK, my only wife) joins me on the fancy trips and manages to avoid the ones where I have to sleep in muddy ditches.” Bucky included a whole series of photos showing his polo club, golf courses with 513 holes, a recreation center and three golf driving ranges in his community. Ah, the good life! I sent Bruce an e-mail asking for additional details, but I received no response. Let’s hope we do not have to wait another 46 years to make contact with him. While reading the Alumni Review, I noticed a quote from Howard A. “Chip” Knight ’09 (the son of deceased classmate Woody and his wife Bonnie), who at 33, having spent 14 years as a Williams student, is expected to graduate in June. Evidently Chip was an Olympic Alpine skier, hence his long tenure at our alma mater. Peter Hayes, formerly a member of the Class of ’62, wrote to thank Andy Hero ’62 and Admiral Steve Cleary ’62 “for their grace and kindness in recently remembering an unexceptional classmate.” Peter reports that he lived “at warp speed, first with the Peace Corps in Peru and then with the 50 | Williams People | August 2009 interdependency advances the liberal cause. In response to an e-mail from your ever-diligent scribe, Mark Campaigne wrote a long and engrossing e-mail describing his doings. Mark, who was originally in our class, left in the second semester of our sophomore year and joined the Marine Reserves. After six months of active duty, he elected to take an appointment to the U.S. Naval Academy. He graduated from USNA in 1966 and after four years as Marine Corps officer, he began a career in education that culminated in his serving as headmaster of St. Margaret’s Episcopal School in San Juan Capistrano, Calif. Mark retired in 2003 with many accomplishments, including increasing the enrollment by 85 percent to 1,200 students and enlarging the school’s annual fund from $80,000 to more than $1 million. Mark is active as a consultant and board member in his community. Mark and his wife Mary Anne have two sons and two daughters. They have four grandchildren, with one on the way. His two younger children, Sarah and Deborah, are in their 20s and unmarried. Mark indicated that he is “not a great ‘keep in touch’ person, and that is too bad. I have a lot of fond memories of Williams and my classmates—particularly those who lived in Williams or Morgan Halls.” He sees Bill Wishard from time to time, but he expressed regret at not staying in contact, particularly with Dan Voorhees (echoing the sentiments of many) and Wally Arakawa. Mark, in the Campaigne tradition, maintains his conservative political posture but expressed dissatisfaction with the choices in the last election. The former dynamic duo— roommates for two years, Brooks Goddard and Reece Bader—are at it again, but this time separately. The ever-itinerant Goddard returned from a week in Cuba, saying, “Suffice it to say that we had a great time, that we were well-received and that we felt completely safe.” Brooks was ecstatic about the omnipresent music, the tasty food, the health care system and the friendliness of the Cubans. Reece, who left the Bay Area in 2005 to move to Clearwater, Fla., is now in Frankfurt, where he is responsible for his law firm’s (Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe) German offices in Frankfurt, Dusseldorf and Berlin. Prior to that, he had similar responsibilities in Paris and DC. He and his second wife, Alicia, also purchased a pied á terre in the Marais District in Paris to go along with their Florida home. Reece has been with Orrick for 41 years and is the firm’s longest-serving partner. He recently returned to Florida for two weeks of sun and to watch spring training with his sons Lawson and Cole and his oldest grandson, Philip. Reece added, “One nice feature of being in Europe is that places are close so we try to visit other countries as often as possible. The drawback about being here is that I do not get to see the boys and grandchildren (numbering five) as often as I would like.” Hobby and David Jeffrey and Kathryn and I had a splendid holiday in Vietnam and Cambodia in February. Our guides were terrific, because we relied on the recommendation of the well-traveled but never jaded E. Brooks Goddard. Hobby and David have four children, all of whom waited a while to wed but then did so in a rush. Well, these four children— Pat, Joel, Silas and Zoe—also “decided” to each have children in rapid succession with the result that the Jeffreys now have four grandchildren (with one on the way) under the age of 5. Hobby and David are both thrilled by the cornucopia of little ones. They recently moved to South Dartmouth, Mass., but still maintain their house in Tenafly, N.J. In addition, they have a condominium on Captiva Island in Florida. David still works but only several weeks n 1 9 6 3 –6 4 per year for the consulting firm he founded, David Jeffrey & Associates. David and Hobby had a delightful dinner with his former roommate Bob Critchell and Bob’s wife Carol. Bob, who also commutes between his homes in Massachusetts and Florida, has two grown children, including Dana ’97, a doctor. I noted in a recent “Report from Williams” an interview and photograph of Shirley and Harry Hagey, who endowed a professorship in mathematics. Harry stated ironically, “The only course I dropped out of at Williams was calculus.” Harry was quoted as follows: “The tutorial program is a real plus, and that has created the need for more professors and a large endowment to support that.” Two of Harry’s and Shirley’s eight children attended Williams—Daisy Hagey ’88 and Paul Crittenden ’03. Harry retired at age 65 from Dodge & Cox, a prominent investment firm where he was chairman and CEO. In 2008, Allen Mondell and his wife Cynthia Salzman Mondell completed a documentary entitled The Monster Among Us about the rise of anti-Semitism in Europe. It has received many accolades after being presented in film forums throughout the U.S. Another film that Allen and Cynthia made, A Fair to Remember, was selected as one of 30 included in the prestigious 2009 American Documentary Showcase. The film, which won many awards, was about a grand Dallas tradition, the Great State Fair of Texas. But the most impressive thing about “Shot” is that he still stars as a quarterback in a weekly touch football game. I had originally intended to include news of each of our class officers, who were elected (in a veritable landslide) late June 2008, to lead us as we approach our BIG 50th reunion. However, space is limited, so I will give voice to a brief update on our peerless leader, Bill McDaniels. Know short bios will be forthcoming in the next issue about 50th Reunion Gift Chair Lenny Bernheimer; Alumni Fund Chair Clay Davenport; Treasurer Gordy Prichett; Planned Giving Chair Rick Berry; VP Stu Jones; 50th Reunion Chair Bill Burnett; and, finally, your ever-faithful scribe. Mac, though widely known and respected in our class, is modestly making his first contribution to the class notes (due largely to my gentle prodding). After Williams, Mac attended Georgetown Law, where, inspired by Fred Schuman, he prepared to study international law. In law school, he shifted direction to criminal law. Upon graduation, Mac spent two years in a program in criminal law and litigation at University of Pennsylvania, where he worked as a public defender and taught at Penn. In 1968, he joined Williams & Connolly in Washington, where he remains today. His practice involves civil and criminal trial work, for which he has traveled widely and attained prominence. He married Kathe, a private secondary school teacher, in 1966, and they have two children—daughter Christine, who teaches in DC, and son Michael, who lives in Albuquerque. Kathe and Bill live in the house they purchased in DC in 1966, but they also maintain a house on the eastern shore of the Chesapeake Bay. The former PSA from the G.B.A. sees Lenny Bernheimer and E.B. Goddard when he visits his sister in Maine during the summer. As for healthy endeavors, Kathe and he jog and play tennis, but Bill admits that his foray into golf has been less than satisfying. Bill concluded his submission with a statement about Obama’s election, “Our town is excited about the new administration. We (Williams & Connelly) have lost some folks to it, including the new White House counsel. Our president is taking our many challenges head on and doing his best to remake our image around the world.” It’s comforting that Mac is leading our class. Finally, in a late flash, Lenny Bernheimer and his partner, a feckless Amherst alum, Tom Poor, won both the U.S. and Canadian Doubles Squash Championship in the 65-year-old division. Kudos to Lenny! 1964 Martin P. Wasserman 13200 Triadelphia Road Ellicott City, MD 21042 1964secretary@williams.edu Classmates, what a joy it was seeing over 50 of our classmates and many wives during our 45th Reunion Weekend June 11-14. The weather held up nicely, and the planned events and conversations were outstanding. To coin a phrase from Vince Farley, we have become “mellow-ambitious” since entering the Purple Valley nearly 50 years ago. Vince is still very active consulting on African issues and adding his expertise from a career with the Foreign Service. He spends time with family and grandchildren at a second home on St. Simon’s Island. Everyone from our class seemed comfortable and at peace despite whatever challenges life has brought, but the grit and determination has not faltered during these many years. Life has changed aplenty since we arrived as boys in the fall of 1960 and graduated in near summer of 1964. During that time period you could mail a letter or buy a Hershey Bar for less than a nickel. Gas cost a quarter and a gallon of milk was less than a dollar. A Mustang was under $2,500 and a new home just over $20,000. The Dow was under 900 and the first 7-11s and WalMarts were open. Exxon was Esso and their tiger was “in your tank.” Chubby Checker covered the “Twist,” and the Beatles came to America with five of the top 10 songs in 1964. Liston K.O.’d Patterson, and Clay in turn knocked out Liston. We witnessed shrink wrap, touch-tone telephones, “Buffalo Wings,” G.I. Joe Action Figure dolls and a demo cassette tape recorder. We still “typed” our term papers and honors theses. Classes might have been small, but there were not the tutorial programs of today, nor did so many manage to spend a semester or a year abroad. We weathered the Bay of Pigs and the Cuban missile crisis and still with vivid memory recall the exact moment on that most tragic day, Nov. 22, 1963. We remember the importance of the March on Washington and the major advances of the Civil Rights movement that began during our blissful time on campus. While we prepared for graduation and the beginning of the next stage of our lives, the rest of the country watched Bonanza, Gomer Pyle, Lucy and The Fugitive. Much has changed in the world, but Williams is as beautiful as ever as SENDNEWS! Y our class secretary is waiting to hear from you! Send news to your secretary at the address at the top of your class notes column. August 2009 | Williams People | 51 CL ASS NOTES we returned to an enlarged campus, a student center with Baxter Hall situated in part within the new and more functional Paresky Center, improvements to our athletic facilities, science quad and music center, and an architectural gem in the new multi-venue theater replacing the AMT. It was great to be back and let the memories of bygone days flood as we dusted off the years and recalled experiences shared nearly two generations ago. Luckiest of our group, both Bill Frado and Dave MacPherson live year round in Williamstown, while Jack Leingang occasionally crosses the “pond” and visits his new home while traveling from his London residence. We missed Jack and hope that he will return to spend the 50th with the rest of us here in the valley. Spending the summers in Williamstown, Peter Buttenheim enjoys the area heart of DC. Peter Johannsen is happily cheering for his Red Sox. They had a good week against the Yankees. Jim Titus was very pleased that the Penguins won the Stanley Cup. He had Bruce Birgbauer to thank for arranging with the folks at Paresky to tune in the TV. It was very exciting. Late in the third period Dave Appelbaum returned as did Bob Warner for the first times. Dave has been teaching philosophy for 40 years at New Paltz, N.Y., and Bob has managed a small business in Portsmouth, N.H. He brought some of his own maple syrup, tapped from his own trees … yum! Lisle Baker returned briefly to see old friends before returning to Boston for another educational activity. John Foehl, when not playing golf, is very proud of his son Brooks ’88, who works for the alumni association and presented EPHCOMPLISHMENT In April Jon Fielding ’64 received the UCLA Medal, the university’s highest honor, for his work as director of the L.A. County Department of Public Health, county health officer and professor at the UCLA School of Public Health. He is chairman of Healthy People 2020 and the Task Force on Community Preventive Services and is credited with implementing a letter-grading system in local restaurants to reduce foodborne illness. and brings his daughters and their families to visit for weeks at a time. He remains as ebullient as ever and flows over when discussing his grandchildren! Bruce Birgbauer still practices law and plays championship tennis although his knees no longer can take the abuse of an exhausting squash tournament. Bill Chapman, when he not biking or running up the mountains of New Hampshire with his son, still litigates the law and was heard engaging in a conversation with many of our “members of the bar” discussing a question posed by Professor James MacGregor Burns ’39 at our Friday luncheon seminar on the meaning and impact of Chief Justice Marshall’s wresting “Judicial Review” from the Constitution in his Madison vs. Marbury decision. Articulate and provocative, and author of a new book on the Supreme Court, Packing the Court, which received an excellent review in The New York Times. Prof. Burns spoke and dined with us while celebrating his 70th reunion. Dick Hubbard had some thoughts on this as well since his office is not far from the 52 | Williams People | August 2009 awards on Saturday morning. Joe Barsky and Jack Beecham still practice medicine. Linn Draper and Mike Doyle were engaged in a heavy conversation, discussing the current economic situation and the impact of energy on our future outcomes. I think they were optimistic, although I must admit they are a lot more familiar with the details than I. Mike also brought along a few cases of ’64 champagne—a very nice gift for all of us. Two people who could have rounded out the economics discussion, John Wilson and Hank Terrell—both of whom have worked for the International Monetary Fund and the Federal Reserve Board—were enjoying conversations elsewhere on the campus and did not add their two cents ($2 trillion?) to the dialogue! Two former Ephlats, Bob Furey and John Romans, were back but did not do any stand-up for us, although Skip Gwiazda and Leo Murray were quick to describe some of their trips on horses in Mongolia to selected members of the group. Judge Chris Hagy told me that he writes more than 2,000 pages each year in deciding cases from the bench and that cases can become pretty complex and require a fine degree of analytic detail. Tim Goodwin and Jack Beebe did a great job in keeping the events moving along during the entire weekend and particularly during Friday night’s dinner. President Jay Freedman served as emcee during Saturday evening’s festivities in the art center. Great job by all! We all acknowledged with a standing ovation Jay’s announcement that Diane Keller has established a scholarship in memory of Gary. What a legacy! Paul Kritzer is continuing to provide consulting services while spending time between Milwaukee and his second home just outside of Charleston, S.C. Al Hageman, Alex McCloskey, Quentin Murphy, Tommy Todd and Ben Wagner all look good enough to go right back on the football field (joining Chappy), and the amazing thing is how well preserved and “young” we all looked despite the number of us who have undergone joint replacements or had heart attacks, strokes and bouts of cancer. Craig Schelter helps developers get through the legal and zoning process in Philadelphia and often joins Bob Summersgill and spouses on the Cape. Al Sachtleben also made a smart move to the Cape a few years back, and the sea air seems to agree with him. During Saturday’s parade, we all wore yellow 45th reunion Williams polo shirts and purple cow caps, but only Biff Steel was able to march with three generations, including his dad William ’37 and his son Anim ’94, and wear three class pins on his shirt. Bob Stine looks great and has kept active despite the fact that he has retired from his practice in emergency medicine! Gay Mayer arrived a day later than anticipated because of a client’s needs (and demands and perhaps some extra time cleaning up the hiking trails of New Jersey? He and Dennis Helms recently had occasion to work together—one of those times when it is good to know and call upon a lawyer! Jack McWhorter is now a grandfather and continues to maintain his solo practice in rheumatology. Graham Covington has retired from Boise Cascade and now runs Minds Matter in Portland, a volunteer mentoring program for economically disadvantaged high school students. He also participates in a jazz trio and does executive coaching. So for those n 1 9 6 4 –6 5 of us still working, we should stay relaxed before we have to retire and face the kind of hectic schedule that Graham has laid out for himself! Gary Ratner remains active trying to improve local education and has been working closely with the new administration on this effort (see CitizensforEffectiveSchools.org). George Boultres brought his son Mark, and together they played the Taconic Golf Course, which is a fine way to see Williamstown! Terry Finn is about to publish his second novel and enjoys the Eastern Shore of Maryland immensely. (Is he the new Tom Clancy?) Jack Kuehn was just in from yet another round of trade shows. Still smiling, he seems to have found a way not to gain weight. He and Nick Goodhue, who recently moved to Milwaukee, stay in regular contact. Larry Modesitt was in from Denver and is working very hard as a consultant for suppliers to the auto industry. Skip Gwaizda led a discussion Saturday afternoon during which many of us gave opinions, vented frustrations and offered suggestions on how to save the world. Felt like we were back b.s.ing in the dorms during the 1960s! Joel Reingold arrived from Saratoga on Saturday and was quickly engulfed in conversation over a wide range of topics and memories. We also learned about a new group—the Eph Sharps—the Class of ’64 Book Club. A reading list will be forthcoming. And I have been advised there will be a “pop quiz” to follow. We all enjoyed a wonderful several days back “home” at Williams. But we missed many of our classmates and friends who were unable to join us during this most happy and festive occasion. Some of you who were not at Williams were caught up in other important activities. There are work obligations and travel, family crises and distances to overcome. For some, there is even a forgetfulness of the carefree days (some of them were … even for a pre-med student) and perhaps some aspects of the experience that were disagreeable. But having now been at most of our nine reunions, I can tell each of you that as a class we have matured, we have an ease within ourselves and a willingness to share the happy and the sad with a special group of special people who shared a very special time in their lives at a very special place … Williams College. I hope that during our 50th reunion each of us will make a special effort to attend. It will occur the weekend of June 12-15, 2014, and I have already marked my calendar for the event. My goal during the next five years is to make every attempt to engage every single person in the class and be certain that his story is described in these pages. I will enlist others from the class to “hunt you down” and bring you into our gentle circle of members of the Class of 1964. I guess the “healer” in me really wants to engage everyone and see each of you for another visit to the valley. I focused this issue’s remarks primarily on the 45th reunion, the people who joined in, the years that were represented during our time here at Williams, the activities held during the weekend and also include a note of encouragement to get everyone to start thinking about our 50th coming up in under five years. But I must close with two special stories. Jon Fielding was unable to join us, but he was recently awarded the UCLA Medal, the university’s highest honor. Jon is an innovator, leader and public health visionary. In addition to his work in LA, he is the chairman of two major national health committees, Healthy People 2020 and the Task Force on Community Preventive Services. And, closer to home, Steve Birrell retired after more than 20 years of service, most recently as VP of Alumni Relations and Development at Williams. He was saluted and recognized on several occasions during his closing days at the College, including our own Saturday evening dinner. Jay Freedman asked Peter Buttenheim, who had worked in the alumni office with Steve for a period of time, to offer comments. Peter mentioned some of the specific accomplishments of Steve’s tenure, including the audacious sums of money raised and the more than tripling of the office’s staff to provide more services to Williams graduates. Most notably, however, Peter took issue with the title of the article about Steve, which appeared in the June Alumni Review, entitled “Measurable Results.” Peter argued that Steve’s impact on the College has been “inestimable” and therefore unable to be quantified! Steve, your classmates would agree. This year’s Alumni Fund gift has been dedicated in Steve’s honor, and we also gave him a gift of 12 Williams plates—each one marking a particular highlight of his career. Thanks for your years of service; enjoy Polly and the kids and grandchildren in your retirement. You have offered the same calm leadership in this job as you exercised as president of DU during the fractious times during the implementation of the Angevine Commission report. And to the Class of 1964, let’s look ahead and begin the planning for our next reunion … our 50th. Hold June 12-15, 2014; it will be even better than this one! And in the meantime, reserve time for our minireunion this Oct. 30-Nov. 1. Plans are for a post-football game thrashing of Hamilton Halloween party. Stay tuned for more news from the Purple Valley. Be well—Marty. P.S. For those of you who wanted a follow-up on Barbara’s and my early departure from our wonderful 45th weekend, let me tell you about this year’s Bay Swim. We had a beautiful day with water temperatures of 74 degrees. The beginning of the swim was a dream with expectations of our best-ever swim! But then, at about the 2¼-mile mark, the currents became unbearable. It was like swimming in molasses! During the fourth mile I actually began to sing “Yard by Yard” (at the suggestion of Paul Kritzer for “when the going got tough”). Nevertheless, I got to the other side and completed all of the 4.4 miles. I was the fifth oldest out of the 600 who started the event. I am hoping for an “easier” race next year as we go for #15. I thank everyone for their comments and support during the reunion. What a great family of friends! 1965 REUNION JUNE 10-13 Tom Burnett 175 Riverside Drive, #2H New York, NY 10024 1965secretary@williams.edu Secretary Burnett reports: While the final totals are not yet available, it appears that class agent Jim Worrall has performed another financial miracle during these difficult economic times. With a class roster of 244 members, we received donations from 215 (including 13 August 2009 | Williams People | 53 CL ASS NOTES who did not give last year)—an 88 percent participation rate. Congratulations to Jim for yet another job well done. Larry Alexander has published a book entitled Demystifying Legal Reasoning through Cambridge University Press, 2008. Mike Annison has also published recently as part of his role as president of The Westrend Group in Denver, Colo. Mike’s work focuses on social and organizational change. He can be reached in Denver at 303.810.9085, and his company website is www.westrendgroup. com, which provides current contact information. Thanks to Jim Worrall, who passed along an e-mail, we have learned what Steve Strauss has been up to. Steve lives in Albania, where he is the CEO of Tirana Business Park, which is bringing German investors to a “green” project near the Tirana Int’l Airport. Steve’s focus is on financing the project, which has proved quite challenging in the current economic environment. Steve Robinson is still working at SAIF Corp., where he does strategic planning and performance measurement. He lives in Eugene, Ore., where his wife Nancy has been elected to a second term as state representative from North Eugene. Their daughter Sierra lives in Hollywood, where she is pursuing a career in film acting and theater design. I was very pleased to hear again from Dave Murphy, who received two healthy kidneys from the same donor and is doing really well. His wife Martha is a retired nurse and has helped Dave recover and benefit from his transplants. In late January, the National Gallery in Washington opened its “Pride of Place” exhibition to rave notices in The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post and The New York Times. The show centers on “Dutch Cityscapes of the Golden Age” and was organized by Arthur Wheelock Jr. Fred Ohly and Dan Plaine, along with Perry and Art Wheelock, organized a special weekend May 1-3 in Washington to give classmates a behind-thescenes look at the exhibition. The event was a rousing success. Some 20 classmates attended. The weekend began with a dinner at the home of Sun and Dan Plaine in nearby Maryland. Saturday events included a tour of the Mall led by Perry, who is 54 | Williams People | August 2009 Members of the Class of ’65 gathered in May at the McLean, Va., home of Fred Ohly (back row, second from left) after a tour of “Pride of Place,” a National Gallery exhibition organized by Art Wheelock (far right). the National Park Service chief for the cultural resources on the National Mall. In the afternoon, Art gave a lecture on the background of the exhibition at the Madeira School in Virginia. That event was followed by dinner at the home of Tina and Fred Ohly. On Sunday morning, the class met at the National Gallery for a private tour of the exhibition led by Art, where he picked up on his lecture points from the evening before. My only disappointment was that a kidney stone (since treated) laid me low and prevented our attending. But hats off to Art, Dan and Fred for organizing and executing such a unique experience for the 40 people who were able to attend. 1966 Palmer Q. Bessey 1320 York Ave., #32H New York, NY 10021 John Gould 19 Nahant Place Lynn, MA 01902 1966secretary@williams.edu We begin with the sad news of the death of Doug Schwab last March. At Williams he was a member of Spencer House and went on to Harvard Law School and a law practice in California. As Secretary Bessey noted, “At the time of the 25th, he considered himself blessed.” On the other hand, a joyful note came from Roger Ruckman that he married Sarah Hall (Hollins ’71 and UVA Law ’74) on April 18. After the honeymoon at Sea Island, Ga., they returned to work in the DC area. The biggest event of the Class of 1966 was the inauguration of the Jeffrey Owen Jones Fellowship in Journalism, which awards funding to a graduating Williams student who is planning a career in journalism. The organizers—Bob Krefting, Steve Atlas, Peter Koenig, David Tobis, Peter Richardson and Bill Bowden—put together a reception and symposium in Williamstown to celebrate the event and honor the first recipient, Molly Hunter ’09, who will use the fellowship to support herself in Jordan and neighboring countries this summer, writing about girls and women there, their access to education and health care and other issues. The Bowdens hosted a massive dinner before the symposium, which included family and friends of Jeff and Joe Swayze, Doug Stevens, Chip Malcolm, Peter Allen, Willard Speigelman, Peter Hassinger, Mike Katz, Jack Vroom, Andy Burr, Ned Davis and John Gould. The symposium was a forum on the future of journalism, which looks, frankly, quite bleak at the moment. It was moderated by Jeff’s brother Christopher “Kit” Jones ’62, a former commentator and senior correspondent with Fox Television News in NYC. Also participating were Thomas B. Edsall, professor of journalism at the Columbia Journalism School; John Kifner ’63, a national and foreign correspondent for The New York Times; Elizabeth Kolbert, a staff writer for The New Yorker; and Shayla Harris n 1 9 6 5 –6 7 ’97, a video producer with The New York Times. According to the panelists, print journalism, at least as far as the big newspapers are concerned, is in big trouble; John Kifner ’63 remarked that as a dinosaur, he felt he had “three hooves in the tar pit.” In April Dave Kollendar, his wife Linda and son Adam ’05 traveled to LA to see daughter Linda perform a lead role in Mauritius at the Pasadena Playhouse. Congratulations to her! Michael Katz received a Fulbright Lecturer Fellowship and will be teaching at the University of Santa Catarina in Florianopolis, Brazil, from March to June 2010. He and his wife are busy learning Portuguese, but he is grateful to be teaching in English. The economic downturn affects lots of us in different ways. Ron Worland writes that “plastic surgery is the Chrysler of medicine,” and his practice is down 66 percent. The good news is that his fourth grandchild arrived recently—a girl after three boys—and he is heading on a surgical mission to Wenzhou, China, to repair cleft palates and such. On April 28, Farrar, Straus & Giroux published Willard Spiegelman’s Seven Pleasures: Essays on Ordinary Happiness. He reports, “Some classmates will find themselves in the book, none by name, none unfavorably.” He was booked into the Williams Club in New York on July 28 for a reading. In the April 30 Wall Street Journal, Wes Davis wrote, “[John] Updike believed there was value in catching sight of happiness out of the corner of the eye. Looking at his pleasures, Mr. Spiegelman does just that, seven times. The eighth pleasure the book provides is in the intelligence and grace he brings to the job.” Arthur Benson offered a suggestion. What about a Facebook page for our class? Apparently the Class of ’83 has one. He points to Willard’s book as being a perfect topic for such a page. Not being a Facebooker myself, I referred this question to president Wink Willett. If anyone wants to second the motion or otherwise weigh in, write to Wink at wink@winkwillett.com. Graham Cole has finally decided to retire as headmaster of Westminster School in Simsbury, Conn., after the 2009-10 academic year. It’s clearly been a difficult decision; he and his wife Carol have been very happy there. They have bought a house in Lawrenceville, N.J., where they have friends and associations. He would love to hear from others about how to deal with retirement, which can look a bit forboding, as I can testify. Roger Kubarych wrote (a bit nervously) of upcoming joys. His oldest son Kevin is expecting Roger’s first grandchild, and his middle son Greg is graduating from the University of Chicago. In the excitement of these upcoming events, he clearly was knocking on wood as he wrote: “I get more superstitious as time goes by!” Lavinia and Dan Cohn-Sherbok continue to live in an old coach house in wild Wales, where Dan is professor of Judaism at the University of Wales. In the holidays they live in their flat in Kensington in London, where they see Sheila and Peter Koenig. Lavinia has published the final novel of a trilogy of comic campus novels (all anonymously): A Campus Conspiracy; “Degrees R’Us; and The Whistleblower— all available on Amazon.co.uk. our patients have no means to speak of anyway, our financial picture (which has never been very good) has not deteriorated further. We look forward to health care reform. “Morty Schapiro held his last out-of-town public event in NYC last week. About 200 alums, parents and friends showed up. The event was at the University Club in Midtown and was preceded by many reminders to wear a tie and no flip-flops. This was the University Club after all. He spoke positively about how Williams had developed during his tenure, what areas he had not been able to develop as much as he wished, and reassured us that the future seemed bright. It was sobering for me to think that he is the sixth president of Williams to finish his tenure on our watch.” Finally, the Second Annual ’66 Dinner of the Boston Ephs met in May at The Country Club in Brookline. Organized by Budge Upton (who couldn’t make it), Bob Bradley and Steve O’Brien (who did), attendees included Peter Allen, Rob Cunningham, David Dapice, Alan Fincke, EPHCOMPLISHMENT Peter Allen ’66 was elected to the United States Tennis Association New England Tennis Hall of Fame in January. A native of Framingham, Mass., he has been a player for more than 57 years and a tennis advocate. Larry Stone has retired from ski jump coaching and, perhaps to celebrate, has released his first recording of music in more than 20 years. Called Dreams Die Hard, it contains mostly original material written and sung by Larry. For samples go to his website, www.littleblackbrook. com. In response to Speigelman’s book, he writes, “End the recession and order my CD and Willard’s book today.” Both are available on Amazon.com. Norman Urmy wrote that his son Matt organized a two-day benefit for the Music Therapy Program at Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital. The program was titled “Nashville City Nights,” scheduled for June 5-6 in East Nashville, Tenn. Co-secretary Joe Bessey was organizing a dinner at the Williams Club after Willard Spiegleman’s reading. He adds, “In contrast to Ron Worland’s situation, our business has been fairly steady, and since many of John Gould, Dick Pingree and Marty Shulkin. Dessert was “Purple Cow Frozen Yogurt.” Conversation ranged from the atrocities of Bernie Madoff to the joys of Bob Mitchell’s sports books, especially A Match Made in Heaven, Bob’s golf novel. One special highlight: Peter Allen revealed, to much applause, that in June he would be inducted into the New England Tennis Hall of Fame, where he will of course join his (and everyone else’s) beloved coach, Clarence “Chafe” Chaffee. 1967 Kenneth A. Willcox 178 Westwood Lane Wayzata, MN 55391 1967secretary@williams.edu Bob Conway reports a flurry of activity in his family. His daughter Satya is running unopposed for her second term on the Madison, Wis., City August 2009 | Williams People | 55 CL ASS NOTES Council. His wife Tyrell had her first solo exhibit of paintings in NYC at the Katherine Markel gallery in Chelsea. Friends and relations from all over, including Burke Moody and Annie Taylor, converged for the opening. Bob then went to DC for discussions with the National Gallery about curating a major exhibition there in 2012. While there, he stayed with Buddy Karelis and Heidi Hatfield. Then he was off to Savannah to speak at the opening of his Bellows drawings exhibition at the Telfair Academy. Kirk Varnedoe took his first art classes there, so Bob started his talk with slides of Kirk and a tribute to his character and accomplishments. Bob is now back in Oakland, where he is starting a new project managing the estate of artist Bruce Conner, one of the initial members of the San Francisco Beat scene. Jeff Bowen and Hillary took their spring break in Mexico this year. They wanted a getaway from the shared pressures of school administration and the fanciful challenge of “spending federal stimulus aid wisely but fast to preserve jobs that can’t last but will have an audit-ready impact on kids at risk.” Lots of luck on that one, of course. The miracle they opted for instead was a warm-weather resort spa without snow days to worry about. Paul Lipof spent quite a lot of time over the past six months with Gregg Meister. Paul says Gregg has put together a truly excellent personal video in support of the State of Israel from his Christian perspective. Paul has helped him with its distribution. One of the shots is one Gregg took of Paul’s grandson’s bar mitzvah in Jerusalem. The Lipofs are awaiting the arrival of their third grandchild. In addition, their daughter was planning a May wedding. And they went back to Israel in June to attend a niece’s wedding. They count their blessings. Fred Sleezer has relocated from San Antonio to Exton, Pa. This was his first winter on the East Coast in 29 years, and he really enjoyed it. He is working for Stewart, Cooper & Coon in corporate and individual outplacement. As you can imagine, he says they are VERY busy in this economy. Fred had dinner with Dennis Helms ’64 and his wife Meg in mid-April. He hoped to make it back to the Purple Valley this summer to have another go 56 | Williams People | August 2009 at Taconic. Fred encourages classmates seeking job change assistance to contact him via e-mail. He would be happy to help. Bill McClung and Hannah Jo are finally empty nesters. Son Charles is a freshman at Macalester College (St. Paul), and their other son is a junior at Carleton. To foot the bills Bill is continuing as computer science chair at Nebraska Wesleyan University and organist for their Catholic College. Hannah Jo is choir director there and teaches voice at nearby Doana College. Recently Henry Walker ’69, computer science chair at Grinnell, provided their department with an excellent external evaluation. Bill says he is post-bypass surgery, a vegetarian and inveterate stationary bicycle rider. He hopes to return for our 50th. Jeff Kelleher has been teaching law in San Diego. He plans to teach the fall term at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. Hank Grass is content with his life and work. Fortunately his athletic injuries are healing, so he can remain active. He views that as an important antidote for the professional stress he feels. His family members are all healthy, “which is also a great joy.” He has no plans to retire from his psychiatric practice in the near future. In contrast with Hank, Bill Woodward did, in fact, take the big leap and retired last March. He says he will now see what he can do managing his own retirement fund (what’s left of it) after having managed others’ investments for the past 21 years. Bill and his wife look forward to traveling and maybe even running into some Williams folks along the way. As an aside, he said that he and his wife were at Longwood Gardens recently. They were wearing their reunion headgear. A nice gentleman asked where they had gotten “those great hats.” When Bill replied “at my college reunion,” he asked “William & Mary?” Bill writes, “I haven’t heard that one in years.” Ted McPherson sent in his obligatory report on the January Alumni vs. Williams JV basketball results. It was the 10th consecutive alumni victory 96-70 (not much defense there). Ted was the sole ’67 participant, and he did score a basket, though clearly not a game clincher. Gordie Gee is usually on the team as well. It’s hard to imagine, but he claims to have had more important obligations this year. Your secretary had a nice conversation with Steve Kiechel. He and Julie are still living in the Toledo, Ohio, area, where Steve is an orthopedic surgeon. They are building a (retirement?) house down the coast from Boston, where they will be closer to the rest of their family. That’s it for this edition. Enjoy the rest of the summer, and I’ll see you in the fall. 1968 Paul Neely P.O. Box 11526 Chattanooga, TN 37401 1968secretary@williams.edu Just before the Williams graduation in June, Paul Marquis wrote: “In a couple of weeks I will finish a seven-year second chance to enjoy Williams and its unique offerings. Our daughter Willa Marquis ’09 will graduate as her sister Estalyn ’06 had a few years earlier. My memories of my four years at Williams are of too many hours grinding out premed courses during the week and binge drinking on weekends. This time around, my memories are richer ones of a Mountain Day hike up Greylock, lunches with my daughter’s professors, visiting their locales abroad (Spain and China) and hosting fabulous volunteer groups to our home city, New Orleans, post-Katrina. I have been blessed to have this second chance to get it right.” Peter Abrahams keeps churning out the books, but the newest one has a twist: “I wrote a book called Dog On It under a pen name (Spencer Quinn). It’s the first in the Chet and Bernie mystery series, detective novels told from Chet’s point of view. He’s a dog, not a talking dog, just a narrating one. The book hit number seven on The New York Times fiction list. Under my own name I have a new YA novel out called Reality Check.” You can see the whole career at peterabrahams. com, but for real fun, take a look at chetthedog.com, Chet’s blog. Chris Dornin has retired, at least from his one-man news service covering the New Hampshire Statehouse. But, he adds, “I still write magazine articles and poems, sing in choirs, play pickup basketball four times a week, cross-country ski, sail a Laser and hang out with our n 1 9 6 7 –6 9 first grandchild. I’m also doing some research on the dubious national war on sex offenders.” He encourages anyone coming to New Hampshire to drop by. Also still playing basketball is Bill Perttula, “to try to fulfill the required exercise old people should have.” Bill has been at San Francisco State University since 1975 and this fall returns to being chair of the marketing department. He’s counting on two more years, then retirement. Susette and Peter Naylor shared a lunch with the Perttulas last winter, which led to these thoughts from Peter: “The fact that Bill and I are both professors of business got me to thinking about how valuable a small, highly focused management program would have been to us as undergraduates. Certainly, I would have been better prepared for graduate work in economics if I’d learned some management practices earlier. Wouldn’t a barebones management program integrated with the economics program strengthen both the economics program and prepare the Williams graduates to turn their passions into careers? “Also, shouldn’t Williams be offering a small general engineering program, so that our liberal arts graduates are technologically literate as they go forth to save the world? Just a few ideas following a terrific weekend— how great to connect with the Perttulas after 40 years!” Your secretary has a few contrary thoughts on those ideas, but in the current budgetary situation adding any programs is a fairly hypothetical exercise anyhow. Jeff Brinn reports on fallout from the financial situation: “Myra and I have taken up fulltime residence in Monroe, N.C. (near Charlotte). We had bought this big house just before our 35th reunion. We gave up our apartment on Long Island Dec. 1, as I had been an early casualty of the recession/depression/ mess that had befallen the business world and could not find anything to justify maintaining a second residence, particularly while out of work. After several increasingly desperate months, I secured a part-time consulting telecommuting gig doing QC work for a NYC CPA firm, which has kept me busy about one-half the time, with fill-ins from old consulting CPA firm clients. I expect to work until they surgically remove my laptop from my dead body, but that had always been my plan.” Bob Chambers endured some acute pancreatic attacks last spring, which now seem under control: “I’m still having to take things slowly and gradually. The best part of this unpleasant experience has been the loss of 28 pounds and a more svelte look in the mirror, but I can’t recommend the process that got me here.” Bob Stanton, perhaps our classmate with the longest record of continuing service to the College, took me up on the request for comments about the Schapiro years: “We will all miss Morty. He has been an exemplary president. He was able to work well with alums, faculty and students. All truly loved him as a person and for what he did for our college. He is leaving large shoes to fill. I trust that Greg Avis ’80 and the search committee will find another great leader to guide the College through these current challenging times to even a higher level of achievement. “I will also miss Steve Birrell ’64. He has been an outstanding VP for Alumni Relations and Development. I still remember, when that job last came open, calling Hank Payne and telling him in no uncertain terms that he needed to hire Steve back from the defectors (Amherst) immediately and without wasting any effort on a search. To Hank’s credit and to the betterment of Williams, that is what occurred.” Absolutely right on both counts, Bob. I will mention less momentously that in June, after 14 years, I rotated off the Williams Board of Trustees (and on to the board of the Clark Art Institute). I have always felt that I got more out of that service than I put in, and I have tried to put in a lot. Trustees serve many constituencies, but I always considered our wonderful class to be one of the most significant for me. The College is in good hands, with a strikingly good senior staff and trustees that bring great wisdom and judgment to governance. Among them is Bob Scott, whose term on the board will continue until 2016. I am also becoming chair of the Smithsonian National Board, a pan-institutional board that works with the professional staff and the Regents of the Smithsonian. That is one complex organization. Governing Williams is simple by comparison, but the College remains number one in my heart. Many thanks to those of you who have offered support and kind words during my time on the board. One of the nicest events during that time was a celebration in April of the success of the recently concluded Williams Campaign. Among the panels was one on the future of liberal arts education. I had the pleasure of chairing it—the panelists were just superb, and among them was Tony Kronman. Tony now teaches humanities at Yale, following his highly successful decade as dean of the law school. John Oppenheimer and Bill Shapiro were also here for the weekend. Finally, a plaintive cry from Class Agent Larry Levien: “Just concluded three years as a vice chair of the Alumni Fund— which has seen both the best and worst of times in those years. The job is a tremendous opportunity to stay connected and one for which alumni of our experience (age) are especially valued. There are 20-plus vice chairs ranging from the Class of 2009 to the Class of 1951. The discussions are anything but dull. If anyone is interested, send me an e-mail and I can describe further. The chairs of the fund, currently Bill Sprague ’80 and Katie Chatas ’88, devote enormous time and energy to making the College a better place. “If anyone is interested in becoming class agent, you don’t have to e-mail. The job is yours. At the very least, I’m begging for a co-head. You have the opportunity to work with Betsy Howard of the fund staff, who is wonderful, and to spend some fascinating weekends on campus.” 1969 Richard P. Gulla 287 Grove St. Melrose, MA 02176 1969secretary@williams.edu Congratulations and thanks to Reunion Co-Chairs Bob Grace and Fred Vinick and their committee for an absolutely terrific 40th reunion. Nearly 50 classmates with spouses and partners attended, and camaraderie, reconnecting with friends and reliving many and good memories filled the long weekend. Kudos to reunion committee members Rick Corwin, Alan Dittrich, Bob Kandel (who organized a ’69 alum tour of MASS MoCA, led by Museum Director August 2009 | Williams People | 57 CL ASS NOTES Joe Thompson ’81), Dick Peinert, Rudy Spraycar and Craig Walker as well as John Kitchen, who put together a festival of Korean films and one of the seminars (aptly titled “How to Feed Your Mind”) for all returning alums. Ever the gentlemen, Mr. Grace wanted to make sure I gave Mr. Vinick the lion’s share of the credit, and Mr. Vinick wanted to make sure I recognized Mr. Grace’s efforts, particularly those that kept Fred within budget. So here’s to you both! A special note of thanks goes to Mike Himowitz, who once again (he did it for our 35th, too) took and posted on the web for all to see more than 100 photos of Reunion Weekend. (Visit winkflash.com; user name eph1969; password Williams). Distance was no barrier for some, as Gordy Bryson from Hawaii, Bob Hallem from California, Jorge Tristani from New Mexico, Dorsey Lynch from Arizona, Johan Hinderlie from Minnesota, Wes Howard from Colorado, Fletcher Clark from Texas, Elrick Williams from Illinois and Gary Robinson from Ohio all appeared. (As space is limited in these notes, a separate e-mail with more details of Reunion Weekend including all attendees, was distributed earlier.) Some of the best (and funniest) moments of the weekend occurred at Saturday evening’s dinner, as Johan Hinderlie presented the idea of “creating some community spirit among the class” by inviting spouses to describe (and giving them the microphone to do so) “that endearing moment that made them say ‘yes’ to partnering with their Williams man.’” Nearly 10 came forward, with all recounting more than just one moment. I can find no words to adequately describe this wonderful part of the weekend and give it justice. You had to be there, and some of us are still laughing. Thanks to Paul Harsch’s bride Joyce, the event was recorded for posterity. New class officers come with reunions, and after a decade of service Bob Grace has stepped down as president. From my viewpoint, Bob did a great job in bringing us closer, and he deserves much credit as well as our thanks for his energy and efforts. Alan Dittrich, who served as VP, succeeds Bob as president, and Wes Howard has agreed to serve as VP. Rick Corwin, treasurer, and yours truly, as secretary, will proudly continue 58 | Williams People | August 2009 to serve in those respective capacities. To recap the reunion, suffice it to say that Fred’s goal—“to renew old friendships and make some new ones”—was fulfilled to the utmost and to the pleasure of all. In other news, Chuck Collins is in his fifth year as president and CEO of the YMCA of San Francisco and wonders “why it took me so long to find this career and path of life. Working for the Y has many benefits, including unlimited yoga passes.” Chuck’s daughter Julia graduated from Stanford Business School last spring, and his older daughter Sara is nearing completion of her fellowship in interventional cardiology. Spouse Paula was scheduled for a 180-mile bike ride in June from the northern part of California to San Francisco. Chuck has fun “keeping up with Liz and Gordy Bryson and Mike West on Facebook, but I realize that only a few of our classmates are Facebookoriented. To our other classmates, get on with it. We can look and be as stupid as we want at this stage in life.” He invites classmates to visit: “Planes go both ways. For all of you people east of here, plan a trip to visit the Brysons in Hawaii and drop off in California to visit Mike in the South and me in San Francisco. Bob Kandel makes a regular practice of it. September and October are our best months.” Dick Tobin continues as college counseling director at Greenhills School in Ann Arbor, “something I’ve been doing so long that I can hardly call it news. With the competitiveness of college admissions and the looming impact of the economy, this job hasn’t gotten any easier, but it has many satisfactions and I’m still enjoying it. I’ve been joined this year by Kevin Brown ’90, who serves as associate director, and this pairing has been a success from every point of view. A few of this year’s graduates are heading to Williams next fall, which is a particular pleasure for both of us.” Dick also teaches a class of grade-11 English. Wife Peggy Wilson is finishing her second year as second in command at an independent K-8 school in the city, and oldest daughter Emily Wilson-Tobin joined Greenhills as theater director, making father and daughter colleagues. Son Peter is currently in San Francisco along with his sister Laura, who works at a Montessori school as a teacher’s assistant. Peter heads to the New School in New York this fall to begin an MFA in creative writing. Dick, a former class president, sends his regards to all classmates. Tom Sipkins, after 36 years as a trial lawyer, was appointed a judge on the Hennepin County Minnesota District Court bench by Gov. Pawlenty. “I will be handling criminal and civil matters and trials in Minneapolis and its suburbs until my 70th birthday, if I get through one election cycle. It is a great gig and a wonderful way to end my career in the law.” Tom closed his notes with a threat to be a partner with Dick Peinert at the alumni golf tournament in 2010. Paul Harsch and his new bride Joyce finished building a new home on Bee Hill Road, just a short way from the center of Williamstown. While pursuing nursing degrees, Joyce is also working in marketing at Paul’s real estate firm, which was selected to be the exclusive representative for the new Cable Mills Condominiums on Water Street. Paul advises any classmates who are interested in retiring to the Purple Valley to contact him. “Williams parents, alums and retired faculty are among our top prospect pool.” Paul, who’s in his 34th year of business in town, welcomes visitors. Just call ahead. Lanny Maxwell has been consulting for the last five years to smaller companies as an outsource CFO in the Philadelphia area. Lanny, who is particularly interested in renewable energy companies, welcomes contact from alumni working in that arena. Chris Kinnell, pastor of the Bellevue Heights United Methodist Church in Syracuse, returned to full-time pastoral ministry in July after a year’s sabbatical and did a short-term mission at the Mutambara Hospital in Zimbabwe. Chris also sponsored two Grandpa Camps in Syracuse this year with his grandchildren living in North Carolina. Henry Walker continues his teaching at Grinnell College in Iowa and this year marked his 28th of grading Advanced Placement exams, 22 in computer science, six in calculus. Henry will join the development committee for AP Computer Science, the body that makes up the course outline and exam. “Wife Terry works at Aviva Insurance as a software n 1 9 6 9 –7 0 Ephs hosted a lunch in April at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Hong Kong for Tom Krens ’69 (fourth from left), former WCMA director and Williams art professor and senior adviser to the Guggenheim Foundation. developer and tester. Daughter Donna and son-in-law Jeff, who have a 2-year-old, are in San Jose, Calif., both working at Symantec. Younger daughter Barbara lives in Newark, Ohio, and works for the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. Terry and I are still caught up in our work and family connections, and it likely will be some time before we think of retirement.” If you ever wanted to know where Grinnell is, Henry provides some perspective: “I live four blocks north of the mid-cape highway—U.S. Route 6, about 1,250 miles west of Provincetown, Mass.” Bob Grace reports his son Rob (Vassar ’00) was married in March and was to earn his master’s in political science in August from New York University. He and bride Shanna will then move to Providence, where Shanna will attend Brown to get her master’s. Bob’s daughter Holly Grace ’97 is planning a December wedding to Kris Kahn ’97. “By the end of the year my entire family will have moved on to the next level. In the meantime, my grand-twins (children of my daughter Heather ’93) are approaching 5 and living in Manhattan. Mike Himowitz is now the deputy managing editor of MedPage Today, a national news service for physicians, after working at the Baltimore Sun for more than three decades. Mike continues his personal technology column, which he’s written for 20 years, at mikepluggedin.com. Jim Barns, librarian at JeffersonMadison Regional Library in Charlottesville, Va., started a documentary film series at his library, “an eclectic selection of films which suits me well, from Roy Rogers to the Iditarod.” One of Jim’s guest experts was Caroline Kettlewell ’84, “an intrepid, engaged journalist,” says Jim, and author of Electric Dreams. Finally, belated thanks go to Head Class Agent Rob Brokaw and Co-Agents Rick Corwin and Dick Peinert and the associate agents for their continuing efforts with the Alumni Fund. Rob’s team recorded 54 percent participation, an admirable achievement in such a tough economy. That’s it for this edition. Keep the news and notes coming, and stay well and in touch. 1970 REUNION JUNE 10-13 Jeffrey R. Krull 3017 Oak Borough Run Fort Wayne, IN 46804 1970secretary@williams.edu I got a nice update from Bill Lawson. Bill enjoys spending time at the family’s home in Charlevoix, Mich. They have a place on Lake Charlevoix with all the toys—Sea Doo, sailboat and powerboat. Retirement has been good for Bill. Early on he went to Indiana University and graduated with a master’s in social work, spent a year working with people with chemical addictions—alcohol, crack, cocaine, marijuana— and saw how devastating these illnesses are. He also worked in an elementary school in a very poor area of Indianapolis that had a number of homeless and Latino children and found it difficult not to get emotionally involved with their situations. He was able to use the Spanish he learned at Williams with the children and their families. Of recent activities, Bill reports, “We traveled to St. Bart’s for 10 days in 2008 and returned for two weeks this year. We also traveled to Palm Desert and La Jolla. My grad school roommate from University of Virginia Business School (Darden) 1972 has a second home in Lake Toxaway, N.C. We visited him and his family several times last year and fell in love with the area. We are now the proud owners of Lake Toxaway mountain property with a great view into South Carolina with the hopes of maybe someday building a home there. I continue to serve on the boards of the Crossroads Council of the Boy Scouts of America and the Indianapolis Civic Theatre. We have become empty nesters except for two dogs and a kitty. Fortunately both of our sons live in Indianapolis as well as my wife’s parents. We are all able to see one another on a regular basis.” Carri and Gerry Stoltz spent a very nice weekend in Al Twaits’ house in Ponte Vedra, Fla., even though he was only there for a short while. Buckets also had a great time at a lunch with Harvey Levin, Rob Hershey, Charlie Ebinger, Paul Miller and Pat Bassett. All appear to have “barely” aged. Our venerable veep also had breakfast with Bob Bearman, who is now the managing partner of the Denver office of Patton Boggs. Hill Hastings is still enjoying the practice of hand and upper extremity surgery and teaching. Last September he and Bettie celebrated their 30th anniversary with a two-and-a-half-week trip to Mongolia with friends, where they experienced “lots of incredible photography, fermented mare’s milk, dried cheese and goat! Spent a few days with Kazakh Eagle hunters in the northwest and took in a great Nadam festival near the Siberian Border. As travel goes in Mongolia—great hospitality, long days and lots of unexpected ‘happenings’ (flight delays, vehicle breakdowns, etc.) all part of normal life. Our younger daughter, Laurel, will be heading August 2009 | Williams People | 59 CL ASS NOTES to DC to begin medical school next August. She and we are excited! Peiper continues with her pilates studio in Telluride, Colo.” Margie Ware wants to tell us about her granddaughters: “David and Jenny Ware produced two gorgeous ‘sororal’ twins on Feb. 4 at Sibley Hospital in DC. For those of you who have never had twins in the family, it is quite the logistical challenge. Bob and I went down to DC in March after Jenny’s mom had left. Bob did all the grocery shopping and cooking and an amazing share of diaper changing and soothing. I hung around and read books, LOL. Of course they are the most beautiful children ever born and definitely above average. The battle of collegiate wearing apparel has already started among Bob, Margie and Aunt Kristi Hansen Smith ’95, Margie (Mount Holyoke ’71), David (Dartmouth ’98) and Jenny (Duke ’98). Probably the elder Hansens will weigh in with something from their alma mater in Boulder soon. In retaliation they’ll probably go to Amherst, Brown or UNC.” I received word from the Alumni Office of the deaths of two classmates. This is not exactly the latest information, as you will see from the dates. Apparently the College just recently learned of these deaths. Robin Whittlesey, Aug. 15, 1999; Benson Platt, April 8, 2006. Ty Tuttle was back in the States for a week in March to celebrate the 90th birthday of his father John Tuttle ’42. Otherwise, Ty says he’s working harder than ever trying to compensate for Wall Street doing its best to demolish all thoughts of an eventual retirement and getting away to Normandy as often as possible. The Tuttles’ son Jean-Philippe just got engaged; marriage planned for 2011. Reports of retirements are not making Bruce Michelson envious. Far from it, as he reports, “Me, I’m hoping to stay in this game for a while longer, not because we’re broke (well, there’s that too) but also because I’m finally reaching a point where I think I know what I’m doing as a teacher and a scholar. Also, next year will be the centennial of Mark Twain’s demise, and as the president of that author-society I’m getting too many gigs to allow impure thoughts about kicking back. Our daughter 60 | Williams People | August 2009 In March, (from left) Rob Brokaw ’69, Joe McCurdy III ’04 and Joe McCurdy ’70 gathered for a round of golf at the European Club in Wicklow, Ireland. Hope is getting married in July in Ithaca—a classic Cornell Rebel Alliance—and showing up there, and doing exactly what I’m told, will provide most of the real fun this summer.” A business trip took Jay Nelson to Austin, so he arranged to have lunch with Mark Lyon. “Nothing much to report,” he says, “we just caught up on careers and family. We agreed that we’d had a good time and to get together again the first chance we have. Teaching Winter Study with Tom Sweeney and Bob Groban was fun, as always, and we had a talented group of students. But the Obama administration’s shift in policy on ‘enemy combatant’ status mooted the case that was the subject of the course, so for the second time in four years, we missed the opportunity to see how close to the real outcome the student ‘court’ came. We hope to do it again in ’11.” I got word from the Alumni Office that Randy Knispel is on the “lost list.” So if anybody has heard from Randy or knows his whereabouts, let me know and I’ll turn him in to the authorities. Rod Titcomb is not lost, but you might think he is if you try to reach him at his old e-mail address. Here’s his new one: ertitcomb@comcast.net. Lee Own is a proud new grandpa! Samuel Ernest Perry was born March 20 to Lee’s younger daughter Abbie. He’ll no doubt get considerable pressure from the get-go to head for Brown (Abbie and her husband are both graduates), but Lee and Aunt Jessie Owen Kostelnik ’99, will make their case for Williams when the time is right. Young Sam reportedly demonstrates remarkable brilliance and athletic ability already. His uncle, Lee’s son Sam (Colby ’04) happened to be in Providence at the time of little Sam’s birth, unexpectedly. After reading the last installment of class notes, Skip Kotkins felt compelled to write and add something. Skip writes: “Pat Bassett indicated that he wanted to work three more years, and his board talked him into five. Lemme give it to you from the standpoint of his board, on which it is my honor to serve. Pat has become the proverbial ‘force to be reckoned with’ in independent pre-collegiate education. He always was such a force, but as president of the National Association of Independent Schools, he has become that rare beacon that is universally respected, admired and listened to. Despite telecommuting from Colorado four months a year, Pat is virtually everywhere at once. I had the pleasure of introducing him one time and said, ‘If you want to hear it from the horse’s mouth, when it comes to independent education, this is the horse.’ It is impossible to overstate the impact he has had on the association he leads and the ‘industry’ he champions. The good news is that my term on the board will be over before it becomes necessary to find his successor. While nothing is impossible, I am really glad that someone else will have to tackle that task.” Well, my virtual mailbag was n 1 9 7 0 –7 1 a little “light” this time, so that’s it for now. Keep those newsy updates coming, friends. 1971 Scott Simundza 579 Sagamore Ave., Unit 102 Portsmouth, NH 03801 1971secretary@williams.edu A few classmates nudged me further into the 21st century by sending Facebook inquiries, so I signed up. It’s sobering to log-on and be told that “You have two friends,” but now I know that George Ebright is a fellow long-suffering Cubs fan, and he teaches English at the high school where my parents met. And George has lots of friends. Kent Rude has friends, too, and is good to his mother: “I went to Guatemala this February with my mother in honor of her 80th. She wanted to go, so I said, ‘Why not?’ I met her in Houston, we flew to Guatemala City and had a big time touring various Mayan sites (Copan, Tikal, Quirigua, pronounced kitty-wa according to our guide,) Lake Atitlan, colonial capital of Antigua, etc. It was inexpensive (cheaper to fly to Guatemala than to STL), interesting, great weather. Amazing old rum … wish I could get some here. I also met old (truly) high school friends in PHX for the NCAA Western Regionals (UCONN, Mizzou, Memphis State, Purdue), plus a Cactus League game (Rockies vs. Mariners) in honor of our collective 60th birthdays. I voted for the new Dodgertown (not for Mannywood!) but was overruled. I’m originally from CO as those with long memories may recall. I also saw Roger Widmer and family for dinner this spring. Tom Jones and wife and daughter were in Boston cementing Kailin’s choice for high school in the US of A, and we met them for dinner.” Another gathering of ancient Ephs was reported by John Chambers: “Three from ’71 (totaling nearly 180 years of age) lit up a Westchester County restaurant on an early spring night—Peter Clarke got out his guitar, Paul Lieberman took notes for his next screenplay, John Chambers served as witness and sing-along leader. Peter forgot to leave his open guitar case on the floor to collect tips, but otherwise it was a delight not only to your classmates, but (most of) the other patrons as well. Oh, and we spent some time over dinner, before the guitar came out, puzzling over the same age-appropriate issues that must preoccupy most of our classmates—tending to aging parents or energetic grandchildren, our own or our partners’ ailments, and how to sustain ourselves in this economy while simultaneously justifying our places on the planet. Flanked by two religion majors, I took some comfort in the springtime of Obama, and the Captain Lawrence Ale (locally brewed by my son’s only middle school classmate now doing what he vowed back in seventh grade). So we beat on, boats against the current. One of the above revelers, Paul Lieberman, wrote some verse to sum up a potential concern of many of us this year: “Many people I know/ Are turning 60/ Between you and me/ It ain’t nifty.” Not exactly a haiku, but I can’t disagree with the content. Jim Lavine is at it again, racking up more accolades as an attorney in Houston. In February Jim was elected first VP of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. Jim has prior experience as a prosecutor in Chicago and Houston and is a member of the bar in Illinois and Texas. He holds degrees from Williams, Illinois Institute of Technology and Kent College of Law. Congratulations to Jim for adding this appointment to his numerous awards for professional excellence! A quick note from the still-gainfully-employed Wally Schlech: “I saw Steve Brown in Philly for a drink and hope[d] to golf with him in June. Wally was dealing with swine flu … at one of our local schools—hopefully no further spread but doubt it!” In the previous edition of class notes, Denman Maroney discussed his productive year of CD releases, and he said he would be in an upcoming issue of Downbeat. I happen to be a subscriber and can report that Denman was profiled in the May issue. In the article, he explains his unusual technique of playing the inside of the piano, and he previews upcoming projects, including a song cycle based on William Butler Yeats’ lyric poems. There is also a nice picture of Denman, although the magazine put Diana Krall on the cover for some reason. Another artist continuing to pursue creative projects is Gordon Clapp: “I am in negotiations with Kevin O’Rourke ’78 to participate in the Williams Summer Theatre Lab. After 30 years of consideration I’ve finally managed to bring about a one-man evening with Robert Frost (Frost himself is unavailable so it would be I as Robert Frost) for the stage. The playwright Andy Dolan and I will work on it for a few days prior to an Aug. 7 performance. Negotiations involve whether or not I get my own bathroom in the shared house. Kevin is a tougher negotiator than Steven Bochco, but I’m sure it will all work out. On April 11 I attended the Red Sox’s thrilling comefrom-behind victory over the Los Angeles Angels of Santa Ana Adjacent Anaheim as a guest of Hilary Barraford ’00, who was recently appointed Mayor of Red Sox Nation Los Angeles.” Sporting events were again the backdrop of my own encounters with classmates last spring. The annual Celtics game with Doug Pickard, Gene Bauer, Kent Rude and Roger Widmer took place in February with the usual pregame dinner, followed this time by a victory for the first time in a while. Kent was just back from Guatemala, Gene was heading to Paris, and Doug was going to Middlebury to support the Williams basketball team in the NESCAC playoffs. In April, during a brief trip to the homeland, I met John Caddell and his daughter Katie at Wrigley Field for a bratwurst and a Cubs victory. John survived the recent megalayoff at IBM. Katie, who lives in Chicago, got her MSW from Loyola a couple of years ago and is an early childhood specialist. I got a nice letter from Bob Edmunds after reporting on his re-election to the N.C. Supreme Court: “Since I didn’t graduate with the class, I feel rather like the proverbial fish out of water, SENDPHOTOS W illiams People accepts photographs of alumni gatherings and events. Please send photos to Williams magazine, P.O. Box 676, Williamstown, Mass. 01267-0676. High-quality digital photos may be e-mailed to alumni.review@ williams.edu. August 2009 | Williams People | 61 CL ASS NOTES but I have an Eph’s heart. I keep on the credenza in my office a porcelain purple cow from the Williams Co-op that I gave my mother during our freshman year. When my colleagues visit, they look at it and then they look at me, but no one says anything. There were only three of us from North Carolina in the class. Rives Kistler wound up as a justice on the Oregon Supreme Court, and Bill Massengale practices law just down the road in Chapel Hill. He and I occasionally get together with my old entrymate, Steve Demorest (Sage C), and Bill’s law partner Marilyn Ozer (Vassar ’69) to eat lunch and tell lies. We all look like we’re in our early 30s. I also keep in touch with my roommate Rod Brown, who is a commercial litigator in Manhattan. Williams was a great place, quite an experience for this southern boy.” In the briefest of notes, Dan Hunt announces a happy family event: He and Jodie are proud that daughter Lexie ’09 graduated from Williams in June. Along that line, I’d like to report that I’m the proud parent of Julia Simundza, who graduated from Wheaton in May and will enter a doctoral program in immunology at NYU this fall. Finally, many of you may be aware of the death of Hamilton (Toby) Wood ’72 this past winter. Toby, who was originally in our class, died in a kayaking accident near the Isles of Shoals, just off the New Hampshire coast. David Sobel delivered a eulogy at the memorial service, describing a mutual love of the outdoors shared throughout a 40-year friendship. In David’s words, “I will live his kindness, his generosity, his enthusiasm, his one-hell-of-a good-dadness, his love of the cold, ragged edge, and in that way, he will be with me.” 1972 Jim Armstrong 600 W. 115th St. New York, NY 10025 David Webster 596 Arbor Vitae Road Winnetka, IL 60093 1972secretary@williams.edu Our most recent class notes were accompanied by Gregg Peterson’s November 1971 photograph of the origin of “The Walk” up Spring Street after the now-customary defeat of the Amherst football team on Weston 62 | Williams People | August 2009 Field. Let the record show that other classmates whose faces but not jersey numbers are visible in the photograph are John Dier, Les Croland, Jack Curtin and Bob Rutkowski. Co-secretary Webster heard from several classmates, including Stan Widger, who was in Chicago for a partners meeting of his law firm. Stan has practiced with Nixon Peabody in Rochester, N.Y., for his entire career, a rare accomplishment these days. Stan reports that Mary is well. David Spadafora is preparing for the Library of Congress’ Bicentennial Abraham Lincoln exhibit, “With Malice Toward None,” scheduled to be on display this fall at Chicago’s Newberry Library, of which he is president. It is one of only five locations outside DC where the exhibit will be on display. Bob Gordon, busy with his Senate duties in Trenton, closed on the sale of his longtime residence in Fair Lawn, N.J., and is now completing renovations of his and Gail’s new home, also in Fair Lawn. Kevin Sweeney is busy with his duties as chair of the history department at Amherst, which of necessity cuts into his time available for research. Carol and Will Thorn were in the U.S. on scheduled leave from Will’s post in Moscow with the U.S. Commercial Service. They attended daughter Julia’s graduation from Johns Hopkins (with honors in cognitive science; she will be applying to medical school while working this upcoming year at one of the Hopkins hospitals). Will expected to return to Russia at the end of June in time for the Moscow Embassy’s Independence Day celebration (which he describes as an annual highlight for the U.S. community in Moscow) and also in time for President Obama’s visit. Doug Stiles was in the news in February as the great-greatgrandson of Jonathan Dillon, a watchmaker, whose secret inscription on the inside of a watch owned by Abraham Lincoln was finally revealed at a ceremony at the National Museum of American History. The inscription, which reads in part, “Fort Sumter was attacked by the rebels” and “thank God we have a government,” was made by Dillon on April 13, 1861. Doug contacted the museum and was the one chosen to open the watch. The story was reported in newspapers around the globe. The Williams Bisexual, Gay, Lesbian and Transgender Alumni association (BiGLATA) presented an award at its May reunion in Williamstown to Dan Pinello “for his work as a student on campus, through his coming-out story published in the Williams Advocate in 1971, and for all his work and writings on behalf of the LGBT community since he graduated.” Current association president Teddy Welsh ’95 reports that it was a joyful occasion and that Dan brought along a few copies of the Advocate containing his memorable article. Dan’s article was included in an anthology of the College’s most significant documents over its first 200 years. Shortly before the closing date of the previous class notes, we received notice of the death of two members of our class, Toby Wood and Winston Williams. Since then we have lost another classmate, Randy McManus. We devoted a major portion of the last edition to the passing of Dave Shawan. This, alas, is a reality we will have to come to grips with, this sudden loss of classmates while we are all, relatively speaking, still young. It wasn’t easy the first time it happened many years ago, and we’re learning the hard way that it doesn’t get any easier as the years roll along. Whether they were close friends or casual acquaintances or simply names we recall dimly from a class or a freshman entry, they were our classmates, and their absence creates a void for us, individually and collectively. Toby Wood was an English major and lived in Gladden House. After Williams he received his master’s in social work. At the time of his death he had been working for a number of years as a school social worker in the Kearsarge, N.H., Regional School District. Prior to that he was a child and family therapist, first at a community medical center and then in private practice. Toby’s obituary in the Concord Monitor referred to his “natural exuberance, spontaneity and outgoing personality.” He loved all children but especially his sons, David and Brooks. He enjoyed music and was an enthusiastic acoustic guitarist, notably during summer visits with his family to Star Island off the coast of New Hampshire. His wife Lisa Eberhart wrote to tell us of Toby’s great love of the outdoors and of his trips with friends to wilderness areas of n 1 9 7 1 –7 2 Labrador, British Columbia and the Yukon. Toby was a hiker, a Nordic and alpine skier, a winter camper, a cyclist and a yearround sea-kayaker. Sadly, he died while kayaking off his beloved Isles of Shoals. Jim Williams ’63, the brother of Win Williams, provided us with information about Win, who matriculated several years ahead of us but returned to graduate with our class. When he came back to finish college, he was married and lived off campus. He majored in English and regarded the late Prof. Clay Hunt as the quintessence of a teacher. Win attended Andover and was a star athlete there; he played lacrosse at Williams. He lived much of his life after college in Winthrop, Mass., and he is survived by his mother, Jim and another brother. Jim says that Win’s avocations— which included art, cartooning and photography—defined him with greater clarity than his vocations. A Williams friend remembers Win’s great love of art and has said of him: “He was the most talented person I ever met. He chose a more quiet life, but he was someone who could do everything, and I miss him very much.” Randy McManus died on April 12 while visiting friends in Florida. Stuart Dornette roomed with Randy at Bryant House and was among those who spoke at his funeral in Corpus Christi, Texas. Stuart writes: “Professionally, Randy helped grow Baker Botts’ DC office from the handful of attorneys he joined out of the University of Houston Law School in 1975 to well over 100 lawyers today. Randy had been directly involved in hiring and training many of them, reflecting his passion to help develop young lawyers. A former head of Baker Botts’ Energy Regulatory Practice Group, he was a leading expert in U.S. energy regulatory policy, appearing often before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and the Public Utility Commissions of Texas and California. Chambers, a London-based evaluator of lawyers around the world, rated him a top-tier energy lawyer. “Randy was a gentleman in all senses of the word. He loved fine wines, architecture, art, design and dance. His clothes were impeccably tailored. He always had the right words to say. And he was an inveterate correspondent, sending postcards and carefully chosen birthday cards to a great collection of friends. He was deeply interested in those around him—not only his many friends and legal associates but also his friends’ children. At his funeral, Paul Isaac and his son Ben ’07 each spoke about his own special relationship with Randy from their travels domestically and around the world. Besides the Isaac family and my own, others attending the funeral were John Brewer, Chris West and his family, John Knapp ’73 and Duke Bascom ’73.” The officers of the class have asked that president Harry Kangis’ April 19 e-mail message to classmates be highlighted in these notes for any who may have missed it: “Immediate past president Gregg Peterson and I have developed some suggested guidelines for how to deal with future class deaths to (a) improve the timeliness of news about these losses to interested friends, (b) ensure the surviving families receive as much support as possible from the Williams community, and (c) respond in as consistent a manner as possible concerning these events. At a minimum, the class president will write a letter of condolence to the spouse or immediate family on behalf of the class. Second, if the information is received soon enough, we will communicate to all classmates on the e-mail list server about details of planned services and any memorials. We will send flowers on behalf of the class, funded by our residual reunion funds, to the family unless we learn that classmates will attend, in which case we will let them determine the best response. As in the past, we will also provide details in the next class notes. The College will continue to offer honorary membership in the Society of Alumni to surviving spouses and partners. Accordingly, I have written on our behalf to Dave Shawan’s sister, Toby Hamilton’s wife, and Randy McManus’ parents. Should you wish to contact any of these families, send me an e-mail (harry@kangis.com), and I will provide their address. “Since speed and accuracy are so important in situations like this, please help us by contacting me immediately if you hear of a classmate’s death, the ensuing arrangements, or any contact information. Getting in touch with close mutual friends and former roommates or teammates has also proved to be valuable in these recent cases.” Barnaby Feder recently wrote to a classmate about his experiences as a student at Drew Theological School following his departure from The New York Times. With his permission, here are excerpts: “To my surprise, [daughter] Mattie ended up choosing Williams and is very excited about it. She got so carried away at the admitted students’ orientation sessions (Michele took her because I was tied up at Drew) that she almost signed up for an a cappella group, even though she can’t sing; did sign up for the band, although she hasn’t touched her clarinet in four years; and even put her name on the Young Republicans list, ‘because the guy looked so lonely.’ “Anyway, I’ll now have a great excuse to go up there, even if I have no time. The only way I’ve found to handle the maximum load at Drew (five courses per semester) is basically to work on academics nearly all weekend as well as during the week. It’s been incredibly stimulating, though, and I enjoy the interchanges that result from being the only Unitarian Universalist among the Christians (we do have one Moravian/Buddhist working on a PhD in my class). I am spending the summer in the clinical pastoral education program at Hackensack University Medical Center—basic chaplaincy training.” Kudos to Jerry Carlson for winning an Emmy. The twicemonthly series Nueva York, which Jerry produces in Spanish for CUNY TV (channel 75; the program has English subtitles) received the award as the Best Magazine Show in New York. Since 2005, the program has examined the lives and cultures of Latinos in New York and has presented information about events, exhibits, services, performances and institutions available to residents, along with interviews of community and national leaders. Each year Williams honors several of its employees on the SENDNEWS! Y our class secretary is waiting to hear from you! Send news to your secretary at the address at the top of your class notes column. August 2009 | Williams People | 63 CL ASS NOTES anniversaries of their starting date with the College. The incomparable Jim Kolesar was feted on his 25th anniversary with the College. Jim’s work at the Williams Office of Public Affairs speaks for itself—it would be hard to find a betterrun operation anywhere. Our congratulations go to Jim. In his role as classmate, not president, Harry Kangis writes: “Had a delightful dinner with Chuck Hyle while in Cleveland in May. Chuck is currently vice chair for KeyBank; needless to say that job has been a bit different from what anyone would have expected a few years back when he and Charlene came to Ohio. Chuck’s Obama-like calm in a crisis will serve him well in this gig. I was in Cleveland to attend a board meeting for the Ohio Nature Conservancy, where I was elected chair for the next two years. Our primary focus is shifting to what we call ‘thriving waters,’ given that Ohio borders the Great Lakes (containing 20 percent of the surface fresh water on the planet) and the Ohio River, which is the largest feeder to the Mississippi River system. We were an important player in getting the Great Lakes Compact passed in 2008, which prohibits anyone from selling Great Lakes water outside the region (without approval from all the adjoining states and Canadian provinces), which was actually on the drawing board in a number of quarters before this legislation.” The 35th annual softball game over the Memorial Day weekend found several classmates, spouses and others together on Cole Field and elsewhere in Williamstown. One source mentions a disturbing trend toward the use of ringers (typically passed off as dates of the children or even grandchildren of our classmates in attendance) to pummel some of the ’72 starters, but as always it appears that a good time was had by all. Of particular distinction was the play of Eric Reeves, more than holding his own as a pitcher and left fielder; Eric has not missed a single game in all 35 years. The group’s highest award was renamed the “Ford Williams Memorial Golden Glove Award,” which was this year fittingly awarded to Ford’s son-in-law Tim Earle. The group included Dori Jacobson, Tom Howley, Gil Birnie, Chip and Michele Moeller Chandler, Pam McCarthy ’73, Charles “Red” Jeffrey ’69, Bob Wiley (former 64 | Williams People | August 2009 crew coach), John Rosenquest ’71 and Paul Grogan. Paul, a former trustee of the College, ensured the presence of a vital and historically sometimes absent item at the festivities: a key to the otherwise locked restrooms. Co-secretary Webster has recently spent time looking into family genealogy, and he reports that if the rest of the class does not display more vigor and creativity in submitting information for the class notes, he fully intends to devote large portions of future class notes to detailed accounts of his ancestry, sprinkled with witticisms of his own creation. For now, suffice it to say that his seven times great-grandmother Mary Perkins Bradbury was convicted of witchcraft in Salem, Mass., in 1692 and sentenced to death, which will come as no surprise to former members of Bascom House. Fortunately—and this was unusual—she was exonerated on appeal and released. Presumably, she had one heck of an appellate lawyer, and David is now exploring whether ancestors of John Enteman practiced in New England in the 1690s. These notes have mentioned the Class of 1972 e-mail list server for receiving and communicating news about classmates. To gain access, be sure your e-mail information is up to date in Williamstown. Please send it to: bio-records@williams. edu, or to Sue Anderson at Susan.J.Anderson@williams.edu. Be sure to indicate your affiliation with the Class of 1972. 1973 Cole Werble 2540 Massachusetts Ave. NW Apt. 204 Washington, DC 20008 1973secretary@williams.edu My brief e-mail solicitation asking ’73 Ephs for clever uses of bailout money and reports on college graduations elicited some lively responses. Dede Gottlhelf had the most “inn-ovative” idea: She quickly offered her inn on “20 acres on the waterfront in the town of Southampton, N.Y., with lots of job creation, tax ratables, economic multiplier effect and good will development” to anyone with excess TARF or TARP funds. Dede, who has run the Southampton Inn since 1998, asked anyone with excess bailout funds to “please be in touch.” She even offers to “dedicate that book that I haven’t written yet to Williams ’73.” Dede is doing her part to introduce the next generation of Ephs to the innkeeping business. She reports having “an Eph ’09 joining in June to assist in running an inn and restaurant.” She also suggests that the class consider an off-calendar reunion at some point at the inn. Dede is clearly good at hospitality and keeping up with Eph connections. She reports recently going to the theater with Connie Rudnick Grayson and lunching with Steve Huage’s sister. No news from Steve Hauge directly, but his family seems to be playing an important role holding together ’73. Janet Brown writes that exiting Starbucks on a mid-May Sunday morning she “met a most charming dog waiting for his owner who turned out to be Steve Hauge’s sisterin-law.” The dog carried the impressive dog-tag: Marco Polo Hauge. Janet also keeps up with two-legged Eph contacts. She socialized with her roommates Katie Jacobs Eyre and Ellen Gill Miller in DC in May. Katie was in town with her husband Bob Eyre ’71 to see their granddaughter Zoe, born to two ’00 Ephs (Peter and Becca Eyre). Zoe is clearly a Zo-eph with Eph genes on both sides, two generations back. Janet also reports the discovery of a trove of photographic history of ’73 in the effects of Randy McManus ’72, who passed away in April. Stuart Dornette ’72, has uncovered the treasures in the bittersweet experience of going through Randy’s Williams materials. Janet says “a photo from Randy’s 30th birthday celebration features John Knapp, Duke Bascom, Stuart and yours truly, performing a musical number.” Janet expresses relief that there were no cyber-postings in 1980. With that group, I’m glad there were no recordings: the sound had to be worse than the pictures. Janet and Patricia Demeroff are starting an effort to resurrect some languishing forms of civility for younger Ephs. She and Pat are conducting a “missed manners” tutorial for current students. “I’d finally had it,” Janet observes, “with e-mails from 19-year-old complete strangers, even if they are Ephs, asking for job advice that start ‘Hey.’” Hey, sounds to me like a good way to start improving modern life. (Steve Harty, please note: At least one of the Class of ’73 who n 1 9 7 2 –7 4 have served on the Eph board is good at sending personal news. That’s a challenge to you: Send some news for the notes as writing to your classmates for annual giving—as worthwhile an endeavor as that is.) The Eph ’73 crusading spirit to improve the quality of dayto-day life also infuses Julie Kaufman, who reports that her wardrobe consulting practice “has been growing, mainly from seminars that I give to individuals and companies on how to choose clothes that will make each of us look our best and on appropriate attire for various business situations.” That must be tough in the current sartorial era and doubly hard when the only colors that a true Eph can recommend are purple and gold. Julie arrived at her new counseling through an MBA and a long career in market research consulting for medical products companies. She has probably seen her share of unwise wardrobe choices during that time. Julie was also one of several classmates to take up my request for graduation news. Her younger son graduated from Davidson, where she ran into Bill Mahoney, who is chair of the religion department and an expert on Hinduism, perhaps a testament to the lasting impact of the Williams-in-India program. Di Strickler also answered the call reporting that her son Will graduated from the University of Florida in May and then headed off to play in the NCAA regional golf championships. He may continue his post-graduate golf competitions: Di says he is preparing to “pursue a professional golf career.” Di’s older daughter Maggie is married, living in Charlottesville and navigating through the bank merger era as a Wachovia employee. Jay Nawrocki’s elder daughter Julia ’09 graduated from Williams in June—a definite loss to the athletic department: A four-year stalwart on the lacrosse and field hockey teams, Julia was selected for a Div. III all-star team after graduation. Larry Heiges did not have a graduate this year; but, picking up on the TARP motif to this round of notes, he expressed regret that his son and daughter will have to wait several more tuition years. “Haven’t received TARP funds—but my balance sheet needs them,” Larry says. He expects a graduation at Dartmouth in 2010 (Max) and 2013 at Bates (Jessica). He notes an Eph connection at Bates, where Wiley Mitchell is dean of admission and occasionally overlooks the connection to 1973 Williams to allow in deserving candidates. Larry left the “Wall Street treadmill” in 2001 and has been coaching high school freshman football in the northern California area and proving that aging Ephs don’t go mildly into advanced years by being a “spin instructor.” The poor economy is driving Larry off the stationary bike and back to the workforce to open a West Coast office for Empire Valuations. Chris Zook also had a graduate this year, his younger son. Chris writes from Amsterdam, where he and his wife Donna are restoring a 1660-built canal house near the Rijksmuseum. Chris continues to work for Bain & Co. and “write a business book every couple of years for Harvard Press.” In addition to adjusting to the older housing stock on the other side of the pond, he is also adjusting to the different travel opportunities: “Last weekend in Istanbul.” Chris graciously extends an offer: “If anyone is in the Netherlands, don’t hesitate to let us know and stop by for a drink overlooking the canals.” Field Horne ran into ex-pat David Hill, who is teaching and researching tropical diseases at University College Hospital and living in St. Albans. Field reports that David had a daughter graduating at Williams this spring. Field also reports getting together with Johnson Howard and Tony Parisi for a sadder event, the funeral for Dave Wilder’s mother. It’s clear that the class remains connected through the years and distances. 1974 Jonathan W. Fitch 5 Cedar Hill Road Dover, MA 02030 1974secretary@williams.edu Our 35th reunion was a grand event. If you were not there, you were missed, and chances are that you were talked about. Special recognitions go to Bruce Beehler, Paul Owens and JoAnne Talbot Ginsberg, all first-time reunion attendees. Those other 57 of the Great Class of ’74 who represented us all, brought great spouses and kids and comported themselves, er, pretty well, included: Mike Adams; Donny Allison; Gene Berg with Margaret Post and kids Eli and Ansley; John Bonn; Mary Lou Boutwell; Patricia and Hiram Brett; Mark Brown and Hope Coolidge ’75; Paula and Steve Broydrick; Steve Carter-Lovejoy; Cheryl and Chris Corson; Jack Dill; Kathy and Tom Douglas; Tom Dunn; Audrey and Jeff Elliott; William Finn; me and Debra Fitch; Cynthia and Stephen Frazier and son Andrew; Margie Kessler French; Ray Henze; Dave Holzworth; Peter and Wendy Hopkins ’72; Jeff Johnson and Hy Conrad; Bob Kaus; Janny and Jon Kravetz and son Jacob ’10; Valerie and Bob Laidlaw and daughter Grace; Richard Langlois; Dave Lehman; Mathew Levine; Carol and Rich Levy; Ned Miller; Yvonne and Chuck Mitchell and adorable toddler Julia; Rob and Nancy Moore (daughter Sarah ’09 led us in the parade); Ed Moss; Dick Nesbitt; Jeff Niese; Mike Parker; Bob Patterson; Randall Perkins; Paul Reilly; Jimmy Rodgers; Bob Rothman; Jim Samenfeld-Specht; Shaura and Phil Shands and kids Adam and Rachel; Judy and Bruce Sheehan; Marty Singer and Nancy Robertson; Kitty and Tom Slattery; Grace Paine Terzian; Jeff Thaler; Rick Unger; Wendy Whistin; Harvey White; Jann Williams; David and Iris Wolinsky; and, not least, Toph Wuthmann and son Walter. Where to begin? This year proved that it pays to be an early arrival. A large number got into the swing of the weekend at a barbecue on Thursday night hosted by Jeff Johnson and Hy Conrad at their beautiful hilltop home in Pownal. Inclement weather did not dull the enthusiasm of reconnecting with old (nay, long-standing) friends, as a record-setting crowd of about 50 people gathered to reminisce, exchange current news and whereabouts, and dine on the culinary delights prepared by Chef Peter Hopkins. The Thirsty Throng regaled President Jeff Thaler in celebration of his 60th birthday (as host Jeff Johnson said: “Someone in our class had to turn 60 first—it might as well be you!”) The next morning Bruce Beehler presented a fascinating and well-attended lecture, “Thirty Years Exploring Lost Worlds in New Guinea,” at the ’62 Center for Theatre and Dance. Bruce spoke about experiences from his 40-odd trips to remote regions of New Guinea, including the chance discovery of the world’s first known poisonous bird and many new species, and themes from his August 2009 | Williams People | 65 CL ASS NOTES new book Lost Worlds (Yale). Friday evening we all rallied at Tyler, where after cocktails and dinner, President Jeff Thaler superintended a trivia contest, the first part involving a handout with impossible questions about our class experiences 1970-74. Example: Of the 345 freshmen, which wrote in the Oct. 13, 1970, Williams Record the following statement and what was he complaining about? “The royal pimp job of the century was executed against the freshmen this past weekend.” (It was Will Luedke, and his complaint concerned a botched mixer.) The second part of the contest was an auditory test (Jeff manipulating a remote control for his boom box), challenging our ability to identify artists and pieces—stuff we know but can’t remember— from those years that were (can it possibly be disputed?) the Golden Age of Rock and Rock. We are getting very, very old, (as confirmed by Jeff Johnson’s Class Survey discussed below), a trait confirmed by the Class of ’74’s high level of participation in the alumni parade and annual meeting on Saturday. The Class of ’04, which won a couple of awards for the highest rate of attendance for the weekend, was barely visible Saturday morning. I won’t dwell on the obvious reasons for the discrepancy. Several of our number played prominent roles and were honored. Our College trustee Ray Henze, who led the search committee that hired President Morty Schapiro, introduced Morty at a breakfast of alumni leaders. Ray’s remarks perfectly summed up Morty’s remarkable record and the widely shared gratitude for his service as the College’s leader over nine years. But we, of course, couldn’t help but note Ray’s extremely effective service in supporting and implementing President Schapiro’s vision of educational excellence at Williams. At the annual meeting, it was announced President Jeff Thaler was elected Tyng Bequest administrator. Bill Finn, our celebrated composer and playwright, Tony Award-winner and recipient of the Williams Bicentennial Medal in 1998, was presented with the Kellogg Award. According to the College website, “The award is named for James C. Kellogg, a member of the Class of 1937 who made his mark in financial circles and became chairman of the New York Stock Exchange in 1956. 66 | Williams People | August 2009 It is presented each year to a Williams graduate with a similarly distinguished career.” Past recipients include such luminaries as lawyer Norman Redlich ’47, AOL founder Stephen M. Case ’80 and George M. Steinbrenner III ’52. (When Bill received the Bicentennial Medal, he joined the likes of James M. Burns ’39, John W. Chandler, Pete Gurney ’52 and Whitney S. Stoddard ’35.) Bill, we stand in awe of the power of your work, thank you for it and congratulate you again. Saturday night at MASS MoCA was a blast. (Let’s do it again in five years.) The evening started with an hourlong guided tour through galleries displaying works of Anselm Kiefer, Simon Starling and Sol LeWitt. The new LeWitt exhibition was painted and installed according to LeWitt’s design (and under his direction, though he died before it was completed) by students from Williams and Yale. Dave Lehman took great photographs of us roaming around the LeWitt panels that you can see at the “Williams ’74 Reunion” page on Facebook. After the gallery stroll, we retired to dinner, a tasty meal (not the usual fare of hamburgers and cookies) which was served in an elegant setting at the museum. Always the high point, Jeff Johnson’s quinquennial report of the latest Class Survey was over-the-top, belly-aching hilarious entertainment, and I can’t do it justice here. A record number of the class, 178, completed Jeff’s questionnaire. The results reported by Jeff include the “facts” that: 78 percent of us have been married for 20 years or more (bravo); we drink at triple the national average (no relationship); we are wealthier, but more of us have been fired; Meryl Streep is still our favorite actress; we are less likely than in past years to kill our pet for $1 million; and 96 percent of us are “still” straight. In regard to the last point, Jeff confessed that it had been his goal as an undergraduate to make 100 percent of us gay; however, as he critically surveyed the men in the room, he announced that he’d had a change of heart! Shifting gears here, I also report a quite poignant moment in the evening, when Jeff Thaler read an elegy (posted at our Facebook page) in memory of those 17 dear classmates of ours who have died. Jeff also recited their names in alphabetical order and the dates of their deaths, as follows: Vic Abnee, July 25, 2008; Mark Altemus, Jan. 16, 1999; Libby Bogel, Sept. 8, 1987; Bart Brown, Dec. 25, 1980; Alex Carroll, Dec. 20, 1994; Sarah Crampton, November 2001; Bill Gibson, May 6, 1981; Joe Goodman, Feb. 10, 1995; Peter Gundlach, July 4, 1987; Leigh Harris, August 1988; Randy Jensen, Nov. 4, 1979; Emmit Johnson, Jan. 25, 1995; Jim Jontz, April 14, 2007; Eric Monke, Nov. 18, 2003; Otis Sanders, Dec. 22, 2000; Frank Smith, Jan. 15, 2001; and Craig Virden, May 6, 2009. We were very grateful to Jeff for drawing our thoughts to these exceptional people while we were all together. We miss them. Each of us had different relationships with these classmates. When I consider the sheer talent of the group as a whole, I am inspired and also can’t help but consider: “What if?” A stunning loss, of course, came in Craig’s death weeks before the reunion. I have received a raft of e-mails fondly remembering Craig as a great man, brilliant, funny and easy to be with. Ronnie Kraus, Matty Levine, Margie French, Annie and Bill Suda, Bob Stern, Jeff Elliott, Phil DiMauro and Rich Levy were among the many of Craig’s friends from Williams who attended the memorial service at St. Peter’s Church in NYC. Jeff was kind to send me a copy of the order of the service; it began with a reading of Edna St. Vincent Millay’s poem “Dirge Without Music” by Craig’s children Emily and Sam. (“Quietly they go, the intelligent, the witty, the brave. I know. But I do not approve. And I am not resigned.”) We extend our deepest sympathies to Craig’s wife Nancy (Gallt) ’75, Emily and Sam. Many, many thanks to those who worked so well in putting the reunion together: Jeff Thaler, Margie French, Chuck Mitchell, Rich Levy, Jack Dill, Skip March (golf), and the tireless Wizard of Ephs Jeff Elliott. Thanks also to Tom Douglas, Chuck Mitchell and Iris Wolinsky, who labored as our head class agents and made sure that the reunion was a resounding success in terms of the financial support we continue to provide to Williams. The next group of class officers, who were elected at the reunion are: Fran Doran, president; Hiram Brett, VP; Margie French, treasurer; and yours truly for another term as secretary (isn’t anyone else interested in the job?). Fran was not at the reunion this year n 1 9 7 4 –7 5 and thus a peculiar tradition, of which we can be proud but should also be wary, continues. Jeff Thaler, who was a superb president for the last five years and who masterfully led the proceedings this year, was not present at the 30th reunion, when he was elected president. Therefore, if you think for one minute that you can avoid the 40th (June 12-15, 2014), think again: You may be elected our next president! Finally, Gates Blodgett could not make the reunion (nor could many others who, like Gates, have been reliable revelers over the years), but he sent me an unlocked secret to share with you: the words sung by Joe Cocker in “A Little Help From My Friends” at Woodstock, www.elwp.com/Joe%20Cocker. html. It’s too bad that we didn’t have this for the Music of Our College Years trivia contest. Thanks Gates! I hope that you all had a great summer. Please drop me a line. Your classmates always get a kick out of hearing from you. 1975 REUNION JUNE 10-13 Allan Ruchman 8 Dandy Drive Cos Cob, CT 06807 1975secretary@williams.edu Greetings to all! Michael Doochin is a man of many facets. In addition to being co-president of Interstate Packaging, an author, certified Healing Touch practitioner and ethnographic art collector, Mike has become an abstract painter in recent years. In a recent show in the Nashville area, his work was described as “traveling to that space of the subconscious for a journey of awareness, wholeness and healing.” I can’t even paint the wood trim work in my house! Peter Hanson is “reporting in alive. Goddamn kids are grown, flying around at various altitudes. We’re about to lose our third, Olivia, to the New York acting scene. All of them in New York, and Joan and I are in Boston, where I am rowing in entrepreneurial waters in coatings, wood pellets, wind, energy conservation using materials and devices. Also rowing still occasionally at the Union Boat Club.” From Naples, Fla., Mike Watkins reports that his daughter Rhys will be a first year student at Williams in the fall. Mike stays in touch with a gang of ’75 folks around the country and mentioned seeing an article by Ted Cox in The New York Times on immigration. “Pretty cool,” he says. Speaking of Ted: “My girls Celeste, 11, and Hanna, 10, are pressing me to go to reunion (to keep up with their friends). We will be there next year; please bring your kids. Don’t forget to visit old profs. Our recent visits with the Parks and Kurt Tauber were well worth it.” Paul Skudder moved from Schenectady, N.Y., to Falmouth, Mass. He says, “Despite some people’s speculation, it’s not a retirement. I am working in Falmouth, continuing my career in vascular surgery. Joanne and I are looking forward to continuing old friendships as well as meeting new friends in the area.” Our fearless fundraiser Anton Bestbreurtje wants “to thank the more than 250 classmates who were able to continue to support Williams in the face of the daunting economy. It has enabled the College to continue to fund need-blind admissions.” Claire Blum was in contact recently with Rich Zuflacht and says, “It is hard to think of myself and fellow classmates as definitely middle-aged and facing a big reunion next year!” Dave Clarke tells us: “I am retiring from my medical practice in Portland, Ore., to work full time teaching health care professionals and the public about physical illness caused by life stresses. There has been a lot of demand since my book came out in 2007. I miss the fall colors in Williamstown and decided to make my first trip back since graduation in October.” Also in life transition is Ellen Davis. She is relocating from Connecticut to Beaufort, S.C., and overseeing construction of their new home. “Our community with lots of outdoor activities and nature focus is located midway between Charleston and Savannah, has lots of friendly and engaged people from all over and sort of reminds me of Williams, come to think of it! If anyone is going to be in our vicinity in coming years 2010 on, once the house is completed, please let us know.” Ellen also proudly reports that her son Chris will be starting his legal career at Paul, Weiss in NYC after graduating from Penn Law. Kurt Hofstra says that he is “feeling mortal as a result of having a couple of stents put in the aging ticker. Son Kris is starting at Univ. of Vermont law this fall and plans to specialize in environmental law.” “I am still at the World Bank,” reports Olina Jonas, “now responsible for coordinating the response to avian and human pandemic influenzas. This means quite a bit of travel; the onset of H1N1 epidemic caught me in Laos, where flu in poultry is an ever-present threat. In April I supported my husband Geert’s project by sailing the last leg of a voyage from Haiti to Florida in a traditional Haitian fishing boat.” The February 2009 issue of Wired magazine carried a long article on the search by Dr. Hugh Reinhoff for the diagnosis for the serious health problems that have been at the center of his 5-year-old daughter’s life. The article says: “Families facing this kind of medical uncertainty are often paralyzed by their distress. But rather than give in to his anguish, Hugh Reinhoff made an extraordinary decision: He would dig into Beatrice’s genetic code and find the answer himself. A biotechnology consultant by day, Reinhoff has been an avid student of clinical genetics since he earned his medical degree nearly 30 years ago. Now he has used this expertise to transform his Bay Area home into a makeshift genetics lab. … He keeps hacking his way through her genome, mostly because it’s the only way he has of feeling some measure of control over an uncontrollable situation.” Virginia Drewry met with several other classmates and our hardworking class president Liz Haff to begin planning our 35th reunion next year. All who would like to help, get involved or give some input should be in touch with Liz: liz_haff@alumni. williams.edu. Patty Brown Glenn returned from an exciting safari in Tanzania. Son Eliot is a financial analyst at Christies Art Auction house in London and daughter Ginny ’07 is getting ready for graduate school in public policy. “I am busy with my art appraisal business, writing a bit on architecture and volunteering for a literacy organization that August 2009 | Williams People | 67 CL ASS NOTES teaches adults to read.” Patty also hopes to come back for our big reunion. From Chicago, Rob Pierce reports: “Since the Board of Trade has gone mostly electronic, we (Cathy and I) have changed gears to accommodate. We now are involved in a number of small ventures as principals. Among these are: a micro-algae project in Central America, a bio-blended fuel distribution firm in New York and an export-import financing firm here in Chicago. May sound impressive, but there is currently more work than money. At least the day is full!” Ben Strout from Sydney, Australia, gives us another work/life transition story. He “retired” as executive director of the Australia Council of the Arts, played some golf, did some gardening, did a one-week consultancy with the National Arts Council of South Africa and unretired to become general manager of the Sydney Writers Festival (www.swf.org.au). Ben feels he has fulfilled his golf retirement requirements for the moment. My post-Williams housemate Mike Pucillo was in Williamstown in April to assume the role of chairman of the board of the Gaudino Memorial Trust. Hope Coolidge also serves on the board. “We are planning a 35th anniversary get-together of those who were influenced by Professor Gaudino in the spring of 2010. Classmates interested can contact me (mpucillo@ bermandevalario.com) or just watch for announcements. The current Gaudino Scholar, Ed Burger, has done a fantastic job, and I look forward to working with him and other board members.” We hear from John Cordes: “I have just opened a solo child and adolescent psychiatry practice in West Hartford, Conn. after completing my training at the Yale Child Study Center in 2005 and working for three years at the Institute of Living in Hartford. It’s taken me all these years to get the courage to be my own boss! On a sad note, my ex-wife passed away in April due to metastatic breast cancer, and my two sons (Dave, age 23, and Will, age 18) and I are struggling to believe that this actually happened. I’m doing my best to support them and to honor my own complicated grief.” John, our condolences to 68 | Williams People | August 2009 you and your sons. The always-caffeinated Dean Cycon writes: “What a busy spring! … I have been getting in touch with Williams classmates through Facebook and beyond having the time of my life. Dean’s Beans continues to grow during this economic trouble, as people seem to want to buy things that represent real values not just marketing hype (great taste and reasonable prices help, too!). Some of our Ethiopian coffee was on the captured Maersk Alabama but is on its way here after the ship was freed. More pirates in my life!” Continuing the retirement theme, Chuck Chockel reports on his, including the “dream house” in Tucson, Ariz. “We spent our first winter in Tuscon this year, and the daily high ranged from 68 to 88 degrees. The big decision of each day was what mix of swimming, biking, running and golf to mix in with checking on the house construction and meeting with builders, contractors and architects.” Fred Dittman tells me how lousy the money management business has been. On the brighter side, he was cast in the role of the sergeant of police in Gilbert and Sullivan’s Pirates of Penzance. This production will be in the Philadelphia area at Westchester Univ. Nov. 18-21. Fred has been quite active as member of the alumni board at Episcopal Academy, helping facilitate their move to a new campus for the upper school. From the Trinity Pawling School, Ned Reade reflects on the passage of time: “Memories of some boys when they were ninth graders sometimes flood my mind’s eye as they grow older and head off to college four years later. I now have taught several sons of students, whom I taught in my first year or two after Williams!” In closing, we extend our condolences to Nancy Gault and her family on the sudden passing in early May of her husband Craig Virden ’74. As expressed by Alicia Kershaw, “Craig was a brilliant, literate man” who will be sorely missed. Thank you all for your help and be well. Think about coming to our 35th reunion next June. 1976 Jane Ray Kell 4 Springlake Place NW Atlanta, GA 30318 Laurie Taylor 435 Grove St. Upper Montclair, NJ 07043 1976secretary@williams.edu Greetings, classmates. I hope this issue finds you all well and enjoying the weather. When I thought about writing this issue of the class news I knew that I would be laid up at home, and I was hoping that I would have tons of e-mails to read and report on. I didn’t get as many as I was hoping for, but I was so happy to receive the ones I did get. How many of you remember Nico Ponsen? Ted Cox received an update that he passed on to Jane. Nico is happily married to Mieke. He has three boys, 20, 23 and 26. One is still living at home while he is in med school, the eldest is working at a school, and the middle gent is a courier for car parts. Nico is working at Triodos Bank as the legal and compliance officer. He has been there for almost three years. Before Triodos he worked at the Dutch Financial Markets Authority (similar to the SEC) and before then at the Dutch Central Bank. He has been living in Amersfoort since January; previously he lived in Harlem but had to move since work was too far away (four hours train and bike each day). Amersfoort is pretty much in the center of Holland. His house dates back to 1540. From 1540-1900 it was part of the town prison. Brick walls a yard thick. He wishes he had it when the boys were growing up. The last time he was at Williams was in 2007 when he was in the U.S. for a vacation. He promises to keep the 2011 reunion in mind; he thinks it would be fun and maybe weird to see how many people would show up that he still knows As for Ted, he has an immigration law practice in New York with six associates. They focus on mostly Chinese asylum cases, appeals and detained aliens. He says that it is all fun, but long hours and stressful, so he has taken up the guitar and started singing lessons, which he thinks is a sure sign of a midlife crisis and early dementia. He is also busy with Girl Scouts with his daughters Celeste, 11, and Hanna, 9. They recently visited n 1 9 7 5 –7 7 the Tenement Museum at 97 Orchard St., which features a 1916 period dressed actress with a heavy Latino accent talking about life then. He hopes to see everyone at our next reunion. Jane also heard from Robbie Palmer Hertneky, who received a Doctor of Philosophy from Antioch University’s Leadership and Change Program. The topic of her dissertation is “The Leadership Self-identity of Women College Presidents.” Robbie is a core faculty member in the Department of Organization and Management at Antioch University New England in Keene, N.H., and she lives in Hancock, N.H., with her husband Paul. Mary Raz said that one of her last duties as president of the Northern California Williams regional alumni association was to introduce Morty Schapiro to a full house of San Francisco Bay area alumni at the Contemporary Jewish Museum. She was able to catch up with Paula Moore Tabor, Anna Waring ’78, Cora Yang ’80 and Leila Jere ’91. The candle-lit reception hall was lovely at the new museum, designed by Daniel Libeskind. The museum building has skewed blue-steel structures jutting out of a landmark 20th-century power plant, and it made a beautiful setting for saying goodbye to Morty. She passed the baton to Shannon Walsh ’03, who is proving to be a great new president. Her son Jonathan (Pomona College ’08) will be attending Harvard Graduate School of Design this fall after working this past year in LA as an architectural assistant for Perkins+Will, a design firm specializing in commercial building architecture, interior design and sustainable building design. Her daughter Danielle is starting her junior year as an economics major at UC-Santa Barbara. Mary works at Cengage Learning and has recently moved into a great loft in a converted warehouse off the Embarcadero in San Francisco. It was such a pleasure to hear from Greg Etter again. He left Dubai, UAE, last October when the crash put a halt to his company’s efforts in neighboring Oman. He was home in Boston for a short stretch to help with the Obama campaign but is now in Kuwait. He travels often around the Middle East and hopes to see Damascus and Isfahan soon if things stay calm. But he does enjoy working in the Middle East, learning a new language, meeting people who are graciously receptive and do not fit the stereotype that many Americans have of the region’s cultures. It is an especially critical and opportune moment, with the Obama administration offering a possibility to mend scars left in the region. So besides being an architect looking for new models of design, he is also an amateur ambassador of common goodwill. Ramsey “Kippie” Chew let me know that he is still practicing dentistry in Philadelphia and that his son is well and will be a junior at Howard University in the fall. Jeanne Gerulskis was involved with the opening of the McAuliffe-Shepard Discovery Center on March 6. It is a transformation of the original 10,890-square-foot Christa McAuliffe Planetarium into a 45,223-square-foot air and space museum for New England, dedicated to New Hampshire’s own Alan B. Shepard (first American in space) and Christa McAuliffe (NASA’s Teacher-in-Space). She helped build a beautiful new museum, installed Earth and space science exhibits funded by NASA, and is in the process of fundraising for astronomy and aviation exhibits. There was a wonderful luncheon before the opening ceremonies in which her Williams roomie Carol Towson and her husband Ed Siegel participated, as well as Christa McAuliffe’s mom, sister, nephew and friends, and 27 members of Alan Shepard’s family from all over the Northeast. She was so pleased to have Carol and Ed be a part of what was the biggest event of her professional life so far. Next to her son, they were definitely her favorite people at the opening! Her other roomies Anna Crane Ewing and Betsy Means couldn’t make it but sent best wishes. Betsy and her husband Steve Gardner ’75 did play a role in the museum, as they put Jeanne up in NYC while she was at the Christies’ 40 Years of Star Trek auction in October 2006. On display in the museum are the items she scored from that trip—which were put out right on time for the opening of the new Star Trek movie (which, incidentally, Jeanne thinks is GREAT!). Also on display is shampoo, a comb and brush used by Astronaut Pam Melroy during a space shuttle flight—as you know, she and Doug Hollett are married and living in Texas, where I’m sure they use shampoo and brushes that don’t come with Velcro attached! In the midst of the opening, while on stage with her governor, senator, and the chair of the museum board, her son Jaki one-upped her while sitting in the audience—he got accepted into Americorps with a position in his place of birth, Ketchikan, Alaska. He’s working with a nonprofit that trains people throughout Southeast Alaska in oil spill response—his job is to increase the amount of responders in small communities throughout the Alexander Archipelago, where oil spills can wreak havoc. A final note from Debbie Nelson. She wants everyone to know that our annual class tailgate has already been scheduled for Oct. 10 at 1 p.m. for the Bates game. If you plan on attending and can let her know she will try to reserve a block of rooms for those who’d like to come back. We’ve had good attendance the last few years, but the more the merrier for sure! Well, that’s all for now but please keep in touch. You can contact Jane or I via the e-mail address at the top of this column, or if you are on Facebook you can find us there too. No matter how you find us, we are always glad to hear from you. 1977 Daiva (Garbus) Gasperetti 401 East 74th St. #5C New York, NY 10021 1977secretary@williams.edu Dear classmates, Although it will be August when you read these notes, I’m editing them on a balmy May evening, sitting by an open window and enjoying the spring weather that has finally graced NYC. Last evening, I attended a reception honoring Morty Schapiro at the University Club in Manhattan. Scott Davis and Chet Palmieri were there, as was my hometown friend Jay Sullivan ’76 and some 200 assorted alumni, parents and guests. Morty remarked about his years at Williams but spent most of his time at the podium responding to questions and comments from the audience. As I listened, I was filled with pride to be a member of this special community. So, on that note, on with the class news. Sara (Archibald) Lund is thrilled that her 26-year-old son, Capt. August 2009 | Williams People | 69 CL ASS NOTES Nathan Lund, returned home from Afghanistan, where he was serving as a dentist with the Army Special Forces. Second son, Second Lt. Chris Lund, is also in the Army dental program and is in dental school at the U of MN. Sara and her husband Rob live in Duluth, Minn., where daughter Caroline attends the College of St. Scholastica and daughter Marian is in high school. Sara serves as a chaplain in longterm care, and Rob is a dermatologic surgeon. After 20 years as head of the Division of Colon and Rectal Surgery at George Washington University in DC, Bruce Orkin accepted a position as chief of colon and rectal surgery at Tufts Medical Center. He is overseeing “a new program with a major academic focus.” Bruce and wife Ethel moved to a loft apartment in downtown Boston and hope to see more of their middle son Daniel, who will be a senior at Brandeis this year. Much as Bruce tried to get their youngest child David interested in Williams, he chose early decision at Vassar. Their eldest, Roxanne, lives in NYC, where she works for Barclay’s. Now that they’re back in Massachusetts, Bruce looks forward to rekindling some of his Williams friendships. Last winter, Simon Watson gave a presentation on emerging artists at the Williams Club in NY. The event was attended by current art students as well as art-loving members of various Williams classes. George Schutzer has been working at Patton Boggs LLP law firm for the last 29 years, where he co-chairs the Tax and Wealth Preservation Practice. However, he laments, “With two children in independent schools, I have done no wealth preservation.” Daughter Kendall celebrated her bat mitzvah in April. Dennis O’Shea and Jeff Boscamp joined in the celebration, as did George’s “Williams in-laws” Stu and Mimi Ginsberg, cousin Sarah ’11, who flew from a Williams crew event, and Shelley Leibowitz ’82. Wife Ellen organized a fantastic party to mark the occasion. On April 21 the Washington Labor & Employment Wire announced that President Barack Obama intends to nominate William E. Spriggs as assistant secretary for policy, Department of Labor. This organization provides advice and assistance to the Department of Labor regarding policy development, 70 | Williams People | August 2009 program evaluation and implementation, budget and performance analysis, and legislation. Currently, William is a professor at Howard University and chair of the Department of Economics. He also served the administration during President Obama’s transition to the White House. During the Clinton administration, William led the staff of the National Commission for Employment Policy and served as a senior economist for the Democratic staff of the Joint Economic Committee of the U.S. Congress. At 5 feet 4 inches “on a good day,” Anu Vuorikoski is the “shrimp” of the family, as her stepkids tower over her “at 6 feet 3 inches and growing and 5 feet 11 inches and maybe not growing.” She is still teaching at SJSU one day a week and getting lots of exercise and trying to plan for life sans kids. As the children get their driver’s licenses, Anu finds the change “dramatic after having been in the kid transport business for six years.” She is mulling the idea of buying a franchise but is holding out for the right thing. She is well equipped to do so, as “running the numbers” is her forte. In class, she enjoys demonstrating that “if it seems too good to be true, it most likely is!” I’m always thrilled when classmates send in a note for the very first time, so Jeff Boscamp, thank you! Jeff is chief of the Sanzari Children’s Hospital at Hackensack University Medical Center, and his wife Yuki is a nationally known pediatric rheumatologist. They sold their house in suburban NJ and are moving back to Manhattan. Son Nick embarks on his junior year at Penn and loves the urban setting. Daughter Emi, now a high school senior, toured Williams last spring, and she and Yuki met Dennis O’Shea for lunch. Jeff and Yuki are very excited about this new phase in their lives, with both kids off to college. Andy Sisson writes that he and wife Karen have had great careers in the Foreign Service, most recently in Kenya, where he was the USAID regional director for East Africa and she was the State Department representative to the UN. They’re now back in DC, where Andy teaches at the National War College. Karen retired and enjoys a wide range of volunteering, including working on the Obama campaign and observing the election in Azerbaijan. This summer they planned to move to Almaty, Kazakhstan, where Andy will head USAID’s regional office for Central Asia. St. David’s Upper School Head Sara Peavy e-mailed Daiva Gasperetti to ask how her son Joe (a St. David’s graduate) had fared in the college search. Happily, Joe had some wonderful choices and is off to Stanford in the fall. Joel Scheiman’s daughter Anne was accepted to grad school and will be getting her master’s in education at Lewis & Clark. Alan and Lynn (Smyers) Eusden are still in Taipei, Taiwan, and plan to stay for at least the next year. They’re enjoying “the big city life, sub-tropical weather and fun people.” Alan has been president of Corning Display Technologies Taiwan for twoand-a-half years. This year he is also serving as the chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in Taipei. Lynn is studying some Mandarin, volunteering at Taipei American School and mostly playing tennis and having a good time! Their youngest, Greg, graduates from TAS this year and will be a freshman at Williams in the fall. Daughter Caitlin ’10 was a JA at Williams last year; son Will ’08 is working for the Exeter Group in Cambridge, Mass. (This is terrific—an Eph family through and through!) Like many of us, Lynn’s not sure she’s looking forward to the empty nest but all in all can’t complain. Jeff Knisely is still teaching, still racing the bicycles (albeit with a mind more willing than a body, he says) and still looking forward to his Julys in southern France. Contact Jeff if you plan to be in Nice next year so you can dine or ride together! In August, wife Joann (Iona ’80) and Jeff will be going to Colorado or California (must be great to be a teacher) and hope to entertain some friends from Holland at some point as well. Jane Lester works as a pediatrician at a clinic outside Seattle, where a partner in her practice experienced one of the first confirmed cases of “swine flu” in Washington State. That made for “a very crazy few weeks with much patient and parent anxiety, many masks and gowns and gloves, tracking down and swabbing and treating everyone that had been at the clinic the day of exposure.” Thankfully, her partner has recovered n 1977 well. In late June, Jane took a weeklong medical trip to a tiny mountain village in El Salvador to participate in a program run by the pediatric residents at Seattle Children’s. Jane studied medical Spanish for two quarters at the UW but claims “my brain is old.” So daughter Lisa got to come along as an interpreter, as she is proficient in Spanish, has completed all her pre-med classes and now is a junior at the University of Washington. She’s a Spanish and international studies major and in July was to leave for a year of study in Buenos Aires. Younger daughter Nina is a freshman in high school and splits her time between her two passions: Ultimate Frisbee and 4H. She shows chickens and rabbits, which live on their 12th-of-an-acre lot, at the state fair every summer. She’s lobbying for miniature goats, which were recently permitted by the city of Seattle. “We’re stalling till she goes to college,” writes Jane. This year Nina is showing sheep, which belong to her 4H leader. Although she hadn’t seen Priscilla Brewer in 32 years, Sue (Waller) Hipple remembered her vividly: “I ate with her in the cafeteria, but she preferred the snack bar. She was a bit of a wisecracker with a dry sense of humor. She was Tex in a version of Chattanooga Choo Choo with myself and Mary Bergquist. As such she parted her two shrimpy companions with her two large hands [and] said, ‘Step aside partner, it’s my day.’” During the summer of ’77, Priscilla worked at Hancock Shaker Village and lived with Sue and Tom (Hipple). Sue laughed to hear that Priscilla was writing about the social significance of cook stoves, as Sue herself was using one at the time. “She remains in my memory, a quirky smile, one hand pushing up her glasses, and young, young, young. Good bye Priscilla.” In the middle of a perfect storm of recession and technological change, R.B. Wilson is busy trying to “reinvent” his little company and would love to talk to others in publishing and information businesses. Alissa Ballot asked me to point out that a number of members of the class now are on Facebook. In April, Ed Bacher got together in Lexington for dinner with some old XC and track runners: Ken Leinbach, Bert Saul ’76, Bob Clifford ’76 and Joe Kolb ’78. Ed claims they’ve all slowed down a lot, “except for Ken, who seems to still be running faster than most 20-year-olds.” Ed also visited Williamstown last spring with oldest daughter, Annie. They grabbed a sandwich at the deli on Spring Street and of course stopped by the Paresky Center for a dessert of grilled honey buns. They also visited with physics professor Kevin Jones, who filled them in on the tutorial program (he taught quantum mechanics as a tutorial last semester) and on his research, “which deals with confining very cold atoms between crossed laser beams. Annie was impressed that he could explain this to a junior who has not yet taken physics.” Ed also “ran over Stone Hill and back through the pasture behind the Clark for probably the first time in at least 25 years. Still as beautiful as ever, with the addition of nice gates so us old folks don’t have to jump over or crawl through the barbed-wire fences like in the old days.” “With sadness but also a bit of delight,” Patty Thomsson is reaching the end of her year as president of the Junior League of Greater Princeton. Under her watch, the league instituted a grant-writing program, which, given the uncertainty of event income in this economic downturn, was a brilliant move. Patty is content to leave the organization in sound financial shape and is proud of the community service work the JLGP does in its focus area of early childhood literacy. She plans to stay active in the volunteer/nonprofit world in Greater Princeton, as evidenced by her continued service to the Cranbury Public Library Board and Library Foundation. She is also thinking ahead to our 35th reunion. Patty’s husband David’s wood-veneer importing business has stayed the course during this awful recession. He continues to travel to Europe and Africa in search of sustainable exotic hardwoods and is optimistic business will pick up later this year. They attended his 30th college reunion at Dartmouth in June. Daughter Katie turned 9 on May 2 and is an enthusiastic and relatively decent swimmer who has set her sights on the Junior Olympics (age 10 and under) in Baltimore over the summer. Bruce Wilkinson’s wife Amy quit her job at the Bank of NY Mellon and moved to the global relief charity Americares. She is doing development work for them, and it seems her network of high net-worth individuals provides value. Son David graduated from Wesleyan and is now thinking about teaching as a way to put his math/econ major to work. Notable achievements include Dave’s trip to Minneapolis for the Div. III diving championships in March. Daughter Ariana is a bio major with one year to go at Elon. She took the MCATs and is doing research over the summer to prepare for med school. As for Bruce, spring took him back to the soccer fields, where he referees teen and high school games, at which he “frequently learns new curses and slang.” He enjoyed a fun ski season with a week in Alta and Solitude and a week in Aspen and stayed with friends in both places. Reed Zars passed on an interesting New Yorker article that contained a historical link to himself and his sister Belle ’79. The piece describes life in Hayden and Elkhead, Colo., circa 1916, where their grandfather, Farrington Carpenter, lived and contributed to the local community. There’s also a love story or two wrapped in there, so check out the April 20 issue for details! Dan Fox wrote, “By the time you read this I will be working for a very nice Minnesota plastics company called RTP.” He will continue to live in Ohio just a few hundred yards from Hamilton Throckmorton and Mark Chaffee. Dan and wife Mary Beth are about to become empty nesters. Their two oldest are in college, and their youngest, who just graduated high school, will participate in CityYear in Miami, Fla. So here’s the latest from Mark Chaffee: Eldest son Macklin ’09 was having a phenomenal track season, which culminated in a runner-up spot in the 1,500m run at NCAA Nationals. He carried over his spring ’08 track exploits into the fall crosscountry season, where he was the number-three Williams harrier on an amazing team that finished third in the NCAA National Cross-Country Championships. He missed qualifying as an All American by a mere second. (Ouch!) Mack was captain of the Williams track team and led the indoor team to an exciting upset win over MIT at the New England Indoor Championships last winter. Williams’ track dominance continued into the spring outdoor season with wins August 2009 | Williams People | 71 CL ASS NOTES of NESCAC and NE Div. III Championships. Macklin once again qualified for indoor and outdoor NCAA Nationals and as of this writing stood to pick up his sixth All-American award. Together with his four school records, Mack’s list of accomplishments places him among the top three track and field athletes in Williams College history. Postgraduation, Mack is considering a job offer as a website developer at a company in Portland, Maine. The rest of the family progeny (five kids) are doing well: Quinn, #2, will be a senior at Miami U., Griff, #3, will start sophomore year at RIT, while the last two, Rorie and Cathal, are still in high school. As for Mark, he’s happy to remain employed, although his company, Rockwell Automation, is feeling the recession. He’s enjoying his multisport training routine and feels as fit as he’s been since college. Wife Monie (Dartmouth ’81) has been very busy making extra college tuition money through her tutoring service. They celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary in July while vacationing at Moosehead Lake, Maine. Ciao for now. Remember to write! 1978 Jeff “J” DeLisle 538 Bloomingrove Drive Rensselaer, NY 12144 1978secretary@williams.edu It is high summer, and many of our classmates have the jones to travel, some coming and some going. And what a difference a couple of months make in the PV: bright sunlight, small city! It is just past Reunion Weekend as I write this, and it’s gorgeous. This will no doubt please Don Wehrs, who expected to return to Williams this summer for the first time since graduation. His daughter Sylvia, 15, was attending the Tanglewood Youth Orchestra summer program as a violinist, so after picking her up in Lenox he and his wife Lorna planned to show Sylvia and William, 11, the College. Don was promoted to professor of English at Auburn University. In 2008 he had two books of literary criticism, one on colonial-era African narratives and another on West African and Maghreb Islamic Francophone postcolonial fiction. Don also co-edited a collection of essays, Levinas and 19th-century Literature, due out this summer. 72 | Williams People | August 2009 Brian Harrison attended the Williams vs. Amherst baseball game, which was the sesquicentennial of the first intercollegiate baseball contest, played in Pittsfield, site of the 1859 tilt. There he ran into Lydia and Mario Chiapetti. Unlike in 1859, the good guys prevailed. An uplifting coming-of-age story (age 50, that is) comes a tad belatedly from Hans Giesecke, who wrote about sublime outdoor adventures with Wally Chambers. The two get together every two or three years for the kind of activities that would make Teddy Roosevelt puke. In summer 2006, Wally and Hans rode bikes 1,000 kilometers along the Danube River Bicycle Trail from the source of the river in Germany’s Black Forest to Vienna, Austria. This past winter they realized a longstanding dream of participating in the American Birkebeiner Cross Country Ski marathon in Northern Wisconsin. Wally skied the entire 54-kilometer classic race, and Hans skied the half-version. Hans says, “These irregular get-togethers keep us motivated and interested in staying in shape even as we turn into old relics. … They are great ways to celebrate the friendship that we forged at Williams.” Wally was unavailable for comment, as he was on his way to climb Mount McKinley (aka Denali). The romanticized image of a wide receiver, which was Herb McCormick’s position as an undergrad, is of speed. We picture breaking away from the pack out into open space, covering the entire field in an instant, a lightning threat to score on each play. Yet the receiver’s sporting life is brutal and dangerous, too: maneuvering in close spaces, going across the middle, subjecting oneself to brutal hits coming from any direction without warning, focusing on catching the high velocity pass all the while. In reality, the wide receiver is rarely unfettered. Rather, he is disciplined and observant, running precise routes but alert and flexible enough to improvise a new maneuver when conditions dictate. Such split second instinct makes the difference between a touchdown and disastrous injury. But I am getting ahead of myself. Tad Seder ’79 wrote of the mother of all road trips. After taking in three Red Sox games with Tad and Mary Burton Nelp ’79, Herb McCormick signed in as a swabbie by the Good Ship Ocean Watch, whose four sailors are taking a group of feckless scientists and teachers on an expedition to investigate and document the fragility of the shorelines of the “islands” of North and South America. That is to say, they are sailing around two continents, 24,000 nautical miles, in 13 months. I guess this is where Coach Farley’s two a days pay off. If Herb and his buddies can avoid the blitzing icebergs of the Northwest Passage, the brave crew, eschewing the Panama Canal, will do a go pattern to the tip of South America, the hard way, through the Strait of Magellan, on up the west coast of South America, then return to Seattle. All of this in a 64-foot sailboat. You can follow their progress at www. aroundtheamericas.org. Kate Stone Lombardi’s 30th reunion speech on the approaching demise of newspapers proved regrettably prescient, as the regional sections of The New York Times, for which she primarily wrote, closed down in May. However, she signed a contract with Penguin to write a nonfiction book that takes a contemporary look at the motherson relationship. Kate would love to hear from moms or sons who have an interest in exploring this topic. First-time contributor Pamela Jennings wrote of a career change that might be described at the very least as adventurous. After graduation, Pam pursued a PhD in clinical psychology then braved the rigors of analytic training to become an honest-toGod psychoanalyst. She has been heavily involved in forensic work as well as having a private practice. Having finally completed all of her training, endured the long hours of apprenticeship and paid off all the loans, she chucked it all in 1994 for a chance as a career as an artist. The affliction has gradually taken over more and more of her time. Her interest in the Rorshach test has inspired her to do several paintings based upon her emotional reactions and evocations to ink blots, which she then works up into surreal depictions. Check them out, along with Dan Perkins’ interview of her, at www.pamjennings.com. Pam is relocating from DC to Baltimore to pursue a baccalaureate in fine arts at the Maryland Institute of Contemporary Art. From her DC base, Pam has run into Dan Perkins, Jackie Higgs n 1 9 7 7 –7 8 Caldwell, Debbie Foy, Mario Chiapetti, Barbara and Chuckles Sanders, Paula Tabor and Mike Reed. Pam participated in a Williams Black Alumni Network discussion group on the election. “Met a lot of young whipper snappers. They put me in my place a few times for having outdated ideas about race.” We can be thankful that John Hammel is about to begin his “encore career” as a psychiatrist. John finished his psychiatry residency at UVM/Fletcher Allen last year and took a fellowship in addiction psychiatry at Dartmouth-Hitchcock, which he completed in June. He accepted an impressive academic position from Dartmouth Medical School, directing the addiction fellowship program at the VA Hospital, running the treatment program as well as teaching students, residents and fellows. The commute from north-central Vermont is lengthy but made interesting by the dangerous curves that John and his Honda Nighthawk 750 crotch rocket take at high speed. John’s children all are doing well. His oldest, Leigh, is on a research vessel in the South Pacific for her junior “Stanford at Sea” semester. Emily is graduating from the ski academy she attends, planning on taking a postgraduate year to hone her ski racing skills before entering Middlebury in the fall of ’10, and his youngest daughter, Moira, is “scaring the hell” out of John and his wife Joyce “as she tries, badly, to learn how to drive.” First-time contributor Rob Carter reports that after Williams he attended Harvard Medical School, then “did the academic shuffle” before landing in Birmingham, Ala., 14 years ago. He was director of the Division of Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology at UAB until last October, when he accepted the position of deputy director of the National Institute of Arthritis, Musculoskeletal and Skin Disease at the National Institutes of Health. He and his wife bought a house in Georgetown and now have daughters at Bowdoin College, St. Paul’s School and Episcopal High School. Anne Youngling reported with a class notes deadline “buzzer beater” of the birth of her son Max Gustav Seufert-Youngling at 8 pounds, 10 ounces, on June 3. With “Gus-Gus” on the way, Anne and long time partner Renee made it official in what Anne terms a “shotgun wedding” on Feb. 14. They have established their domicile in Milford, Conn. Anne sent me a picture of her son. Granted, it’s early, but he has the build of a power forward. Jim Little’s daughter Sarah had quite a scare. After completing her semester’s studies at Davidson, she went on a trip to Africa, working in the local hospitals during the week and going on safaris on the weekends. Then she was hospitalized with a pulmonary embolism! How do you imagine you’d feel to have your daughter’s anticoagulant medications managed by text messaging from Nairobi, Kenya? Oldest daughter Amy is now attending medical school at UT Southwestern. Having achieved success at the T-ball level, Jim and a fellow church member were offered and accepted the managerial responsibilities for a team of 9-year-olds, where he believes his baseball skills might be “maxed out.” Not so in tennis, though, is the general counsel and go-to exec with one of the nation’s hottest ‘green’ companies—A123 Systems, which makes all kinds of batteries. Dean Gianakos continues to provide some of the ‘old fashioned’ medical services on the planet, mixing emotional support and large orders of French fries in his holistic approach to medicine. Steven Rothstein is knocking it out of the park as the president of the world’s largest organization devoted to caring for the blind and deaf blind—Perkins. He recently hosted a gala that raised $1.2 million, in excess of last year’s high-water mark. In typical Steven Rothstein fashion, he gave all the credit to everyone else.” In news from the Third World, the legendary outdoorsman, WOC president, ex-class secretary and man who taught me that Purple Klister was not a personalcare item—yes, the incomparable Henry Wittemore—checked in after too long a spell. EPHCOMPLISHMENT In July Hans C. Giesecke ’78 was named 10th president of Anatolia College in Thessaloniki, Greece. The college was founded in the Ottoman Empire by Boston Congregationalist missionaries in 1886. Charles Tracy, Williams Class of 1864, was Anatolia’s first president. where the Dirty Texan still plays tough in the 100-degree heat. Susan Beebe’s art business is branching off into the mass market with Blossom the Fairy, a paper doll book based upon her paper doll originals. See www. enchantedislandpaperdolls.com. Hey, can we have a round of applause for good works? Several of our classmates, none of whom are willing to take credit, are heavily involved in the organization Aim High, www. aimhigh.org. This outfit provides tuition-free summer programs to the San Francisco Bay area’s underserved communities. Selfeffacing David Simpson credits Glenn Shannon’s leadership in fundraising efforts that exceeded last year’s, in spite of the tough economic times, to the tune of $2 million. David describes his role as “riding [Glenn’s] coattails.” Glenn points out that David and fellow founding board member Miranda Heller talked him into joining when he relocated to San Fran a few years ago. David spares no praise for other classmates. “Eric Pyenson Hank and Darcy still live in but are scarcely confined to Readfield, Maine, a town of about 2,500 surrounded by lakes and rolling hills, just west of Augusta. They consider themselves fortunate these past 25 years to have been able to live and raise their children Katie and Sam in a small, supportive rural community and also to have interesting travel opportunities. Darcy has been involved in classroom teaching, environmental education and recently at the local greenhouse (it’s “that” time of year). Katie is 21 and in her junior year at UVM. She spent a semester in Paris, where she pursued study in anthropology, linguistics and French, a language in which she is now fluent. At 18, Sam appears to be omnivorous and bit of a prodigy. He is at the top of his local high school class, runs cross-country, skis on the Nordic team (Maine’s Class B champs this year) and plays tennis. He and Hank have done some quaint father and son projects together, well beyond the usual boat building, August 2009 | Williams People | 73 CL ASS NOTES like constructing a theremin (a musical instrument that plays notes by detecting the electrical fields emanating from the player, who moves his arms before the machine) and a Vandegraaf generator (the static electricity ball that makes your hair stand out straight). They even built a trebuchet, which is a medieval catapult used in castle sieges and the like. Sam will attend MIT next year, at which point Henry and Darcy will face the empty nest. Henry works for Four Winds Capital Management, a UK-based company that is building a global portfolio of timber and timber-related assets. Just as the demands of being an undergrad took Henry to Smith, Mount Holyoke and Skidmore, the demands of his job have taken him to Nicaragua (Henry describes the poverty there as “crushing”), Costa Rica, Serbia, Romania, Estonia and Latvia. He is the company’s lead in Eastern Europe and finds it fascinating. In Serbia they are building a plant to manufacture wood pellets using residuals from sawmills that are otherwise thrown in the rivers. (I am picturing him with a cross-cut saw and an adze, but you guys contract that stuff out, right Henry?) Ever the sage, Hank concludes, “Forests are proving to be good investments in these terrible economic times: Trees still grow whether there are bulls or bears in the understory!” Perhaps some of you were amused by my account last time of heretofore unknown classmate Fred Strong though were skeptical of his ancient Williams connections or perhaps didn’t believe he even existed. Well, Fred checked in from north of the border with news of a brand-new reference volume, the Williams Biographical Annals by Calvin Durfee (1871). The volume not only confirms our earlier claim of Fred having two relatives who attended Williams in the 18th century but identifies no less than 15 to 20 of his family who attended Williams. The book even supports a Strong Clan connection with Mark Hopkins, “a black sheep by our (Strong) standards.” Further, he offers this resource for any of us “who prefer your relatives safely underground.” You can Google this if you don’t believe me. If that still doesn’t convince you, Fred promises to attend our 2013 reunion in the flesh, “God and Mayan calendars willing.” Fred, who is a “defector” from 74 | Williams People | August 2009 Richard Gray ’48 and his daughter Nancy Gray ’78, last year, outside Hubbell House at their 60th and 30th reunions, respectively. the Class of 1979, described its reunion as “safe, sensible and well dressed. But they missed those furniture-tossing freshman bonding sessions.” Mary Fish Arango reports that she and her family were not endangered by the wildfires in Santa Barbara, but the night skies filled with shooting flames were stunning and humbling. Mary’s photos of horses and dogs have been instrumental in four books in two years, and she often has a project in the works collaborating with an author. Son Bailey, a sophomore at Whitman College, was nominated for a Truman Scholarship, is an RA and plans to spend a semester in New Zealand next spring. Daughter Grayson finished high school early and completed her first year of college at Santa Barbara City College. She’ll start exploring the transfer process next spring. Mary’s husband Peter is organizing a possible yearlong sabbatical from teaching in 2010; he hopes to travel, write stories and refine his storytelling at national events. Mary is competing in agility with her dogs and visiting patients at the local hospital, and three Border Collies are almost constantly trotting alongside on bicycle rides. Mary’s website is www.maryfisharangophotography.com. I can’t resist sharing this thought: Can you imagine what John Rainey could have done with a trebuchet? Sally Fri moved to North Carolina and is preparing to move her infirm mother there. In spite of falling in love with the state’s natural beauty, Sally is having difficulty fitting in, as the locals don’t understand why she is not enthusiastic about basketball—apparently she is still trying to learn to distinguish between the round orange and the oblong brown varieties of balls. In November, Sally plans to visit Bhutan to celebrate her friend’s 60th birthday and for a three-week stroll “in the lower altitude Himalayas,” where the wise king is more concerned about the GNH (gross national happiness) than the GDP. In case you’re keeping score, and Sally is, Bhutan is the number-one happiest place in Asia. Well, all of this travel news has me itching a bit, and I reckon I got to light out for the territory too. 1979 Barbara H. Sanders 3 StratfordRoad White Plains, NY 10603 1979secretary@williams.edu Submitted by outgoing secretary Kathleen Ruane: Dear classmates, It has been a very fast five years since I became secretary at the 25th reunion. I have enjoyed hearing from you over the years and want to express my sincerest appreciation to all who have shared their news, both personal and professional, with us. I am very sorry to begin these notes with sad news. Dave Clement passed away on June 12, just as our reunion was getting under way. Dave lived in Parker, Colo., with his wife of 23 years Gina and their three children, Elise, Aja and Drew. His sister Barb wrote that while Dave’s n 1 9 7 8 –7 9 cancer was aggressive, “it did not diminish his spirit. He was positive, inspiring, funny and happy (even singing two days before he died) right to the end. He asked me the day before he died to celebrate his life, not to feel bad for him, he had accepted the plan.” Subsequently, two celebrations of Dave’s life were held, one in Colorado on June 17 and one in Massachusetts on June 24. Dave was a master gardener who especially loved trees. To honor Dave, classmates may make a donation in his memory to Colorado Tree Coalition, P.O. Box 270968, Fort Collins, Colo. 80527-0968. Or please plant a tree! The reunion: We were very fortunate to have a strong turnout. Over the course of the weekend 125 Class of ’79ers traveled to Williamstown to catch up with friends. Included in that number were 16 who had never been to a reunion—Leslie Christoph, Dorea Ferris, Brenda Flock, Dwayne Freeman, Martha Hennig, Rob Hiltzik, Joe Juster, Andrew Kane, Bob Kanell, John Law, Nancy Obara, Dev Palmer, Glenn Rogers, John Simon, Hyla Skudder and Victor Zerbino. Thank you to all who worked on pulling the weekend together—co-chairs Diane Hughes and Tad Seder, Elizabeth Emmons, Fred Elia, Lisa Russell O’Shea, Stan Parese, Kristin Djorup, Rich Williams, Bill Webster, Ann McCabe, Stew Menking, Bill McCalpin and Ken Hollingsworth. You did a fantastic job! Our HQs for the weekend were Perry and Wood houses with a tent set up between them. The campus looked spectacular. Friday’s dinner was casual, and the music was organized by Dwayne Freeman. It was a great opportunity to get together as classmates arrived on campus. Saturday began with the alumni parade followed by the meeting of the Society of Alumni and then an all-College picnic lunch on the lawn. In typical fashion, the Class of ’79 distinguished itself by hosting three community service opportunities over the weekend. The first was a food drive to benefit the Williamstown Food Pantry. Fred Elia oversaw the project, while Stan Parese made the necessary arrangements with the local organization, and Jodi Harrison offered the Harrison Gallery on Spring Street as a drop-off point Thursday through Saturday. Enough food and paper goods were collected to fill a large SUV, and $540 was also donated. Fred extended gratitude to everyone from the local and College communities and alumni who supported this effort. The second opportunity was at check-in when donations were collected to send class gifts to enlisted Ephs. The class gift was a large purple towel with “W ’79” embroidered in gold. Stew Menking reports that the necessary number of towels were purchased, and there was enough money left over to buy the deployed Ephs the most valued commodity—Charmin toilet paper. Then on Saturday afternoon a group of about 20 classmates, spouses and children participated in a community service project at the Mount Greylock High School, applying a muchneeded coat of paint to brighten some of the public areas in the school. Stan reported that their efforts were in support of an all-volunteer painting project— which will eventually repaint the entire interior of the school— and which will go on for several years. It’s an ambitious undertaking, and our large and very hard working ’79 crew made a great and greatly appreciated contribution. Saturday’s dinner was again under the tent but more formal. (I was only able to stay for the Friday-Saturday afternoon portion of the reunion, but I am grateful to several classmates for the reports they passed along.) The highlight of the annual meeting was a presentation by Kathy Sharpe Jones to Stew. Tad Seder said that she was great in her speech presenting a plaque to Stew, and Betsy Howard, development officer of the Alumni Fund, reported that “the presentation of the plaque to Stewart Menking was quite a surprise to him—he almost skipped the general (Society of the Alumni) meeting. As you can imagine, he was overcome with emotion both at the meeting and again at the dinner on Saturday night. He told me that what meant the most was that it was his classmates who were honoring him. Tad was absolutely correct in mentioning that Kathy Sharpe Jones did a terrific job in her presentation. It was funny and poignant.” Kathy said, “It wasn’t a written speech. I just talked. … I shared a couple of anecdotes from when I was deployed. Stew refused to send me pastel colored toilet tissue because he didn’t want me to get a urinary tract infection. But he redeemed himself when he sent me two tubes of my favorite lipstick. There really are no words to express how grateful I am for the support of the entire class and of Stew. I just found out Friday evening that Stew asked Paul Shlanta to drive by my house while I was gone to see if he could find someone to keep my lawn mowed!” Kathy’s sentiments were echoed in an e-mail from Bill Couch that Kathy then read. It said: “I cannot express the gratitude and thanks enough to Stewart for his service and support to myself and other deployed alumni. We work hard under very arduous conditions, and the support and packages from Stewart have ‘oftentimes made our day.’ To receive one of Stewart’s care packages is a wonderful remembrance from home. We don’t need much, just to remember us is enough. But his support goes much further than a simple box of goodies. He has marshalled (to use a military term) the entire alumni community, resulting in many expressions of support and love from you all. For that we are doubly blessed. I will close now, please ‘hoist’ a glass to Stewart and toast him for myself and all veterans—past, present and future!” I can’t imagine that there were too many dry eyes in the house at that point. Thank you Stew from all of us. Mark Tercek also spoke on Saturday evening. (Tad was instrumental in passing along this information.) Mark talked about his journey after Williams through Goldman Sachs to the Nature Conservancy, where he now serves as president, and about staying flexible and trying new things even after age 50. He quoted a study indicating that the productive work life of folks who are 52 is about 30 years, so we have plenty of time left to do new and interesting things. Mark referenced many of the speakers who had gone before him at reunion and graduation for inspiration, although each was different in his or her own way. Mark’s speech was funny and inspiring. Also announced during the evening were the new class officers for the next five years. Elizabeth Emmons and Tad Seder will be co-presidents, Barbara Hunter Sanders will be secretary, and Bob Kraus has agreed to stay on as treasurer. August 2009 | Williams People | 75 CL ASS NOTES Diane Hughes pointed out that “we were the only tent with dancing ’til midnight. It’s hard to get old farts started but even harder to get them to stop. Morty stayed with us for at least 45 minutes (no dancing though). And, in the posted photos so far, it is obvious what a good time was had by all.” Photos can be uploaded and viewed at the website Rich Williams created for the reunion: williamsclassof79. shutterfly.com/18. Password is Williams79. Diane also is working on a Facebook group for the class. If you belong to Facebook, search Williams ’79 and see how to connect. Also, the College hired a video professional to work on a piece on our class, primarily due to the community service projects. A documentary on the Class of ’79 should be available on the college website in the near future. When asked about the weekend, Elizabeth Emmons answered, “As far as I’m concerned the entire weekend was one big highlight. I always have so much fun, and the first day after is such a big letdown.” Ann McCabe reported that Paul Shlanta had arrived via motorcycle from Atlanta—18 hours; that Jas Dembinski rode his bike 100 miles from his home in Vermont; and that John Simon is vice provost at Duke. Ann also heard from Anne Calcagno, who planned to spend five weeks in Italy this summer with her son Lucien. Lucien wants to study Italian and learn to make complicated pastas. While there, Anne hoped to see Lauren Iossa and her daughter Vivian. Anne’s daughter Jessamyn is in college at Reed (Portland, Ore.). Anne teaches at the School of the Art Institute’s MFA in writing in Chicago. Glenn Rogers traveled to Williams from DC, where he works at the U.S. Agency for International Development. He said, “As a first-time reunion participant I really enjoyed seeing and being reintroduced to so many classmates. What a great group of individuals in the Class of ’79! Friday panels were a chance to hear from individuals in other classes, as each speaker reflected on their current passion and how their Williams education helped lead them up their current path. Very inspiring indeed. The College art museum exhibit on Lincoln, all drawn from materials in the Williams archives, was a peep back in history to when mass media, photography and 76 | Williams People | August 2009 electronic communication first played a role in presidential elections. I enjoyed a moment of quiet at the Haystack Monument, studying the globe and mulling the history of American outreach overseas that led to our current foreign assistance activities in which I am now involved. The reunion was a pleasant mix of reflection, sharing, laughs and activity.” Well, that’s it. I wish all of you a happy, healthy and safe fall. Please be sure to send your news, big or small, to Barbara. You can reach her at 1979secretary@ williams.edu. Otherwise she says that she’ll just rely on Stew’s rumor mill for the class notes. And remember the tri-state dinner held in NYC in October. It is a great way to stay connected. Thank you again. All the best, Kathy Connolly Ruane. 1980 REUNION JUNE 10-13 Mimi Dumouchel 71 Rosewell Road Bedford, NH 03110 1980secretary@williams.edu Warmest greetings to all classmates, and many thanks to each one who sent news. As Sarah Underhill points out, “It’s hard to believe, but we’re closing in on our 30th reunion!” Save the dates, everyone: June 10-13, 2010. Sarah will be co-chairing the event with Nancy Van Duyne and Bill Sprague. They began with a fantastic planning session in Williamstown in early May that included Bart Mitchell, Kathanne Wray Fowler, Ruth Hutton Brainin, Vivian Dorsel, Dan Towle, Monica Grady, Doug Orr, Gus Nuzzolese and Lee Shackelford Szykowny. Please contact one of them or Susie Laidlaw Camp, Ruth Wells, Tom Walsh, Betty Keller, Helen Prakelt Bishop, Michele Corbeil, Sonia Weil, Warren Pear or Ronnie Hayden if you are interested in joining the planning team! Stay tuned for messages about developments throughout the next year. The team will be creating a class website for posting plans and ideas and general reconnecting. They plan to organize a series of events in various cities to get our classmates together before the big weekend. Also during the Williams leadership retreat in May, Bill Sprague was honored for his service as chair of the Alumni Fund for the past two years, and Lee Szykowny, as one of our head agents, was awarded trophies for achieving the largest participation increase and the greatest dollar amount for a non-reunion class. Congratulations to both of them for a job well done! I received the following messages from many regions, both foreign and domestic: Betsy (Wood) Brooks: “Jay and I are in the final stage of becoming empty nesters up here in far upstate NY (Plattsburgh). Both of our children recently graduated from Williams (Ben ’08 and Sarah ’06). Sarah is in Seattle as a strategy consultant, and Ben is about to enter the Peace Corps and go to Cameroon. I guess we thought we needed a project, so we’re in the early stages of building a house, although Jay’s paper manufacturing engineer/manager job never seems to leave enough time. My job as a librarian is not as demanding, but there’s always a lot to learn. We don’t run into many classmates up here but have been reconnecting with quite a few via Facebook.” Carolyn Dye Brougham: “I am married to Jon Brougham. … We have been living in Richmond, Va., for the past nine years but are moving this summer to Princeton, N.J. Jon will be the headmaster of The Hun School of Princeton. Our older son Sam will be a freshman this fall at Hamilton College, and our younger son Ben will be a ninth-grader at Hun. I am an elementary school teacher and hope to continue teaching in New Jersey. We still live with two dogs, two cats, two gerbils, two guinea pigs and one lizard, all of whom will make the move with us!” Sarah (Austell) ’81 and Ben Cart are proud to announce the birth of their granddaughter, Addison, to son James ’05 and Ashley (Ulmer) Cart ’05. Vanessa McCoy Clark: “I am writing in for the first time since 1980. I’ve reached the point in life where I just want to say: ‘I’m still standing.’ Since graduation, I married, divorced, remarried, worked, had a business, raised great kids, wrote some, played some, got sick, got well. I garden a lot now, and I have a grandson, Joshua, who is 2. Playing with him is my great joy. Shout out to all my friends from ’76-’80.” n 1 9 7 9 –8 0 Michele Corbeil: “I spend most of my professional hours writing about our WoodenBoat Show at Mystic Seaport and thinking up ways to get folks to come to it. … In an effort to channel my nervous energy about the economy, I have spent much of my spare time … getting a sewing business off the ground called Three Bags Full. I make rectangular box bags to contain knitting projects (or anything else you want to carry around) out of cool designer fabrics with handmade beaded zipper pulls. I’ve been selling them locally at two galleries and have a small online presence as well. I also have paintings in two shows this summer and hope to do my annual week’s retreat to Bear Island in Penobscot Bay with fellow artists in September. This spring I sang a Verdi aria with our local choral group.” Anita Cook Gholston: “It’s been a lot of years since I checked in with the alumni association. I’ve got so much good stuff going on this year that I thought I would share. My oldest son, Benjamin, graduated … with a BA from Purdue University; my middle son, Malcolm, is studying computer graphic art at WCC—SUNY Westchester Community College—where I work as an assistant prof/ counselor; my middle daughter, Avery, is pregnant with our first grandchild; my youngest daughter, Maya, is graduating from high school next month and will be attending University of Kentucky in the fall. This June, my husband Felton Gholston and I … celebrate[d] our 25th wedding anniversary. Life is full, busy and gratifying! Please give my very best to my classmates.” Jim Holmes: “I am excited to add the title of P’13 to the end of my name—my daughter Katie will be entering the freshman class at Williams in the fall. She is thrilled, and my wife and I couldn’t be more proud. Our son Davey just finished a great high school baseball season as the starting center fielder on the varsity team as a freshman. Our other son, Sam, is finishing third grade and loving everything about life. I’m still teaching sixth grade and loving every minute of it. I go to work and play all day—at least that’s what my students think. I don’t bother to let them know that I slip in some instruction between the stupid jokes from time to time.” Betsy McGean: In March, “Trudie ten Broeke and Ben Larrabee came to visit us in Hanover [N.H.]. … We had a fun dinner gathering, which also included Mary Lou Ruch and husband Tim Frey, who is currently working at the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center. Connections: Mary Lou and I figured out that our fathers had graduated from Dartmouth College in … ’49 … and two of our children are in the same fourth-grade class at the Ray Elementary School.” Ann Oberrender Noyes: “Nick head[ed] up to his ’79 reunion this June, which means ours is only a year away. Log it onto the calendars! Nick will only have Ben, our 16-year-old, in tow, since I inadvertently signed up for a mother-daughter community service trip to Peru the same week with our 15-yearold daughter Eliza. Part of my specific assignment for Peru is to collect recorders that all of our elementary children received in the Concord school system, and the first recorder was hand delivered to us by Guido (know as Phil Adams around here). Fun to catch up with him and his wife Anne Westcott. Our oldest son, medical physicals for President Obama. Eager to work on our 30th reunion! Swing freely! Down the middle!” Bernie Oakley: “Rebecca and I have been well and visiting the Purple Valley much more than we used to since we have a son at Williams. … I have … enjoyed reacquainting myself with the many fine hiking trails in the area, since David ’11 is also an enthusiastic hiker. We were treated to a mini blizzard climbing Mount Greylock when I brought him back after spring break and during Family Days ended up bushwhacking most of the way up Berlin Mountain after missing the trail and starting up an old logging road that went nowhere. David’s twin brother James goes to Dartmouth, which similarly has many fine recreational opportunities. I am thankful that both my sons went to schools that are nice places to visit!” Chip Oudin: “Not too much to report from Houston except that summer is once again upon us. I’m playing golf regularly and made a hole-in-one yesterday! I’m still working for Anadarko, evaluating a deepwater oil EPHCOMPLISHMENT Last spring the fourth issue of Berkshire-based literary magazine upstreet, edited and published by Vivian Dorsel ’80, received the Independent Publisher Book Award Bronze Medal in the category of anthologies. Court, is headed to Dickinson College after an adventurous gap year. He spent his first semester sailing from Australia to Thailand with Seamester, and the second semester in Costa Rica living with a local family and going to University of Heredia. He e-mailed us … and suggested that since the job opportunities were better down there, he would stay for the summer, which he is indeed doing.” Gus Nuzzolese is golfing regularly with clients, loving every putt. “Wife Mary is doing walk-a-thons for charities. Margaret is working in DC with Jesuit Volunteers International. Elizabeth is in LA, working on a master’s in education. Colleen is studying nursing at Boston College. Patrick (6-foot-3, 220 pounds) is a frosh at Chaminade whose mission in life is ‘to help Dad and Mike Curran re-live their days at Chaminade.’ Mike Curran is A-plus and does the discovery off of Ghana (West Africa) and hoping that Obama’s energy policies don’t drive domestic oil companies out of business. Looking forward to our 30th next year!” Pano Pliotis: “We are well here in London, surviving the credit crunch, not to mention Bank of America’s takeover of Merrill Lynch, where I work as a tax lawyer. My daughter Helena, 16, is developing into a spirited and independent teenager while my son George, 13, appears to be a more gentle citizen, so far. Please do not hesitate to look us up if you are in the UK, and by all means check out my wife’s website. (Fiona Dunbar—she is an author of children’s books for the 10- to 13-year-old set, but only one has been published in the U.S.) I am in regular contact with Richard Robinowitz, Stephen Hall and Nancy Richman, among others.” Christopher Read: “My big August 2009 | Williams People | 77 CL ASS NOTES news is: CA Supreme Court upheld the voter initiative that changed our Constitution to deny same sex marriage rights but let stand those marriages performed before the November election. So Chris and I remain legal. Who’d a thunk Iowa would be ahead of California? “Was at Christopher Kerby’s ’81 50th birthday party, where I also caught up with Clinton Loftman ’79. My niece, born our sophomore year, got married. … Oy.” Rebecca Smith’s son David was “heading off to a summer of seismology research in British Columbia, which will no doubt be very interesting but will keep him away from home until midAugust. Our other son, James, will be staying at Dartmouth for the summer term, so we’ll continue to have only one child at home—we’re getting quite used to that, and Elizabeth rather likes being an only child.” Rebecca went camping with Elizabeth’s Girl Scout troop, which was mostly fun but would have been better without the girls’ tent giving out in the rain in the middle of the night.” Barb von Euler: “I’ve got Williams on my mind right now.” Son Natanael ’12 finished his freshman year, and Malin finished her junior year at Harvard. Barb says, “After having lived their entire lives here on the coast of North Carolina, they underwent some significant adjustment to the New England weather (I got a text message from Natanael in early October that informed me, ‘It’s #&$^% snowing.’), but both are blissfully happy at their respective colleges. “As for me, my husband and I are still practicing law in a small firm here in Wilmington, N.C., concentrating on Social Security disability law. I’ve reconnected with a few friends from our class on Facebook but haven’t seen any classmates in real life in many years. Looking forward to the next reunion.” Mark Walch: “I am keeping the purple cow high with climbing still going on out here in N.M. Got plans this summer for Mount Rainier, bunch of 14ers including the Ellingwood Arrete, Colorado River raft and Aconcagua in January. Talk with Tom Seldon pretty regularly while he is on dog walks, and he keeps me up to date on Taro Tanaka and government goings on. Spent some time with Jim Briggs ’60 in Austria this past 78 | Williams People | August 2009 Participating in the Williams Women’s Alumnae Ice Hockey Game in Lansing Chapman Ice Rink in February were (from left) Shannon Bryant (head coach of the women’s varsity team at the time), Blythe Miller Brown ’80, Jeanne Dugan Maritz ’80, Debbie Bernheimer Harris ’86 and Mallory Young (assistant coach). summer hiking the Alps as he is the best on local info for climbing and strudel!” Mark and Jim were to do the RAGBRAI in July. “Otherwise all well in the Land of Enchantment.” Rob Baker-White: “Tracy and I are still here in Williamstown, where I chair the theater department, and Tracy does landscape painting and works in the elementary school. Daughter Emily finishing first year at Oberlin (College and Music Conservatory), and son Matthew heading off to Bates in the fall.” And there you have it. Recurring theme: eager anticipation of our 30th reunion. THIRTIETH. Yikes! It’ll be a blast. Until then, y’all keep up the good work, OK? 1981 Kyle Doherty Hodgkins 8645 Monte Drive Cincinnati, OH 45242 1981secretary@williams.edu Greetings! As I write this, it’s not quite summer, but I sure can see it from my front porch. Thanks to all of those who took time from their madhouse May schedules to send a quick update. I’d be remiss if I didn’t note the calm, clear leadership of our own Rich Besser during the recent H1N1 concerns. Many of you wrote in to send kudos to him. Well done, Rich. MJ Dougherty Toms and I had a chance to catch up over middle school projects. She gave this update: “I started working last year at UVA’s Darden School of Business with their entrepreneurship programs (funded by the Batten Endowment). Lots of energy and new business ideas. What is most surprising to me is how many students here are interested in sustainability and social entrepreneurship as well as consulting and investment banking. The students are very inspiring. (But I keep wondering how will I feel a few years from now when I keep getting older and the students don’t age a bit?)” Speaking of not aging a bit, how is it that Sarah Austell Cart can be so young and yet be a grandmother? She wrote in with this good news: “Addison Weeks Cart, granddaughter of Sarah (Austell) and Ben Cart ’80, was born in LA on May 18. Proud parents are James and Ashley (Ulmer) Cart, both Class of 2005; her maternal grandfather is Kevin Ulmer ’72; and great-grandfathers are Theodore W. Cart ’53 and R. Rhett Austell ’48. Yes, her nursery sports a cow motif (though it’s pink, not purple!)” Spiro Rombotis sent a quick note. As president and CEO of Cyclacel Pharmaceuticals Inc., he and a few colleagues “rang the NASDAQ closing bell on May 8. Cyclacel has two cancer drugs on the market and three in clinical trials with the most advanced in late-stage trials for acute myeloid leukemia in elderly patients.” Nevill Smythe sends an update from the Purple Valley: “Was in Williamstown recently for an annual fund event. Wasn’t going to go, but Val Colville Nierenberg n 1 9 8 0 –8 1 Trudie (ten Broeke) Larrabee ’80 (second from left) and Betsy McGean ’80 and their husbands got together in March for the town of Hanover, N.H., annual Mud Ball. said she was going. … Had a great time. Stayed out far too late with members of the Class of 2005 at the Red Herring (the only place for a drink in town). Val and I were the only ’81ers there but also saw several others from the Class of ’80. Billsville is still beautiful, and still couldn’t get in there if I had to apply today.” Maybe so, but think of all the company you would have, sitting at the end of Spring Street. We could all hang out together and wonder what might have been! Katherine Precht has ventured once more to Cairo and hopes that anyone visiting the area will look her up. “When I was there in the mid 1980s, I did an MA in Islamic art and architecture at the American University in Cairo, which is where I’ll be working. I’ll be the AVP for development, so I’ll be returning home in some sense. But it’s a great adventure for my husband Chris and for our daughter Miranda. Sophie, a first-year at Smith, is OK about it, but I wouldn’t say she was thrilled.” Closer to home, Tom Resor continues his hot coaching streak, with The Boston Globe calling the Noble & Greenough girls’ hockey team “the region’s ice nobility.” The article goes on to say: “The Bulldogs recently won their fifth NESCAC title in eight years.” No coincidence, Tom has been coaching the team for the past nine (having been with the boys team for 14 years), giving him the opportunity to coach his daughters Nina and Carry. Kathy McCleary took time away from penning her new novel. “I always feel that I don’t have much to say in class notes. (Another few months of schlepping kids to soccer practice! Another few months of being a stunned witness to world-class eyeball rolling by my adolescent daughters!) I’m currently working on revising my second novel, about a woman who gets so fed up with trying to raise her kids in an affluent suburb that she moves them all to a remote island for a year to live without shopping malls, cell phones or even electricity. (Hmm—wonder how I came up with that idea?) My first novel, House & Home, will be released in paperback on July 7, and I shamelessly beg everyone to buy it and recommend it to others. (It’s a great beach/plane read, really.) I’m a newcomer to the brave new world of Facebook and Twitter but love both and love reconnecting with old friends. Larry Platt, Martin Kohout and Russell Trahan have all become good Facebook buddies, and I feel privileged to get the chance to share little bits of their lives this way.” Dan Friesen had a recent visit with Tom Rizzo, who was in Denver for a conference. “Tom was in town, and he, Jim Christian ’82 and I had a great five-hour dinner conversation. We were able to complete 1.8 of Rizzo’s stories. … Christian and I, along with DJ, Bradley, Tripler and Spike are doing the charity bike ride for The Children’s Hospital in July. The trash talk has begun and it may be enough to get Rizzo out for the ride. Many oarsmen are not as robust as soccer players, so he may not make it. Our motto: ‘Let the good times roll.’ … Me ... I’m training for a triathlon, the Hippo 500, and enjoying my grown children. The law practice would be good if clients could just get some bail-out money and pay their bills. I have too many distressed assets.” Oddly enough, Tom wrote in as well, and has a different recollection regarding the likelihood of his participation and the relative talents of bikers and oarsmen. Vive la difference. Lastly, one of the challenges of assembling this column is reporting when we lose a classmate. Many of you received the e-mail with the news about Karen DeLong Parles, who passed away in February. She generously created Lung Cancer Online and battled to improve the quality of care and information provided to people living with lung cancer. Our sympathies go out to Jamie and his family. Chris Gootkind wrote in, “Karen’s memorial service was a beautiful, moving, loving and, in many places, humorous tribute to an incredible person. All who attended felt it captured who Karen was and that she would have enjoyed it. There were numerous Ephs in attendance, many of whom spoke during the service. Lynnie McCormack, Sherri Nelson, Mark Aseltine, yours truly, Bill Lohrer ’80 and Warren Feldman ’80 all spoke. Jamie spoke at the end and read a short, poignant note from President Morty Schapiro that said Karen represented the best that Williams had to offer. Others in attendance included Gloria Prado Braskamp, Phil Darrow, plus Sarah Mollman Underhill ’80, Nancy Van Duyne ’80, Bill Sprague ’80 and Dan Katz ’79. Our hearts go out to Jamie, Karen and Jamie’s children Chris and Casey, and Karen’s parents Shirley and Howard DeLong ’57. I apologize if I missed any other Ephs. Several of us [were to see] Jamie and his kids at Martha’s Vineyard over Memorial Day weekend.” Jamie was kind enough to send his thoughts: “Karen was a titanic individual, ‘two forces of nature,’ as someone close to our family once called her. She became an internationally prominent figure due to her work in lung cancer advocacy, but all she was really doing was expressing her most basic and prominent personality traits to a wider audience. In everything Karen did, she displayed empathy, fearlessness, a thirst for knowledge and August 2009 | Williams People | 79 CL ASS NOTES a reverence for quality. This combination provided the framework that made her the kind of mother that allows me to see and hear the sparkle of her brilliance, and the depth of her kindness and generosity, with each interaction I have with Chris and Casey. Add to the list Karen’s piercing sense of humor—usually self-deprecating, always present, especially when things got harder—and it is easy to see how our group of Williams friends has become an extended family whose love and support has stretched across generations and decades. Mostly I will continue to count Karen as my life coach, as the prescient young woman who, after great prodding, picked me out of a large crowd and immediately set out to make me the person she knew I could be. Unstinting and impolitic with both praise and criticism, Karen never let me get away with less than my best, as a husband, as a father, as a doctor, as a friend, especially as a driver, LOL. As infuriating as her impulse never to let me rest could be, it sits on my shoulder, whispering in my ear, making me cry and smile.” 1982 Will Layman 8507 Garfield St. Bethesda, MD 20817 Kolleen Rask 55 Pine Hill Road Southborough, MA 01772 1982secretary@williams.edu OK, campers—does everyone have a marshmallow and a good stick? Great! Roast ’em ’til they’re golden and settle down. Turn off your flashlights. Because … it’s time for a creeeeepy campfire story! Once, in the mystic west of your imaginations, there was a place called Lordsburg, N.M. On a ranch 23 miles to the north, surrounded by the Gila National Forest, there lived a woman named Erin (Sweeney) Evans. When people visit her there, the remoteness is so great that driving from the airport “everybody gets really quiet at about the AZ-NM state line, thinking, ‘Oh, my, God, what are they doing HERE?’” Creeeepy! Erin has that most haunted of all jobs: substitute teacher! One day, Erin was walking down the hallway of her school when she noticed something peeking out just at her: a 80 | Williams People | August 2009 Early 80s class members celebrated the 50th birthday of Tim Williams ’81 (center) on the beach in Gloucester, Mass., in September 2008. poster meant to inspire kids that contained the quote: “Climb high, climb far, your goal the sky, your aim the star,” attributed to Mark Hopkins of a place called “Williams College.” “I looked at it, and the other fourth-grade teacher came out of his class. ‘That’s where I went to school,’ I told him. His eyes got pretty big, and he said, ‘How did you get from there to Lordsburg, N.M?’” And this, my little friends will remain a mystery forever. At just about the same time, thousands of miles away in Boston, Mass., something uncanny occurred. Jen Jones, wife of Mike Rosenfelder, ran the April Boston Marathon with her ghoulish kin, Ken and Liz. They were the founding members of the Toad Hall Track Club, whose motto is “Don’t Hurl.” And: No … one … did. In the very same town at nearly the very same time, a married couple attended Richard Goodwin’s play Two Men of Florence. This couple, Kolleen Rask and Tim Langella ’80, were, however, at no ordinary play. Oh, no! A sudden chill descended over Kolleen as she turned to her husband and whispered in heartpalpitating frenzy, “Isn’t that Diego Arciniegas?” And: Indeed it was! “He still looks exactly like he did in college. He was fabulous, playing several roles and morphing into each one flawlessly.” A man who does not age and can transform himself into others! Auuggghhhhhhhhhhh! Not far to the south, children, is the haunted island of Manhattan, a place where Eliza de Sola Mendes can be found battling something no less ghoulish than a proposed solid waste dump on the Upper East Side at Asphalt Green that threatens to house 5,280 tons of garbage per day. While the solid waste monster rises each night from the ebony sky, Eliza battles back with petitions for a bill in Albany, which she has “gotten more than 5,000 people to sign and more than 550 doctors and scientists from more than 15 hospitals and universities.” The solid waste monster, we know, cowers. “I stay in touch with Jill Diamond Wruble ’83. My son Daniel will be a senior in high school next year, working for Congresswoman Caroline Maloney and a captain of his school soccer team, while Ben is 13 and an avid squash player.” Non-adult creatures are, friends, actually epidemic. Witness the scourge reported by Annabelle Cone, whose “offspring, Rosalie” has decided to attend a little school called “Dartmouth College, just down the road from where her mommy just happens to teach French. ‘Will that be weird,’ people ask? Au contraire. She might even enroll in one of my classes. It’s difficult to leave the snow and the great outdoors.” But weird it remains, kids. Anybody want more marshmallows? Speaking of things that smolder and catch on fire—do you kids know about Afghanistan and Pakistan? Well, our friend Eric Schmitt writes stories—strange but very true stories—about those places for The New York Times. And his stories, written as part of a team, won a Pulitzer Prize last spring. Great news, Eric! (Actually, the news was n 1 9 8 1 –8 3 probably not good, but the news of your prize cheers us. And we need cheering tonight, sitting here in the dark.) Here is something even more dangerous and mysterious: a political campaign. Is your skin crawling yet? Seth Rogovoy traveled the full width of the continent to visit Mike McGinn in the damp, cloaked city that is Seattle, Wash. And there, kids, the bold truth: Mike is running for mayor. “On my first visit in late March, Michael had just earlier that week declared his candidacy for mayor of Seattle. By the time I returned a few weeks later, Michael’s campaign was in full swing; he was set up in an office, had a slew of advisers and volunteers, had raised thousands of dollars, all for a campaign based on the principles for which we all know and love Michael—his commitment to the environment, sound economic principles, city planning that emphasizes mass transit, and smart land use. “What’s really fantastic is that Mike hasn’t become a ‘politician’ in the conventional sense; frankly, I’m rather surprised to see him unshaven and as plainspoken as always—even on TV, where I saw him while I was out there on a local Sunday morning news show. Michael is running against an incumbent mayor and has very low name recognition. But, should Michael prove triumphant, he could instantly become a figure on the national political scene as a visionary change agent and smart, level-headed leader. Even if you live outside of Seattle, you can donate to his campaign. For more information, and to watch several videos of McGinn talking about the campaign, visit www. mcginnformayor.com.” If all these tales have not already shaken you to your very core, let me tell you one final story, a chiller that will keep you from sleeping tonight. When I was 5 years old, my mother told me that she had to go to the store for just few minutes and that she was leaving me alone in the house with my pet iguana, Tim. I heard her car drive away, and I pulled the covers up to my chin. Then I saw Tim, inside his cage, light a cigarette and start talking. He leaned against the bars of cage, bent one easily with his forefinger, then said, “I sure am hungry for some little boy.” I screamed. Then he said, “Nah, I’m just kiddin.’ But it is frightening to imagine being married for 22 years ain’t it?” For that’s the monster-ish duration of the bond between Susan and Christopher Shields. More ominously, Susan just “joined Jamba Juice as their new senior VP responsible for establishing a new division for consumer packaged goods products, taking the Jamba brand across multiple categories in the store. Needless to say my cool factor with the kids has increased immensely.” I don’t know about all of you kids, but I find this juicy enthusiasm for marketing to be frightening! “Chris is still at the Academy of Sciences in San Francisco as their director of strategic planning. He know my friends never thought it would happen, I’ve been the source of unending entertainment as they watched my dating follies, but I have met a great man with whom I share just enough and not too much! We will stay here in Seattle, as he works for Amazon and I have a private practice in psychology. No stories about cats yet (I’m working on him), but we have traveled much and have much more to see. In the meantime, I’m just trying to keep the nuptials as mellow as possible, given that my poor mother is frothing at the mouth as the ‘mother of the bride.’ I now understand why people elope. … Cheers and love EPHCOMPLISHMENT In May Eric Schmitt ’82 was one of a team of New York Times journalists that won a 2009 Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting for its coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan. is happily situated in their brand new building and gets to visit with the many creatures, including an albino alligator, every day.” An albino alligator?! Children! Run! Run for your liiiiives! (And if you live to see the light of day, e-mail us with news of your latest walks through the dark woods. Will.K.Layman@gmail. com or KRask@holycross.edu.) 1983 Bea Fuller 9002 Honeybee Lane Bethesda, MD 20817 1983secretary@williams.edu Greetings, all, and thanks to those who sent me news. I continue to encourage you to get on Facebook. You can see photos of Dan Maynard’s kids skiing in Switzerland, Chris Tantillo’s hot air balloons floating over Kansas (without Toto); Michael Chambon’s beautiful daughters laughing at or with him—not sure which; Erin Bogan and two gigantic boys (are they hers?); Nico Howson and his incredible feats of physical fitness; if you understand Thai, you can watch Suranand Vejjajiva’s daily cable TV show; and much, much more! Big news from Kathy Pope: “Well, lord have mercy, I finally have something to say! At the ripe old age of 48, I will be getting married this September. … I to all my Williams buddies.” I seem to have a quite a bit of news from Californians—maybe I sent my plea ripe for West Coast time. John Graham writes from southern California, “Yesterday, I had lunch at Blue Plate in Santa Monica with Bruce Leddy, who’s been working with MTV on a pilot and is in fine form. Had just returned myself from Cannes, where my last movie was being sold internationally. It reminded me of Williams a bit—parties until 4 a.m., lots of hopeful, young people and a charge of ‘anything could happen from here’ floating around. Of course, it’s a bit different being one of the elder statesmen among our group, but very enjoyable nonetheless.” Carol O’Day also writes from southern California: “No good idea goes un-multiplied. I launched a speaking and consulting firm, The New Having It All, last summer and have been speaking and mentoring back-to-work moms since. I am impressed by the amount of female talent lying fallow out there and the eagerness with which educated women embrace returning to the world of the mind. In addition, I accepted a position as a director of marketing and development for Saint Anne School, a K-8 Catholic elementary school in Santa Monica, which I came upon in a classic fashion. I was a three-year volunteer on the school’s board August 2009 | Williams People | 81 CL ASS NOTES when the position was offered to me. So, ladies, choose your volunteer jobs (and they ARE unpaid jobs) wisely. I invite other Eph development people to contact me, coday@saintanneschool. com, to share development ideas.” Becky McIver writes from northern California, “Rob Kusel is now training my daughter’s club team. It has been great having his energy and passion for the game instilled in these young players. The team is a Div. I under-14 girls. My daughter Kelsea is also training with him outside of her team. He has a beautiful wife and cute baby boy! I manage Luna Vineyards’ Wine Club among other things. If anyone needs some world-class wine, check out our website, lunavineyards.com. One of the co-founders is George Vare ’58!” Karen Lewis Alexander sends warm greetings from Chicago, and she regrets that at the last minute she was unable to attend the 25th reunion. “All is well in the Alexander household, if by well you mean crazy busy. Scott has been on sabbatical and traveling (internationally) quite a bit. I went to work as VP for development at Loyola University Health System last June and after six months was promoted to a senior officer of the health system as senior VP for development and external affairs. The work has been extraordinarily rewarding, but the hours are going to drive me to an early grave. Most meetings with physicians need to start before they make rounds— meaning I have to be in the office by 6 a.m. many days. Most meetings with donors take place in the evening—meaning I have to stay in work until 9 p.m. I’m getting too old for this! Our son Myles just finished his junior year at Sarah Lawrence College, where he is an economics major. (Yes, hard to believe two liberal humanities jocks could produce a hard-core, conservative, budding economist.) Myles headed to an intensive summer program at the London School of Economics for July and August before beginning his senior year.” Karen had “two trips on the docket this summer—a lateJune week in Venice and a lateAugust trip to London to see the kid.” In between, she hoped to hear from fellow Ephs visiting Chicago. “You may have heard, we have a great modern wing addition to our art institute!” Sharon J. Glezen is “writing 82 | Williams People | August 2009 from Rochester, where I work as an internist at the University Health Service. I have yet to meet up for coffee with Lis Bischoff-Ormsbee since her arrival last fall, but that is on my to-do list now that many of the pesky students have gone (hopefully taking the flu with them). I’m writing to share personal news. After 20 years and two kids, my partner Cara (Mount Holyoke ’83) and I are finally, and legally, married. We were married first in a small family ceremony in my parents’ living room in Connecticut in December. My folks have been incredible advocates for equal marriage in the state, and all of their hard work finally paid off last fall. We then decided to have a huge celebratory wedding here in our Unitarian church home in Rochester in April. We were surrounded by tons of teens and tweens, family and local friends. The ceremony was followed by champagne and an ice cream social. What’s not to love? Cara and I have been moved by the outpouring of love and support that we’ve felt during this entire journey and have been blessed with the chance that this has provided us to step back and focus on the relationship that sustains us in all of the other aspects of our lives. We are lucky, indeed.” And from The New York Times, you should read the article “On the Bench and Off, the Eminently Quotable Justice Scalia” by Adam Liptak. Justice Scalia said he could think of one sort-of exception to his rule favoring the elite law schools: “One of my former clerks whom I am the most proud of now sits on the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals” in Cincinnati, the justice said, referring to the Hon. Jeffrey S. Sutton. But Justice Scalia explained that Mr. Sutton had been hired by Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr. after his retirement and then helped out in Justice Scalia’s chambers. “I wouldn’t have hired Jeff Sutton,” Justice Scalia said. “For God’s sake, he went to Ohio State! And he’s one of the very best law clerks I ever had.” Thanks to Mr. New Yorker himself, Jim Corsiglia, for sending this my way. Jim is still balancing secretive corporate work with his good deeds and great daddy skills. As for me, I started a new job July 1 as the Upper School head at Severn School in Severna Park, Md., near Annapolis. I am thrilled about the move; my boys are cautiously optimistic— which means they are not openly rebelling and they are wearing their Severn sweatshirts. Of course it helps that their friends in Bethesda have heard of the school because it has a decent lacrosse program. We are looking forward to life near the water and reconnecting with Jeremy Snow, who has children at Severn! I have myriad goals for the coming year including more time to exercise and making time to paint or draw, but I am grateful that I can still run in the woods and play soccer occasionally and that I have great friends and family. Hope you all are well, and now you have a new reason to visit the capital of Maryland! 1984 Sean M. Crotty 31 Carriage House Lane Saratoga Springs, NY 12866 Carrie Bradley Neves 7 Gay St. Apt. 4N New York, NY 10014 1984secretary@williams.edu Submitted by outgoing secretaries Christine Harrington and Kathy Spraitz: Blink. Just like that, 25 years evaporated. We awoke in the Purple Valley, where the rain doesn’t matter, where everyone “looks exactly the same!” and where, for an entire weekend, there were no homework assignments, exams or oral reports due. This kind of time travel is good. Old friendships, perhaps having laid dormant for a few months or a few years, were instantaneously rekindled. New friendships were seeded. All things purple were greatly revered. And for the oh-so-lucky denizens of the Berkshire Quad housing, the bunk beds were still in working order. (With mighty flat mattresses, but working nonetheless.) Entire freshman entries were nearly intact. Navjeet Bal helped take inventory of the Morgan East ’80-’81 crowd: Robert McLean, Jose Perez, Richie Chishty, David Cerrone, Tim Hinkle, Fran Toler, Julie Klotz, Evy Douglas, Doug Sparks, Sean Crotty, Andy Crain, Jay Brodie, Rory Costello, Gary Selinger and Tory (Smith) Walsh. Way to go, Morgan East! So much for the Minnesotans bringing home the “Best Attendance” award. Familiar laughter floated through the air. We in n 1 9 8 3 –8 4 Fayerweather (aka “Faye,” according to those youngish Reunion Rangers) enjoyed Melissa George Iserloth’s infectious giggle and tried hard to stay awake late enough to hear Sara Griffiths Connell laughing so hard it was unclear whether she was still breathing. Merritt Mayher also reported: “Sitting next to Scott Brittingham on Friday afternoon while he chortled at Morty’s comment about how lazy we all were in 1980 took me right back to the myriad times I heard Scott laugh. (Since Scott had Morty for Econ 101 freshman year, I’m blaming him.)” Regarding the speaker on stage, Steve Johansen remarked, “It was appropriate to say goodbye to President Morty Schapiro, since it was our freshmen class that welcomed him in the fall of 1980.” The refrain “You look the same!” was heard at least 1,984 times. Per outgoing Class VP Greg Pliska: “Rob McLean and I were chatting on Friday night, looking around at our class and remarking on how well we’ve entered middle age. Sure, the signs are there in hairlines and waistlines and a few wrinkles around the eyes, but we agreed the Class of ’84 could say, ‘Hey, we look GOOD!’” Greg’s observations continued the next day as the Class of ’59 filed into the Society of Alumni annual meeting. He and Rob hypothesized the 50th reunion gang had probably been at their own Friday-night event, looking around and saying they’d barely aged. Sure enough, Greg reports: “When they got up to present their class gift, they said as much! So I guess it’s all a matter of perspective. But I still maintain we look damn good. And even if we don’t, well, we FEEL good, and that’s what counts.” Linda Brockelman Ogden, Lou and Amanda Shipley, and Alberto and Rosanne Luzarraga all felt plenty good enough to trek up Pine Cobble. Rosanne confirmed, “When we reached the top and could see that, while some things have changed in the Purple Valley, from up high it still looks simply beautiful.” And the Log, thank goodness, is still the Log. (Particularly since its sassier cousin, the Purple Pub, burned down in our absence.) I suspect many classmates who initially felt trepidation found their weekend sea legs at Thursday night’s Log gathering. Per Sara Griffiths Connell: “I felt nothing had changed the moment I walked in … and saw very familiar faces. It felt incredibly comfortable. I talked with people as if no time had passed.” It helped having familiar faces on stage. Thank you, Marc Hummon, Sean Crotty, Greg Pliska, Gary Selinger, Suzy Akin, Matt Kadish and Dave Cole for so readily transporting us back to our college days. Sean’s daughters Molly and Annie gave him an early Father’s Day gift: “Singing at the Log and watching my daughters—normally very shy to get up in front of people—seem to feel the love in the room and jump up on stage to sing, and being backed by Marc. That will stay with me for a long time.” Connections initially forged on the playing field also remained contemporary. Jack McGonagle cites the following reunion highlight: “Having lunch in the Paresky Center with Sean Crotty (and 16-year-old son Ryan), Marc Hummon (and 16-year-old son Levi), Jeff Congdon (all the way from Alaska), John McCarthy, Ted Leon and Coach Farley. Tim Curran ’83 and B.J. Connolly called in, too.” Jack adds: “Coach Farley was our coach for four years across multiple sports and said maybe two words in that entire time. Now, one lunch … wow! Let’s just say the verbalcount factor has changed. Great time. Great man.” Incoming Class President John McNicholas echoes the sentiment: “For me, the best part of the weekend, and moment you felt like ‘nothing had changed’ was when Artie Pidoriano, Ed Schmidt, John McCarthy, Russ Howard and I were at dinner reminiscing about playing basketball and hanging out together on campus. It was the first time we’d all been together since senior year. It was great being back together.” Purple sports jerseys. Purple vests. Purple hair? Though purple is always big in these parts (c’mon, the Vikings? Prince?), it was back in force for all. Purple fleece vests, thanks to the reunion committee, were worn no matter the temperature at Saturday morning’s parade. Merritt Mayher, sporting what she described as a “subdued” purple and gold coat, stood next to Tom Harrity on the Clark terrace, Tom in his dad’s Class of ’46 purple blazer, purple shirt and purple bow tie. I thought my own eyes deceived me at the class officer breakfast, but Greg Pliska confirmed it: Val DiFebo was wearing purple eye shadow. Not that it stopped after the weekend. Unsuspecting youth, i.e., those too young to protest, will return to their non-Billsville lives in Eph style. Steve Johansen confirmed, “I chose to buy a Williams sweat suit for my 2-year-old son,” as did, I’m sure, many parents who were spotted with Spring Street’s finest shopping bags. With Goff’s outfitting the populace, Route 2 under construction and Pappa Charlie’s catering to an untold number, it was tempting to think nothing much had changed. But there were signs that Williamstown has entered the 21st century in spite of our desire to keep it “just as it was.” There’s now a working stoplight on Route 2. I know it exists, because I almost ran through it, having been distracted by the “Wash-nWireless” laundromat sign across the way. “Wash-nWireless?” Come now. It’s not like we would’ve seen that cross promotion back in the ’80s. No surprise that iPhones, Blackberries and cell phones were out in force. It was kind of fun “texting” our old roommates and deciding where to meet up, was it not? The Class of ’84 did take pause when it came to the College’s shifting skyline. Maybe it’s hard to embrace the new, however well executed, when it requires we let go of fond memories. What is Chapin Lawn, after all, when not in the shadow of shipshape Baxter Hall? What will the College do with those groovy double-decker study carrels when the library comes down? Sell them on eBay, à la seats from the old Yankee Stadium? Sara Griffiths Connell joined many in pondering the issue: “The newer buildings, while beautiful in and of themselves, threw me a bit. Is the campus charm disappearing? I did spend time wandering around the campus and have to say, it still feels like the Williams we knew—especially by Dodd House, Mission Park and beyond.” Slush wisely concludes, “Maybe at the end of the day it’s not the buildings that are the most important thing about Williams.” Supporting Sara’s theory that people make the place, the new architecture nicely showcased our very own talent. Val DiFebo, August 2009 | Williams People | 83 CL ASS NOTES John Berg and award-winning Donna Ching were critical players at the Chandler Gymnasium podium. Scads of our kids—and a few of their ’rents—enjoyed swimming in that great big glorious pool. Jim Neumann, Mara Bun, Peg Stevenson and Bill Edmonds entertained, challenged and raised our collective awareness regarding sustainability, all while perched in Purple Valleyesque Adirondack chairs on the ’62 Center for Theatre and Dance stage. And didn’t everyone look splendid out on the terrace of the Clark’s new Stone Hill Center? Development guy John Skavlem can be proud of the work he and his colleagues did to support that particular Clark Art Institute expansion. Did anyone notice how the pictures from Callie Lombard Sullivan’s nifty photo booth got progressively, shall we say, creative as the night progressed? If you have time to review the online summary of same, be sure to look at the Craig Lee/Curt Jenson combo shots. Excellent composition, guys. Your finance-type jobs belie your underlying artistic talents. Let’s not forget a building that was always there but may have been discovered for the first time 25 years later. Goodrich Hall, anyone? The scene of what Christine Harrington later referred to as “crazy dancing”? Architectural commentator Sara Griffiths Connell notes, “It was like the late Saturday night dancing of yesteryear. Non-stop, crowded and in a dark room.” The only difference? “The floor wasn’t sticky.” Thank goodness for that. Given it was a highlight for many, this scribe passed too breezily by the 25th reunion panel discussion titled, “Sustainability at Williams and Around the World.” The crowd listened to Mara, Jim, Peg and Bill talk about their vocational passions. Navjeet Bal summarized it well: “I really appreciated the different perspectives that each speaker brought to the topic and the seriousness that each has about their life’s work. Very cool and very impressive.” You know what’s great about the Williams DNA (as it was code-named during Class President Val DiFebo’s speech)? Humility. How’s this from a guy who, with his peers, nailed his portion of the panel presentation? Jim Neuman was “surprised it could be more nerve-wracking 84 | Williams People | August 2009 to present to 100 of your classmates than to 200 Congressional staffers or 50 fellow economists. At least you know why the staffers and economists MIGHT be interested. And of course the Williams ’84 audience is likely smarter and actually paying attention.” Jim graciously adds: “Having done it, I highly recommend it to others—it was a terrific way to connect with many. Thanks for all the positive feedback!” I’ll resist repeating the welldeserved thanks that were expressed throughout the weekend and give a shout to some unsung heroes. I bet we can all agree: We owe a sincere thanks to our spouses, mates, partners, kids—and at least one pet, who behaved beautifully at the Friday night dinner—who humored us by living the great Williams mythology for an entire (long) weekend. Talk about good DNA. It’s a great group of people. Assembling that crowd of quality folks may be our best collective accomplishment yet. No column wrapping our “silver” reunion would be complete without acknowledging we are incomplete as a whole. The Class of 1984 will always remember Johnnie Conyers, Tom Dougherty, Paul (Justin) Johnson, Christian Minard, Sarah Anne Murphy, Janet Ricker and Scott Pileggi. We welcome with open arms their surviving spouses and partners as honorary members of our class. On a lighter but also sincere subject. Many of you know Class Book publishing guru Sean Crotty has agreed to serve as your next class secretary. In later breaking news: Carrie Bradley Neves will join Sean as co-secretary. One thing’s for sure: Our class will be in good, lyrical and very musical hands. I received a crackling voice mail from Carrie on June 22 declaring she and her husband Marc were “sitting on the steps of Chapin Hall.” Did anyone tell them that Reunion Weekend ended? Is she taking the new gig so seriously as to have opened a local press office? Carrie, inquiring minds want to know! Sean got the memo about Reunion Weekend ending but not before heading to Boston and topping it off with an ’80sappropriate Crosby, Stills & Nash concert with former roommates Tom Graham, Tim Hinkle, Joe Loturco, Caragh O’Brien and several of their respective family members. With reunion over, Sean writes: “It was great seeing all of you, and I wish all of you a great summer. I accept the task of keeping you all up to date on one another gladly. I like hearing about what makes this class tick. “To my old friends, I will see you soon. To my new ones, you better watch out. I do get to Australia now and then, Mara, so tell Stu to keep the horses fed and the beer cold, as you never know when you might get a call from Darwin. Jose, I promise to call when I get to Paris, even if I’m at one of the airport hotels for just the night.” Jose Perez capped his invitation to Sean with his own summary of Reunion Weekend: “Truly a very special moment with an incomparable group of people. Much more than a trip to the past, a great source of strength and inspiration for the future.” How elegant. And he didn’t even say it in French! Sean finishes with: “There was a tradition in the Air Force. When you left a particular base, you didn’t look in the rear-view mirror. The idea was that you should always look forward. Driving away from Williamstown, I admit to looking in the rear-view mirror and remembering Reunion Weekend—all of you who came and those that could not. I looked back hoping I’d see you all again in five years, if not in 25 for the 50th. You are a special group of people. I miss not having you all in my life on a daily basis. I can’t wait to see what all of you have in store for me at our reunion in 25 years.” No doubt it’ll be here in the blink of an eye. 1985 REUNION JUNE 10-13 Wendy Webster Coakley 25th 271 Pittsfield Road Lenox, MA 01240 1985secretary@williams.edu The nation’s first intercollegiate baseball match was commemorated this spring in Pittsfield, Mass., the “neutral ground” where it all started 150 years ago between Williams and Amherst. Before the modern-day teams took to the field to battle for NESCAC playoff privileges, a game was held with alumni from both schools playing under 1859 rules (no gloves, for starters). Representing our n 1 9 8 4 –8 5 Members of the Class of 1985 gathered in Williamstown in May to begin planning for their 25th reunion. “vintage” were Mike Coakley, Brian Rutlege, Rob Coakley ’86 and Kevin Morris ’86, coached by Jim Briggs ’60, nattily dressed in top hat and tails. The players’ hair may have been grayer than their vintage uniforms, but ESPN, Sports Illustrated, USA Today, The New York Times, The Boston Globe and other media captured their irrepressible smiles and genuine delight. Kudos to organizers Mike Barbera ’89 and former Red Sox GM Dan Duquette (Amherst ’80, who redeemed himself by sending his daughter to Williams). Another sport—hockey— resulted in a more spontaneous Eph reunion when Greg Masters bumped into Ted Plonsker ’86 at a Delaware tournament in which their sons were playing. As a hockey dad to three boys, Greg has taken to playing in a men’s league on Saturday nights but would switch to water polo in a heartbeat if he could just find a team. If you Philly-based readers have any leads, contact Greg. Meanwhile, the sport of soccer has provided a decent living for former Eph player and writer Debbie Wickenden Crisfield, who’s authored several books on the subject. Debbie has recently switched her focus to the game of bridge, teaching others to play and improving her game to the point that she won an event at the North American Bridge Championships, “albeit the least impressive of the national events,” she wrote modestly, “but now I have a little street cred. Then a publisher bribed me with a book on bridge if I would write just one more soccer book. It was absolute torture to write a sixth soccer book—it’s just not that interesting a subject— but the thought of writing a bridge book made it all worth it … until I actually had to write the bridge book, which made it quite clear to me that I really just don’t enjoy writing” (except to her class secretary, fortunately for me). At the urging of Susan Knapp McClements, not to mention the presence of two teenagers in the Crisfield household, Debbie joined Facebook, “which means that suddenly I’ve renewed friendships with a number of classmates … but, since I rarely get on Facebook, it doesn’t do me much good, which makes me look forward to reunion even more.” That’s a good thing, and I’m able to report that reunion planning got off to a great start with a meeting hosted by the College and our extremely organized copresidents Sara Harkness Curry and Meg Holliday Kelly. Thanks to the classmates who took time from their busy lives to attend, including Jonathan Carpenter, Katherine Boozer Cote, Gillian Davies, Emily Sneath Jones, Jeff May and Peter Orphanos. Special congrats to Emily and her husband Spencer Jones on their eldest son Casey’s acceptance into the Williams Class of 2013. And welcome back to Jeff, who recently relocated his family to Lakeville, Conn., after many years in London. Thanks to the many more of you who weren’t able to attend the kick-off but have volunteered for various committees. Our 25th promises to be a very special event, thanks to the time and talents of these individuals. One thing we will be doing is honoring those members of the class who have left our earthly ranks but are never far from our hearts: Scott Pond, Shelly Traina Riecke, Dori Dewar Salancy and Kim Zullo. I hope that those of you who knew who knew them at Williams or beyond will be moved to share your memories in our Class Book, an effort headed by the indefatigable Allison Martin Mertens. Finally, thanks to a nontraditional member of the class, Adriana Brown, wife of the late, great poly sci professor Mac Brown, who graciously put up a number of our planning meeting attendees at her Williamstown home. On that note, it always pleases me to report on our “non-trad” classmates, so I was delighted to hear from Lucy Gardner Carson: “No one knows me because I lived off campus and worked five jobs to put myself through school! I’ve always regretted not being better connected with my class—OK, let’s face it, mostly embarrassed that I haven’t accomplished more impressive or glamorous things by now, but at 47 I’m starting to get over that—and you keep saying it’s never too late to speak up! “After graduation I married my still-husband—a rock musician and computer guy—and eventually ended up in Buffalo, where I spent time in publishing, had a successful kidney transplant and raised two kids, Nick and Molly, in a Waldorf school there. In late 2007 we relocated back to Bennington, Vt., to be closer to my aging mother. I took a publishing job but found that I couldn’t make enough doing that to support a family, especially since my husband John left his big-time IT job in Buffalo to join us. So guess where I ended up finding a good job with better pay and benefits, where I can be of service in the reputable field of higher education while also reveling in my gorgeous surroundings? Yes! I work at Williams, supporting the Africana and Latina/o studies programs and the Classics department. And the icing on the cake is that we’ve moved from Bennington to Billsville. Nick and Molly [finished] ninth and eighth grade, respectively, at their school in Vermont and [will attend] Mount Greylock in the fall.” Great to hear from August 2009 | Williams People | 85 CL ASS NOTES you, Lucy, and I hope other “non-trads” are inspired to follow you, Les Johnson and Sue Wise in writing. “I don’t think I’ve ever had any entries in the class column,” wrote another first-time correspondent, Elise Brown. “Once I graduated I just sort of sailed off into the horizon.” Elise sent a wonderful synopsis of her life since, reporting that she is happily settled in a small town in rural Maine with her partner Martha and their children Rose, 11, and Seth, 4. They live on a homestead farm where Elise raises vegetables, layer hens and dairy goats and also runs small maple sugaring and apple cider operations. In addition, she serves her community as the emergency service director, having previously held the volunteer office of fire chief. (No doubt Elise’s earlier stint as a professional firefighter and EMT for the city of Portland, Maine, has served her well!) Other hands-on adventures since graduation included wooden boatbuilding and off-island sheep shearing, and she is currently engaged in statewide political activism to improve the economic security of women and end racism. As a former Log luncher, I especially enjoyed Elise’s closing observation: “Recently, a friend asked me how I became so adept at bread baking. I look back on my senior year as Log lunch cook as being instrumental to my interest in not just making food, but growing it, too.” I also heard from Lisa Celona, recently promoted to assistant Spanish professor at Tunxis Community College in Farmington, Conn. Lisa loves her job, especially when it affords her the opportunity to take students into NYC for the day to see Broadway’s bilingual production of West Side Story, travel to Spain over spring break or host a Flamenco guitarist on campus. “Being a college teacher is a lot more fulfilling and enjoyable than the 10 years I spent in bank management, although that was a good experience too,” Lisa observed. Another professor, Laura Henriques, notes that she’s “been on the academic calendar my whole life, going straight from Williams to teaching K-12, then grad school and now being a professor, and I must say I like the rhythm of it.” Laura chairs the science education department at Cal State Long Beach 86 | Williams People | August 2009 and was looking forward to an LA alumni group gathering at Cal Tech featuring Williams Prof. Jay Pasachoff. Congratulations to Matthew Garrity-Janger, the new principal at Mount Desert Island High School in Bar Harbor, Maine, a truly pristine spot. This is Matthew’s return to New England—he worked at schools in New Hampshire and Massachusetts and was at Yale for his MBA—after many years in Michigan. After their move, his wife Cecily will continue her important work with combat vets, treating post-traumatic stress disorder. In North Carolina’s Research Triangle, Ted Benson started a new job as a molecular and cell biologist with a company called Talecris. Toner Mitchell is back in his hometown of Santa Fe with his wife Cullen and son Gus, and he runs a fly-fishing business and does freelance writing and arboriculture. City planner and leading New Urbanist Jeff Speck is helping Grand Rapids, Mich., and Oklahoma City create pedestrian-friendly downtowns. After many years in Abu Dhabi, Molly Tennis, husband Olivier and their four FrancoAmerican sons are relocating to Aix en Provence, France. “New job for Olivier and, at long last, fluency for the boys,” she wrote. And Dan Blatt reports that Anne Fetter has become quite the horsewoman and that we should all check out her Facebook page. (That means you, Debbie Wickenden Crisfield!) Mireya Calderin D’Angelo reported on a mini-multi-year Williams reunion in NYC, where she attended a party with my in-laws Rob ’86 and Catherine Eaton Coakley ’88 as well as Liz Peay McCreery ’86. Mireya’s daughter, an aspiring horsewoman herself, is in the same grade at the Chapin School as Liz’s. The always inspiring Kimerer LaMothe has written her third book, What A Body Knows: Finding Wisdom in Desire, published by O Books, an upand-coming religion/philosophy press in the UK. She and her musician spouse Geoff Gee celebrated its release by performing “Genesis,” an original music and dance piece about how we all participate in the ongoing act of creation. Appropriately enough but still astonishing, Kimerer performed the dance six months pregnant with their fifth child! (Astute readers of this column may recall that she was tiling their bathroom mere hours before giving birth to their fourth.) Check out www. vitalartsmedia.com for more on what this truly creative couple are achieving on their farm in upstate New York. I leave you with this cheerful update from New Hampshirebased Peter Burghardt, who reported, “Gosh, not much new here,” and then proceeded to write about his car being totaled in a multi-car interstate pileup, a work trip to Copenhagen, learning about craniofacial trauma as an EMT and skijoring with his rescue dogs, Luke and Tess. My favorite part of Peter’s account paid tribute to his wife Pam, data manager by day and industrious fiber artist at night. “She spends her free time weaving, spinning, dying and knitting,” he wrote. “At last count, there were three looms and four spinning wheels in the house, along with bags of fleece and rolls and skeins of yarn. There’s nothing like a snappy pair of hand-knit purple socks to make the airport security check a bit more cheerful.” I’m telling you, we class secretaries live for details like that. Purple socks! I love it. Thank you, Peter—you should think about wearing them to reunion! 1986 Greg Heller 178 Rolling Road Bala Cynwyd, PA 19004 1986secretary@williams.edu Tuck Rickards is in the middle of a trip around the world with his wife and kids Andrew, 17, Katie, 15, and Matt, 13. Tuck’s day job is with Russell Reynolds Associates, where he leads the tech sector, doing primarily CEO searches for private-equity clients. K. Bailey Freund is still working in New York as a retinal surgeon. He and his wife Nina Yannuzzi Freund just celebrated their 20th anniversary. They are enjoying watching kids Avery, 6, and Allegra, 13, grow up in NYC and in Milan, N.Y., a town in Dutchess County to which they escape whenever possible. Lee Hatcher is working in Silicon Valley as an entrepreneur and has a wonderful son Lucas Hatcher Jolicoeur, 5. Lee wanted me to pass along that he is alive, n 1 9 8 5 –8 7 Bill Reeves Jr. ’98 (left) and Thomas P. Vitale ’86 met up in San Diego in July 2008 at the Sci Fi Channel cocktail party, an event at the annual Comic Con gathering for devotees of science fiction, fantasy and horror. well and available for contact. J.P. Conlan recently graduated from law school at the University of Puerto Rico, where he is a professor of English. Robin Hoagland and her husband are living on Cape Cod full time now that their kids are in college. Son Henry is a freshman at Bowdoin, and daughter Elissa is a senior at Brown. Robin is active in lay ministry with her church (Christian Science) and is teaching locally and lecturing nationally I had the privilege of spending some time with Phil Tucher, his wife Karen Engel, their son Jamie, 8, and daughter Julia, 11, at their beautiful home in Piedmont, Calif. Phil is working for the Bay Area Coalition for Equitable Schools. Phil dragged me around the local lake on a run and is in amazing shape for someone of our—how should I put this?—maturity. Kevin McGonigle recently joined CornerCap Investment Counsel, which is a wealth advisory firm, as an executive VP. Kevin still lives in Atlanta with his wife Susan Bratton McGonigle and their three children (ages 10, 12 and 14). Kevin still travels around the world for his client base, but it’s a whole lot less than the constant travel that marked his two decades in management consulting. 1987 Greg Keller 2810 College Ave. Berkeley, CA 94705 Rob Wieman 11 Jarell Farms Drive Newark, DE 19711 1987secretary@williams.edu Greetings from California, the nation’s bad-debt capital. If you lend us a few nickels to cover for our no-money-down mortgages, our credit-card debt and our state budget deficit, we’ll pay you back whenever we get our groove back. Drew Steckler, a fellow California transplant and Berkeley resident, submitted news for the first time since graduation. Moreover, he proved that he’d been paying attention to the class notes style guide by adding in the appropriate bold text for each mention of a classmate. Drew writes, “Just before turning 30, Annie Winkelstein (Tufts ’87) of San Francisco, Calif., agreed to marry me. We now live in Berkeley with our three children—Zoe, 11, Tara, 9, and Sam, 3. I am a public defender attorney in the Alameda County office in Oakland. Until recently I read and discussed books with John Schafer, formerly of San Francisco and currently of Menlo Park. John is upper school director of Craig Breon’s alma mater, Menlo School. John and his lovely wife Deborah have a still more lovely daughter, Lucinda, 3, and they just had another girl, Marina (in April). Schafes and I used to play no-limit hold ‘em with Sam Beltran and Barton George. A couple years ago Barton split for Austin, Texas, with Sun Microsystems along with his wife Lisa and children Nicole, Dane and Logan. Sam’s still around in our Shangri-la, Oakland, teaching. Sam and his wife Kristen have a 4-year-old girl and a 2-year-old boy.” Drew adds that he still owes Gary Sheff a wedding present and a new-baby gift and is working on both but first needs to track down Gary. According to Drew, “Last I knew Sheffer was somewhere in Florida,” though the alumni directory lists a potentially more recent Chapel Hill, N.C., address. Annie Gilbert Coleman was on the move this summer to the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Ind. (Do we all live in college towns, or does it just seem that way?) In August, she will become a tenured associate professor in American studies, joining her husband Jon, who teaches in the history department. Annie’s research focuses on the history of professional outdoor guides, and she’s working on a book “tentatively called Brokering Wilderness for Oxford University Press. That plus new courses and growing kids (Harry, 8, and Louise, 5) will keep me busy for quite a while.” Karin Muller has probably logged many hours with professional outdoor guides as part of her work as documentary filmmaker when she spends three months each year in “a global conflict zone” such as Sudan, Chad and the Gaza in Israel. In addition to producing films for National Geographic and PBS, Karin has created a nonprofit organization, Take 2 Videos (www.take2videos.org), which distributes her raw footage of these regions mostly to high schools and colleges for use in student projects. In exchange for free access to the video, participating schools and teachers agree to guide the development of student films ranging from 30 seconds to 30 minutes. Karin is currently signing up new schools for the program and would enjoy working with anyone from Williams who is a teacher or who are the parents of kids at the right age levels. I expect that we’ll all be seeing more video on iPhones and similar devices, especially since all my TV channels turned to snow in June. Glenn Bloom is banking on this future and recently August 2009 | Williams People | 87 CL ASS NOTES set up a company to develop iPhone applications. A visit to his website (www.idvance. com) shows that he’s already posted a music simulator app called iTrumpet and has more applications in development. In May, Glenn added, “My wife and I live in NYC, and we have a daughter now 16 months old. I suppose being able to use both the terms ‘wife’ and ‘daughter’ in a sentence constitutes some good fortune.” Glenn’s wife Kristin also writes a blog (tryingtobegreener.wordpress.com/) focused on green consumer choices. In preparing the last request for news, I discovered how many of our classmates are writing blogs or are involved in new types of publishing. During this same period, I’ve noticed the spread of information about Williams and our classmates through the EphNotes e-mails, Facebook, LinkedIn and probably a few other sources that I’m not yet savvy enough to see. These new formats are great for many things, though I have been overloaded by the amount of news, which ranges from the truly interesting to the mercilessly mundane. One announcement that you’re almost sure to read in some other format over the summer is that Joey Horn has been elected to the Williams Board of Trustees. This is a well-deserved honor as Joey already does so much for the College and our class. When I worked with her on 20th reunion planning, it was not uncommon for her to send e-mails well after midnight with ideas for the class website (www.87ephs.com), which still steadily counts down the days to the celebration of our 25th. In addition, I assume that she’ll continue to be co-head agent with Dave Futterman while making time for her new responsibilities. I also enjoyed seeing Seth Lawry’s speech to the Williams Annual Scholarship luncheon, which was part of the May 4 EphNotes e-mail. Seth told a very entertaining and personal story about his experiences with Williams both as a student and in the years after in explaining why he and his wife Cindy have sponsored a scholarship. He referenced the fact that “I now have lived about the same amount of time since college as when I graduated,” another milestone for each of us that adds to the appreciation of the educational opportunity Williams provided. 88 | Williams People | August 2009 And if I’m not mistaken, Ned Patterson has already communicated with most of you by hitting “Reply All” to my previous e-mail request for news. Still, I can understand his enthusiasm for having his findings published in Nature Genetics, followed by a newspaper article in the Times of London and a radio interview on BBC Scotland. Ned was the lead author of the research article, which presented “our discovery of a gene mutation that causes some Labrador retriever dogs to not be able to use their rear legs after intense exercise. It is a recessive disease, and 30 percent of Labradors worldwide are carriers of the mutant gene.” Further background in the links Ned sent indicates that the University of Minnesota, where he is a member of the College of Veterinary Medicine faculty, now provides a test for the mutant gene, which is changing how Labradors are selected for breeding. For those of us who aren’t coming up with scientific breakthroughs or founding companies or writing books, there is solace in knowing that even the leading lights of our time still put their shoes and socks on like everybody else. For example, Jon Bon Jovi (not a classmate but certainly a presence on campus during our era) drops his kids off at school most days alongside a bemused Hans Humes, who’s doing the same thing. “We’re both middle-aged parents now,” Hans e-mails, which is not “anything profound” yet is not too bad either. 1988 Britta Bjornlund 3406 Rodman St. NW Washington, DC 20008 Carolyn O’Brien 241 Huron Ave. Cambridge, MA 02138 1988secretary@williams.edu We’re trying not to take this too personally, but it appears that many classmates are leaving the country. Chris Jones and Cecilia Malm are moving for a year to Rennes, France, where Chris will be teaching math in the Student Year Abroad program for rising American 11th- and 12th- graders. He and his wife are excited about the adventure and hoping their daughters won’t be cursing them (in lovely French accents) for enrolling the kids in the local, French-only elementary schools. Having not yet tasted the croissants, Chris and Cecilia intend to move back to NYC. Paul Danielson, who provided perspective on his military service during our reunion last year, is once again deployed in Afghanistan as a surgeon with the 101st Airborne Division. He said they’ve been mostly treating U.S./NATO/Coalition casualties, but there has been a pretty big humanitarian mission as well. He would like to see John “Wiley” Rahill (we know Wiley as “JR”) streaking overhead in his F-16 as close air support, but apparently JR and the Green Mountain Boys are stateside. Kate (Saunders) Hodgson sends news from Canada. If the swine flu pandemic is still in full swing by the time you read this, you may see her on the nightly news. Her career involves working with physicians and veterinarians (at the University of Toronto and the College of Veterinarians of Ontario). Kate’s twins Elize and Patrick are in grade three and love it. Her husband Pat Hodgson ’90 is also in academia, “terrifying” undergrads, according to Kate, with questions like, “Why are there no polar bears in Antarctica?” We understand the terror of his students and hope Kate writes back next time with the answer! Ashok Ashta reports that by early May temperatures had already soared to 110 degrees in Delhi, India, where he lives, and his favorite flavor of ice cream is chocolate chip. In Sydney, Australia, Jo Bellanca is happily caring for her own global citizen, son Elias, 6 months, who is a citizen of the U.S., Germany and Australia. World traveler Olga Bassinne spent February and March excavating in Oman, which she calls an “absolutely amazing place, being one of the few Gulf States that has not sold its soul/heritage along with oil.” When she wrote, she was in Provençe, digging and classifying ceramics from an oppidum (Olga did not provide a “definitions” section for her e-mail), and she was pondering the value of maintaining her apartment in yet a third location, Munich. Elise Friedman was jetting off to Tarragona, Spain, to present at the 9th International Conference of the Association for the Study of Marble and Other Stones in Antiquity. Tickets may still be n 1 9 8 7 –8 8 available. Elise has spent the past 15 years studying the Eastern Roman Empire (Greece, Turkey and the Middle East) and was looking forward to seeing how the “other half”—the Western Roman Empire—lives, or at least hosts a conference. Elise expects to publish her book soon. Gail Covington and family also left the country (on a “wonderful trip to Rwanda and Uganda in October”), but she returned, only to leave the longtime position at Goldman Sachs we reported on in a previous issue. Gail accepted an offer with Morgan Stanley wealth management services. As we now know, Gail’s choice of a Portuguese water dog puppy preceded the First Family’s. Gail doesn’t report on whether children Lauren, 11, and Williams, 6, find time to walk and feed the puppy amidst their basketball and lacrosse games. At least a few of our classmates have kept their adventures domestic for now. Bennett Lee moved from Atlanta to Richmond a few years ago, which he enjoys notwithstanding his Amherst boss. Bennett’s wife Eun, boys Caton, 4, and Noah, 2, and daughter Kaija, 6 months, keep him busy. Bennett’s kids bonded with Steve Holsten’s kids when they went on a trip to see the cherry blossoms in DC. Unfortunately, Bennett and his wife ended up in the ER with their youngest (who is now fine) while Steve and wife Tami kindly entertained the Lee boys at their home in Northern Virginia. The next week, Bennett and his family played host to Kurt Klebe, his wife Elizabeth and son Nate on their trip through Richmond to a Shenandoah Valley vacation from Maine. Fellow Virginian Nat McCormick was featured in The Virginian-Pilot for his work as an architect with the Norfolk Redevelopment and Housing Authority. The article provides enticing details about Nat’s work since Williams, including his contributions to Harvard’s Hasty Pudding Club, a French monastery, the Salt Lake City Olympic Village and an outhouse in Alaska. Nat seems to enjoy his contributions to developing vibrant, green and livable communities in Norfolk, where he lives with wife Thaler and daughters Maddy, 9, and Ella, 5. Farther up Route 95 and inside the Beltway, Blake Robison gathered with a group of late80s Ephs to celebrate the 40th birthday of Ellen Chase ’89 with Kirsten and George Tolley ’89, Mary Iliff ’89 and Ellen’s husband Kevin. The meal was followed by a performance of The Winter’s Tale at the Folger Shakespeare Theatre, featuring Blake’s wife Connan Morrissey as Hermione. DC resident Nicole Melcher married John Martin, who serves in the Army JAG Corps and provides legal assistance at Walter Reed Hospital in DC. Nicole and John had a “destination wedding” in balmy Wisconsin in January, braving 50-below temperatures upon arrival. (Were they put off by the lack of polar bears in Antarctica?) The weather warmed to 17 degrees on their big day, allowing them to get plenty of outdoor photos. Lisa Mandl, Carter Zinn, Susan Becker ’89 and Kate Macko, Kate’s husband F.R. Dengel ’87 and their baby Abigail joined in the celebration. For the record, Nicole notes, their first dance was to “At Last,” several days before the Obamas used it at the inaugural balls. Lisa Mandl and her daughter Imogen are pictured modeling audio guides at the Met in NYC. Impressive! And in baby admiration, Kim Daboo confirms from her visit with Kate Macko and family in March that Abigail is indeed a beauty. Mike Sullivan moved from the Philadelphia suburbs to Pittsburgh. His wife Megan and daughters Ellie, Kiki and Shea were enjoying tips from Pittsburgh residents Kim Daboo and Lisa Phillips about their new city while Mike settled into his new job as president and COO of HM Insurance Group, where he has worked for the last 13 years. Also in Pennsylvania is Hal Wells, who wrote in for the first time. Post Williams, Hal spent even more time in schools, earning both a PhD in history and a JD. After spending a few years practicing law in DC, he “saw the light” and returned to higher education—he is now an assistant professor of law at Temple University in Philadelphia. Hal teaches corporate law and legal ethics and writes “thrilling” articles on the history of corporation law. He lives with his wife Jenny and two daughters, Margaret, 7, and Emily, 1, adopted from China last November. Alicia Bjornson (Mount Holyoke exchange ’86-’87) is the site manager for Hancock House State Historic Site near “Exit One” off the New Jersey Turnpike. She lives in a rural county, where the one stoplight between her house and work rarely slows her down. Alicia remains in touch with many Williams friends and credits two art history classes with Whitney Stoddard ’35 for putting her on her current career path. Brian Kornfeld reports from Westchester in New York that he is also enjoying his career choice, working at a nonprofit called Abbott House on a Medicaid waiver program called “Bridges to Health.” He supervises a volunteer team of 90 folks who deliver services to the homes of the children and families enrolled in the program. While Brian’s (very young) knees no longer tolerate soccer, hockey is still on his agenda as is chasing his kids during summer vacation. Because we are hipster women—and because we do pretty much anything to fill this column—we’re turning to Facebook for information on you people. (But not to worry, all stories are pre-approved. We wouldn’t use something without your consent!) Esu Anahata (formerly Howie Patlis) is “walkin’ for water.” Starting May 11, he and other activists walked 500 miles—from the Burkina Faso U.N. Mission in NYC to the Unitarian Universalist Society of Bangor, Maine—crossing 20 cities in 20 days to raise awareness and funding for clean drinking water in Burkina Faso. Passing through the Berkshires, Esu commented that he hoped to solidify deeper connections between BARKA Foundation and Williams. To start, Adam Ruderman joined BARKA’s board of directors and drove up from Pennsylvania to join in two days’ walking. Esu called Adam a “tremendous asset.” Steve Halloran and Rick Barton were recently reminiscing about scoring five to 10 albums (that’s how we listened to music back in the day) for $25 at Toonerville Trolley Records on Water Street. Professor Barton did some research and learned that the place is still in business. An associate professor at UNC Greensboro and with the academic year coming to a close, Rick reported that he was looking forward to retreating into the arcana of medieval history over the summer. We also learned from Facebook that Steve and Jonny Hollenberg attended the same R.E.M. tribute August 2009 | Williams People | 89 CL ASS NOTES show at Carnegie Hall in March but didn’t see each other. One of them may have even been in the front row. A missed opportunity. Jody (Abzug) Irzyk kindly wrote to us, not knowing we would also tap into her Facebook postings for an update. She and her family just completed their first year in New Rochelle, N.Y., living on the campus of a Christian Brothers school as the only lay residents. Having spent 12 years living on the more rural Choate Rosemary Hall campus, she says it has been an adjustment, but a good one. Jody has found it easier to host Ephs at her location 30 minutes from Manhattan. Lisa Buxbaum, Nora Harrington, Kate Gerber Kennedy and Helen Curtis (and her “very, very adorable 18-month-old son Freddy”) have all stopped by. Jody planned to spend the summer driving cross country from California and back again with her 10-year-old twins, visiting many Ephs and National Parks. Bill Hilty successfully rowed a “cataraft” through the Grand Canyon on a 16-day private group trip. While he reports no injuries he’s willing to admit to, he says there are some “BIG” rapids in there. Bill also reminds us that the “dry Southwest (is) where whisky is for drinking and water is to be fought over.” Does this means he’s having a BYOW party soon? Via Facebook, we learned Jody met up with Kim Rich Lupkin in Manhattan. Kim made it back to Williams this past winter to celebrate hockey coach McCormick’s 80th birthday. Kim served as manager of the men’s team while at Williams, and her father played for McCormick in the 1960s. What about class president Russell Werkman? Russell forgot to write in this time, but we learned that he was recently delivering lambs, feeding cattle and grooming horses. You’ll have to ask him why. And on a sad note, Jim Elliott informed us that Mark Raisbeck has officially retired from competitive darts. So ends a long chapter of NYC life that included Jim, Brooks Foehl, Ray George and others. Mark’s team held a brief but undoubtedly tearful ceremony to commemorate his achievements in the field—incredible come-from-behind wins, too many high scores to count, the occasional destruction of a pool table, and even a quick snooze during scoring. Cheers Mark! 90 | Williams People | August 2009 There were no pool tables, but there were plastic glasses of beer and wine at the annual meeting of the Williams Boston alumni association, which Carolyn, Lisa Tenerowicz, Gerry Kirschner and Dave Kane all attended—providing Carolyn with the opportunity to harass people for notes in person, which works! Lisa must have heard about the great weather at Nicole’s wedding, as she decided to visit Christine (Boddicker) and Michael Roach in Buffalo in March! She was treated to traditional Western NY hospitality, which included a Sabres-Flyers NHL game, a great hike and Lisa’s first trip to Niagara Falls. Lisa says she enjoyed the two-fer of catching up with friends and knocking “visit Niagara Falls” off of her bucket list. Lisa’s making the rounds of regional alumni association meetings and attended a Williams Buffalo meeting, where she caught up with Michael’s sister Kate Roach ’87. Gerry reports that he enjoyed the hospitality of Jeff Brancato and family while watching the Boston Marathon last spring. Gerry found himself thinking, “I did that before. I can do it again!” But he says: “Fortunately, that illness seems to have passed.” Gerry also caught up in May with Lisa Buxbaum at a mutual friend’s cookout, where they speculated about which Ephs might attend their upcoming 25th (must be a typo!) high school reunion— possibly Sally Robertson, Claire Hsiang, Bob Long or Laurie Bennett. Dave Kane, author of ephblog, was gracious enough not to be hurt that we’re not up-to-date on our blog reading. He pointed us to some great pictures of Sean Logan, Lew Collins and Scott Garfield playing in last spring’s re-creation of the first intercollegiate baseball game (played by Williams and Amherst in 1859). The vintage costumes are reason enough to Google this! Dave also reminded us to congratulate Tom Smith, aka Thomas E. Smith, associate professor of chemistry at Williams College, for being named one of only five professors across the country to win the Henry Dreyfus TeacherScholar Award for leadership in original scholarly research of outstanding quality with undergraduates and excellence and dedication in undergraduate studies. The accompanying press release says that Tom and his undergraduate research assistants are “researching pyran-based anticancer natural products in order to formulate an efficient general strategy for the asymmetric synthesis of these complex molecular structures.” Well said. Katie Kent, aka Kathryn R. Kent, associate professor of English, became (full) professor of English in July. Katie became a professor at Williams in 1996. She’s offering the first interdisciplinary gay/ lesbian/bi/trans/queer studies course at Williams in spring 2010. Modest classmate and academic Donna Lisker reported from Duke University that she had little to report—other than her experience with swine flu contingency planning for the university and a recent, very pleasant visit with Mary Lisker in Seattle, where Mary drove up from her home in Portland. Donna failed to mention—but our intrepid reporting and random luck can’t be stopped!—that she was the only alumni speaker among those participating in this year’s “Claiming Williams” series of events that also saw the Congressional Black Caucus visit to Williams. Donna is the associate dean of undergraduate education at Duke. Carolyn enjoyed a visit from Joyce Rogers over Memorial Day (instead of completing the class notes) where Joyce had the chance to spend time with Carolyn’s daughter Audrey and learn firsthand the joys of eating dinner in eight minutes or less with an active toddler. Thanks to everyone who spent a leisurely eight minutes or more to send us their news. Don’t forget, “What I Did Last Summer” makes for classic reading! We hope to hear from you soon. 1989 David Bar Katz 138 Watts St., Apt. 4 New York, NY 10013 Shannon Penick Pryor 3630 Prospect St., NW Washington, DC 20007 1989secretary@williams.edu Submitted by Shannon and outgoing secretary Tim Shaw: It was great to see such a great turnout at the reunion, and many thanks to all who helped out. Our committee included Nancy Hedeman Cleary, Ian Lapey, Marc McDermott, Laura Richman Myers, Gordon Pollock, Shannon n 1 9 8 8 –8 9 Pryor, Seth Rabinowitz, Allison Wertheim Weiss and Carolyn Darrow Woodard. Peter DuBois, aka “recycleman,” gave a great performance for all of the kids at the reunion. Dave Willey, editor in chief of Runner’s World, gave a talk that got rave reviews. Our class agents Deborah Snyder Platt and Dan Pryor accepted two of the reunion trophies: largest class gift in the “middle years” classes, and biggest increase in class gift year on year. Unfortunately, the trophies—big silver bowls—had notes inside indicating that they were not to be taken home. Dan also wishes to point out that Chris Giglio, VP of the Society of Alumni, was sitting on the stage during the alumni meeting in shorts, alone among the leadership in choosing to “show his lovely legs” (these are my husband’s words, not mine). Remarkably, four of our classmates in attendance at the reunion have been working for the same employer ever since graduation: Doug Gschwind (at Morgan Stanley), Rich Ward (at Microsoft and spending some of his spare time fostering dogs), Marilyn Germano Trabold (at Aetna, though her husband works for the competition) and Sheila Keady Rawson (the city of Cambridge, Mass.) Let me know if I’ve missed anyone! The highlight of my reunion was catching up with former roommate Marilyn Germano Trabold. Other entrymates in attendance were James McGill, who traveled all the way from Amherst, and at least one of his five kids; Todd Pelkey, in from California; Wayne Fritsche, who launched a career in theater and, according to Facebook, was due to open as a dying drag queen and a recovering sex addict (though he says his real life is much more dysfunctional); Mark McLaughlin and his wife Ninette Enrique with their two daughters; and Rob Gotti, still the czar of advertising at Sam Adams brewery. Mark and Ninette donated the purple “W” shopping bags in which the reunion gifts were distributed. Trey Meckel rescued my 3-year-old son Tommy, who had wandered from the freshman quad over to somewhere near Sawyer, but we didn’t have a chance to talk. (I think I was trying to find my daughters.) I did learn from David Bentley, who made the arduous trek to Billsville from the Boston suburbs, that he’s working at a startup and spends a lot of time at the Ping-Pong table in the office. Mike Barbera may be one of the first among us preparing to send a child to college! He was one of the organizers of the 150th anniversary WilliamsAmherst baseball and chess matchup. Williams won both. Theresa Tejada flew in from London. She works for Goldman Sachs. Sarah Ryan was up with husband Rob Weiner ’87; she is living in Delaware and teaching teachers how to teach. Southy Walton practices trusts and estates law in Northern Virginia. Our former neighbors Beth ’90 and Adam Kimberly came with their two kids from Boulder, Colo., where Adam runs his own private equity firm. John Berger and wife Sarah were moving their family and their nonprofit, Made by Survivors, from Massachusetts to Florida but made time to attend the reunion. Shirley Kagan and Matt Dubroff ’90 brought their two kids, Miriam and baby Avi KaganDubroff, born Sept. 18, 2008. Shirley is still the entire theater department at Hampden Sydney. The Kagan-Dubroff family made a trip in December to visit grandparents in Florida. At Disney World they ran into Dave Allen and his lovely boy. Mike O’Malley moved from Chicago to Boston to take a new job. Stew Verdery, who runs his own lobbying shop, is tremendously busy but was able to get away from work and make it to Williamstown at the last minute. Susie Sullivan wrote, “Most of the computer science crew were in attendance— including Todd Pelkey, Rich Ward, Doug Gschwind, myself and Rachel Scales. Professor Tom Murtagh came by to round out the picture. But we did miss seeing Bill Morrison and Jon Headley, and we hope they can make it back for the 25th!” John Dillon is moving to Framingham, Mass. Asif Jalil lives in Atlanta and is working for Delta. Mary Kipp was in from El Paso and was walking around with Jon Bank. Ann Carson is still working at NCQA, planning a move to Cape Cod. She occasionally sends me e-mails meant for a colleague named Shannon, but they are never interesting enough to print here. Tim Frechette has attended two Williams reunions in two years. Jim McNulty had one of the youngest attendees along, James IV. Jack and Jen Storey Gillis are still in St. Louis; she teaches at MICDS, where Jack serves on the board and their kids attend school. Amy Heald came over from San Diego, where she teaches elementary school. Harriet Honigfeld brought her husband and 5-year-old daughter Meredith. Jennifer Morris Grossman and husband David ’87 both looked completely unchanged; Jenn is a rheumatologist at UCLA. Pete Dahling is living in the Bay Area and working for Chevron. Our new class VP and treasurer David Beischer “completed 10-day tour of New England culminating in our reunion weekend. Traveled with my family to Mystic, Boston—where we went to Fenway Park for the first time—then up to the Maine coast to visit with Eric Mukai and his family in Portland. Reunion was great, and Seth Rabinowitz came through big organizing the food.” Kin Ma summarized his news from the reunion: “My daughter ShiShi (potential class of 2020) was play buddies with Beth Edwards’ oldest daughter, Sarah, throughout the weekend. Beth’s husband Bob Morrow ’91 and their three children and ShiShi and I all frolicked and cooled down in the Chandler Pool on Friday. We had also reminisced with our appetites by eating pizza at Colonial’s. Beth is a homemaker and soccer coach for her children and lives in western North Carolina, while Bob is a general surgeon in a nearby town. On Friday night, we had dinner with Juan and Louise Aponte and their three children. Juan is a practicing dentist Down East in Maine, and Louise is home-schooling her three children and encouraging them to play violin. It was their first time back to the Purple Valley, and we enjoyed renewing our friendship. “On Saturday morning, we decorated our hats, batons and purple balloons for the class parade with the wonderful purple help of Nancy Ma ’10, a very enthusiastic reunion ranger. Both the Morrow and Ma families really enjoyed the wonderful sunshine for the parade of purple and gold as we marched through the campus where the highlight was 1) Stopping Route 2 traffic, 2) Seeing our beloved ‘walking’ purple cow (not the ice cream), and 3) Spotting the tall ‘Ephman.’ At the alumni meeting, it was great to cheer when our class won two trophies for large class gift total and high participation rates in the Alumni Fund. I was glad to help as an August 2009 | Williams People | 91 CL ASS NOTES associate agent, though the deep, heartfelt thanks goes to the 69 percent (341) of our class members who contributed this past year. It was fun to chat with John Nathanson … who is lawyering in NYC as a U.S. district attorney.” His wife Alison Brown is doing a postdoc in psychoanalysis and “will likely teach psych at Columbia in the fall,” Kin says. “On Saturday evening, chatting with Will Dudley was fun, though it was quite entertaining to have President Morty Schapiro in our conversations, and Schapiro confided to us that Will had helped him become a better teacher in their team-taught course of philosophy and ethics. Grace Park and I were alumni weekend suitemates in Sage C, and she will be the new magnet coordinator for the performing arts and medical magnet programs at Van Nuys High School in California. She challenged us all by going on a Saturday morning three-mile Gale Road run. Jen Krouse flew back into town on Saturday, and she entertained Grace, Beth and me with stories of her Stockholm Business School days and her insightful commentary on meeting life’s challenges and growing in wisdom in our middling years. Jen is now a North Adams landlord.” Kin concludes, “On Saturday evening, Grace, Jen and I had dinner with Cassandra Kirk, Ingrid Scott and Joaquin Campbell. Ingrid teaches elementary school in South Carolina, while Cassandra is working as a lawyer in Atlanta. … The Reunion Road Warrior awards should be given to Joaquin, Cassandra and Ingrid, since they left Billsville on Saturday night in the pouring rain to drive overnight back to South Carolina and Atlanta.” A few notes from classmates who were with us in spirit: Lynda Gregory writes, “I am setting my hopes on making our 25th. Hopefully I can make it happen. I don’t know how to get the boys there, as they don’t have school holidays until July, but we’ll see. All is well here in Sydney. Coming up to my 20th anniversary with Gen Re. Still a good place to be. Heading off to Queenstown in NZ to ski with the boys and another family for a week in August, which should be really nice. Didn’t realize it when we booked, but the week we are there will be the World Cup games. … Still keeping in touch with Julia Riecheld and Amy Ragalis, which is great.” 92 | Williams People | August 2009 Laura Tang writes, “I am now at the stage where I feel ‘settled’ in Shanghai, though there is always an underlying sense that I am not ‘home.’ I continue to study Mandarin, but I envy my classmates who studied Mandarin at Williams. I am very sorry to miss reunion, but we do plan to spend a month in the States this summer. This past February I traveled to Jingdezhen, the source of porcelain for two dynasties. I did not see another foreigner while I was there and feared for the safety of the cyclists turning their heads to get a good look at me. I now write and edit regularly for Shanghai Courier (expat assn. magazine). We welcome visitors!” Shannon Brennan Olrich wrote: “Sad to miss our 20th—my dad’s 55th reunion—especially since I remember how much I used to love those reunion weekends as a kid. We were in the midst of a cross-country move at the time. After four wonderful years at The Bay School of San Francisco, we’ve moved back east to the Brooks School (North Andover, Mass.) campus, where my husband Peter will be director of college counseling, and I will be home with our two children, Will, 4, and Eliza, 1.” Mike DeSenne wrote, “Carmen (Kenyon ’90) and I have adopted our daughter Lorena. We first met Lorena in 2007, when she was 10 years old, through an amazing program called Kidsave Summer Miracles. We spent two months in Colombia finalizing the adoption in 2008. Despite the stereotypes, Colombia proved to be an incredibly safe and beautiful country. Like most big cities Bogota is crowded and chaotic, but Cartagena is gorgeous, as is Medellín, and the people are unbelievably open and friendly. Going from no kids to a (now) 12-year-old has been an educational experience on many levels. I know more about the Jonas Brothers than a grown man should, and I’ve learned that I know a lot less about middle school math than a grown man should. Hats off to anyone who can tell a rhombus from a hole in the wall.” Stephanie Brown wrote, “My family (husband Cory, identical twin 13-year-old daughters Jessie and Clara, and terrier-poodles Alice and Wendy) and I will be leaving Châteauneuf de Grasse, not far from Cannes, and heading back to Chevy Chase, Md., in mid July. The girls will start high school (!) in September, my husband will go back to his work with Texas Instruments, and I’ll be looking to restart my work in museums. Before we left I was a curator at Hillwood Estate, Museum & Gardens in DC; when we had the opportunity to live in France for two years, I turned in my badge. It has been well worth it—travel, food, wine, weather, finally figuring out how to use the French subjunctive— and now we’re all looking forward to living in Obama’s Washington!” Tim Shaw and I have enjoyed reading and compiling all of your news over the past five years! It’s time for a new slate of officers. Taking the helm as our new leader (president) will be Deborah Snyder Platt. Cooper Campbell Jackson and Dan Pryor will be the class agents calling you for contributions, David Beischer will be VP and treasurer, and David Katz and Shannon Pryor are the class secretaries. Please write any time with news, real or imagined! 1990 REUNION JUNE 10-13 Christina Evans 1 West 64th St., Apt. 7B New York, NY 10023 1990secretary@williams.edu Our fantastic former secretary Beth Broadrup Lieberman wrote with her latest (perfectly edited) news. “My husband Jim Lieberman ’90 and I celebrated our 40th birthdays in 2008 with our first visit to Spain. We joined a Williams alumni tour led by art history professor Zirka Filipczak, exploring Antonio Gaudi’s otherworldly architecture and eating tapas at midnight in Barcelona. In Basque country, we discovered the misty, serene town of San Sebastian and marveled at the ‘undulating curves’ (thank you, Art History 101) of the Guggenheim Bilbao Museum.” In September, she flew to Williamstown for a reunion with Jonna Hooker Whitman, Melissa Levine Baratta, Lisa Gauthier Miceli and Holly Kim Price. To mark their 40th birthdays, they hiked Stone Hill, feasted at Mezze, checked out the luxe Paresky Center “and laughed at a display in Sawyer Library: a historical trivia contest about 1990, ‘the year current first-year students were born!’ We left the Purple Valley grateful for n 1 9 8 9 –9 0 the friendships we began in the days of Baxter flume and paper Facebooks.” The bit about the freshman class being born in 1990 is horrifying. Beth added, “Perhaps Jonna Hooker Whitman’s days as a patient at Williams’ infirmary influenced her more than her chemistry classes; she now treats students as a physician for Vanderbilt University’s health center in Nashville and takes piano lessons, practicing quietly after Meredith, 9, and Reed, 4, are asleep. Melissa Levine Baratta returned to social work in suburban Boston after younger daughter Cassidy entered first grade. She and sister Katie, 10, finally persuaded Melissa and Mike Baratta ’89 to adopt a dog. Lisa Gauthier Miceli finished her term as suicide prevention counselor at Connecticut College and now practices psychology privately in New London, where she also pursues watercolor painting. She and husband Jeff and son Jack, 9, love to escape to the New Hampshire coast. Holly Kim Price, a teacher and reading specialist, is currently at home with kids Hyun Su, 5, and Sarah, 2, in Providence. Holly relaxed with a yoga class in North Adams during our September reunion.” Beth and Jim toasted Steve Brody at his 40th birthday picnic in DC. After leaving the Department of Justice, Steve practices law with O’Melveny & Myers and explores DC with wife Melanie and daughter Anna. Jim and Beth moved to western Michigan 10 years ago, when he finished his residency at University of Chicago and entered private radiology practice. Two daughters and one hospital merger later, they remain among the sand dunes and wild turkey flocks and take regular trips back East to see family and friends. Beth says, “On a drive through southern Maine last fall, Jim surprised our former JA Lorri Williams Sommer ’88 by knocking on her door like a Ghost of Freshmen Past. Assured he wasn’t on the lam, she invited him in to catch up.” Beth says she is “at-home librarian” to Helen, 6, and Anna Ruth, 2, “who pepper me with unanswerable reference questions such as, ‘What-inna-world is dis?’ and ‘WHY?’ Sound familiar, anyone? There are moments when NYC seems immense and exhausting, and there are moments when it is pretty terrific and even small-town in feel. I have had a number of the latter experiences of late, including running into Chris Towle on the corner of 86th Street and Columbus Avenue. He was in town from St. Louis for a meeting and was headed to dinner with David Lerner. I was shuffling little girls out of a cab—all chaos and flying backpacks—and it was terrific to see an old Jake House friend after so many years and in such a random setting. I also ran into Peter Milliken and his wife Ashley ’92 and their kids—in my very building, no less—who were in town for part of the kids’ spring break before heading to DC. In news from Minneapolis, Madeleine Lowry reports that all is well with her family and that they were looking forward to visiting London this summer. “I am working on a manuscript for a young-adult novel and getting a little use out of my MBA (sigh), counseling small businesses for the local Small Business Development Center. My husband Phil ’77 is a gastroenterologist and sings with VocalEssence, a 130-voice chorus. We have three kids: Nicola, 11, Weston, 9, and William, 3, and a feisty dachshund named Pepper.” Madeleine would love to get in touch with classmates on Facebook. Also in Minneapolis, John and Jill Romans welcomed their fourth child, Richard, this past spring. He joins his sisters and brother and is undoubtedly keeping the whole family delighted and extremely busy. Andy Bernheimer wrote with lots of news from Brooklyn: “Our son Isaac is tipping 5 years old, our daughter Alice, 2 and change. We see several classmates, including Troye Jenkins, who is bicoastal, has a small pièd-a-terre about four blocks away from us and has been working film shoots in Brooklyn Bridge Park.” Will Hong (newly engaged!) is living in Park Slope with his fiancée Cam and is getting married in the fall. “Will and I have started a regular tennis match out in Fort Greene,” writes Andy, “though we spend more time chasing the balls we hit over the fence than actually playing. Worse, we are now old, and retrieving the ones we hit out takes longer than it used to.” Andy continues, “My architecture practice has been productive despite the economic downturn. We’re working on a few new projects—a house in the Hamptons, a wine store in LA (for my sister Jill Bernheimer ’93), a gallery in the city in Chelsea, an addition to a house we previously designed for Andy and Alison Kaplinsky ’92. We also recently won an international design competition for a very small environmentally friendly house up in Syracuse, N.Y., and this will be built starting in September. We also just completed our two largest projects, both apartment buildings in Manhattan near the new High Line Park in Chelsea. Most notable, a nearly 200-page book on our work of the last 12 years is about to hit the shelves called Think/Make, published by Princeton Architectural Press (visit www.amazon.com now). I have been teaching as well at Syracuse and at Parsons in NYC.” It was great to see many Ephs at the Williams Club in NYC last spring for a benefit for Gina Coleman’s “Quest for College” www.questforcollege.com/, a fantastic early awareness college program and game that aims to educate students as to what lies ahead on the academic horizon. After a day spent speaking to and inspiring the kids at the Bronx Charter School for Excellence, where both Deirdre Flynn and myself are board members, Gina and her band set up at the Williams Club to raise money and awareness for QFC. Wendy Lipp brought the whole event together, and it was great to see attendees such as Hilary Steinman, David Bank and Jody Abzug ’88. Gina is associate dean at Williams, where she has a role as both mentor/friend and disciplinarian. I was fascinated to hear about some of the crazy stuff these high-achievers are getting into these days. David J. Bank “had dinner with Andy Bernheimer, Jeff Friedman and Chuck Samuelson (at Chuck’s place) with our wives (thanks to Francesca for cooking)—a real treat and chance to catch up after way to long.” Dave spends summers in the Hamptons “so anybody looking for an Eph kids playdate (Zoe is 8 and Alex almost 4!), give me a shout.” Rick Bruner is in LA, where he works as a health insurance broker and has become more active in the healthcare reform debate. “I went to DC in April to speak to legislators about this issue. I did the same thing in Sacramento in May. These experiences were very rewarding. Now the August 2009 | Williams People | 93 CL ASS NOTES summer is here, and I’m going to have some fun by heading to St. Tropez, France, for a week and also vacationing with my family in Lake Geneva, Wis.” Polly LeBarron had a chance to spend a day in Williamstown with Megan King Henderson and Rob Swann to get started on plans for reunion 2010. “In between checking out the new buildings on campus and watching Eph victories on the field, we were able to generate a lot of ideas … but we’re also looking for suggestions from the class. There will be much more to come, but we wanted to get people thinking about reunion as early as possible.” There have been big changes for Kevin Confoy, including a move to the Charlotte, N.C., area this year. “I hope this is the last move for a long time to come, since between building houses and changing cities, this is my fifth house in the last five years. So far the area has been great … Will, Class of 2024, just finished first grade, and Sean, Class of 2026, just finished pre-K, and we’re looking forward to some travel this summer. Tricia (my wife) and I will be getting out to San Francisco, and we hope to get to NYC.” Kevin and Andy Bernheimer will be joining Will Hong in Las Vegas this summer, so I’m sure that’ll be a big time. Bob Santry reports that he is “working away at Goldman Sachs while preparing to move out of Boston to Newton, Mass., this summer. We have two children now, Julia, 2-plus, and Jack, 6 months. Played out in Vail with the 40-plus lacrosse team last year but will be admiring from afar this July—too many bruises! Looking forward to a great summer and hoping to make it out to the Village Beautiful at some point soon.” Carter Brothers reports from Atlanta about last summers’ Brothers Family Williams Great American Tour (Northeast Coastal Leg). “My family got to catch up with the families of John Mackie, John McCann and Craig Gangi during a beautiful Sunday stopover on our way back from Maine, where we spent a week hanging out with the family of Amy Scott Vaughn.” He completed the Pacific Islands leg of the Brothers Family Great American Tour, where he and Jen got to spend time with the family of Andy and Miki Bunn. “As Andy and I headed to the golf 94 | Williams People | August 2009 course,” writes Carter, “dark and ominous clouds came sweeping in over the mountains. Andy looked at me and said, ‘Thanks for bringing the lousy weather. It never storms in Hawaii.’ To which I replied, ‘If I brought the weather, there would be tornados!’ Later that day, at a golf course nearby, the first tornado in 20 years touched down on Oahu. I kid you not.” And from Maine, Allison Smith Mitchell got remarried in ’08 and is busy with concerts, Little League games and spring soccer matches galore. She is “putting all of my analytical skills to good use as we walk through the school budget process and also work our way through the process of creating an entirely new school district. The state of Maine imposed a consolidation law last year, and having created the plan, we’re now in the process of making it a reality with the other towns with whom we’ve agreed to partner. It’s interesting and a real education (no pun intended). “In addition, I’ve taken on a new role as a trained guardian ad litem for children in the protective custody of the state. In my role, I am their ‘voice’ in all court proceedings. It’s also interesting and an education into a side of life I really haven’t had much experience with (thankfully!). I enjoy doing it because I feel like I can make a real difference in the lives of children who haven’t had a lot of advantages. And it makes me incredibly grateful for all the blessings we have here in our own lives. Even when my kids are fighting with each other!” Amen to all of that... Thank you all, as ever, for answering my pleas for your news. I continue to be amazed by the interesting paths that everyone has chosen, and I am really looking forward to catching up in person next June. 1991 Mary Moule 555 Edgecombe Ave., Apt. 9D New York, NY 10032 1991secretary@williams.edu Let’s start off with the new crop of babies. It seems we missed the birth of Nick Antoun’s son, but Nick filed this update: “He is 26 months old and is a real chatter-box; I liken him to a play-by-play announcer as he narrates all household events: ‘Mommy washes carrots; Daddy drinks juice (wine).’ Nicole, William and I live in Hopewell, N.J., west of Princeton—much more peaceful and green than we expected NJ to be. I have been working at Johnson & Johnson for about four years as an in-house counsel handling acquisitions, divestitures and joint ventures for the company.” More recently, John Freedman’s wife Cecily gave birth to Elio Nataniel Baskir Freedman on Feb. 24. Spud said, “The timing was tricky—Elio had to wait until dad returned from Ohio late Monday night before starting to make his way out, then he had to hurry to make sure he was born on Mardi Gras (or else Daddy was going to name him Ashley Wednesday).” Somehow, I suspect Cecily might have had an opinion about that. Lynn Huddon welcomed her second son, “sweet baby” James Theodore Dauer, on March 2. Sarah Gagnon Barbato had her second daughter, Caroline Elizabeth Barbato, on April 16 and reported: “Caroline seems to know she’s a second child and is settling in nicely—eating well, sleeping well and generally fussing a lot less than her older sister did at the time. Meanwhile, Samantha, 4, has come into her own as a big sister and regularly proclaims Caroline as the ‘cutest baby of the whole world!’” Erik Sebesta welcomed his second red-headed daughter, Lauren Hayes Sebesta, on May 8. Chris Mersereau and his wife and three kids made a spring trip to the Galapagos Islands: “It was a remarkable experience. We swam with giant sea turtles, penguins, sea lions and sea iguanas on a daily basis. We even had the rare opportunity to see a volcanic eruption up close.” Anna Bardone-Cone took her family to visit extended family in Quito, Ecuador, over the winter holidays—her children’s first visit, “and we did see more Spanglish emerge as a result. It’s a start!” Ramona Liberoff continues to bounce around the globe managing accounts for WPP. She reported: “I had the rare pleasure of hosting Stacey Baradit ’09, who interned last summer at one of our group companies in London after traveling through China doing independent work on the health care system. Kids today. I am also learning cello, very slowly, from a 19-year-old professional cellist … [and] being bossed around by a whole slew n 1 9 9 0 –9 1 of experts who are half my age. … It’s been a great time to feel old and say things like ‘when I was your age.’” At least she gets the expert youngsters. Chris Cox ’92 teaches math at Illinois Central College, where he once had to convince one of his students that getting a D on the final exam could not possibly bring her D average to a C—in an algebra class. I would have laughed harder at the story, except that I remember asking some rash questions when Chris was my calculus tutor sophomore year. Bevin Cooper Farkas is in her less busy season at bumbleBdesign.com, since half of her gift-basket business comes during the holidays. Her Seattle home-based business engages her creative side, and having two tween-agers keeps her on her toes. For those of us approaching that stage, she warned, “The middle school phase is crazy! Slang speak, slouchy clothes and cell phones—it’s all about fitting in. But I’m glad that, despite all the efforts to be cool, my son still wants to be tucked in at night, still has his favorite stuffed animals.” Cara Schlesinger’s home-based business, traditional bookbinding, is in addition to her day job. She mixes up paste in her kitchen, uses a hand-operated gold stamping press and was nominated to the executive board of the Guild of Book Workers. Look for her at the fall fair in Rhinebeck, N.Y. Speaking of Medieval art, Alexa Sand will take a break from teaching to do research in Paris for the fall. She said, “I’d love to hear from other Ephs in Paris, since it would be fun to have a social life.” She’s already expanded her social life locally, using Facebook to reconnect with some of her East 3 entrymates: “Lo and behold, two of them actually live in the Beehive State. So, in April, I got together with Allison Tonkin and Annabel Sheinberg ’89 (our JA) at Annabel’s house in Salt Lake City. It was so great to see them after a 10- and 20-year hiatus (respectively), and yet another confirmation that the more things change, the more people, essentially, remain the same. We’re all foodies, so we had a great meal, met each others’ spouses and kids, and hung out, just like old times. Allison and her husband own a winery in Hungary, and it was a treat to get to taste some of their Tokaj wine.” Alexa also met up with Soo La Kim during a visit to Evanston, Ill., for a Medieval studies conference. Soo and new son Spencer were also visited by Soo’s brother Bo Kim ’92 and Elizabeth Allison. In recognition of that special number some of us have reached, Caleb Gordon created a trivia contest all about his wife Lisa Alcala for her 40th birthday bash in January. Among the exactly 40 guests (by coincidence, they claim), were Rebecca Sokolovsky and her husband Franco, visiting from NYC. The Gordon-Alcala family is adjusting to life in Florida, which “includes frogs in the pool and alligators by the roadside in the middle of town.” They also hosted Melissa Fenton Herrod “and her sweet little boys, who played non-stop Legos with our girls.” Gretchen Piper and Jim Field keep up their Williams connections as co-presidents of the Twin Cities Williams Alumni Association. In addition to getting to hang out with each other and other Ephs, they are organizing a regional allNESCAC event. Charlie Rardin, Judy Conti and Lisa Kaestner all met up in DC for a “fabulous dinner/reunion/pediatric event,” complete with their three spouses and eight kids. In Baltimore, Matt Wyskiel and his family have frequent visits with neighbors Jim Higgins and family. Matt also had lunch with Jim Ryan ’92, who works for Citi Financial, and Matt’s wife Christy recently joined the board of Southwest Baltimore Charter School, which was founded and directed by Erika Brockman ’92. Michael La Porte changed law firms, joining Flachsbart & Greenspoon (their real names!) in Chicago: “We represent inventors in patent litigation (when we aren’t discussing poker theory: One of my partners cashed in the World Series of Poker Main Event last time he played two years ago, and we represent a tech company that successfully sued Bodog, Full Tilt and others over online gaming-related patents).” So if you want a patent lawyer with a good poker face, you know who to call. First time correspondent Marcangelo Puccio has taught science at a range of levels in Oregon and California and also earned degrees in botany at the University of Washington (2006) and education at Stanford (2009). He reported: “I’m currently teaching art and science at Thomas Edison High School in Portland, an innovative school whose population consists entirely of students who have single or multiple learning differences with normal to high IQ, and who have not been served well by other private or public schools. … I’m also the exceedingly proud dad of a 3-year-old girl.” Just up I-5, Ian Smith lives in Seattle and got married last year, attended by Mark Elefante, Brent Powell and Bob Santry ’90. Ian summarized: “I work as a pulmonary/critical care doctor at Virginia Mason Hospital, where I do some teaching of residents in addition to patient care. My wife Megan is an OB-GYN at Swedish Hospital a few blocks away. … We have two dogs and live in a small house built in 1906 in Ballard, an old Norwegian neighborhood near Puget Sound that has been transformed from fishing/logging/brothel hub to a nice combination of restaurants and local business. Seattle is a fantastic place to live, with a great combination of urban and outdoor options, and we spend a lot of time up in the mountains nearby and in British Columbia, where my family has roots.” Let me close with a big thank you to two observant non-local correspondents, in Peoria (Chris Cox) and Cairo Karl Galle, for finding and sharing the New York Times review of Telephone at the Foundry Theatre in NYC. To quote the February review by theater critic Ben Brantley: “Such inaudible voices are what shape the second scene, a bona fide tour de force for the actress Birgit Huppuch. She plays Miss St., a much-written-about patient of Jung’s who believed she had a telephone inside her. The twisting soliloquy that Ms. Huppuch delivers, with symphonic variety and deliberateness, weaves toxic narcissism and paranoia into slowly emerging patterns of poetic logic.” I’m sorry I missed it, because the last time I saw Birgit was when I bumped into her last year while I was shopping for a scarf. She gave practical fashion advice, with no hint of “toxic narcissism.” Birgit, please let us know when we can catch you on stage again. And for the rest of you, please submit a 100-word essay on “What I did during summer vacation” or some other piece of news or sly comment you’d like to share. August 2009 | Williams People | 95 CL ASS NOTES 1992 Stephanie Phillips 241 Central Park West, Apt. 5A New York, NY 10024 1992secretary@williams.edu Hello Class of 1992. I hope you all had a great summer (although as I write this it’s not yet Memorial Day, and it has just gotten warm). Thanks to all for contributing, though the number of complaints from Yahoo users about the multiple e-mails far exceeded (by nearly 2:1) the number of people who actually wrote in. Sorry about the technical glitch—Yahoo apparently doesn’t like Williams, but we believe we have resolved the issue. To the classmate who suggested (and I am not making this up) that I need only hit “send” once, not 17 times, thanks for the tip—I’m on it. Heidi Sandreuter, who I regularly run into on the Upper West Side of NYC, wins the prize for the most comprehensive update. (Thank you!) She has moved over to Pepsi International to manage its international coffee partnership with Starbucks. Unfortunately, she needs to balance the upside of the global business perspective with the late night or early morning calls with China and other corners of the world craving Frappuccino in a bottle. Heidi also writes, “The thing I am most excited about this spring is the fact that I am coaching girls lacrosse. Even though it’s been more than 15 years since I played (with a wooden stick, no less), I am thrilled to be teaching and cheering my great eighth graders. It sure beats anything I do at my day job.” Heidi did a great job of collecting scoop on other classmates and shares that in January she visited San Francisco during some West Coast work travel and got to see Josh Levenberg and his wife Verna for a quick visit to Christie Beach with their children Zander and Vivi. Heidi also visited with Candace Kelly and spent a day in the U.S. district attorney’s office. She writes, “I huddled in the attorney’s lounge talking DoubleShot while Candace toiled to put bad guys behind bars.” Lastly, Heidi notes that in October she “saw Ashley (Edgar) Milliken, Bissell (Gioia) Duffett and Chen (Stites) Allen when everyone (that’s code for hubbies and kids, too) descended on 96 | Williams People | August 2009 Williamstown for a minireunion with our friends Sheila and Bob Stone ’44. We had an amazing time, and it was wonderful to share those October moments together before Bob passed away this past February at the age of 87.” They all planned to assemble again in Billsville for the celebration of Bob’s life on May 30. “It should be a wonderful reminder of the incredible friendships one makes while at Williams.” Eric Matson, whom I have never seen on the UWS but did once bump into in Oxford, England, also sent in a great update about our musical classmates. Eric writes, “I just saw a great show by Fountains of Wayne (featuring Adam Schlesinger ’89 and Chris Collingwood ’89) and hope everyone realizes that ‘Stacy’s Mom’ isn’t their only good song. I continue to be a huge fan of our own Kris Delmhorst as well— anyone who doesn’t have her last few CDs is really missing out.” Eric went skiing with his family and ran into Jen (Plansky) and Bill McKinley with their daughters. He also notes that Bill’s skiing has noticeably improved since college. Andrew Everett and wife Elise Newhall Everett ’94 are still in Seattle. Andrew has helped found k-nected, an online career and social network for professional athletes. He enjoys being his own boss and loves the commute down the hall from the bedroom to his home office. He also reports that he is coaching a boys’ fifth/sixth grade lacrosse team in the spring and enjoys a weekly ice hockey outing all winter with Ian Smith ’91. Jeff Lipp hasn’t been heard from in a while. He writes, “After six years in Portland, Ore., we moved back to LA. It was a great run in Portland, but Rachel (wife), the three kids and I are all happy to be back in the sunshine. I recently saw Blake Danforth and am eager to reconnect with other LA-based Ephs.” Evan Moore shared a great update about his family. He writes that his wife Anna and children Nicholas, 12, Caitlin, 11, Olivia, 8, and Ian, 4, are doing very well and are living in Saxtons River, Vt. Evan is working as a senior network engineer at SoverNet Communications in Bellows Falls. Evan was “busy planning our summer vacation to the DC area, and we will be participating in a nearby Habitat for Humanity build later this summer. The summer’s other big event is the long-awaited wedding of my co-worker and friend, who introduced Anna and I all these years ago. Anna will be the matron of honor, so our house is overflowing with wedding supplies. Nicholas … is in seventh grade and has plans to become a writer/illustrator of graphic novels, something he has been interested in since he learned how to write. Caitlin … has just completed her fifth grade basketball season, in which she led her team in rebounds. Olivia, our second-grader, mastered her breaststroke this winter and hopes to be on the swim team next year. Ian, who turned 4 last month, is wavering between growing up to be either a motorcycle cop or tank guy (his words). We are all happy and healthy and encourage anyone to get in touch if they are in the area.” From the alumni office news clippings comes a report on Hugh Howards. Hugh is an associate professor of math at Wake Forest University and won the 2009 Award for Excellence in Teaching from the Southeastern section of the Mathematical Association of America. That section represents five states and more than 200 colleges and universities, and Hugh is the first Wake Forest professor to ever win this award. Hugh has been at Wake Forest since 1997 and won another teaching award— Reid-Doyle Prize for Excellence in Teaching—in 2004. Also from the clippings comes news of Baird Jarman, assistant professor of art history at Carleton College. Blair earned an MA and PhD from Yale, specializing in American art history of the 18th and 19th centuries. He then joined the art and art history department at Carleton in 2002. Blair is apparently earning quite the positive reputation—as the article notes, “A teacher of pre-war American and post-war Modernist art history, architecture and photography, Jarman is renowned for the breadth of his intellectual interests, eloquence in lecturing and innovative assignments. In addition to his scholarly writings, Jarman has served as a guest curator for the Milwaukee Art Museum and as an exhibition reviewer for various art and design journals.” Caroline (Smith) Older was featured in a March article in the Grand Rapids Business Journal about her role as the executive n 1 9 9 2 –9 3 director of the Arts Council of Greater Grand Rapids. It’s a great article that goes into her role in Grand Rapids and her background in the art community in New York and Cincinnati. As we enter our third year together, I should let you know that I have made good on my threat to make stuff up and in fact have been peppering the notes with completely fictional updates and will continue to do so until called on it. Prizes to those who can correctly identify what’s not actually true. Thanks for all of your contributions, and have a great fall! 1993 Chad Orzel 1570 Regent St. Niskayuna, NY 12309 1993secretary@williams.edu I’m writing this at a restaurant in Dulles Airport, en route to the DAMOP meeting—ah, the glamorous jet-setting life of an academic. By the way, you may not know that due to increased security, the Transportation Safety Admin—oh, you knew that? Sorry. My last e-mail request for news included a suggestion that desperation might lead me to skim information from the Facebook profiles of classmates. Happily, enough information came in that I didn’t need to, but just to prove that it could be done, I’ll note that Bill McLaren’s Facebook profile informed me of the birth of Luke Charles McLaren on March 20. Congratulations to Bill, whose later communications indicate that he’s happy but exhausted by the arrival of a third child. While I don’t need to cite Facebook as a source for Senior Middle East Correspondent Paul Schemm’s news about the birth of baby Ray in March, I can confirm that the baby pictures Paul has posted on Facebook are really cute. Paul is doing the “usual Cairo thing, with brief jaunts to Israel and Yemen,” though he’s planning to go back to Iraq … right around the time when I’m typing this, actually. The expansion of the Class of 2031 continues, with Pamela Israel welcoming her second son, Ethan, in February; Mike and Nina Pyle Furlanetto writing in to announce son William’s birth in January; and two indirect birth notices, for Holly Phillips’ daughter Olivia in December (via Nancy Rodriguez, who also had a pro-Facebook story of using the site to hastily arrange a meeting with Jen Weiss); and Allegra Millan’s son Adrian Francisco in January (via Nadine Block, who has “reached a comfortable stasis” working in DC and enjoys being a mother to her twin boys). Chris Colburn rounds out the birth news, casually slipping in a mention of the birth of his daughter Erin, only after mentioning his election as president of the Illinois Masters Swimming Association and selection as ILMSA 2009 Coach of the Year. He may have outdone Trevor Pound for the stealth birth announcement—what is it with these swimming types? Trevor reports on a family trip to San Diego, where he visited Robin Truelove ’96 and attended the wedding of Ian Eisenmann ’99 and Ariane Verdy, a childhood friend of Trevor’s wife Catherine. Greg Bowne has also gotten involved in the masters swimming scene, encountering both Chris Colburn and Wendell Charles ’88, whom he ran into and beat at a recent meet. Greg is working with a bunch of other Williamsfolk, including Matt Fletcher ’95, Kathleen Mason ’99 and David Wagner ’86, at a “cutting-edge word-of-mouth marketing company” called BzzAgent. How cutting edge is it, you ask? He just got me to plug it in the class notes—he’s good. the shift from classroom teaching to college advising at the Emery School in Houston. Tom Kimbis has spent the last nine years at the Department of Energy and is excited to be working for Barack Obama on “making the world safe for solar energy.” Tom also mentions meeting up with Bill Mowatt, who has spent the last decade in the NOAA Corps, “saving harp seals from Russian clubbers.” Angela Carcia is to be married in August and then to follow her husband to Germany in September in hopes of finding a job herself. Good luck, Angela. A couple of classmates are embracing the agricultural life, with Matt Smith leaving high finance to join a company growing vast numbers of organic tomatoes, and Greg Meyer starting to raise chickens during his free time from working to improve the life of Expedia callcenter workers. Kim Cleland has less ambitious agricultural news, writing that she’s “almost pathetically grateful” that things are growing in the garden she just planted. You’re doing better than I am, Kim—I’ve spent the last several years trying and failing to grow grass in my backyard. Kim and her husband Martial are also trying to raise their son Xavier to be bilingual and report that while he mostly speaks English, he has picked up “oh la la,” which means that he knows almost as much French as I do. EPHCOMPLISHMENT Chris Colburn ’93 was selected as the Illinois Masters Swimming Association’s 2009 Coach of the Year and is now president of the organization’s executive committee. He is the coach of Academy Bullets Masters in Aurora, Ill., and chair of the U.S. Masters Swimming Coaches Committee. We should put Greg to work for the benefit of some classmates who are launching new businesses, like Jill Bernheimer, opening a wine shop in LA (also via Nancy Rodriguez), Pete Kirkwood, whose brewery Shawnee Craft Brewing is now in operation (I detect a possible theme, here) and Teresa Obin, who left the spa where she was working as a massage therapist and struck out on her own. Best of luck to all of them, and, Greg, see what you can do, OK? Eugene Kim is moving from Louisville to Greenville, S.C., joining a different anesthesiology practice, and Chris Teel is making Not in need of Greg Bowne’s promotional expertise, but still pretty cool, Matt Aselton’s directorial debut, Gigantic, was released last year. I had seen reviews of it when it came out but never connected the Matt Aselton getting praised for his directing to the one I went to college with. That’ll teach me to underestimate our class. Derek Catsam writes in from England, where he is a visiting fellow at the David Bruce Center for American Studies at the University of Keele, to report the publication of his new book, Freedom’s Main Line: The Journey of Reconciliation and August 2009 | Williams People | 97 CL ASS NOTES the Freedom Rides (University of Kentucky Press). In addition to being cool in its own right, this gives me a great opportunity to sneak in some shameless self-promotion, as my own book, How to Teach Physics to Your Dog, will be published in December by Scribner, just in time for all your holiday gift-giving needs. Finally, Mike Lapin writes in from Seattle, where he has decided to put the lessons learned from attending our 15th reunion last summer to work coordinating his 20th high school reunion. Which is a reminder that my own 20th high school reunion will be happening right around the time this goes to print, and gosh, that makes me feel old. Or maybe it’s just that listening to dorms with Andrew Welch, Joe Valenzuela and Joe’s son Sam was a trip. We realized that, like the old Bill Cosby joke, we traveled uphill both ways in the snow for a large part of our college careers. Despite the changes, the bucolic setting made the campus feel familiar. Visit if you have the opportunity. All joking aside, the best part of the reunion was going down memory lane with friends. Many thanks to Dave Ruder, our reunion chair, for doing a fantastic job. Present at the festivities were: Jon Aborn, Elizabeth Culpepper Allan, Kari Andersson, Erika Bailey, Janet Bertucci Lynch, Rob Bice, David Bilik, Kari Bilik, Laurel A. Blatchford, Melissa Braisted, EPHCOMPLISHMENT In June David Ruder ’94 made the first-ever IAM-250, Intellectual Asset Management magazine’s list of the world’s leading intellectual property strategists. As VP of business development for RPX Corp., Ruder was recognized for his skill in helping IP owners increase the value of their rights portfolios. airport security announcements over and over again is breaking my spirit. Either way, that’s it for this edition of the class notes. Tune in next time for … um … more class notes. And send any information you have to me at oilcan@gmail.com, or I’ll have to rely on social networking services and do an entire entry based around personality quizzes, trivia games and Scrabble scores. 1994 Elizabeth Randolph Rappaport 45 Pineapple St., Apt. 4A Brooklyn, NY 11201 1994secretary@williams.edu Submitted by outgoing secretary Cynthia Llamas: I submit these notes, my last as your class secretary, with mixed feelings. I have enjoyed receiving your news and am grateful for the opportunity this post gave me to reconnect with friends. I will not miss the deadlines. I pass the mantle onto Liz Rappaport, elected as your new class secretary during our 15th reunion. Thanks to a last-minute cancellation, I was able to go for a day. It had been 15 years since I had been to Williamstown. Incredibly beautiful new buildings share space with old haunts. Visiting our old 98 | Williams People | August 2009 Johanna L. Bruno, Elizabeth B. Burnett, Mark Bussard, Grace Kim Caddell, Erin Caddell, Tom Castiello, Greg Catanzano, Janet Y. Chen, Kewanna Ard Cigales, Margaret Cormier, Tobie Cornejo, Jenny Cotner, Heather Curnutt, Cathleen Miller Davenport, Peter H. Davenport, Katherine Becher, Tara de Souza, Steven Dean, Todd Ducharme, Elise Everett, Dan Fasulo, Andrew Ferguson, Kerry Davenport Fitzgerald, Amelia P. Fox, Josh Frechette, Alexandra Garbarini, Wystan Getz, Cory Wickwire Halaby, Brittany Star Hampton, Susan Harper, Matt Harris, Peggy Drucker Headstrom, Allyson Hightower, Erika Iverson, Jon Jeffress, Rebecca Kind, Liz Rosan Kirkwood, Bernie Kluger, Amy Wallace Koenning, Brad Kroh, Josh Kussman, Yi-Shiau Leu, Alex Levering, Jared Levine, Eileen Luhr, Vikas Lunia, Todd Machnik, Upacala Mapatuna, Coreen McCool, Chris McIlraith, Amy Minnick, Genny Mann Morris, Heather Morse, Ron Moskovitz, Dan Neuwirth, Cristin O’Callahan, Amanda Oberg, Becky OliverRemshifski, Bo Peabody, Amanda Turner Phillips, Amy R. Radil, Matt Raffety, Elizabeth Randolph Rappaport, Rachel Remmel, Heather Roberts, Keith Roberts, Dave Ruder, Jacob Russin, Adam Scheer, Deborah Schein, Mike Seckler, Micah Singer, Brad Smith, Eleanor Winston Smith, Josh Smith, Benny Soffer, Anim Steel, Mike Strauss, Dave Sullivan, Joanne Torres, Hillary Twining, Lisa Uebelacker, Susan Everett Vaill, Joe Valenzuela, Agatha Donovan Walker, Kara Weber, Andy Welch, Richard Whitcomb, Jennifer Wingate, Heather Moore Wood, Andrea Wright, Matthew Wright, Christina Williams Wyskiel and Mitchell R. Young. A great though sometimes soggy time was had by all. Kara Berklich Weber brought Guston Weber, “the world’s most handsome, mellow baby,” to reunion. He turned 1 on June 14. Kara writes that Gus is with her compliments of her pregnancy acupuncturist Tatiana (Palmer) Rubio, who helped Kara through both of her pregnancies. Ah, the ties that bind. Kara and Co. have been in Venice, Calif., for eight years. She runs marketing for the Rubicon Project, an online advertising infrastructure company. It is her fifth startup, and she is hoping it will be the biggest yet. Of course, the Williamsborn Tripod.com will always be nearest her heart. Kara trumpets the greatness of Williams to all the West Coasters she spends time with—including an ongoing debate with a colleague whether his Middlebury years qualify as a “proper East Coast” education relative to her (clearly superior) Ephdom. Kara has seen Sarah (Davidson) Richmond in San Francisco and Peggy (Drucker) Headstrom in Seattle. Laurel Blatchford and Bernie Kluger, with 2-year-old Eleanor in tow, relocated from NYC to DC in late February after Laurel accepted a position in the Obama administration. Laurel is serving as chief of staff to Secretary Shaun Donovan at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Bernie is commuting back and forth to New York to work at his company Fair Choice Systems. Ellie adjusted within hours, but her parents say they miss New York. On the bright side, they discovered Whole Foods and now have a backyard. Laurel and Bernie are planning “lots of barbecues” and have enjoyed reconnecting with old friends in DC, including Brad Smith, Michael Strauss, Jake Russin, Molly Rauch and Grace Kim Caddell. Erik White planned to leave the Navy in July and has been offered a job with the anesthesiology group that staffs St. Joseph’s Hospital in Tacoma, n 1 9 9 3 –9 5 Wash. He was looking forward to returning to the beautiful Pacific Northwest. Erik also had kid number two in May. He and wife Amy figured that they made one international move with an infant before, so it could not be that much harder with an infant and a 3-year-old. After serving as a deputy director for voter protection of Barack Obama’s presidential campaign, the New York State Senate appointed David Markus as special counsel to the majority. Dave is splitting his time between NYC and Albany, a stone’s throw from the Purple Valley. Democrats took control of New York government for the first time in 45 years, so he is “especially psyched for this appointment.” When he is not negotiating legislation, balancing budgets and telling lobbyists exactly where they can go, Dave is drafting a book manuscript on judicial governance, pounding the treadmill and sleeping. Chad Cleveland had his fourth child—his first son—Nash Steven on March 20. He joins Lilly, 7, Isabel, 5, and Tessa, 3. All is good and crazy. Nash will grow up quickly with four mothers. Chad is on his eighth year with GH Phipps, a general contractor in Denver. He was on the project team that built the new Children’s Hospital. Since then, he is on a project for Sun Microsystems and is back in the office in the estimating department. Though it is, “a bit scary right now for builders,” he is surviving. Rhadjena Hilliard got married over Memorial Day weekend. Present was Tanya Miller. Tanya has been in touch with Kim Thomas and Kila Weaver, who are both doing well. Also in May, Rohit Menezes’ wife Vanessa presided at Tanya’s son’s dedication ceremony. Vanessa has a 100plus-year-old church in Summit, N.J. Tobie Cornejo and husband Sam Coffin and their twins Ella and John also attended the dedication. Nicole Vennell Roberts and husband Brian welcomed their first baby, daughter Michaela Elizabeth Vennell Roberts, on March 25. Raffaele Bevilacqua, who was looking forward to sleeping in the dorms with his kids and wife Amy Zindell ’95, missed the reunion but had good reason. His fourth child, Luciano Bevilacqua, was born on April 3, weighing in at over 10 pounds. Per her normal routine, Amy “already is primed to race this season, just after six weeks of conditioning workouts following the birth of Baby Luciano.” They hope to make it to Amy’s 15th. Last but not least, Laurence Herman asked me to publish the following before reunion. I received this post after the publication deadline but can think of no better way to end my tenure as your class secretary than by submitting this as my last note. As the years pass, and we come to reflect on the value we place on our Williams education, many of us are looking to give back. In addition to the Alumni Fund, a great tribute offered for your consideration is to advance the work of Jon Fielder. Many of you may remember Jon as a stellar student in both sciences and the humanities. He graduated Williams Phi Beta Kappa and chose to learn medicine as a tool to help those in need. Jon attended Baylor Medical School and completed a residency in internal medicine at Johns Hopkins (winning the award as top intern). After finishing his training, Jon had many options but chose a different path. He moved to Kijabe, Kenya, to serve as a medical missionary. In his four years there, he trained many local doctors and built an AIDS treatment program that has saved the lives of many. Jon and his wife Amanda, along with his children Matthew, 3, and Aaron, 16 months, moved to Malawi, one of the poorest countries in the world, to continue their work. Malawi has 7,400 patients with HIV for every doctor. Jon’s mission over the coming years is to replicate the success they had in Kenya, treating those suffering with AIDS, training medical professionals and enhancing medical care in the region. Right now Jon is hoping to build a small hospital in Lilongwe, the capital. Jon’s work literally saves lives. His commitment in time, effort, hardship and opportunity cost is an inspiration to Laurence and many others who have heard about and/or supported his work. If you would like more information, contact Jon at jonfielder6@gmail.com. I look forward to reading about you in future editions of the class notes. Send your news to 1994secretary@williams.edu. Adios, amigos. 1995 REUNION JUNE 10-13 Flo Waldron 442 Nevin St. Lancaster, PA 17603 Anamaria Villamarin-Lupin 535 Arabella St. New Orleans, LA 70115 1995secretary@williams.edu Greetings from sunny Arizona! As I type this column, it’s a beautiful day in May and I am less than 48 hours away from my Leukemia & Lymphoma Society fundraising hike in the Grand Canyon in memory of Eric Gilbert. From the bottom of my heart, many thanks to all of you who donated so generously to help sponsor my hike; I can’t tell you how much it means to me and to all those whose lives have been touched by blood cancers. I begin with a warm welcome to first-time contributor Julie Niederer. Personally, having not seen Julie since Laura Hemmeter’s wedding to Pete Putnam ’93 the summer after we graduated, I’ve wondered from time to time what Julie has been up to over the 14 years since then. I am delighted to report that Julie gets the honor not only of being the newest voice to respond to the secretary’s perpetual plea for news, but also of being the very first piece of classmate snail-mail I’ve received as co-secretary since Anamaria and I took over this post! My thanks to Julie for the lovely, long and newsy letter. The condensed version goes like this: Following graduation, Julie moved back to her home state of New Jersey, where she landed what sounds like the dream job for her: working “in retirement plan administration 401(k) plans, profit-sharing plans, etc., which was a good match for my fondness for rules and my attention to detail.” More recently, she relocated to South Carolina to be closer to her aging parents in their retirement. SENDNEWS! Y our class secretary is waiting to hear from you! Send news to your secretary at the address at the top of your class notes column. August 2009 | Williams People | 99 CL ASS NOTES While Julie’s communiqué thus wins awards for Old-Fashioned Delivery and Longest-Awaited News, the award for Earliest Posting this time goes out to Dedrick (Dunbar) Muhammad. On the eve of President Obama’s inauguration, Dedrick wrote that he and Navin Girishankar ’93 “were the keynote speakers at the Martin Luther King Jr. brunch at Epworth United Methodist Church in Gaithersburg, Md. In attendance were Rachel Watts ’94 and Ayanleh Dualeh ’93.” Two updates from the Alumni Office earn the secretary’s awards for Most Interesting Update and Best Story, respectively. Most interesting to me—in part because my husband is from Syracuse and likes dinosaurs—is news of Chris Wildrick’s latest project: an exhibit entitled “Dinosaurs Had Sharp Teeth!,” which ran at Syracuse’s Redhouse Arts Center last March. After earning his MFA from UW-Madison, Chris taught in Southern Ill. University-Carbondale’s School of Art and Design for five years before moving to his current home in the Department of Foundation at Syracuse. As the article explained, Chris “has been working for several years to become a self-taught professional paleontologist,” specializing in “dinosaur aesthetics”—the art/ science of “why scientists think dinosaurs look the way they think they looked.” When not teaching or creating cool-sounding exhibits, Chris works with two collaborative groups, Earl and 2funBastards. The second item, though actually from the pen—er, keyboard—of Tripod co-founder Ethan Zuckerman ’93, concerns my former entrymate Kate Krolicki. In a posting on his blog “My Heart’s in Accra” this past March, Ethan chronicled Kate’s impressive rise from 20-something dues-payer after graduation (working such jobs as official “porn-sniffer” at Tripod, where she served as a sort of Internet police), through the ranks at Tripod and off into the world beyond. As Ethan put it, in 1997 Kate “found herself hanging out with a group of Tripod programmers and asked, ‘How hard would it be for me to learn Perl?’ … Within a couple of months, Kate was no longer stomping out porn but writing the core code that controlled our mail systems.” Kate subsequently 100 | Williams People | August 2009 From left, Anamaria Villamarin-Lupin ’95, Carolyn Thompson ’91, Tim Lupin ’93 and Emily Sterne ’95 enjoyed the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival in April. moved on to writing mail code for another company “and now geeks for Williams College, where she’s part of a small team that helps faculty figure out how to integrate technology into their classrooms.” Go, Kate! As someone who’s often on the other side of that equation, on behalf of faculty everywhere I thank you for your service. Our wedding album for this issue includes the nuptials of David Lee, who “married Angela Tirion on Sept. 28, 2008, out in Park City on one of the most spectacular fall weekends of the year.” Ephs in attendance included John Thompson III, Alex “The Rifle” Shawe, Jay “Kaiser Soze” Ashton, Matt “Governor” Governali, Gretchen Engster Howard, Brooks “Leather Pants” Gibbins, Franklin “Shank” Puleo, George Lee ’67, Bob Lee ’69, Nancy Lee ’97 and Andy “Dice” McDonald ’94. David wrote that he was “having a blast finishing up my first full year of teaching fifth- and sixth-grade math at Town School, an all-boys’ school in San Francisco,” where he also coaches an eighth-grade lacrosse team that is “one of the top teams in northern Calif.” Helen Spande reported that she “married Simone Amidei at the Abbey of Cultibuono in Tuscany, Italy, on April 18. Sacha Place and Clare (Sibley) Campbell attended. The happy couple honeymooned in Singapore and Malaysia.” Sacha’s posting filled in some of the dirt on the event as well as the Ephs involved. The 10th-century abbey in Florence where the wedding took place sounds like a perfect fit, as “Helen is an art conservator and still works for NYU at their Villa La Pietra in Florence.” In response to my follow-up e-query, Sacha explained that Clare (who last I knew was still Sibley and still living in France) “got married a little over two years ago. … She’s now living in Manassas, Va., and has been doing social work.” Sacha, meanwhile, is “at home with our two young kids” these days. Among future Ephs whose names appear on this issue’s cradle roll, Sarah Knight and Marc Johnson welcomed Samuel Millen Johnson into the world last Sept. 27. Sarah wrote, “We’re now aswim in his gear, and there is no question but that he rules the roost. We are both totally overwhelmed and very happy.” On April 15, Laura (Barre) Nadler and husband David welcomed son Max Zephyr Nadler into the world; they are all doing well, but “early parenthood is pretty all-consuming, so not much else to add!” Meanwhile, as an old pro on the parenting front, Brian Rooney reported that he and wife Tiffany “had our third child on Feb. 6, Blaise Sebastian Rooney, our second son.” A number of our classmates have celebrated major professional milestones. A very happy (and no doubt relieved) Chris French learned in late April that both he and his wife Karen Shuman had received tenure in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics at Grinnell College. This past spring, according to the class officer grapevine, Class Co-President Margaret Coady graduated from business school n 1 9 9 5 –9 6 somewhere in the Big Apple (details not available at press time, as Margaret herself was keeping mum on all of this). Meanwhile Paula Peters, mother of two and counting, wrote in that she had “just published my third book, The Working Mom’s Survival Guide, and am enjoying doing publicity for it; it’s a bit different than running my tech writing services business!” In and around the publicity junket, she and her husband managed to take advantage of last spring’s rock-bottom airfares for a quick trip to London and Wales. Jeremy Fox, who’s still in the Department of Biological Sciences at Calgary University, had an interesting work-related trip to Japan last March: “Went to Japan to speak at an international ecological symposium. Unbeknownst to the Japanese organizer, all three ‘international’ invitees (including me) were in the same lab at Rutgers circa 1997. So it was less an ‘international’ symposium than a New Jersey one. Had a lot of fun seeing Japan for the first time; would love to go back someday.” My co-secretary Anamaria Villamarin-Lupin “spent three wonderful weeks in Colombia” in April then returned home “just in time for the 40th anniversary New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. It was a glorious celebration that brought Emily Sterne back to the city for her annual pilgrimage, and once again I roped her into photographing my family. I also got to see John Fagan and Chris Hagy. Chris chose New Orleans as the obvious destination for his bachelor party, and, of course, they all had fun.” Matt Hall reported, “I stay in close touch with Ari Blum, Todd Borus, Martin Kurtz and Richard Williams, among others.” Heather (Champagne) Penner wrote from Portland, Ore., where she’s lived for the past eight years: “Love it here. My little boys are now 5 and 1½ years old. I recently left my job managing the web department of a hospital in town to join a startup that makes iPhone apps. Fun times!” Award for Most Mobile ’95er goes to Staff Sgt. Rebecca Doucette, who deserves to be quoted at length, lest I mess up any of the details. Becca wrote: “I recently completed a three-year assignment at the National Guard Bureau, Arlington, Va., and transferred to the 142nd Military Intelligence Battalion, Utah Army National Guard, as a linguist/human intelligence collector. I am currently halfway through interrogation school at Camp Williams, Utah.” She was to graduate June 13 and move with her husband to Monterey, Calif., where “I will be attending the Defense Language Institute for 64 weeks of Arabic” followed by “immediate deployment to the Middle East.” Our final news item concerns that little banner you see at the head of this column, reminding us all of how long it’s been since our time in lovely Billsville (and how many children, gray hairs, etc., ago that was). Hard to believe the countdown to Reunion #15 is on. Co-Prez Julia (Broehl) Hesse represented our class at the reunion planning kickoff and asked me to pass on the following plug: “I am thrilled to report that the College is paving our way for a tremendous weekend for our 15th. While I know that this is an incredibly busy time for us all—especially for the many, many people in our class who are in the midst of chasing around babies and toddlers—reunion is a tremendous opportunity to reconnect with friends, and from my personal experience nothing is more fun than watching your kids get along with your friends’ kids. My kids (who will be 9 [!] and 12 [!] by … our next reunion) had a blast at our 10th, and I genuinely hope that you will all consider bringing the entire family for the fun. The College has already organized a jam-packed slate of family friendly activities (WAY more than there were for the last reunion), and they have committed to me that babysitters will stay for free (although we’ll probably need to charge some small amount for food). For those of you without children, not to worry! The reunion will feature good times, strong drinks, loud music and plenty of bad dancing. You will all be receiving more information from me as the year progresses. If you would like to volunteer for the planning committee, please give me a shout at juliarhesse@gmail. com. In the meantime, mark the dates June 10-13, 2010, on your calendars, and I’ll look forward to seeing you then!” I echo Julie’s plug: Come to reunion. Eat, drink and be merry with old friends in old haunts. You know you want to. Start planning now to attend. Put it on your calendar. And to that end, now’s as good a time as any to make sure you’ve got all your contact info—e-mail address included—up to date with the College (send updates to alumni. office@williams.edu). Looking forward to seeing you ALL next June; till then, stay cool and classy. —Flo 1996 Lesley Whitcomb Fierst 245 Dale Drive Silver Spring, MD 20910 1996secretary@williams.edu Classmates, please join me in extending our sympathy to the family and friends of Jay Edwards. Lana Choi and Heather Wilkinson wrote with the sad news of Jay’s sudden passing in February. He was killed in a car accident in Prague, where he lived with his beautiful wife Steph and daughter Ellie. “Those of us who heard the awful news back in February are still pretty floored, as the news was such a horrible shock. He was such a wonderful guy. I think anyone who was lucky enough to spend even five minutes with him will remember his kindness, his sense of humor and total generosity of spirit. Along with many other members of the ’96 Williams Beer Pong Team, I was incredibly fortunate to have spent a few days with ‘Warthog’ just last October during our annual gathering. Jay wasn’t able to make it out to the States every year, so this most recent gathering was particularly special. Many of us were heading out to Seattle in May for a memorial service and to welcome his daughter and widow, who are Czech but thinking of moving to the States to honor Jay’s wish to come back home. He made friends wherever he went and will be sorely missed. I think it was said best in one of the many e-mails that went around among some of his friends in the days immediately following his passing: ‘Everyone dies, but not everyone lives. Jay definitely lived.’” From the too-soon departure of one Eph, let’s start by celebrating the arrival of some future Ephs. Michele (Gleason) Gonzalez and her husband welcomed a baby boy, Ian Gleason Gonzalez, on March 18. “We’re doing well and enjoying the newest member of the family.” Ian Graham and family were joined by their second daughter, Virginia, on May 5 in Frankfurt, Germany, “our August 2009 | Williams People | 101 CL ASS NOTES new home as of April 1. Her first language is yet to be determined.” Tobias (Toby) Engel was born to Sarah Greenberger and Matt Engel on April 19, and they’ve been enjoying their new little guy. I ran into Sarah and Toby on a neighborhood walk, and I can attest to his adorableness. Dave Long and family welcomed Fiona Wynn Long on March 13 in Beverly, Mass. Dave reported that the entire family was doing well. Evelyn Claire Lorentz joined parents Dayna (Kaufman) ’99 and Jason Lorentz in Burlington, Vt., on April 5. “Evelyn is big (9 pounds, 4 ounces, at birth) and healthy. So far, it’s been a joyous and delightful experience all around! Even the cloth diapering is great.” And Shing Chi Poon and E-Wen Liao welcomed a baby boy, Derek Sau-Chung Poon, on April 27. Liv Osthus wrote an entertaining and poignant piece about her experience with breast cancer that was featured in Portland Monthly Magazine. Liv wrote to me, “My goal is for this article to reach as many women our age as possible. There isn’t enough print given to breast cancer amongst young women.” To paraphrase Saturday Night Live, I laughed, I cried, it was way damn better than Cats, so please read Liv’s article and pass it on: tinyurl. com/nmfhn5. An article in April’s Jewish Woman on hosting Passover gatherings prominently featured Rachel Barenblat discussing the haggadah that she wrote and uses at family seders. Rachel is a poet and rabbinical student, and her haggadah is available at www.velveteenrabbi.com. Todd Poret wrote, “After 13 years of leaving these e-mails in my inbox until after the deadline, I figured I would finally write in some news.” Todd continued, “I have been back in New England (Vermont and New Hampshire) for the past six years and am currently living in the small town of Warner, N.H. Since completing residency three years ago at the Children’s Hospital at Dartmouth (where my co-residents included Liz (Martin) Richards ’95 and Sarah Crowley ’93), I have been a pediatrician at Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center and am also director of medical student education in pediatrics for Dartmouth Medical School. Last August I got married to my wonderful wife Sidney in our backyard; the Williams crowd included Gist Croft, Tom Rogers, 102 | Williams People | August 2009 Dan Polsby, Mike Keim, Wendy Morris, Sarah (Kaplan) Browne, Sarah Greenberger and Scudder Parker ’65. I recently got to spend another week with Wendy when she and her husband and two boys spent their spring break at our house. We occasionally pass through Williamstown on our way here or there, and I’m always amazed at how much it has changed. I look forward to seeing people at our 15-year reunion in a few!” Also making up for lost time was Julie Weed. “My partner Deb and I adopted a little girl, Janiya, in April 2008. She is 3 ½-yearsold now and just adorable. It’s quite something to become a parent to a walking, talking child right off the bat. While we loved the instant rewards of 12-hour nights (and no waking!), smiling and giggling, and hearing ‘Mommy’ and ‘Mama’ very quickly, there were lots of other challenges: starting the new fitness regime with a 30-pound weight instead of a 7-pounder, having to learn to argue toddlerstyle with no warm-up debate classes, figuring out nutritional meals and when to snack behind her back, and getting my singing voice ready for a tot-sized critic. Still, we love our new addition and are so thrilled that she’s joined our family and fashioned us into a new, improved version. We can’t wait to bring her up to Williams and start the indoctrination now! I also just got a chance to visit DC to see Emily Eakin ’99, who’s living in Williamstown; Sarah Altschuler ’97, who is busy traveling with her job and promising to come visit me in Charlottesville someday; Cora Ganzglass ’97, who is battling the foreclosure crisis with Congress; Tracy Piatkowski ’99, who just had her second baby, a beautiful boy; and Laura (Jacobs) Kravis ’99, who is still enthusiastically tackling middle school students.” After 12 years of teaching math, Bonnie (Macpherson) Ricci moved out of the classroom. She now is the assistant director of the Association of Independent Schools in New England, where she oversees the accreditation of independent elementary schools. Abe Loomis reported, “The student bluegrass band I direct —The Academy Freightshakers—just opened for The Winterpills! The kids were, as you might imagine, quite excited. I’m still fishing from my kitchen window over the Deerfield and occasionally catching trout.” And Willard Morgan continues to work at Chewonki in Wiscasset, Maine. Dan Ebert visits from Boston from time to time with his wife Elizabeth and their young son Ezra. Steven Hufnagel and his wife Liza had their second child, Nathaniel, in February. Willard wrote, “Since they live up the road in Damariscotta, we get together as often as we can.” Steven then chimed in, “To complete the record, did I mention Nathaniel was an 8 pounds, 10 ounces, baby and born Feb. 12 at Miles Memorial Hospital in Damariscotta, like his older sister?” Ann Dillemuth reported, “Following Grace Lee’s departure to Alabama, this year we headed over to Zach Cook’s for the Academy Awards, where we won Mamma Mia for being the least proficient at picking Oscar winners. Next year we’ll have to study up! We also joined the ranks of dog owners, having adopted a retired racing greyhound. As Megan Farkas can attest, they are amazing dogs and are surprisingly well-suited for city and apartment living (10 percent sprinter, 90 percent couch potato). And there’s lots more who need good homes (hint to any other Ephs thinking about getting a dog)!” Ann also sent a photo captioned, “Here’s our 91-pound, 2-yearold lovebug Tank! Yes, that is a very large stuffed toy bone.” It looked like that dinosaur bone in the opening credits of The Flintstones. Gretchen (von Oesen) and Andrew Diemer ’97 welcomed their third child, Katherine Bennett Diemer, on March 9. “Brother Marcus and sister Anna think she is pretty cool and are a ‘big help.’ I am still working at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia as clerkship director and assistant program director for the internal medicine programs there. Makes being a doctor a little more of a 9 to 5 type job and makes being a mother of three (gulp) more feasible.” Soon to be in Philly are Tina Rosan and family. Tina got a teaching position at Temple University in the geography and urban studies department, so her family will move to the City of Brotherly Love in the fall. Elizabeth Waugh-Stewart announced the Jan. 24 birth of daughter Caroline Maeve Waugh-Stewart. “We are calling n 1 9 9 6 –9 7 her Callie for short, and she is a real peach. Stella Rose (age 2½) is a great big sister, and we are all adjusting to life with a fuller house! In November I spent a fun weekend in Charlottesville with Jen Rubenstein, who is a poli sci professor at UVA.” In the spring Elizabeth and her family traveled by plane for a wedding in Boston, where they planned to see Stella Rose’s godmother Tiffany Steinwert. Also in Chapel Hill, Hanna (Kelly) Sanoff is an associate professor of medicine at UNC and a member of the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center. She presented a free community workshop on her research. Heather Wilkinson departed Hilton Head, S.C., and is currently “a nomadic soul. I’m doing locums ER doctor work in Charlotte for the summer but working on my California license and thinking of heading out there for at least six months or so later this year!” New to California, Lauren Burwell relocated to the Bay area, where she will be attending UC Berkeley’s MPH program starting in July. Lauren’s bigger news, though, was that she and David Lee were married March 21 in Charlottesville. Christine Carter, Amy Prieto, Michael Miller and Nzinga Kone-Miller ’98 were all in attendance. Holly (Hodgson) Stephens had much to report, including Sean Christopher Stephens’ arrival on April 10. “He came out in five pushes, four of which we got on video—it only took two minutes total! Crazy!” Holly said that her older son Coby is already learning to be a good big brother. “For inauguration weekend, I traded crazy DC for Brian Spitzer’s idyllic log cabin in rustic Forest Falls, Calif., with Emilie Grossmann, Bonnie Schulkin and Amy (Smith) Muise ’97. And locally, my husband was outside our apartment with our son, talking with a family with another little boy. I went out to join them wearing my Williams soccer hat. The boy’s dad, recognizing the hat at the distance of 100 feet, said, ‘No way! Your wife went to Williams?’ Turns out Zack Wiseman and family are our neighbors! Even crazier? When we discovered we were both ’96! (How could we have gotten through four years without even once crossing paths?)” Tiffany Steinwert successfully defended her dissertation on sexuality and the United Methodist Church in April, and she kicked off the newest campaign as the national field director for Reconciling Ministries Network in May. Anna (Cederberg) Heard reported that since her husband defended his dissertation and passed, she hopes she can soon follow him and also become Dr. Heard. Meanwhile, she took a job at BioVentures for Global Health, where she met Joanna Lowell ’90. Dan Bolnick’s big news was his appointment as a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Early Career Scientist. “This means HHMI will pay my salary and (generously) fund my research for the next six years while I stay here at the University of Texas. It’s a really exciting opportunity to try some higherrisk research.” Lawyers, lawyers, everywhere. Christopher Wheeler joined Farella Braun & Martel in San Francisco as an associate in the business litigation group. Monica Patel returned to the workforce as a part-time attorney in Savannah after taking two years off following son Paawan’s birth, “and I am enjoying my new routine!” Tracy Weir and her husband David welcomed daughter Maria Annette Marek, “born in the middle of a Poughkeepsie snowstorm on the morning of Jan. 18. We truly have been enjoying her, and now that I have returned to my lawyering job after three months of maternity leave, I am enjoying every minute with her even more. Before all of this, I did get the chance to meet up with Nina Wang ’98 for a nice lunch in NYC before she flew back to California.” Henry Shinn quit his job at Morgan Lewis to join a startup with his cousin to develop a computer game. “It will be a MMORPG (massively multiplayer online role playing game) targeted toward teens and tweens. I’ve come on as senior VP and general counsel, which means that in addition to the legal aspects, I’ll be handling operational and business development functions. The online gaming market is growing exponentially and appears to be recession resistant. At least more recession resistant that the legal profession. … Look out for a marketing push toward the end of the year.” Jim Heyes and his wife welcomed son Oliver on March 18. Baby Oliver started his trip on the 17th but must have hit traffic. New dad Jim wrote, “Lucky for him he doesn’t have to put up with green cupcakes (St. Patrick’s Day) at his birthday parties for the rest of his life!” I’m sure Jim’s wife was elated that the labor lasted that long. Amy Whitaker’s “still living in London, though in a very peripatetic phase, since I work for a company in New York.” (I had to look up peripatetic—still not sure how I got into Williams.) “I am mostly busy finishing my first book, which is to be published in September. It’s called Museum Legs, and it’s loosely about why people get bored in art museums and why that matters.” Amy spent January in Williamstown teaching a Winter Study called “Entrepreneurship as an Art Form.” She said, “Was excellent, too, to hang out with Jonnie Cluett and Cornelia Alden (though they met one of my students at a basketball game and spent the whole time explaining that it was Winter Study, so he didn’t need to do any work).” Porter (Harris) May and her almost-2-year-old daughter Savannah came to Maryland for a girls’ weekend with me and my daughter Aviva. We headed over to Lydia (Vermilye) Weiss’ house for a stroll to her local playground with her and her son Rex, and as we walked, I marveled over how the times have changed. Sigh. Anyhow, by the time you all get this, summer will be in full swing. Enjoy, and keep in touch! 1997 Bahia Ramos Synnott c/o Ecofin Inc. 630 Fifth Ave., Suite 2452 New York, NY 10111 1997secretary@williams.edu Hello, Class of ’97. I was recently sitting at a breakfast where Queen Latifah was speaking about honoring the women of our community, because they are the thread that holds us together. So in honor of that sentiment, it’s Ladies First: Sabrina B. Oei and husband Chris moved from Denver back to the East Coast, where she’s joined the public relations team at Novartis. It’s been a long time and fabulous world travels to return to NJ (let alone living with the parents again until they find a home), and Sabrina looks forward to reconnecting with East Coast Ephs and tearing up the triathlon racing scene. After seven years working as a freelance sound designer in Atlanta theater, Mimi Epstein August 2009 | Williams People | 103 CL ASS NOTES is leaving the field to start law school at William & Mary (cue instant Williamstown/ Williamsburg confusion). “It’s a big change, but I’m pretty excited about it. And to think it all started from a chance comment at Rachel Hoover’s bachelorette party!” Mimi says. Check out some of Mimi’s sounds at www. resoundingechoes.com. Former secretary Kate Boyle Ramsdell is just about finished with a year as the acting dean of students at Nobles, and while it’s been fun, she will be happy to return to the college counseling office and to teaching next year! Kate says, “My husband Jamie and I got to spend some time with Chloe Bland Shaw in April, which is always good fun, and we’re looking forward to the first summer in a long time with only one weekend absorbed by a wedding. Otherwise, life is pretty status quo these days, and I think I’m the better for it.” Heidi (Schneider) Summers had a permaculture work party to get her backyard ready for a little urban homesteading over the spring and summer seasons. She’s still doing private practice psychiatry in Issaquah, Wash., but will more often be found with her 3-year-old, Katie, baking sourdough or making homemade soda (yum!). Becky Baum is still living in San Francisco and working as a deputy district attorney for the San Mateo County District Attorney’s Office. She writes, “I will have been there for eight years this summer, and I am currently assigned to the domestic violence unit, which I find incredibly rewarding. I just recently returned to work after a six-month leave due to my most exciting news: the birth of my daughter Lucy last September. Between her and my husband, our teeny tiny house is quite full, but we are both enjoying our animated little girl.” Alex Steinberg Barrage and husband Rafic hosted Charles Imohiosen while he was interviewing in DC (details to unfold a little later). After a few years of dreaming, Alex qualified to run the Boston Marathon. Says Alex, “It was a terrific feeling, especially at the end when I got to hold my son Amir.” Patricia Porter had the worst case of spring fever. She planned out trips and mini-vacations for practically every weekend until August. She writes, “I decided that the theme of this season will 104 | Williams People | August 2009 be ‘See Washington!’ Already I’ve gone up to Skagit Valley for the much anticipated Tulip Festival. It was absolutely perfect in every way—weather, vividly colored flowers, relaxing. … I’ve also been Spring Barrel Wine Tasting in the Yakima Valley. It had been a couple of years since I’d been out there. It brought back memories. It was a time when I marveled on how blessed we were. I really appreciated life.” Upcoming events for Patricia included the Anacortes Waterfront Fest and Deception Pass, visiting the Columbia River Gorge, a road trip along the Cascade Loop, and maybe seeing Larry Marcus again at the end of July at the Oregon Beer Brewer’s Festival. Patricia jumped on the Facebook bandwagon and has been excited to get in touch again with people she hasn’t spoken to in a while. She writes, “I called Thien Lam ’98. … She finished a master of fine arts program in England, is back in San Francisco and … landed a new job.” Shayla Harris traveled up to the Purple Valley to join other award-winning Williams alum journalists on the discussion “The Future of News: Journalism in a Post-Print World.” As for me, I was recently accepted into the National Urban Fellows program and will be spending my summer getting an MPA. Your contributions may be the most I hear from the outside world during most of this time, so I encourage you to keep me informed about how you all are doing. Ian Synnott and I had the chance to catch up with Seth Morgan on a great early summer evening in NYC. Ian also saw Austin Fagan and Adam Piatkowski, who are both enjoying fatherhood and doing well. Now on to the guys… Geoff Findlay did a ride from Houston to Austin (approx. 180 miles) to raise money for multiple sclerosis. The first day was canceled due to a tropical storm, but the second day was pretty great, and he went through a state park. Jesse Brackenbury is working with UN’s World Food Programme in Rome for six months on a leave of absence from the Boston Consulting Group. He submits, “With my wife and son, we’ve moved to Trastevere and are having a great time exploring, eating and traveling. We’ve hosted lots of visitors, including Aleta Angelosante and Sarah Cottay.” Benjamin Ergas co-founded a private equity firm in São Paulo called NEXPAR that structures and finances energy projects (from conversion of biomass into electricity to onshore gas concessions). It’s a small company with big ambitions in a fascinating sector and engaging country. He’s recently crossed paths with Caroline Mahon ’96, Jose-Ignacio Palma ’98 and Dan Shirai ’00. Issac Pesin has been a longtime reader but first-time writer to class notes (welcome, Issac!). He writes, “Mariana and I welcomed our third son, Victor Elliott, to the world Jan. 18. He joins Barnett, 4, and George, 2. Three boys under 5 is both a wonderful blessing and a ton of work! Mariana hosted a Perry girls reunion last spring at our home in South Florida—Liz Fishman and Jenny Keane came down from NYC; and Julie (Finch) McCaffrey and Steph (Lindenbaum) Seale made the cross-country trip from California.” Charles Imohiosen reports: “1. Kirsten and I had daughter no. 2. Lauren Elise Imohiosen was born on March 9. Alison, who is now 21 months old, seems generally happy to have a sister (apart from the occasional bite and pinch to her new sister’s leg/arm). 2. I will be starting a new job … working for the EPA as a special assistant on climate change in the administrator’s office in DC.” While down in DC recently, I had lunch with Tom Eldert and stayed with Alex Steinberg Barrage and her family, both of whom are still lawyers at MoFo and are doing well. Jonathan Levine’s first child was born on March 17. His name is Yedidyah Tov Levine, and he is doing very well. Ben Partan has moved to Beijing for at least a year. Peter Sinclair and his wife had their second child on April 1. “John Zaia Sinclair is a big healthy boy and getting bigger by the day. Sister Mary is keeping us on our toes. That’s the news from Pasadena,” writes Peter. Jonah Wittkamper is still in DC, going on three years now. “Being part of the Obama tech team opened lots of doors. I’m now the executive director of Search for Common Ground-USA, a big conflict-resolution org. I’m doing a national dialogue on issues of same-gender couples. Think: national gay leaders and the religious right talking about federal civil unions and guarantees n 1 9 9 7 –9 8 of religious freedom. My kind of thing—trust in diversity transcending political divides. … I’m also talking to White House people on young donor movement stuff. I saw Josh Solomon … who was in town with the Young Non-Profit Professionals Network. Never a dull moment, though family remains king,” submits Jonah. Every season I get one of those updates that makes me remember why I signed up for this duty. Don’t get me wrong, I am thoroughly enjoying my role, but the first-timers really put a certain spring in my step. I hope more of you come out of hiding! I don’t bite, I promise. So, without further ado… Noah Federman reports, “I am in LA and doing great. I’m an assistant professor of pediatric oncology at UCLA and the director of a very, very busy children’s bone and soft-tissue cancer center here. I also got married a few years ago and just had an adorable baby girl, Emme, who is now 5½ months.” If you feel like submitting news in the off-season, feel free to utilize Jeff Zeeman’s blog site williams97.blogspot.com/. With this, Facebook and my e-mails, you literally have no excuse! Lastly, on a sadder note, I would like to share news of our dear classmate Chrissy Clawson. Liz Fishman has written a beautiful obituary in her honor, which I would like to share again with you: It is with deep sadness that I announce the passing of Chrissy Clawson Audibert, a dear friend and classmate. For those who didn’t know Chrissy well, she combined a gentle smile and sweet giggle with an upbeat sense of adventure and optimism. Her bravery and grace in battling cancer has touched the lives of many people in the Williams community and beyond. Chrissy lived in Williams E her freshman year, studied as an econ major and played on the soccer and lacrosse teams. She was involved in many activities, ranging from Peer Health to the Gospel Choir. Chrissy studied abroad in Venezuela her junior fall and upon her return received a diagnosis of breast cancer. She completed the spring semester at Williams, driving back and forth to Boston for treatments and taking on the cancer with characteristic determination. After graduation, Chrissy spent two years in Boston working at the Monitor Co. (along with many other ’97s) and then moved to San Francisco. I was lucky to share this time with her, where she worked in a variety of jobs including a startup called GetOutdoors.com and a nonprofit environmental organization called Lighthawk. Chrissy was the kind of person who encouraged others around her to take advantage of their surroundings, from organizing hikes to seeing live music to joining a softball team with strangers. After seven years in remission, in 2002 Chrissy received news that her cancer had metastasized to other areas of her body. Although unable to work, she grew gardens, learned to play the banjo and wrote poetry. She fundraised for and participated in Avon Breast Cancer Walks and spent summers building houses on Indian reservations with other breast cancer survivors through an organization called Amazon Heart. The link below describes this work and includes a touching personal statement (written by Chrissy in 2007) that shows her courageous attitude throughout her journey: tinyurl. com/kmfnpw. On Feb. 13, Chrissy passed away in her hometown of Harvard, Mass., at the side of her parents Dick and Phyllis Clawson and husband Matt Audibert. Her parents and Matt have announced that contributions may be made in her memory to The Healing Garden, P.O. Box 145, Harvard, Mass. 01451. The Healing Garden (www.healinggarden.net) is an educational nonprofit dedicated to providing a community of support to facilitate the healing process for women experiencing breast cancer, and it was a place that was very dear to Chrissy. 1998 Andrea Stanton 145 Luquer St., Apt. 4 Brooklyn, NY 11231 1998secretary@williams.edu Hello, and happy summer to all of you. I hope that some of you were able to make it to this year’s reunion and that for others June has brought back fond memories of reunion 2008. We have a great collection of updates this season, and I hope you enjoy reading them as much as I enjoyed receiving them. As always, we have a new crop of babies to welcome. Jasper Boardman was born to Tristan Smith and Kate Wearn on Jan. 29; “another baby to add to the growing ’98 collection,” Tristan writes. “Visitors are encouraged, if they don’t mind chaos.” Adam Borden and wife Meredith added son Ian Matan to their family in February. “Big sister Emma alternates between nuzzling him and trying to poke out his eye,” he says. Adam has been busy expanding his food-focused venture fund Bradmer Foods with a new beverage investment in Sambazon, a company that sells the açai products that both Oprah and half of my scam e-mails endorse. He is also working with a nonprofit organization, Marylanders for Better Beer and Wine Laws, which works for legislation that would permit direct wine shipment for the state. Adam saw Carolina Braunschweig promoting her CMB Sweets jams at the January Fancy Foods Show, and his family enjoyed seeing Emily Snell in Baltimore and playing with her sons Conrad and Theo. Katie Schultz also had a February birth: daughter Beatrice Schultz Martin. The Martins have seen Erica Bollerud, Britta (Beenhakker) Mullany and her family, and Amanda Holbrook and son Sebastian. In April, Elise London and husband Mike were joined by a daughter, Phoebe Caroline. Susan Stanton and David Burroughs welcomed Caitlyn Jane Burroughs, who, Susan says, “happens to look adorable in purple.” Jon King and wife Stephanie Sewell King ’99 became a trio with the May 3 arrival of son Graham Lawrence. And on May 7 Jed Untereker and wife Melissa did the same with daughter Leila Solika. Others with family news include Sarah E. Nelson, who writes that 1-year-old Tate is now getting big enough to play with 2½-year-old Finn. “I’m planning on teaching Finn how to throw a Frisbee this summer,” Sarah writes. She sees a lot of Jess (Charland) Shear and her 1-year-old son Evan. Evan and Tate attended one another’s birthday parties and, Sarah adds, “would be fast friends if Tate would stop pulling Evan’s hair.” Kate (Hedden) Vosburg writes that she and husband Dave ’97 are still in the process of adopting foster daughter Isabella and that son Nate is working on being a “gentle” older brother. She is also helping Pam Bromley settle into the house that Pam bought August 2009 | Williams People | 105 CL ASS NOTES last spring. Those with slightly older children will be happy to know that Danielle (Bahr) Eason’s company Myself Belts, which designs toddler-friendly belts, has been named one of Startup Nation’s top 200 mom-owned businesses of 2009. Danielle, who owns the business with her sister, writes: “Myself Belts are now in 700 specialty boutiques worldwide.” Bohn Vergari writes that he and family, including son Bohn III, are well and living in Bronxville. Chris Bell writes in with the latest update on his meals with Chris Elkington and their respective spouses. “We have begun having calorie-efficient dinners of pizza and homemade ice cream, topped with childhood favorite Magic Shell,” he writes. The calories come in handy on weekdays, since Chris adds: “I’ve collected some fellow road bikers to form a pace line for the 50-mile round-trip work commute.” In their off-work hours, the Bells have replaced their lawn with basil and invite anyone visiting Portland to stop in for world-class pesto. While there have been no other reports of lawn basil, a number of ’98ers have food blogs: Annemarie Cancienne’s divineambrosia. blogspot.com/, Janee WoodsWeber’s www.revelandfeast.com/, Dena Zaldua-Hilkene’s denasrecipeexchange.blogspot.com/, and Lizi Craft’s foodcraftaustin. blogspot.com/. “Are there others out there who have the same love of food and blogging?” Lizi asks. If you do and are interested in creating a class cookbook, please e-mail her at liz.craft@ gmail.com. Lindsay Tucker reports that the focus of Ned Sahin’s Kennebunkport bachelor party was a pig roast, “something that none of us had done before and all of us had been advised against, due to concerns over food poisoning, E. coli and the like.” When those with medical degrees refused to help prep the pig, John Williams stepped in to stuff and glaze it, ending, Lindsay adds, by “sewing it up with needlework that made my Italian leather gloves look like counterfeit dungarees.” (Ned was married in early May and promises details to come; no bachelor party attendee was harmed by John’s pig tailoring.) Lindsay also saw Rob Wittenmeyer, an astronomist at the University of New South Wales, en route home to Sydney after a “Life on Other Planets” conference in Baltimore. 106 | Williams People | August 2009 Visiting NYC, Nina Wang ’98 (left) had brunch and reminisced with Tracy (Weir) Marek ’96 in November 2008. Others currently far afield include Sam French, who writes that he has been working on a film about de-mining efforts in Afghanistan for the Mine Action Coordination Center of Afghanistan. “Got to love the acronyms,” Sam writes. His first news piece, a Channel Four (UK) feature on a match between the Afghan National Cricket Team and a team from Sussex, England, was broadcast last spring. Our woman in Brazil, Thais Mariz de Oliveira, writes that she has made an internal career change, moving from Heidrick & Struggles’ marketing division to its executive search team. She also has a 1½-year-old son, Caique. Thais sees Nacho Palma and his wife when their schedules permit but reports that since her husband is Nacho’s dentist he sees Nacho the most frequently. Laura Davis writes that she is relocating to London for a few years with fiancé Jim (Middlebury ’95). And Nathan Pieplow visited Dave ’97 and Kate Vosburg in southern California, carrying the latest birding devices. His gear included a “modified remotecontrol model boat”-cum-recording device that scientists use to get close to otherwise-shy water birds. “Only Nathan could come up with such nefarious schemes for birding,” Kate writes. Finally, Bevin Hartnett and son Christopher moved to Santa Fe for a management position in the financial planning firm in which Bevin has worked for the past few years. “No signs of any Ephs yet,” Bevin writes, “but I’m barely moved in so I remain optimistic.” The southwestern Ephs may all be in Arizona, according to Phoenix native Anjali Abraham, who is now doing research and policy work for Arizona’s county governments. “There are lots of people in Arizona now,” Anjali writes, “which is pretty cool.” Anjali reports that she is taking cello lessons and riding horses in her spare time, which also sounds pretty cool. But the winner of this issue’s class notes is Tui Sutherland, who writes that she has followed in James Kossuth’s footsteps by appearing on Jeopardy. “Its one of the things I’ve always wanted to do,” she says, and as for being the second ’98 alum on the show, she adds: “I wouldn’t be surprised if I’m not the last.” A less glamorous but still impressive report comes from Mitch Stripling, who is director of emergency planning in New York’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. He writes that his spring was utterly derailed by swine flu but that he still found time to take daughters Emma and Livvy to the Met. As for me, I had the pleasure of catching up with several ’98ers last spring. In Seattle, I shopped with Jess Mintz and her dog Pooka for seedlings and soil to plant in their summer garden and met up with Jon Burstein for coffee just before he headed off from his job at Zillow for an Australia vacation. In New York, I had lunch with Jeninne Lee-St. John, back from Vietnam for a friend’s wedding, and had drinks with Bunge Cook, who is starting a three-year term as head of LA’s Marine Corps recruiting efforts and as a result is now studying Mandarin and Spanish. (Guess n 1 9 9 8 –9 9 that means we won’t be speaking Arabic the next time I see him.) And I enjoyed a delightful dinner with Veronica Roberts and Evelyn Spence at the envy-inducing apartment of one of Veronica’s friends. Veronica has been putting in long hours at MoMA, and Evelyn is finishing the first year of her master’s program in creative writing, but they have still been finding time to train for a half-marathon. It’s getting warm in New York—sunny days and just the hint of humidity in the air at night. I hope your summers were full of blue skies and time to enjoy life with family and friends. 1999 Erik Holmes 709 Palm Ave., Apt. 6 Huntington Beach, CA 92648 Nat White 4476 North Morris Blvd. Shorewood, WI 53211 1999secretary@williams.edu Submitted by Nat: I’ll begin this set of notes with several thank-yous. First, thank you to the reunion committee, chaired by Alex Egan and Katie Walsh-Gardner. Many others contributed time and ideas to the planning of reunion, which was well attended. I and doubtless many others enjoyed a wonderful weekend in Williamstown hanging out, catching up with old friends and even meeting some new ones. The next thank-you goes to the outgoing slate of class officers for their past five years of service to our class and the College: president Alex Egan, VP Dede Orraca-Cecil and treasurer Will Slocum. Next, I’d like to thank the incoming group of officers for their commitment: copresidents Dede and Leigh Winter Martin, VP Dave Willett, treasurer Eric Soskin, and Erik Holmes, who will be helping me by taking on some of the duties of class secretary. A thank-you also to all of the class agents, headed by Emily Eakin and Tyler (Lewis) Perry, whose work allowed us to win a trophy for our gifts to Williams. Lastly, I’d like to thank all of you who have submitted news to be included here; you make the job of secretary an enjoyable one. I was surprised and thrilled to win the Thurston Bowl for class secretaries at reunion this year, which speaks to the quantity and quality of the news you submit, so keep it coming. Because so many of you were at reunion and able to catch up with each other, I will start this edition with those who were unable to attend. Farthest away is Kate Dunlop, who lives and works in Tokyo. Kate gave birth on Oct. 1, 2008, to Katharine Miranda Abbott, who has already crossed the Pacific several times but wasn’t quite up to the trip to Williamstown. She has, however, already met Kendra Field and her husband Khary. In Arlington, Vt., Katie (Westbrook) Redding, her husband Chad and 3-year-old son JD welcomed Lyla Olivia Redding into the world on May 11. While they didn’t make it to Williamstown, Katie and Lyla managed a minireunion for lunch in Bennington with Kate Nolan Joyce, Robyn (Markham) Harrington, Erik Holmes and his fiancée Shannon, Marc Barreda and Adam Nesbit ’97. Katie is loving life as a full-time mom. Also with a new baby joining a 3-year-old son is UC Santa Barbara professor Zack Grossman. Son Levi joined the family on June 1, which precluded a trip to Williamstown for reunion. He was born at home in the house Zack and Amy purchased only two weeks prior to the birth. Zack was also wrapping up his first year as an assistant professor in the economics department and dealing with final exams. Becky Logue-Conroy, despite her proximity in North Adams, also missed reunion with new arrivals. Twin girls Maeve and Meiris turned 2 weeks old as we all departed Williamstown. They did have an early lesson on the importance of Williams friendships over the weekend, with visitors including Cara Yoder Matzen, Karen Hu, Laura and Jon Kravis, Anazette (Williams) Ray and her husband Phil, and my wife Julie Rusczek and me. There are rumors about other sets of twins that kept their mothers away from reunion, but I don’t have formal confirmation yet. In a similar vein, Brett Linck writes that he is the only pediatrician on the base in North Dakota, where he is now stationed. Brett took a humanitarian trip to Ecuador, where he estimates his group provided care to about 4,000 kids in 10 days. Despite the crash course in Spanish and his wish that he had learned some of it before he arrived, Brett got interviewed by a local TV station in Spanish. He may be fortunate that they edited the interview to simply include Brett waving. Greg Albert missed reunion to attend his own graduation from neurosurgery residency at the University of Iowa. Greg will stay at the University of Iowa for another year on a neurosurgery fellowship, but he has begun interviewing for pediatric neurosurgery fellowships for the following year. A bit farther west, Jen Hurley and her husband Nick Kujawa and son moved from San Francisco, where Jen was clerking for a judge on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, to Nick’s hometown of Butte, Mont. Jen is quite busy studying to take the bar exam again as she looks forward to working with the Montana public defender’s office, handling criminal appeals. Jen and Nick purchased a historical building uptown that they are converting into commercial and apartment space, using green construction techniques while meeting historic preservation codes. They are loving life in Montana. LA resident and writer Rachel Axler was quite sad to miss reunion, but she was too busy writing for Parks and Recreation, which will come back on NBC on Thursdays, starting Sept. 27. Rachel is enjoying the change of coasts; she will have been out of NYC for about a year by the time you read this. Thanks to Ian Eisenman for alerting me to the whereabouts of some of our missing classmates. Devin Redmond married Katherine Peterson near Yosemite on Reunion Weekend; hopefully he’ll have details for us in the next issue. Ian himself is a recent groom; he married Ariane Verdy on April 11 near Santa Monica. He was joined for the weekend by Seth Resnick, Erik Holmes, Devin Redmond, Andrea Slate, Dave Cowan, Jan Postma, Kate Ervin, Kristina Gehrman ’00, Todd Rogers ’01, Trevor Pound ’93, Chris Lovell ’77 and Jonathan Lovell ’67. On to more new members of the Class of ’99 family. Jon Servidea ended nearly 10 years of silence on the class notes front by writing about the arrival of twins; Jon’s wife Kathleen gave birth to Lily and J.J. in February. Jon is still working at JP Morgan in NYC, and the family lives in Darien, Conn. Jack Griffin Sweeney Benzon was born on Feb. 21 to Sarah (Sweeney) and Paul Benzon. Jack is named in memory of Sarah’s father Jack Sweeney ’71 and Griffin Hall, August 2009 | Williams People | 107 CL ASS NOTES where Paul and Sarah were married. Big sister Ellie is now 5 and is Jack’s number-one entertainer and babysitter, although she claims her favorite reunion activity was “creating mischief with Jon Pak.” On March 26, the stork visited another of the women of Williams C as Lachlan Jason Kelleher was born to Robin Paul Kelleher. Robin had a baby shower that was quite well attended by many Ephs, and she’s loving life as a mom. April was a popular month for births. On April 5, Evelyn Claire Lorentz was born to Dayna Kaufman and Jason Lorentz ’97 in Burlington, Vt. Dayna has finished her MFA in creative writing and literature, but writing is not her day job; she’s a clerk in the Chittenden County Court. Ifie Okwuje and her husband welcomed son Jan Kelechi Bruess into the world on April 12, and Ifie reports that Jan is awesome. They are still living in DC, which apparently has become more staid since Jodie Hearn moved to NYC for school. Courtney (Stokes) and Dave Willett were thrilled to have Charlotte Stokes Willett join the family on April 19. Even big sister Parker is enjoying the new arrival. Graham Lawrence King, born May 3 to Stephanie (Sewell) and Jon King ’98, had a collection of purple cow toys even before his arrival at reunion. No formal announcements yet, but the rental house shared by Christian Dankers, Jon Ilgen, Drew Richards and Julie (Zlotnick) and Justin Belcher was full of little ones for Reunion Weekend. With these and many other children in attendance, there was some debate as to whether the accessory of choice was grandparents (Matt and Kathleen (Higgins) Sigrist, Sarah (Moline) and Matt Whalin, and several others brought grandparent helpers) or the Baby Bjorn. In other additions to the class, Laura (Moberg) Lavoie sent the details of her February wedding. Bridesmaids included Emily Palmer, Jennifer Walcott and Leigh Winter Martin. Will Slocum, Arlene Spooner, Aaron DeCamp, Kathleen Mason, Eric Soskin, Jon Pak, Steve Bennett, Christian Rubio, Jen Hurley and Hans Davies also joined in the fun in San Diego. Laura confesses to suffering from wedding and reunion planning withdrawal, but she’s already looking forward to our 15th. Rich von Bargen is engaged to Suela Nako ’00, so 108 | Williams People | August 2009 Before leaving for a six-month trip to the Middle East to work on his dissertation, Peter Krause ’02 visited Rebecca (Krause) Missonis ’99 (left) and Gisele Pinck ’02 (right) in Newtown, Pa., where both women work at George School. he’ll get to go to reunions two years in a row from now on. Andrew Henderson brought his fiancée Gwynne to reunion, and Zach Niman brought his fiancée Natalie. The last news about reunion that I will leave you with is that I met a husband new to the class who was friends in college with one of my elementary school neighbors and soccer teammates. Yes, Williams is a small college, but it has a large reach. Speaking of that reach, Sarah Spivack, who started with us and then transferred, sent in an update. She has launched her first creative venture since leaving NPR; Sarah is collecting stories by and about the children of hippies for an anthology she’s editing. Sounds like a cool project. Moving away from the pull of the Purple Valley, Vivian (Wang) Lin and her family are moving from NYC to Taiwan. Vivian will be busy managing her family’s fashion design business and raising kids Zachary and Ally. Adam Schreiber, on the other hand, is enjoying being back in Brooklyn after his time in Austin. Adam works for a small architecture firm called Delson or Sherman, concentrating on modern renovations of aging brownstones. He’s looking forward to starting the long, slightly harrowing exam process that will allow him to officially call himself an architect. Also in NYC is Seth Resnick, who should win an award for making it to reunion two days before taking his boards in psychiatry. Maggie Adler was unable to resist the draw of Williams; she is leaving her job at an art gallery in Andover, Mass., to come back and start a master’s in art history at Williams. I leave you with a few thoughts on staying connected to friends from our class. First, there are more than 200 of us in the Williams Class of 1999 group on Facebook, and there’s room for the rest of you. Second, just because it’s fast and easy to use Facebook doesn’t mean you should stop writing to your secretaries. That’s all for now; I look forward to lots more news in the next go-round. 2000 REUNION JUNE 10-13 Jon Pearson 18 Le Pere Drive Pittsford, NY 14534 2000secretary@williams.edu I have loved compiling and writing our class notes for the past six years or so, but there are times when I don’t enjoy it much at all—when I screw up. Whether it’s replacing the “a” in your name with an “e” or omitting one of your bridesmaids from your list of wedding attendees, I feel like a jerk when I mess up your news. I made such an error last time when I inadvertently left out an update from two of our distinguished classmates, and I will now attempt to make up for it in two ways. 1) These two classmates will, in perpetuity, now be n 1 9 9 9 –2 0 0 0 referred to as “the beautiful” Amy (Sprengelmeyer) Healy and “the dashing” Jason Healy. 2) They get the coveted leadoff spot this time. Here we go! The beautiful Amy (Sprengelmeyer) Healy and the dashing Jason Healy are doing very well in Suffield, Conn., with their son Seth, who turned 1 the day that these class notes were due. As it should, most of their news now consists of updates about Seth, who has already accomplished a lot in his one year of life. He learned to crawl, walk, run, sort blocks by shape, say “Uh oh” and, most importantly, how to direct all attention in a room to himself. Plans for swimming lessons and summer trips were on the horizon. On a recent visit to see Cathy Williams and Chris Richards in Hoboken, N.J., Seth had the run of their apartment. On the same trip, they all went to visit Susie (Fyrberg) and Mike Hacker in NYC. Let’s have the Hackers kick off the MLEs. Susie and Mike are pleased to announce the birth of their second child, Amelia Mehana Hacker, on Jan. 31. Susie is pulling full-time mom duty for both Amelia and her older brother, 2-year-old Sammy, who was at the time of this writing in the midst of the pressure cooker known as the NYC preschool admission process. Mike continues to work in finance and “took some time off from the pillage” to hang with the kids. Nell Putnam-Farr and Brendan Nelson are the proud mommy and daddy, respectively (in case that wasn’t clear), of Theodore Putnam Nelson, known to the ladies as Teo. Teo was a St. Patrick’s Day baby, and Nell says, “We expect him to be a Guinness fan and to grow up thinking that all the parades and parties are for him.” The only vitals I have on the little guy is that he showed up weighing 9 pounds, which, I am told, is a lot. Meg (Ting) Ryan and her husband Mike ’98 have produced a beautiful baby boy, Finbar Peter Ryan, known as Finn. A quick Google search informs me that Finbar is the anglicized form of the Gaelic name Fionnbharr, and there is probably a 50 percent chance that is true. Meg reports that he is fat, bald, beautiful and on his way to being very bright. The couple resides in Philadelphia, where Meg was finishing an endocrinology fellowship. Bob Blackstone receives a Class Secretary’s Award for Brevity for reporting the birth of his son Thomas to him and his wife Marcie on Nov. 23 in Brussels. Thomas enjoys giving his parents big smiles and playing games of peek-a-boo. Props to Dan Mason for starting his update, “Well, on the hot, fresh, Major Life Event tip, my daughter Julia was born on Feb. 1 in NYC.” The tale-ofthe-tape on little Julia: 8 pounds, 4 ounces, and lots of pain for her petite mother, who withstood 18 hours of labor. The family left New York shortly thereafter and moved to the north part of the Jersey Shore to be closer to family, and Dan reports that having a house and a place to park a car is pretty nice. Patchen Mortimer, I am told, frequently threatens to stop by. Kat (Oetjen) Jackson hereby ends her “long period of class note delinquency” by announcing that she and her husband David had their first child, Isabel Anne Jackson. A wee peanut at 5 pounds, 1 ounce, Isabel is now, according to her mother, officially head of the household. Kat works for Amazon Web Services as a product manager and loves Seattle, especially when the sun is out. Mike Brown and his wife welcomed their third daughter, Khara Alexendria, on April 9. She weighed 6 pounds, 3 ounces, and measured just under 20 inches long. Mike reports that her older sisters Raelyn and Elora love their little sister. Meghan (Cavanaugh) and Ryan Raveis welcomed their first child, Eleanor Dillon Raveis, on April 22. There was a play date involving the wife and progeny of Matt Art as well. Ron Parsons, the pride of Buffalo, N.Y., reports the birth of his second child, Charles Michael Parsons, born March 20 at 7 pounds, 9 ounces. Charles’ older sister Abby apparently believes that her baby brother is the newest addition to her doll collection. George Anthes and Aida Avdic became the parents of a daughter in January. Because George did not provide the name of his daughter in his e-mail (and I failed to follow up with an inquiry), we can all use our imaginations and pick a name for her until the mystery is solved. I’ve decided on one, but I’m not telling. Shara Pilch was an early visitor. George and Aida also attended an event in Philadelphia at which they saw Don and Melissa (Vecchio) Wood ’01, Steve Hibbard, Nat and Jen (Curley) Bessey, Sabrina Schwager ’04 and Justin Reliford ’03. Aida frequently sees our distinguished former class president Erin Morrissette at work. It was a pleasure to get a nice long update from Nick Weiss, who brings us the joyous news of the birth of Katherine Jane Weiss ’31 to him and Jocelyn (Riedl) Weiss. Katherine arrived weighing a “healthy” 9 pounds, 1 ounce, which is a perfect time for me to interject with a question: Is it just me, or are we collectively raising the national birth weight average? Nick reports that Katherine is a strong eater and is growing rapidly. Nick enjoys the sunny weather in LA and is CFO at a medical equipment company, while Jocelyn is an attorney with LA County. They saw Kai Gross in March and had dinner with Todd and Jessica (Erickson) Stiefler ’01 and Joe Sensenbrenner last summer. Thus concludes a very successful stretch of miracle production. Congratulations to all the new moms and dads out there. Our only wedding announcement of this MLE section is that of Drew Sutton, who celebrated his marriage to Bayliss Camp on April 25, the culmination of a decision that the couple made last year when California briefly recognized equal marriage rights. Those lucky enough to attend the festivities included Jeff Grant, Mariya Hodge, Rob Trumbull, Wayne and Becky (Hermes) Wight, Peter Webb ’02, Anna Frantz, Matt Levy, Steve Roman, Becky Iwantsch and Virginia (Pyle) and Kevin See. For the rest of our time together we’re going strictly potpourri/ grab bag/lightning round style. I’m going to take my hands off the keyboard for just a moment to shuffle the printouts of your e-mails before getting started … and we’re ready. The leadoff spot goes to Lauren (Siegel) Applebaum, who told me that she had forbidden MLE news that will have to wait until next time. Once again, I refer you to Facebook for your embargoed news needs. Angela Lankford is still in China, still raising her 2-year-old daughter and still leading treks into the highlands. Business was choppy in the spring due to political unrest, so Angela spent some extra time in the U.S. As of this writing, things seemed to be getting back to normal, however, and business August 2009 | Williams People | 109 CL ASS NOTES was picking up. Nikki Lopez, who incorrectly worries that she has “nothing interesting to say,” works with the Kabbalah Centre in LA and got to collaborate with Rav and Karen Berg, the pair responsible for bringing Kabbalah to the world. Nikki has traveled to San Francisco, San Diego, Las Vegas and New York. Also, she has not lost her mind but instead has found her soul. Let me know if you saw either of mine while you were looking around. Speaking of my soul, this seems like a good time to report that I was to receive my MBA from the Tuck School of Business on June 13. Let’s hope that I do not find a way to screw that up before you read this. to report and who just keep plugging away.” I like it. Adam Schuyler was to start a postdoc this summer at the UConn Health Center in Farmington, while his wife Erica was preparing to start a neurology gig at Hartford Hospital. Their 2-year-old son Ari has expressed excitement about living closer to his grandparents, though his young mind had not yet reconciled the idea that their house is not moving with them. Adam bumped into Bevan Londergan at UConn but only had enough contact with him to report that “he was in scrubs.” This is the kind of in-depth journalism that we are known for here at class notes. Wil Harkey saw Nick Waugh in EPHCOMPLISHMENT Writer, actress and slam poet Mayda Del Valle ’00 was a featured performer at an “Evening of Poetry, Music and Spoken Words,” hosted by the Obamas at the White House in May. Gabriela Allen is also a newly minted MBA, having graduated in May from Duke’s Fuqua School. She planned to spend her summer teaching business strategy at Davidson College to gifted middle school students and hoped to return to New York thereafter. In April, Rebecca Rehm met up with Liz (Bailey) Johnson and family for dinner in Charlotte. Liz and Rebecca reminisced about rugby while their daughters threw food. Also, I am told there were beers and that said beers were, at times, chugged. Not by the children. Elise (Estes) Morgan attended a barbecue for women’s soccer alums hosted by Kim (Comeau) Webster ’98. She was able to introduce her 7-month-old daughter Emily to Ann Brophy, Jill (Caterer) Cotter and Meghan (Cleary) Hamilton. She also spent a day in Williamstown in May starting the preparations for— brace yourselves—our 10-year reunion. She was joined by Nelson Hioe, Heather (May) Eckert, Albert Naclerio and Amanda (Leach) Norton. Elise was excited for a planned early-summer meeting with Becca Parkinson, who is Emily’s godmother. Ellie Springer chimed in via Facebook (you can all feel free to do that at any time, by the way) to give a shout-out “to all those who thought they would have it all figured out by now and don’t, those who don’t have any MLEs 110 | Williams People | August 2009 New Hampshire in May when Nick was in town for the Tuck MBA World Cup soccer tournament. Nick told Wil that New Haven is lovely, which heartened Wil given that he was to move his office there this summer. I can also proudly report that Wil’s lovely wife Papri was voted the “Best Dressed Female” in my business school class—an honor she richly deserved. Had there been an award for “Most Likely to Show Up to Class Wearing L.L. Bean Fleece in a Neutral Color,” I would have surely been a contender. Carrie Ryan has become a veritable class celebrity since her first novel, The Forest of Hands and Teeth, was released in March. She sold the film rights for the book to Seven Star Pictures, and a press release announced that the “Seven Star is developing the project for an as-yet unnamed A-list starlet.” Carrie is, like many of her readers, trying to figure out who the actress is. The book was, in May, already in its sixth printing, and Carrie has also sold the book rights in the UK, Australia, New Zealand, Germany, Spain and Latin America. I read it in one sitting on a flight from Zurich to Boston and really enjoyed it. It also looks like Carrie’s got a franchise on her hands—she has already written and revised the sequel and sold the third book, too. Sara Caswell Kolbet, who thinks it is “nice to hear that people from Williams are makin’ good and makin’ babies,” made the traditional class pilgrimage to Seattle to see Jon and Alicia (Currier) Kallay. We are told that Oren Kallay is both adorable and brilliant, and that he and Sara’s son Oliver hit it off and loved hiking while holding hands and laughing together. Sara related news of her vegetable garden and the retirement of her parents, and she also included a note that she is redoing her guest room in a shameless, not-so-subtle attempt to encourage friends to visit her in Oregon. Oh, and there was some forbidden MLE news. All of this and more in five tidy paragraphs made your class secretary a happy reader. Nancy Moeur checked in with news of some unseasonably warm spring weather in Syracuse. She is enjoying year one of home ownership and had developed an ambitious list of summer projects that included installing ceiling fans. The snobby cast of designers on Trading Spaces just shuddered— assuming that show still exists. Moving to our nation’s capital we find Alan Fitts, who spent last year’s presidential campaign season on then-candidate Obama’s Advance Team. He moved into a role on the Presidential Inaugural Committee, in which he helped to organize five of the inaugural night events, and now he works in the White House as trip director for First Lady Michelle Obama. This means that he is her primary channel of communication back to the White House wherever she travels. Alan reports that the experience has been “amazing” so far; he visited the G8, NATO and EU summits and was already planning a busy schedule for the rest of the year. We leave you this time with Steve Roman, who, as usual, provided his update in a neat, bulleted list. I will do nothing of the sort in relaying it to you. First, Steve took a week off at the beginning of April to enjoy a visit from Becky Iwantsch. Matt Levy and Anna Frantz also made an appearance that same week for the aforementioned Sutton wedding celebration. Matt had yet to see many of the Bay Area’s most important sites, so Steve took him to the Golden Gate, In-N-Out Burger and a Mexican restaurant. That’s all folks. See you next time. Let’s keep pumping out those chubby babies, OK? n 2 0 0 0 –0 1 2001 Katie Kelly Gregory 2642 West Cortez St., #3 Chicago, IL 60622 2001secretary@williams.edu Our class has added several new children to the pool of legacy applicants! Sierra (Smith) Nimitz and her husband welcomed a third daughter, Lucy McGregor, to the family in February. She joins big sisters Molly and Casey. Sierra and family moved to Minneapolis in June. Amy (Balas) O’Connor gave birth to a baby girl, Aoife Pearl, in February. “I managed to give birth with no drugs in a birth center, which was a great choice for us. If anyone is thinking about going that way please feel free to e-mail or call me!” Amy continues to teach early childhood special education and plans to move to a charter school in the fall and is looking forward to teaching in DC again. Annaliis (Abrego) Canty and her husband Scott ’98 welcomed their second son, Malcolm James, on Aug. 24, 2008. Their older son Danny turned 2 in April. The family has settled into the house they bought in Alexandria, Va., last summer. Annaliis works for the Department of Defense. Samantha (Grant) Riegels celebrated her son Bryce David Riegels’ first birthday. She reported, “For someone who never really saw herself having kids, the experience has been way more fun than I expected,” though she admits it might be nice to “sleep in” until 6:30 once again! Kivlina (Sheperd) Block and her husband bought their first house in October and spent the winter with their two kids sleeping in the dining room while the bedrooms were remodeled downstairs. She does not recommend this renovation technique! The family recently adopted a dog. Kivlina wrote, “She’s a great dog who shares my love of shoes; we just have to come to a meeting of the minds regarding their use!” Sara (Grote) Custer and her family moved from Philadelphia to Memphis for Sara’s work on a research project at St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital. They plan to spend a year in Memphis before relocating to Indianapolis. Matt Atwood and his partner Jackie Stein ’00 moved to Amherst, Mass., over the summer. Jackie plans to begin a doctoral program in sociology, while Matt expects to teach and pick up some part-time work farming or gardening. Zuzana Tothova finished her MD/PhD program at Harvard in June and was set to begin residency in internal medicine at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. Zuzana wrote, “Being on the residency interview trail was fun, mainly because it helped me reconnect with Williams people along the way, including … Jessica Bauman ’02 and Karen Chachu while visiting Penn and … Jess Leibler at Hopkins. I have been seeing a lot of Anne Dwyer, who is one year short of completing her family medicine residency. Betsy Lo is moving back to Boston and working as a primary care physician starting this summer. I have seen Chris and Susan (Levin) Koegel ’02 a few times … and eagerly await Susan’s return to Boston in the summer. Liana Thompson came to visit for a couple of days. … It was so fun to reconnect and hear about all her exciting productions.” Lloyd Nimetz returned to the Bay Area and reports that he has “a huge roof-deck in San Francisco to entertain and grill beef for Williams alumni. I’m also starting up an Internet platform called GRROUP that makes it much easier for social innovators to create meaningful, positive changes at scale.” Karen Chachu graduated from Washington University in St. Louis, where she completed an MD/PhD program. After eight years in Missouri, she’s moved back to Philadelphia to begin a residency program in internal medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. After she completes her residency, she plans to complete a fellowship in gastroenterology. Jeremy Faust reported that Williams’ Director of Choral Activities Brad Wells asked him to serve on the board of directors for “Roomful of Teeth,” a new professional vocal music ensemble based at MASS MoCA, Williams and in New York. He has been helping to run auditions in NYC and attending board meetings via video conference. The project brings young professional singers and composers (including Judd Greenstein) together with master voice teachers from all over the world who specialize in non-classical singing. Jeremy continues his medical school studies and is gearing up for board exams. Ryan Mayhew finished his MD/ MBA program at Northwestern in June 2008 and recently completed his intern year in an internal medicine residency program at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in downtown Chicago. Fumi Tosu plans to enroll in an international development graduate program at Columbia University after spending the summer in Kenya. Nate Foster spent the spring on the academic job market circuit. He enjoyed hanging out with Lynn Lim in Chicago and John Morrison and Lia Amakawa in Brooklyn. Nate expected to complete his doctoral program in computer science over the summer and will spend the next year as a postdoctoral fellow at Princeton before beginning a faculty job at Cornell next summer. He also reported that Scott Moringiello and Johanna Heinrichs ’02 moved to Philadelphia in June, and Nate is looking forward to seeing a lot more of the couple. Dan Center spent the month of April traveling in Peru with his girlfriend and brother. In May, he traveled with Hilary Williams, Grace Rubenstein, Becky Sanborn and Bailey McCallum to southern Utah for a camping trip. In addition to camping, Dan’s plans for the summer included a 50-mile mountain relay race with Mel Scheefer ’03 as well as a threeday relay with Joey (Shapiro) Key and Becca Levine ’03. Hilary Williams moved to Iowa to begin teaching graphic design at Drake University. In the spring she completed an MFA at the University of Tennessee. Bailey McCallum moved from Connecticut to Portland, Ore., in the spring. In May, we met for lunch in Chicago with Brian Werner. Seth Brown freestyle raps about the news on his weekly podcast at NewsInRap.com. He also is pioneering Green and British fusion cuisine, combining spanakopita with steak and onion pie. The result, “Gritish Cooking,” is bound to catch on. Jess Robbins has been living in Poland doing research for her dissertation. She’ll be there until next spring and has been traveling a lot throughout Europe. She plans to spend a week in Croatia with Kristin Wikelius and Danielle Tarantolo in the fall. Tori (Henrion) Weir reported from London, where she works as an attorney. In March she spent a few days in LA and met August 2009 | Williams People | 111 CL ASS NOTES up with Susan Lai. She mentioned that Martha (Myslinksi) Tipton plans to move to Singapore in the fall for a marketing professorship, and Gillian Green expects to move to Atlanta for a postdoc with Emory University. Tori also wrote that Maya Kapoor began hiking the Appalachian Trail in April is likely still out there! Tori also reported that Annie Im got engaged and that she and her fiancé live in Pittsburgh, where they are in residency programs. Hope to hear from all of you soon! 2002 Jenny Veraldi 5518 Waterman Blvd., Apt. 21 St. Louis, MO 63112 2002secretary@williams.edu Greetings. So I’ve tried to spice it up in my submission requests. And some of you have responded enthusiastically—I greatly appreciate those who took the time to craft their updates in the form of a question. The theme I really wanted to go with (“What movie plot does your life most resemble?”) didn’t really accomplish much. I still appreciate those who have chosen to humor me with attempts. No, really, I do. Even though the only funny movie plot-related-response was from Jonathan Salter: “I’m graduating with a doctor of musical arts. … With this economy, the movie plot is probably most like Failure to Launch.” Good one! But seriously, congratulations on your graduation. Megan Samenfeld-Specht completed her studies at The Fletcher School (Tufts) with a focus in international environmental policy and negotiation. Jeff McBride couldn’t help his glowing account of the graduation, where Megan was recognized for her outstanding work. They’ll be moving to DC in the coming months. They celebrated Megan’s sister Erin’s ’09 Williams graduation in June. Annie Weiss was thrilled to have Sarah Barger come to New Orleans to attend her graduation festivities. Jon Weiner will exit LA upon his graduation from UCLA’s law school so that he can move to San Francisco, where he will work for the Natural Resources Defense Council. It’s also important, for posterity, as you will see, that we review certain events which transpired during a trip to Las Vegas. Jon recounts that he, 112 | Williams People | August 2009 In May, 2002 classmates Garry Sanders (left) and Eric Moore trekked in the Wallowa Mountains in Oregon. John Addorio and Eric Moore had the incredible fortune to play blackjack at a table tended by a dealer who was none other than “the guy who played shortstop for the Red Sox AAA affiliate in the late 1960s.” Actually, of all the submissions received, that’s probably the closest to an actual movie plot. Thanks, Jon. Garry Sanders and his fiancée Carly moved to La Grande, Ore., where Garry works with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife since finishing his master’s in aquatic biology at Grand Valley State University in Michigan. They seem to have found a gorgeous location in the middle of wonderful scenery, ready for hiking, skiing and visitors—Eric Moore found his way there between Boston, Anchorage, etc. Please contact Garry with any and all questions regarding salmon and steelhead habitat protection and restoration. Eric Powers graduated from Baruch College, having earned his MBA—he’s keeping himself busy with writing business plans and consulting. Eric saw Karen Lichtman, who completed her master’s in linguistics. Lisa Cohan reports that the completion of her master’s of science in foreign service (from Georgetown) now leaves her amply qualified to cat-sit for Liz Hole Knake’s cat. Liz will soon start her doctorate of psychology studies at George Washington University. Back to those in school who might be enjoying their summer vacations. Andrea Lee planned to spend the first part of her law school summer break interning in DC. Then she was to jet off to Vietnam and Laos to round out the summer. Jasmine Bradley continues to love life back on the West Coast, where she was keeping her nose to the grindstone this summer as she fills her days with dissertations and discussions. And probably some sunshine. Probably. Alix Partnow was visited by Erin Wheeler in Columbia, Mo. Erin lives in Colorado these days, and Alix wrapped up her first year of neurology-neurosurgery residency for veterinary medicine. Her dogs are bearing the stress of being left to their own devices for hours at a time quite well. Another person who lives in geographic proximity to me, here in Saint Louis, is Brian Michener. Though we no longer live down the street from each other, it’s close enough that we’re toying with the idea of sometime seeing each other again. Eventually. You don’t want to rush these things. Alix and I plan to see each other, too, but that will be on metric time, so it doesn’t translate all that well. Mike Paarlberg continues to write about business and labor issues, and now it’s for The Guardian. Steele Thomas Marcoux has been jetting about the country visiting Williams friends. I was the lucky hostess for a weekend visit from Steele as she made her way westward in May. She also traveled to New York, where she visited Kate Werble, Katherine French, Kurt Palmer and Niki Cosgrove. Steele, Casey Matthies Owen and Kate Forssell had a fabulous weekend in Colorado in June—they were relieved to see only the likes of a bunny while hiking n 2 0 0 1 –0 3 and not the escaped felon they were worried about. (Again, I see the potential for somehow incorporating a movie plot in this bit—all I’m coming up with is the rabbit from Monty Python. I give up on the movie plots.) Steele and her husband Michel live in Birmingham, where Steele expertly serves as design editor for Coastal Living. Kate Werble continues to put together exciting shows at her art gallery and planned to make some time for traveling of her own this summer. Niki and her dog are finding ways to console themselves now that they aren’t wearing their Cavs jerseys nightly—Lulu, the dog, sends Niki to work at The Whitney each day with the Cavs jersey folded neatly in her bag. Jess Paar sends in a Windy City run down—all is well with Mike and Kelsey Peterson Recht ’04, CC Ciafone, Richard Bode and Laura Crum. I saw Richard at brunch in April when I was in Chicago for an on the sly surprise birthday party (you can’t trust anyone with those kind of secrets)—we were both moderately confused by the “It’s a Small World” music swirling in the background. Jess worked very hard to raise money for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society in conjunction with her training for the St. Anthony’s Olympic-distance triathlon in St. Petersburg, Fla. No one will deny that she earned the title of “triathlete,” despite cancellation of the swim portion due to rough seas. Rough seas will always get you. Still, Jess planned to earn her stripes in the Chicago Triathlon this summer. Go get ’em! There’s really been a minimum of wedding and baby updates. Only one of each! Heather Black Ganitsky and her husband have a new baby boy, Eli Natan Ganitsky, who is doing quite well. He is appropriately outfitted in plenty of Williams gear. Sarah Knup, Kelly Finn, Molly Venter and Kristen Samuelson have been able to visit the baby. Molly is out on tour this summer—check for her shows near you! Nuptial news is limited to Will Davidson at this juncture. He’s back from a “phenomenal” honeymoon in French Polynesia following his April 18 wedding. He reports a strong showing from the Class of ’02 in addition to cameos from the classes of ’04, ’03 and ’61. Sadaf Ahmad enjoyed a trip to Costa Rica with her former suitemates Enuma Menkiti, Erika Beltran and Vanea Norris (all ’01). They celebrated their 30th birthdays. Volcanoes, rainforests and hot springs made it a fantastic trip. Really, I have to say Sadaf wins the prize for most movies mentioned in her submission— and, really, that shows the most effort and attention of any submission. Laura Spero took a trip down memory lane when she was reunited with an old journal of hers. She continues running health and education programs in Nepal, producing radio in New York and teaching arts residencies in the New York public schools. Eric Olson-Getty has been working with a project in Northeast-Central Durham to develop community gardening as a means to a sustainable and healthy food source. More growing is in the works for Irena Hollowell, who planned to spend the summer at Acorn Community in central Virginia. They own Southern Exposure Seed Exchange, a seed company specializing in open-pollinated and heirloom seeds. Sarah Hart-Unger and Hilary Hackman are helping little children grow like little weeds as pediatricians. Sarah, at Duke, plans to specialize in pediatric endocrinology starting in 2010. Hilary, in Oregon, will be working with those particularly tiny babies as she starts her neonatology training. Slightly larger children at McNair Academic High School in Jersey City (a magnet school) enjoy the vocal music teachings of Ben Isecke. Ben really enjoys his job and loved spending time at the Williams choir reunion last spring. Also busy making music are Caitlin Bowler, Iris Moon and Ravi Purushotham ’00, who have wowed the patrons of Sing Sing (NYC—not the prison) with what I have read was a legendary and genre-defying (?) medley. Have a great fall! 2003 Anri Wheeler Brenninkmeyer 280 Riverside Drive, #GB New York, NY 10025 2003secretary@williams.edu Lots to report from the Class of ’03; graduate school seems to be the main recurring theme in this issue. Thanks to the many first-timers who took the time to write in. As usual, I begin with weddings and babies. David Morris married Deanne Moyer on May 2. Classmates at the wedding included Aaron Flink, Nick Suttle, Rob Sawyer, Luke Hyde, Navin Pal, Richard Lammert and Max Montgelas. Charlie Giammattei ’05 and Frank Giammattei ’76 also attended. Bethany (Sayles) Yu and her husband Jonathan welcomed their first child, Evelyn Byrd Yu, in December. The three live in Cambridge, Mass., where Bethany just received an MA from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. Jasmine (Klatt) Belflower had a girl in March, Willow June Belflower. Jasmine writes that Willow is “totally adorable” and looks just like her dad: red hair, pale skin and all. Anastasia (Gilman) Leyden and her husband James welcomed a baby boy, Patrick John, in February. Kimmie (Kemper) and Angus Beal are busy “parents” to the nine new chicks recently added to their backyard flock. Angus loves being in the hospital, at last, for med school rotations. Jeff Garland stopped by to help Kimmie and Angus cut down some trees and buck them up with their heirloom crosscut saw. The Beals got together with Kristin Hunter-Thompson and Malin Pinsky in Tahoe for some sunny skiing. Kimmie looked forward to a summer of vegetable gardening and swimming in Lake Champlain. Two classmates will be teaching Williams students beginning this fall. Justin Crowe has accepted a job as assistant professor of political science. He headed back to the Purple Valley this summer with wife Christen Romanick and son Everett. He was sad to leave sunny California and colleagues he adores but thrilled to be returning to the Berkshires and ecstatic to have the chance to raise Everett in Williamstown. He is also incredibly excited to join the Williams faculty and to have the opportunity to teach the next generation of Ephs. Diane Bennett will be teaching oceanography for the WilliamsMystic program, filling in while a regular faculty member is on sabbatical. She is excited to be associated with Williams again and to stay in Mystic, Conn., for another year. Diane was in Boston this spring to see Erin Troy ’01 defend her PhD thesis in microbiology at Harvard Medical School. Three classmates also August 2009 | Williams People | 113 CL ASS NOTES finished medical school. Sheila (McMurrich) Greenlaw graduated from University of Massachusetts Medical School and is moving to Charlotte, N.C., to do her internship in internal medicine. After that she plans to return to UMass to do her residency in dermatology. Liz Campos graduated from the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio and will be heading to Nashville, Tenn., to start her surgery intern year at Vanderbilt. After graduating Williams, Liz spent two years living the good life in Costa Rica, Brewster, N.Y., and Connecticut, working at Paul Newman’s Hole in the Wall Gang Camp. Liz is engaged to Russell Pearce, whom she met at Lake Tahoe in 2005. The two plan to wed at Disney World in October. Emily Siegel graduated from medical school and is leaving Philadelphia for DC to start her emergency medicine residency at Georgetown. She met up with Karin Rosenthal, Ryu Yokoi ’01, Nicole Theriault and Anjuli Lebowitz in NYC for a Martha Stewart-style brunch, compliments of Nicole in celebration of Karin’s birthday. Emily also visited Bethany Yu and her new baby girl in Boston while interviewing for residencies. Emily trains for triathlons and is trying to get on the CBS show Survivor. Another classmate moving to DC is Alix Davis. Lindi von Mutius wrote that Alix won a prestigious Smithsonian Fellowship for which she will be moving. Lindi and Alix attended a joint Amherst-Williams happy hour and caught up with Emily Siegel. The two were excited about the Williams-Amherst baseball game, hoping for another opportunity to hang out. Lindi also saw Justin Reliford, who works at a law firm in Philadelphia. Lindi is amazed at how many Williams alums are lawyers in Philadelphia. Freeden Oeur is moving to Philadelphia to begin his dissertation research. He taught sixth grade there after graduation and is very excited to reacquaint himself with the city. Freeden has been hanging out with Rod McLeod ’05. The two met up with Emily Lample ’05 for dinner in the spring. Several other classmates are at work on their PhDs. Jen Doleac is finishing her third year in the economics PhD program at Stanford and living in San Francisco with Matt Webster ’04. They’re both working hard but manage to take 114 | Williams People | August 2009 In April Richard Usatine ’78, a professor at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, inducted Elizabeth Campos ’03, who graduated from the School of Medicine, into the Gold Humanism Honor Society. Usatine is a member and faculty adviser to the society. full advantage of nearby wine country on weekends. She gets to see Daniel Klasik and Emma Herries quite a bit as well as Tony Iwane, Steve Scroggins ’04 and Mike Needham ’04. Kamille Williams finished her MS at American University and is now slogging through a PhD at Georgetown. Last year, Kamille spent four months in Japan. During that time she visited Christopher Calfee ’04 in Thailand and was visited by Melanie Beeck ’04 and Andrea Nogales ’04, who were on an Asian country tour. Nina Chaopricha is doing PhD research on soil carbon in collaboration with the World Agroforestry Center in Kunming, China. She is enjoying sharing an office with three North Koreans. Brian Katz was excited to receive his PhD from University of Texas at Austin in May. He is joining the faculty at Augustana College in Rock Island, Ill. Brian caught up with Jen Barone, Dan Demoss, Chris Holmes, Alex Lavy, Joe Lucia, Miranda Routh, Katie Saxon and Emmy Valet and about 35 alumni from other years at the Williams choir reunion, in honor of Brad Wells’ 10th year at Williams. They performed a Mass by Frank Martin with the current concert choir and generally reveled in the traditions of music at Williams. Seth Borland received a master’s in architecture from the University of Texas and will be moving to Chicago with his wife Laura Noel Borland ’06. They will miss Austin, particularly the amazing food and weather. Also moving is Mitchell Green, who received his MBA at Wharton and is looking forward to being back in NYC to work for a hedge fund. While Mitchell is finished, four classmates begin their MBAs this fall. Bryan Marcovici is living in Hoboken but is preparing to leave his management consulting job to move to Philadelphia to attend Wharton. He sees Tom Kramer when Tom is in town to visit. Drew DeMuth will begin an MBA at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business. He wrote, “If Rich Rod doesn’t turn the football program around in the next two years, then I quit.” After two years of environmental strategy consulting work in DC, Liz Mygatt will be traveling to Europe for a month before heading up to Cornell for an MBA. Chris Durlacher was moving to NYC this summer to start an MBA at Columbia. Joining Chris at Columbia this fall is Lisa Schulman, who will be starting at the Mailman School of Public Health. She will continue to work full time for NYC—in communications for the Office of Emergency Management—as she matriculates. She’s on the lookout for fellow Ephs at Mailman. Also in NYC is Faith Black, who is an editor at Avalon Books, taking all the sex (and fun) out of romance novels. She still plays basketball and recently joined a “basketball for book lovers” league in Brooklyn. Faith completed her first half-marathon in Frederick, Md., in May. n 2 0 0 3 –0 4 Dave Brenninkmeyer and I continue to enjoy NYC life. I graduated from culinary school in January and, after completing an internship in the test kitchen of the Food Network, am now a stage at Savoy restaurant in SoHo. Dave is done with the first year of his MBA at Columbia and worked for a hedge fund over the summer. Danni Lapin is still working hard doing therapy with youngsters in Yonkers, N.Y. She has been taking the intramural sports community in NYC by storm, playing kickball, volleyball and football. Lately, though, the intramural sports world has taken her by storm, it seems, and she will be having knee surgery. She planned to spend the summer getting to know the new Yankee Stadium and trying to forget her first trip there (when the Yankees lost to Cleveland, 22-4). Kate Leonard and Abi Jackson coached a lacrosse team at the Prague Cup in June. Prague played host to the Women’s Lacrosse World Cup this summer. Simon Maloy appeared in G Force, The Boston Globe’s “daily interview or Q&A with personalities who are in the news.” The interview detailed Simon’s job as “a deputy research director of the left-leaning media criticism website Media Matters for America, [for which] he writes the ‘Limbaugh Wire,’ an hourby-hour rebuttal and critique of the conservative talkmeister.” The full article appears on boston.com. On to our West Coast-dwelling classmates. David Mihm is still in Portland, Ore., where he’s been for just over a year. He absolutely loves it there. His Internet marketing company is faring better than he could have imagined at this stage, thanks to a couple of changes at Google in the past year that have fed right into his niche of expertise. He had a great time at the wedding of Williams B suitemate Graeme Sanderson and was looking forward to the wedding of his other suitemate Robbie Kirsher. After Graeme’s wedding, David left for a phenomenal trip to Europe where he hit up nine cities (and four countries) in nine days. A highlight from his travels was one of the best meals of his life: roast chicken, fries and a pint of Stella Artois in Brussels. Perry Kalmus is researching market trends for margarita mixes as he is considering entering the market with a fellow Williams graduate. Perry lives in Hollywood and is trying to get a movie made that he wrote with Marshall Dines. Stephen “Slim” Oliver is living in the San Francisco Zoo with his girlfriend Shilpa Duvoor ’04. Their apartment is on a small island in the zoo’s lagoon; the bald eagle with clipped wings shares the yard. Ben Cannon ’02 and Azusa Kobayashi ’02 visit them regularly and toss in bits of bread. Lastly, in what has definitely been my most thoughtful submission to date, a handwritten note arrived in my mailbox from Brother Michael Sheehan. He reports that after two years of mission work in San Marcos, Nicaragua, he returned to Boston with his Franciscan brothers to make his final vows on May 16, 2008. Mike was happy to spend time at his final vows reception with Peter Feudo (former Catholic campus minister), Chris Vaughan ’04, Dan Burns ’06, Jeff Ossinger ’05 and the family of Rob MacDougall ’01, who visited Mike in person with his wife and two kids at Thanksgiving. In the summer of 2008, the Franciscans of the Primitive Order, of which Mike is a member, moved their house of studies from Maryland to East Boston. After the move, Mike began a four-year program toward ordination to the priesthood at St. John’s Seminary. Since moving to Eastie, Mike has run into Ryan Friend, Nick Goggans ’01 and Jeff O’Neill ’01. 2004 Editor’s note: At press time the Class of 2004 was in the process of choosing a new class secretary. Please continue to send news to 2004secretary@williams. edu. The following notes were submitted by outgoing secretary Stephanie Hall: Tim Patterson did something very interesting this past spring. The Kachin Independence Army is one of the rebel groups that defy the Myanmar military junta. In December Tim snuck across the northern China/Myanmar border and spent a month with the KIA in the foothills of the Himalaya on a journalism grant from the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting. Stories from his trip are in Global Post, The Kyoto Journal and the Washington Times. Matt Hoffman successfully defended his PhD dissertation in applied mathematics and scientific computation in May and moved to a new apartment in downtown Baltimore about three blocks from Oriole Park. He was selected to receive the inaugural Cormack Postdoctoral Fellowship in Global Change from Johns Hopkins University and is to start there in September. This summer he is continuing research on the Chesapeake Bay and the Martian climate and was to get married in July. Courtney Tunis has been working at MASS MoCA in North Adams since January and was just made the new education coordinator. Adam Grogg has been up to visit her, and they ate at Gramercy Bistro, where Adam informed their waitress that we used to love the restaurant in college because they never carded us. Courtney also occasionally runs into Mitchell Baker around Williamstown. Mark Orlowski continues with his work as executive director of the Sustainable Endowments Institute, a special project of Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors. This summer, he is leading a 15-person research team in studying campus sustainability initiatives and endowment investment practices at 333 colleges across the U.S. and Canada. His research was featured in May in a front-page New York Times article. Mark is also finishing his master’s in management at Harvard. Mark is excited about raising capital and building the leadership team for his new venture—a Cambridge-based startup at the nexus of technology, sustainability and finance. Claudia Arzeno graduated with her master’s in arts administration and policy from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She will be moving to Milwaukee to intern in the curatorial departments of both European and contemporary art at the Milwaukee Art Museum. I planned a trip to Austin to visit Violeta Archilla, her baby Amelia and Jarod Kidd ’02. Mary Flynn spent May in Mumbai doing a medical rotation at KEM hospital—a crazy experience. Now that she’s safely back in the U.S., she’s graduating from UMass med school (with Sheila McMurrich ’03) and planned to start a residency in family medicine here in July. August 2009 | Williams People | 115 CL ASS NOTES Emily Isaacson is finishing her master’s in choral conducting in Oregon and is getting ready to start doctoral work at the University of Illinois in the fall. She is very excited to be near Williams folk in Chicago. Most exciting, though, she got engaged to her boyfriend Matt Tzuker. Carolyn Robbs spent her final semester of law school working as a judicial extern at the Southern District of New York federal courthouse. During her four months in NYC, she got to spend time with lots of ’04s, including Ronni Weinstein, Ashley Kindergan and Nora Burns. She also attended a rooftop party hosted by Sarah Jensen, and she bumped into Charlie Davidson, Matt Raid, Michael Graham ’05, Tucker Kain ’05 and Ned Hole ’05. She graduated from law school in June. 2005 REUNION JUNE 10-13 Zach McArthur 34 Hancock St., Apt. 3 Cambridge, MA 02139 2005secretary@williams.edu “I don’t have a girlfriend, but I do know a woman who’d be mad at me for saying that.” —Mitch Hedberg. Kate Rutledge is engaged to med school classmate Gene Schiappa. Kate said “Yes!” when Gene broke out chocolatecovered strawberries following the new Star Trek movie. Andrea Berberian’s also engaged (to a Middlebury grad), as is Katie Davisson, who’s tapped Jenn Campbell and Danner Hickman as bridesmaids in her nuptials. Philipp Huy married Caroline Anderson ’06 in Germany. Philipp bumped into Sabrina Wirth at Checkpoint Charlie, which led to an impromptu meal at the restaurant White Trash. Michael Silverstein’s bachelor party in Atlantic City included Ashok Pillai, Matt Resseger, Gailon Ebell ’03 and Brendan Dougherty ’06. Mikey was to marry Jess Phillips ’07 in Thompson Chapel before law school calls at Yeshiva University. Kevin Kingman’s hosting Noah Bell and Jason Davis for Jason’s bachelor party. Abby Wattley’s in Portland for the summer, looking forward to seeing Amy Dieckmann. Tameka Watler and Fran Fredane-Fraser are joining Kevin and Abby at Harvard 116 | Williams People | August 2009 business in the fall. Faith Lim attended two spring weddings. The first involved a brave foray to Mexico, where Faith avoided swine flu by sipping tequila with boyfriend Michael MatthewMcMurphy McDonough. She then hit the jackpot by being my date to Bryan Harmon’s ’04 wedding; the ceremony included the Korean tradition of the groom piggybacking his bride around the room. The Great BH struggling to carry his beautiful bride Soojin across the dance floor while adorned in silken pink robes was an unforgettable sight. “I was in a casino, and this guy came up to me and said ‘You’re gonna have to move. You’re blocking a fire exit.’ As though if there was a fire, I wasn’t gonna run. If you’re flammable and have legs, you’re never blocking a fire exit. Unless you’re a table.” Chuck Soha went to Vegas for March Madness and hit big 0/00 bet, bringing his lifetime record to three for four. Giddyup! Kurt Brumme and I hit the 0/00 as well, but in life experience. We camped out in a parking lot with seven other golf teamers to play Bethpage (Black), site of the 2009 U.S. Open. Kurt arrived at 4:30 a.m. Saturday to snag one of six coveted foursomes available Sunday morning! After sleeping three hours in a Camry, Brummbag’s 84 nosed out my sick 85 for medalist honors. In early May, 15 ’05s met in Williamstown to begin reunion planning. Saturday night was capped off in the faculty club with games including midnight speed candlepin bowling. The lone blemish? Tara Boyd’s response for class notes: “I beat Zach McArthur in Ping-Pong.” Lucky, Tara. Rematch at reunion. Soberer this time. “Alcoholism is a disease, but it’s the only one you can get yelled at for having. ‘Damn it, Otto, you’re an alcoholic!’ ‘Damn it, Otto, you have lupus!’ One of those two doesn’t sound right.” In March, Matt Resseger and Noam Yuchtman visited Alexis Medina in China. The trio entered into an informal boat race with an unsuspecting Chinese family while chanting “U-S-A, U-S-A!” Stephen Dobay’s summering in Williamstown, working for the WTF—he invites all ’05s to stop by for a BBC with him at the Herring. Ken Brown’s up in Burlington, doing research and growing fresh veggies in a community garden. Meg Giuliano has a plot in Portsmouth’s community garden and is working for Clean AirCool Planet, building energy efficiency in historic homes. Alexa Holleran’s running Aloha Camp’s summer tripping program for kids in Vermont. Two Eph slayers are moving west: Laura Cavin to Eugene to start an environmental architecture degree, and Kendra Totman to Aspen to teach environmental education. Kendra writes, “Three years ago I had lunch with Sarah Meserve, and she told me all about her job. … My response then was, ‘I want your job!’ Well, now I have it!” “I didn’t go to college but if I did I would’ve taken all my tests at a restaurant ’cause the customer’s always right!” Emily Bloomenthal, a graduate of NYU Law, is taking the bar exam before starting work at the Education Law Center in Newark; Chris DeNicola’s following a similar route, with the bar preceding his move to NYC. Congratulations to Scott Pierce, who graduated from GW with a master’s in history and acquired a guinea pig named Sumo! Chelsea Pollen’s starting a master’s in human development and psychology at Harvard. Will Cary did his “best E.J. Johnson ’59 impersonation,” as he gave a tour of the Brooklyn Museum’s Gustave Callebotte impressionist paintings to 35 Ephs, including Bri O’Brien and Kate Beswick. Marcos Gouvea presented at a conference, “a graduate shindig on the future of the Classics.” Marcos is in Chicago. “Go Cubs!” writes Alice Brown, who’s headed to U-Chicago in the fall to sit in the back of the classroom with the cool kids. Eric Manchester shares my feelings on the Cubbies—“Did you see our lineup … against Lincecum? We had a substitute teacher playing short! Seriously, that Scales guy teaches in the winter to ‘supplement his income.’” Chris Tom “had the great pleasure of visiting Boston again in February and staying with Zach McArthur. For the second straight month, I had to buy Zach toilet paper, which makes me wonder what Zach is teaching his seventh graders.” Chris, I teach them algebra, not personal hygiene. Becky Allen warned of a swine flu outbreak at Amherst! She’s getting her master’s in school psychology at UMass and was “trying to stay away from [Amherst students] even more than I normally would.” n 2 0 0 4 –0 5 Members of the Class of 2005 raised tens of thousands of dollars for the Crawfish for Cancer benefit they organized in NYC in May. “I went to a doctor; all he did was suck blood from my neck. Don’t go see Dr. Acula.” Yifan Guo’s starting residency in plastic surgery at Brown, where he may run into Kathleen Carroll. She matched into dermatology there! Dellie Sorel was in LA to see Ashley and James Cart before starting at Cambridge Hospital in June. Phil Enock begins Harvard’s five-year clinical psychology PhD program in September. Pam Choi leaves wonderful Rochester, N.Y., with one fewer Purple Cow as she’s off to GW for a general surgery residency. She’ll be joined there by internal medicine resident Ju Kim, who attended the wedding of Rana Suh ’04 and Krishna Kannan ’03. Noah Allen showed Chris Bodnar around Cincinnati’s gross anatomy lab, which made Chris yearn to be an anatomist. “I hope the next time I move I get a real easy phone number, like 222-2222. People would say ‘Mitch, how do I get a hold of you?’ I would say ‘Just press 2 for a while! And when I answer, you will know that you have pressed 2 enough.’” Jeff Delaney’s following Morty to Northwestern; he’s beginning his MBA this fall. Sky Riggs is marketing for a collectibles manufacturer and started a band (www.myspace. com/28mansions). Hao (Nicky) Chang’s wrapping up work in Shanghai and heading to Yale School of Architecture, and Julia Brown’s starting a master’s in international affairs at Columbia. Suzanne Walsh is moving to Manhattan; her new degrees in art history and library science come “just in time for a really poor job market.” Terry-Ann Suer’s “80 percent sure” she’s switching coasts for grad school on Long Island. Aron Chang’s graduating from Harvard Design and is off to New Orleans to work on housing projects. Good man, Aron, good man. “I wanna be a race car passenger—just a guy who bugs the driver: ‘Say man—can I turn on the radio? You should slow down. Why we gotta keep going in circles? Can I put my feet out the window? Man, you really like Tide.’” Gavin McCormick visited dozens of Williams alums over a six-week span and calculated the trip required 95.4 miles/ Eph. “No one seems to live near anyone else anymore!” Jonathan Landsman passed through my lil’ sister’s hood of Williamsburg as he circumcycled the East River in a downpour for the Five Boro Bike Tour. Katie Stevens and I explored North Carolina’s sandhills in March, playing golf, grilling meat and jumping in icecold pools. As for her dad, Mike Stevens ’73, only 102 days until Katie and I run train on him in our NFL pool. After working in nine states for Obama, Ari Schoenholtz is back in DC. He bumped into Shomik Dutta in the West Wing of the White House, as did Marissa Doran, who’s working on the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. “I want to hang a map of the world in my house, then I’m gonna put pins into all the locations that I’ve traveled to. But first I’m gonna have to travel to the top two corners of the map so it won’t fall down.” Scott Moskowitz offers “a futon of some sort or at least a ragcovered pallet” to Ephs traveling through Shanghai. Micah Halsey and Abby Whitbeck had cocktails in Dubai at the Burj al Arab Hotel. Lucy Thiboutot’s off to Syria on a fellowship to study advanced Arabic. “Visitors welcome! Damascus is the longest continually inhabited city in the Western world.” Best wishes to Chris Mishoe, who’s doing communications engineering projects in Afghanistan with the Air Force. London, Warsaw, Berlin, California, Austin, Salt Lake City, Chicago, DC, NYC and Maine make up the itinerary for Annie Snodgrass before she joins Lindsey Taylor and Danner Hickman at Tuck. Aaron Helfand’s off to England to participate in an urban design project before returning stateside to attend “the much anticipated Gilmore-Saar wedding!” Prague calls for Wendy Stone, who’s been tapped to manage the U.S. Women’s Lacrosse team for the World Cup! Dan Krass played in an Ultimate tournament in Lausanne, and selected to be on his team was Ryann Hoffman ’08! They overcame a first game loss to win the event, making Krass a two-time defending champ. Ben Himowitz runs a school in Costa Rica—visitors have included Liz Suda, Paul Sonenthal and Lili Zimmett. Life is good for Zophia Edwards as she researches globalization trends while “soaking in some sun in sweet Trinidad and Tobago!” “My friend said to me ‘I think the weather’s trippy.’ And I said ‘No man, it’s not the weather that’s trippy. Perhaps it is the way that we perceive it that is indeed trippy.’ Then I thought, man, I should have just said ‘yeah.’” JJ O’Brien’s in sunny Palo Alto starting b-school at Stanford—a sharp departure from his Easter vacation of skiing along glaciers through the Alps. Grace (Wells) Tomooka’s in at Azusa Pacific University for Nursing (“WHOOHOOO!”). Charlie Giammattei left Philly to visit Eric Manchester in Cali—Eric snuck Terminator onto his flag football team on the day Tom Brady dropped by! Deborah Hemel hosted Samantha Goldman, Kate Rutledge, Emily Joiner, Leisa Rothlisberger and Jess Yankura for a minireunion spent wandering the streets of Philadelphia. Alana Whitman thoroughly enjoyed a New York August 2009 | Williams People | 117 CL ASS NOTES spring—“Brooklyn is lovely.” Alana, Sarah Johnson, Nick Perry ’04 and David Roth attended a picnic organized by Mariah Robbins in celebration of the weather. Dave wrote commenting on the perpetual spring rain in Brooklyn (does Brooklyn have micro-climates?!) and noted Mariah was off to Italy to study in a villa with E.L. Doctorow while he begins the JD/MBA program at Harvard. Joanna Leathers caught up with “many Ephs enjoying the arrival of spring in the city” on Megan Henze and Sarah Jensen’s ’04 roof-deck. “Is a hippopotamus just a really cool opotamous?” A puppy joins Joanna Lloyd’s birds, bunny and cat—good thing Joanna’s starting vet school at Penn! Lindsey Taylor’s spending summer weekends horse showing before Tuck business school calls. Noah Capurso and Steve Kelleher surprised Brian Saar for some bachelor fun in Boston: seeing the Wolverine movie, paintballing and cooking up a rack of wild boar ribs! Noah and Steve are splitting as roommates for the first time in seven years: Steve is off to Bolivia while Noah stays at Yale. Louisa Swain sent in a stunning picture of her and Mary Stranghoener at Mary’s dolphin show at Sea World! (“So fun to see her in action.”) Louisa’s settling in NYC, site of the first annual Crawfish for Cancer event, organized by Class of 2005 alums. Led by Jimmy Crowell, the organizers recaptured the spirit of the Crawfish Boil. The event raised tens of thousands of dollars for multiple myeloma from over 300 attendees, “most of whom had attended a Boil during their time at Williams.” “I had a bag of Fritos, they were Texas Grilled Fritos. These Fritos had grill marks on ’em. Hell yeah! Reminds me of summer, when we used to fire up the barbecue, and throw down on some … Fritos. I can still see my dad with the apron on: ‘You better flip that Frito dad, you know how I like it.’” On June 14, Asha Rhodes visited Texas for the first time, performing with the Jamal Jackson Dance Company in Austin. Emily Joiner’s halfway through public policy school at UT-Austin. Jane Stimpson graduated from Texas with a master’s in information studies and is looking for work at a library near—you guessed it—Austin. A poetic update from 118 | Williams People | August 2009 Paul Skudder: “In school again, still. Rocks & beer. Montana. Soon, Texas.” Jocelyn Gardner’s interning at Old South Church in Boston; she and Andra Hibbert hosted Gavin McCormick for a night of spring fun fixing twisted street signs. “Putting those Williams degrees to use at the service of the good people of Somerville.” Jenni Simmons sent in a great picture of her and Gavin participating in International Pillowfight Day. Gavin and Nate Pyeatt visited Jamie Hensel in the ATL; Jaime took them to a festival complete with banjos, BBQ and Confederate soldier re-enactors. Katie (Marsh) Garvin spent “a great weekend in Falmouth” celebrating Susie Theroux’s b-day with Kali Moody, Andrea Burke ’06 and Chris Garvin ’03. Rumor is Kate Dineen is looking for apartments in Cambridge as she heads to MIT’s urban studies and planning program. Kate and Vivian Djen spiced up Boston nightlife as they attended a Lady Gaga concert. Kate writes: “In homage to the ferosh Gaga, I attended the concert sans pants. I assumed the majority of Gagalovers would have also left their pants at home. I was mistaken.” “I don’t have any children but if I had a baby I’d have to name it, so I’d buy a baby naming book. Or I would invite somebody over who had a cast on.” James and Ashley Cart welcomed their first child, a daughter, into the world on May 18: “Fairly life-altering, amazing event,” says Ashley. John Harris is looking forward to “some father/ son trips to play at Taconic Golf Club in about 2025.” Why? He and Sarah Jo bore a son named John Alexander on Feb. 22! Congratulations, and I pray he is a long hitter with the crazy new tees on the back nine. That’s it, 2005. To close, a final peek inside Mitch Hedberg’s head: “My friend asked me if I wanted a frozen banana, I said ‘No, but I want a regular banana later, so … yeah.’” 2006 Ariel Peters 414 North Granada St. Arlington, VA 22203 2006secretary@williams.edu Everyone’s downsizing, and I have a new word limit. Here goes! When Rachel Segretto wrote in from Louisville, the dogwoods were blooming and derby season was in full swing. (Put it on your bucket list!) She planned to spend the summer teaching ESL and working on DIY projects, from sewing her own clothes to riding around on her moped to making “interesting chutneys and jams and pickled things” from whatever popped up in her community garden. Sara Beach is teaching ESL to adult immigrants at a charter school in DC. She loves it! Joel Bradley, Elissa Rehm and Amelia Bishop finished the Boston Marathon on a chilly Patriots’ Day. Tim Stickney ’04, Peter Leonard ’04, Sarah Torkelson ’04 and youngster Sam Kapala ’09 also crossed the finish line! Joel spent the summer in Mendoza, Argentina, working on a project in infant malnutrition through HelpArgentina, an organization founded by Lloyd Nimetz ’01. Geri Ottaviano completed her first marathon last spring. She and Maggie Carr attended a Williams happy hour in San Francisco—or, rather, that was what they intended. When they got to the bar, they realized that the happy hour was actually scheduled for the following week, but “that just meant more cheap margaritas for us, and we had a great time.” In April, Blair Coffman ran the Cherry Blossom 10-miler. While in DC she had the chance to catch up with Jaye Gregory. She and Sarah Hardin are still living together in their cozy NYC apartment. If reading about all of the wonderful things your classmates are doing makes you feel inadequate, skip this paragraph. Chris Yorke’s writing and photographs were published in Pete Nelson’s New Treehouses of the World, and Robin Stewart’s software project, which he started at Williams, was acquired by The Omni Group (his current employer). It’s called the OmniGraphSketcher, and it’s available at www.omnigroup.com. Is your first name Christine? If so, you’re probably getting married. Christine Rodriguez’s salsa-dancing partner Joel spontaneously proposed; there’s a video on Facebook! Christine Hunt is also engaged. She’s heading to UNC for a master’s in public health and then to Duke for law school. Yami MacKenzie’s first name isn’t Christine, but she’s engaged, too! In May, she finished law school at the n 2 0 0 5 –0 6 University of Georgia then moved to New York to study for the bar. Ellen Crocker and Travis Vachon got hitched! (Her words, not mine!) They relocated from San Francisco to Ithaca, where she’s starting her PhD in plant pathology at Cornell. And Matt Hsieh and Meg McCann are now husband and wife! Last spring she was on sabbatical from Bain and working at a nonprofit in DC. The two grown-ups plan on buying a condo in Arlington, Va. Meg mentioned that Matt Teschke hosted a few dinner parties, inviting the newlyweds, Steve Acton, Yariv Pierce and Lucy Cox-Chapman, all of whom live nearby. Sarah Louise Smith is settling down in Birmingham, where she bought a house. She still works for the nonprofit Impact Alabama and is lobbying the state legislature for a bill that she helped write. Elissa Klein was on her way to DC to celebrate Christine Hunt’s engagement, but before she left she sent me a quick e-mail saying that her job and her lease were both set to end in August. She was biding her time with unemployed friends—“it’s the most fun I’ve ever had.” Gillian McBride “gave in to the lure of health insurance”; she’s putting off a career in the arts to work as an administrative assistant at the Hair Club of Rye Brook. “I’m out of the big city and up to my elbows in toupees—it’s bizarre and wonderful,” she says. That, and she and her coworkers won first place in the regional “Pirates of the Hairibbean” competition! “This is arguably the best job I’ve ever had.” Megan O’Malley has been splitting her time between NYC and the Jerz while job searching. In addition to taking French classes, she volunteers at an animal shelter and drinks a “whole lot of champagne” with Galen Glaze and Cecilia de la Campa. Need a lawyer? Take your pick. Steve Myers graduated from Penn Law in May; he’s now clerking for the Southern District of New York and living with Hayley Wynn in the West Village. Bryan LaPlant graduated from Harvard Law in June. He planned to spend the summer studying for the bar before celebrating with a trip to Europe. He’s living in Boston’s Back Bay and is to start work at Ropes & Gray in January. Tiffany Chao also finished at Harvard in June with a degree and a certificate in counseling. In July, she was to spend a week in the Hamptons with Christine Layng, Kristin Moss and Laura Noel Borland. Caroline Toy graduated from Georgia College & State University with a master’s in outdoor education administration in May. Now she’s exploring what to do next. Here’s the latest from the O’Rourkes: Devon and Jackie have moved to Boston to start grad school at BU. They invited Wendy Stone ’05 to room with them and were trying to convince Rachel Barr to move to Boston, too! They went to dinner and a concert with Charles Bellows in April. (No word yet on whether he’ll stick around to keep them company.) Jackie and Devon were sad to leave Twink Williams behind in the Berkshires; however, Twink is busy. She’s a college counselor, and in her spare time she’s “leading a struggling softball team to newfound greatness!” Jackie also chatted with Elissa Popoff, who was hoping to move to Maine to teach at a private school there, and Melissa Vandermyn, who is “doing what Moe does best.” Karl Naden showed James Brittin and Ashleigh Theberge around town when both came through Madison in late March while looking for places to live when they finish grad school. Karl will be long gone—he’s off to Carnegie Mellon for his PhD. In March, Jordan Bate, Galen Glaze, Zach Weisser, Marilyn Gomez and Cecilia de la Campa celebrated Marilyn’s 25th at midtown’s Bamboo52 and The Park. Zach wore hiking boots, and Cecilia got her heel stuck in a grate (and then kept on walking, grate attached). The management was not pleased, and everyone turned up a month later at Loreley to celebrate Jordan’s 25th, giant-sized brewskis in hand. On April 25 and 26, more than a dozen ’06s got together to celebrate Adrian Martinez’s birthday. The group played games and cooked his favorite meal. It’s hard to believe, but Adro passed away three years ago this August. He would have turned 25 on April 30. Alissa Caron moved to Bangkok in May; she manages HIV and primary health care programs in Thailand, Cambodia and India through the Population and Community Development Association. Wayward travelers, take note! Of course, we have our fair share of those. Jose Marrero and Ben Angarita ’03 returned to the States in April after spending a fun-filled month and a half in Medellín, Colombia. Jose substituted free association for a description of their travels: “boxed rum, silicone, hot dogs on everything imaginable, and myriad applications of mayonnaise.” Jonathan Dowse spent the spring semester in Helsinki, where he enjoyed clear skies and lots and lots of daylight. When the semester ended, he moved to Barcelona for a summer program and planned to return to St. Louis for more school. Ruxy Paul is working on her dissertation; she’s studying new migration patterns in the EU. She was in Italy and Romania this summer doing research and plans to spend the year in Paris on a Chateaubriand Fellowship. Before she left, she got together in Harvard Square with Dan Gerlanc, Gape Machao, Lisetta Shah, Alan Cordova (in town for a conference), Katie Lewkowicz, Mark Orlowski ’04 and Peter Tosirisuk ’07. Meredith Sanger-Katz was sitting on a runway in Hong Kong when she wrote in. She had just resigned her post in the Paterson administration and was heading to Bangkok to meet Adam Bloch, Adam Ain and Alex Smith. Meredith starts business school at Harvard this fall. This time, fact trumps fiction, but here’s what Adam Bloch had to say anyway: Adam spent the spring in a small town in Maine, managing a diner and trying to avoid run-ins with a hostile local policeman and the town matriarch. “During my time there, I tried to understand the changing face of small-town America and the post-industrial northeast as well as the mysteries of my own past.” Vickie Fernandez finished her third year in the South Bronx, where she taught math and directed The Wiz and Little Shop of Horrors, the first two plays ever to be performed at her school! Then she and Steve Rahl ’05 quit their jobs and booked a one-way ticket to Tokyo. They planned to set off at the end of July knowing “what countries to visit and what shots to get,” but that was about it! Kim Fassler moved to China August 2009 | Williams People | 119 CL ASS NOTES in June. She’ll spend this year studying at the Hopkins Nanjing Center. She learned how to say “global financial crisis” in Mandarin before she left, so she’s all set. In February, she and Mary Catherine Blanton enjoyed a tour of the West Wing, courtesy of Shomik Dutta ’05. In March they headed to Nicaragua for spring break. They ate rice and beans and plantains and visited lots of “pointy” volcanoes (not to be confused with the Hawaiian variety, which are “flat and oozing,” says MC, who learned a lot from her former roommate). In May, MC, Sasha Gsovski and I helped Blake Albohm celebrate the big 2-5 at a Nationals game. They gave us the improbable gift of a win. ¡Al rojo vivo! Andres Schabelman is firmly rooted in LA after some “crazy travels” in Southeast Asia. He’s shooting a TV travel show pilot; he’s the host! Melissa Paige now lives in Park Slope. “Oddly enough, I am just a couple doors down from Sasha’s parents!” she said. Jon Russell, Jeanne Lehmann, Emily Casden and Jesse Schenendorf paid her and her apartment a visit in April. Kate Sauerhoff moved from Kansas City, the heart of the Midwest, to Pacific Palisades, Calif., after school let out in May. She’ll teach middle school science at St. Matthew’s Parish School this fall. She lives close enough to work that she can walk, and Jose Bravo ’02 teaches there, too! Robin Kim and Gillian McBride visited Zack Orjuela and Ryan McNeely in New Orleans for Mardi Gras. According to Zack, “Both ladies left with a clear understanding of what it takes to earn a lot of beads. Don’t ask.” This fall, Ryan will be rocking out in Jersey while getting his master’s in public policy at Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School (on a full scholarship), and Zack will be starting law school at NYU (also on a full scholarship). Alas, says Zack, “The days of po boys and streetcars in the Big Easy are over—for now.” Neal Holtshulte is still working at Klein Steel in Rochester; he says he’s “making peace with the way I pull myself in a million different directions.” And, finally, Raphael Jeong is reading Goethe’s Faust. That’s all he had to say—really! 120 | Williams People | August 2009 2007 Matthew Earle 23 West Branch Road Weston, CT 06883 2007secretary@williams.edu One way to celebrate being two years out of Williams is by getting degrees at other schools. Myron Min-Thu-Aye finished a master’s in mathematics at LSU and plans to return in the fall to pursue a PhD. He traveled to NYC to celebrate the simultaneous milestones of Emily Chepiga, who got into Fordham Law, and Ren McDermott, on the verge of finishing her two-year Teach for America commitment, with a feast at Centro Vinoteca and Broadway’s Billy Elliot. Jess Phillips graduated from NYU with a master’s in educational theater and English education just before marrying Mike Silverstein ’05 in Williamstown. The party took an all-Williams photo for Williams People then “broke into an energetic if slightly inaccurate chorus of ‘The Mountains.’” Guests included Greta Wilson, Lauren Hester, Andrew Lazarow, Spike Friedman, Annie Smith and Miles Klee. José Valenzuela graduated from the Boston Teacher Residency in July with a master’s in education and is stoked to have his own classroom in the fall at TechBoston Academy in Dorchester, Mass., where he’ll be teaching eighth/ninth-grade civics/U.S. history. “All Ephs are welcome to collaborate and help me think about ways of making my classroom the best place for history students in Boston!” Other ’07s have decided that two years is enough and are headed back to the classroom. On the Thursday before Memorial Day, Ali Beswick found out she got into Cardozo Law School. Friday, she quit her job. She spent the weekend preparing for the start of school on Tuesday—“not exactly a ‘relaxing’ Memorial Day weekend.” Her roommate Kate Whipple finished her first year of law school at NYU and is spending the summer working in the criminal division at the U.S. attorney’s office in the eastern district of New York. Peter Tosirisuk ran into Noah Smith-Drelich and Régine Lim at the Stanford Law School admitted students’ weekend. Peter is deferring matriculation for a year, Noah is starting in the fall, and Régine lives in neighboring Palo Alto (though she’s starting the genetic counseling program at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in the fall). Google’s nearby Mountain View HQ has imported Matt Kane from its Boston office. Matt hopes to find a place in San Francisco, across the bay from UC Berkeley, where Michael Fairhurst is beginning law school after a summer road trip. Devin Yagel is moving from Cambridge (U.K.) to Chicago to start a PhD in conceptual and historical studies of science and is “looking forward to being able to buy books again without worrying about how to get them home.” Over in Pittsburgh, Dan Aiello started a master’s of public policy and management at the Heinz College at Carnegie Mellon, and Blake Emerson is beginning the JD/PhD program at Yale. Lauren Williamson is working on a PhD in neuroscience at Duke. In between finishing her work at a different Duke lab and beginning her studies, she went on a “nomadic journey around the country,” stopping in New Jersey for Martha Yepes; NYC for Juan Pablo Galindo, Sara Echenique and Martha Rogers; and Boston for Sarah Chuzi, Jane Allen, Chris Furlong, Matt Nolan, et al. Many of our classmates continue their graduate work. Shea Chen finished his second year of grad school at U.C. Berkeley, which means he’s “now focusing more on research rather than classes.” Dan Wollin and Eugenie Du visited Shea and Merritt Edlind (TFA; Oakland, Calif.) during their spring break. Stephanie Dockery is writing her dissertation for her master’s in art business from Sotheby’s Institute in Singapore. She traveled to Melbourne and Sydney with Jane Lee in June. Diana Davis finished her first year of graduate work in mathematics at Brown and is spending another summer teaching math. She is excited for Megan Bruck to join her at Brown in the fall. After taking Step 1 of the Boards (“along with every other second-year medical student”), Andrew Platt is officially a microbiology grad student, working toward a PhD as part of his combined degree program at Boston University. This summer he was “looking forward to having actual free time!” Katie Montgomery finished her first year of grad school in n 2 0 0 6 –0 7 English at the U. of Iowa—“I’m still enjoying it, which I think is a good sign.” She “did a total food tour” of NYC with Jessica Chung during spring break and planned a week in Glasgow, Scotland, for herself, because, “Iowa City is nice, but … I start to miss real cities.” Casey Drosehn wrapped up year one of a PhD program in comparative literature at Northwestern. She feels “pretty much at home at a university whose winters are astonishingly cold, whose school color is purple and whose president is Morton Owen Schapiro.” (Morty, this one’s for you.) If Morty needs Eph-support, Chicago-based Dave Brown, Cristin Wilson and Conor Quinn will be there for him. Conor finished up his time with Teach for America, and he’s sticking around to join the TFA staff as program director, “training and supporting the high school math cohort.” Cristin “started a new career as an air traffic controller with the Federal Aviation Administration. … I never imagined I would be doing this after college … but I love it.” She’s currently stationed at Chicago Midway Airport. Dave took last winter off from the city to ski in Breckenridge, Colo., a couple hours away from Boulder, where Kate Scheider finished her first year working for Bikes Belong, the bike industry’s nonprofit advocacy organization. She and her boyfriend bought a house downtown—“there’s a bedroom open for anyone who wants to come visit Colorado’s gorgeous trails (or delicious breweries).” Michael Fairhurst swung by in May, and the two “donned [their] purple and black cow-spotted Williams spandex for a bike ride in the foothills.” Dave’s next planned break from the Windy City is a few weeks in Lesotho this fall working on AIDS prevention education/ treatment 1,000 miles to the south of Zambia, where Tommy Day is doing similar work with Grassroot Soccer, a nonprofit that uses the popularity of soccer in sub-Saharan Africa to teach youths about HIV/AIDS prevention. He’s “having a great time learning about a place so vastly different from home.” Fola Folowosele “never imagined that a time would come” when Tommy Day has lived in Africa more recently than Fola has. Fola’s in Costa Rica, where the U.S. National Soccer Team played a major World Cup qualifier in June. Before the match, he said, “I’m tempted to go to the stadium in stars and stripes, but if the U.S. wins I may not get home alive.” They didn’t, and he did—Dave Senft, Jonathan Earle ’09 and I confirmed it en route to Nicaragua. Alison Koppe and Marmalade (her stuffed Jack Russell terrier from the David and Joyce Milne Public Library in Williamstown) visited Lauren Moscoe and Sara Jablonski at their Peace Corps sites in Guatemala. In Aldea Soledad Grande (Lauren’s site), Alison became the first person ever to use the new latrine at the local women’s association meeting house. The trio traveled to nearby Lake Atitlán to swim in crystal blue waters beneath towering volcanoes. Laura Lee spent her third summer in Mexico City directing InterVarsity Global Urban Trek trips—“No, earthquakes, drug lords and global health panic do not stop us.” Beforehand, she met up with Jen Menzies in Bardstown, Ky., in May during the Kentucky Derby for a thorough orientation in the Bourbon Capital of the World, then went quickly down to Holly Springs, Miss., to see Angela Doyle, “premier teacher in the Mississippi Teacher Corps (no kidding, she really got an award for it).” Kimmy Ulmer ditched a Brown neuroscience lab for a month on Craig Venter’s 95-foot sailboat, Sorcerer II. She joined the crew for the passage through the Panama Canal, then sailed to Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., and Bermuda, “sampling sea water every 200 miles.” Despite her departure, the boat managed onward to the Baltic Sea, sailing past Oslo, Norway, where Jack Nelson will be studying public land preservation on a Fulbright come September. He’s “a little nervous about making ends meet in one of the world’s most expensive cities,” he says, but apparently the ski trails are accessible by metro, so it’s a wash. After the ’08 election, Jack crashed with Zack Brewer before flying to Peru for a whirlwind tour of the Andes with Annie O’Sullivan (in the middle of an epic pan-South American quest from Guatemala to Patagonia), after which he moved into a “sweet row house” in DC (which “might be rivaling Boston as the Eph go-to city”) with Thomas Zimmerman ’06. Steve Seigel ’04 took it upon himself to be their big brother during the move, providing “furniture and advice on how to adjust in DC.” Lesson #1: Do not be fazed when you witness a stabbing in the Metro, even if it’s your first night in town. Jack has been working on health care and education issues for Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) and crashing free food receptions on the Hill (like the National Association of Truck Stop Operators Pie Reception). He goes cycling with Tucker Sawin and runs into freshmanyear roommate Andy Stevenson a fair bit. Andy returned from Hong Kong in December and started working on U.S. foreign policy on climate change with Resources for the Future, a think tank, and Climate Advisers, a consulting firm—“It’s quite an exciting time to be in DC.” Andy joined Sean Hyland, Bill Ference, Mike Davitian, Steve Shumsky, Rob Zalkind, et al. (“yes, a lot of dudes”) for Memorial Day weekend in Vegas. Sean assigns superlatives to Andy for “blackjack dominance” and to Bill for going “the entire trip on just two hours of sleep.” Andy explains: “I won about $500 playing blackjack, prompting the dealer to ask if I went to MIT. … I told him my geology degree from Williams was much better preparation.” Sean is living in Cambridge, Mass., “dangerously close to Tufts” and working for Conversion Associates, a small, digital media company started by some Ephs. Also in Cambridge, Morgan Anderson is managing at Tory Row, Harvard Square’s newest, sleekest dining experience—one that includes the faultless service of Rachel Williams and me. In January, Alyssa Mack and Dominique Mack “braved a frigid DC day to witness Obama’s inauguration.” This summer, Dominique is in Rio de Janeiro—“I majored in English, but let’s see if I can teach people to speak it.” Brett Moody took a trip to Boston from New Jersey in April to see Allycia Jones, Jacqui Miller, Jane Allen and Katie Stiffler. Jon Hillman joined them out for an evening—“we were approached by a man with a peg leg who handed us his 10-page ‘girlfriend’ application, with such questions as ‘Do you like pi?’, ‘Are Euclidean?’ and ‘Would you rather spend the winter in Argentina or divert incoming asteroids?’” (I say: Yes, August 2009 | Williams People | 121 CL ASS NOTES No, Argentina). They all are “anxiously awaiting callbacks.” Reconvening a month later on campus with Lauren Fernandez, Ian Poirier and Kimmy Ulmer, they found the Pub “totally knocked down and non-existent” and had to drown their sorrows in “too-strong Long Island Iced Teas from Water Street Grill and a marathon Apples to Apples game.” Reacting to the note from last time that Alison Davies and Alex Tanton found her travels for work glamorous, Tova Meyer commented, “For me it was more like just … work.” I think there’s a life lesson in there. Tova is “very happy to have made it through another busy season” in the Princeton admission office “in one piece.” She ran into Phil Wall at the PrincetonHarvard basketball game, and at press time she was awaiting an appearance by Rob Streicker in the role of “non-alum observer of the crazy party that is the Princeton reunions.” Nirmal Deshpande is living in Fort Greene in Brooklyn and working at the Ad Council in Manhattan, “trying to make Americans healthier, smarter and cleaner through public service announcements.” Uptown, Hannah Gray finished her time with TFA and is moving on to teach at Harlem Village Academies, a charter school described by The New York Observer as a model for “Obama’s vision for the future of American education” and where “the homerooms are named after their teachers’ alma maters, so next year there will be a class of East Harlem sixth graders called ‘Williams College!’” Nick Yukich is “still kicking it in NYC and did not get swine flu,” though he did help build a small cabin in the Adirondacks. He recently moved out of CDO structuring at Morgan Stanley and into global macro sales as well as a new loft. Chris Furlong hollered at us from Croatia, halfway through a two-week tour of Eastern Europe—“It’s too nice here to waste time catching up on e-mails,” but it’s “very cheap” and there’s lots of “tasty beer.” At press time, Emily Bruce’s exciting news was her upcoming departure for Germany to research “18th-century German books for girls.” She also saw “lots of wonderful folks at the first Williams choir reunion” in April, including Steve Spinelli 122 | Williams People | August 2009 and Liz Spragins, who spent a week at the University of Salamanca in Spain “learning how to read old books” and hopped the Strait of Gibraltar “to spend six weeks at Arabic school” in Fez, Morocco. Jeff Castiglione is training Iraqi police officers with the Marines. Ridhima Raina has been working in Credit Suisse’s London office with the tastiest possible industry focus: beer and confectionery goods. Despite being “perpetually sleep deprived,” she’s feels lucky for the “cool projects” that have sent her to Dubai, Amsterdam, Switzerland and “most recently back home to India.” She’s “looking forward to travel buddy Pam Vachatimanont moving back to Europe.” (Pam just earned a master’s from the Harvard Graduate School of Education.) After returning from Turkey, Brian Van Wyck “spent a blissful spring in Berlin, learning German” and getting mistaken for mentally challenged. He’s spending the summer back in Boston reconnecting with classmates and then “it’s off to Germany again, this time on a Fulbright.” If any ’07s find themselves in western Europe, he’s got “a couch, futon or half of a cardboard box (the nice half, too) available anytime.” Auyon Mukharji is excited that the other members of his and Dave Senft’s band (Sam Kapala ’09, Harris Paseltiner ’09 and Don Mitchell ’06) are joining them in Northampton, Mass. Auyon is spending the bulk of his summer working on a book about his “travels/thoughts from last year abroad on the Watson [Fellowship], with reflections/ vignettes about [his] Indian upbringing in Kansas”—“New York Times Bestseller List, here I come!” Bethany Lorge is in San Antonio “and loving it,” spending the summer off from teaching “with pools, cookouts, sleep and tubing down the nearby rivers.” In a stroke of inadvertent awesomeness (because she was feeling “like an old fart”), she bought a motorcycle to make her “feel young again.” It’s working—“The students think I’m cool.” Daniel-McKenna Foster rounded out his 24 months of Peace Corps life preparing for a world-by-bus tour. Spring turned him into “some kind of wild and dirty animal” whose only stimulation in the “cultural morass” is spending money, though a couple of potted basil plants in his home help keep his spirits generally elevated. Kai Assauov gets the last word: “I just love Williams College. This is all I have to say this month.” (In the voice of Rick Spalding, Amen!) 2008 Julie Van Deusen 61 Brighton Ave., Apt. 2 Allston, MA 02134 2008secretary@williams.edu It’s hard to believe we’ve been out of Williams for a full year now. But a lot has happened in our first year in the “real world,” from Obama being elected president, the economy tanking and swine flu causing a nationwide panic to Michael Phelps sweeping gold in Beijing and Jim and Pam finally getting engaged (and apparently pregnant) on The Office. Beyond those noteworthy headlines, our class too has established itself across the country and around the world. Jarrad Wood is in Guinea, West Africa, with the Peace Corps, teaching chemistry and English. He only gets access to electricity and Internet (not simultaneously every time) about once or twice a month, so we should consider ourselves lucky to have gotten an update on him! Jared Oubre states that “life in Peace Corps Dominican Republic has brought fresh perspective and fresh food to my life. Mangos are in season and drop from the trees nightly!” He and Daniel Golub (also serving in Peace Corps Dominican Republic) got together and ran a road race in the late spring in Santo Domingo. Dan shares Jared’s excitement over the mango surplus, claiming to eat six daily. They certainly aren’t lacking for vitamin C! Samra Brouk will be in Guatemala until April 2011, serving as a Peace Corps volunteer. Her title is healthy schools municipal coordinator. She notes, “It’s a beautiful country. Everyone should come down and visit!” In Mexico, Jose Pacas has been volunteering with underprivileged children in San Cristobal de las Casas with Martha Rogers ’07. In the spring, they visited Cancun and Isla Cozumel, where they got to try their hands at scuba diving. Fortunately, Jose managed to n 2 0 0 7 –0 8 avoid contracting swine flu. For the summer, he is researching with a professor from the University of Minnesota and will begin his master’s in public policy there in September. Sarah Bonn, along with her younger sister, flew to Geneva in May to visit Ryann Hoffman. The three of them spent two weeks traveling around Switzerland and the south of France and hiking Cinque Terre, Italy. Catie Warren is living in Vietnam but has been accepted into medical school for next year. In Ho Chi Minh City, she is doing private tutoring lessons about 20 hours a week. She has been traveling a lot, gone to a couple of Vietnamese weddings, been a part of a Lunar New Year’s special on TV and spent Tet (same as Chinese New Year) in the countryside with a Vietnamese family. Sara Carian has been working as a legal assistant at Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders since October. GLAD is a nonprofit legal advocacy group fighting for equal rights for LGBT people and all people regardless of HIV status. GLAD was the primary legal counsel in the cases that brought marriage equality to Massachusetts and Connecticut. Sara lives in Jamaica Plain, Mass., with roommate Adam Banasiak. Gordon Crabtree is working at the Joslin Center for Diabetes, where he has taken over as the senior study coordinator and is in the process of applying to med school. In the spring he started volunteering with me at Horizons for Homeless Children. We get to play with kids for two hours each week, which really just gives us an excuse to finger-paint and make various Play-Doh creations and Lego constructions. Katie Powers survived an entire year of vet school at Tufts and is working over the summer at the school’s program for middle school, high school and college students interested in veterinary medicine. Molly Olsen is living in the North End in Boston with Lauren Kennedy, Annie Schneidman and Allie Rottkamp and working as a clinical counselor at McLean Hospital in a residential program for the treatment of borderline personality disorder. Will Parker and Matt McClure visited Will Eusden, Tyler Hull and Ben Byrne in Boston in early May, and I was lucky enough to run into them at Beacon Hill Pub, a common hangout among NESCAC alums. Joining the extensive Eph contingent in Boston, Scott Hertrick is moving in August to begin a master’s in education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. Greg Schultz says that life in Beantown is much better now that the weather has warmed up. He’s still living with five other Williams guys, but now Hugo St. John has joined their army barracks apartment in Back Bay. He and his band had lots of gigs up in Williamstown in the spring, which he definitely enjoyed but describes as “bittersweet.” Ariel Heyman went to a choir reunion at Williams, where she ran in to Daniel Rosensweig and Matt Allen. They sang the “Martin Mass for Double Choir” with choir alums from the last 10 years, which “was a blast!” She and Lizzy Koltai ’07 moved into a new apartment and note that their cat is not happy about it. Kate Sortun will be attending the Boston College Master’s Entry Program in nursing this fall. She is working at the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance and training to run a marathon for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. Speaking of marathons, Allison Morrow ran her first in Providence this past spring and qualified for the Boston Marathon with a time of 3 hours and 36 minutes! It seems like the warmer weather has brought the urge to run out of quite a few of us. In May, Annie Ferguson ran in the Broad Street 10-mile run in Philly, where she came across Michelle Kurkul, Dan Meyer and Steve Spinelli ’07. Annie’s spending the summer coaching her country club’s swim team in New Jersey before heading off to Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in August. I even got the quick chance to see Margaret Ryan when we passed each other while running along the Charles. Margaret and Mary Burr flew out to California to see Deborah Bialis in the spring. Deborah spent a couple of months in Jordan working with the nonprofit that she, Katie Krieg and Anouk Dey ’09 started called Reclaim Childhood (www. reclaimchildhood.com), where they run sports camps for Iraqi refugee girls. Zoe Fonseca finished up year one of Teach for America in the South Bronx, saying goodbye to her very first class and getting excited about next year and a new adventure. Dominique de la Torre has been working in NYC for Barclays Wealth in private investment management and living on the Upper East Side. In late March she hosted the first annual NYC Drink Pink event. All proceeds went to the Kay Yow Foundation for Breast Cancer Research. The event had a great turnout from Williams alumni this first year, and she looks forward to doing it again! Jonathan Prigoff is working at a hedge fund run by Williams alums and has learned an amazing amount in the past year. He recently returned from a business trip to Hong Kong, which was very exciting; unfortunately he was too busy working to get a chance to see the Big Buddha like he had wanted. He’s living with Bagna Braestrup and Chris Rose in Hell’s Kitchen and loves being in NYC. Taryn Pritchard has accepted a five-year teaching fellowship called Math for America and will be getting her master’s in math education at Columbia next year. She is living on the Upper West Side with Eve Woodin and Marina Harnik. The three of them videotaped their lives for a week with Kate Peterson as a guest star and sent it over to Eric Ballon-Landa in Spain to thank him for sending a care package of delicious Spanish food and gifts. Jenn Sit is working for the cookbook publisher Lake Isle Press, writing the “50 State Pizza Tour” column for SeriousEats.com, attempting to fit in recipe testing and embarking on a European Eph adventure over the summer. Taryn Rathbone is loving vet school at Cornell and survived her first winter in Ithaca (which was even worse than winter in Williamstown, seeing as it snowed on Easter). Even though it’s hard to think about snow now that summer’s here, in mid-March Eugene Berson and Will Ford took a couple of days off work and went to visit Ryan Dunfee, Justin Vassar, Kit Fuderich, Alex Horne and Louisa Berky for a long weekend in Aspen, Colo. Highlights included getting a bottle’s-worth of free samples of expensive champagne at an après-ski bar, a possible cameo on a TV show about cougars and a lot of fresh powder. In DC, Caroline Goodbody is working for a Maryland senator as a legislative correspondent, August 2009 | Williams People | 123 CL ASS NOTES focusing on environmental and energy issues. She absolutely loves it, claiming “living in DC is fast paced, exciting and never a dull moment.” Andrew Douglas is looking forward to a one-year college reunion in our nation’s capital with Carynne McIver, Henry Burton, Mike Reynolds and Terry Tamm. Angela Crudele is living in DC, where she has been working for a neurologist for the year. She’s spending her summer traveling and then plans to move to Philadelphia for medical school at Jefferson. Lexy Letvin is moving to Baltimore in August to begin a PhD program in art history at Johns Hopkins. She’s excited to go back to school and to be closer to everyone on the East Coast! Jeremy Doernberger finished his first year at George Washington Law and was interning with a judge in DC this summer, working on prostitution cases. He’s living with Ben Bullitt in downtown DC. Ben’s consulting at Kaiser Associates and is spending most of his free time getting mentally and physically prepared for the next Harry Potter movie. Jeremy is engaged to Liz Upton, who finished her first year of med school at UNC. They don’t plan on getting married for over a year but are both very excited about the engagement. Speaking of which, Don Wieczorek is now happily engaged to Christina Stockwell and will be moving (and relocating his company Purple Valley Capital Inc.) to Atlanta, where they will live while Christina attends medical school at Emory University. Teaching high school math was one of the most challenging experiences of Matthew Simonson’s life, learning as he went. After eight months, he states, “I almost know what I’m doing, but the kids are amazing, and I love it.” He returned to Seeds of Peace International Camp for his fourth summer as a counselor and planned to start a new teaching job in DC in the fall. Jessica Rosten finished her school year teaching at Fay School and was at Tabor Academy Summer Program for a couple of months while doing a little traveling. In the spring she went back to Williams with Nicolette Savageau for the Williams/Amherst game in celebration of the 150th anniversary of the first collegiate baseball game, and they ran into Bagna 124 | Williams People | August 2009 Braestrup and James DiCosmo. Nicolette is also part of the Eph teaching contingent, teaching PE and health education at Ashland High School in Ashland, Mass. Additionally, she’s the assistant girls’ basketball and lacrosse coach there. She’s been playing in a few basketball leagues but “misses college hoops big time!” In the next year or two she plans to embark on the ever-daunting task of getting her master’s. Other than that, she’s just being a dedicated Boston sports fan and playing her guitar in her free time. Soon to join the teaching ranks, Katie Quinn graduated from Northwestern with her master’s in elementary education. She’s very excited about summer in Chicago, especially for visits from Jon Chow and Liz Pierce (and maybe more) for Lollapalooza! Whitney Livermore left Taiwan in June and moved to San Francisco, where she and Eric Ballon-Landa were planning to room together. She was looking forward to lots of delicious meals and getting back to the good, strong California sunshine. For the summer, Will Jacobson is interning at Nelson Davis LLP, a Hollywood entertainment law firm in Santa Monica. In the fall, he plans to attend Stanford Law School. Also in the Golden State, Kyle Frederick spent most of her time this past year playing the networking game to nab various production jobs in LA. So far she’s worked on two independent feature films and, most recently, a TV pilot episode. Next year she’ll be starting to work toward her MFA in film and TV production at USC’s School of Cinematic Arts. She and Davern Wright happened to be in the same USC production class. In December, Kyle went on a ski trip to Steamboat Springs with Riley Maddox, Zack Brewer ’07 and Will Parker. She also traveled to London in February/ March and met up with Jae Bogges, who has been living and working there. Jenny Campbell is in Pensacola, Fla., as the assistant curator at the Pensacola Museum of Art. She has been installing shows, planning future exhibitions, giving gallery talks, writing gallery guides and wall text, training docents, learning to sail and going to the beach. Jesse Levitt ran into Sesh Sundararaman at the Philadelphia Orchestra and has been training future Ephs Justin Mangope and Michael Brofft, both Class of ’13, in the art of roofing. Lily Li finished her first year at Duke University School of Law and interned at the Asian American Justice Center in DC this summer. Some of the highlights of her first postWilliams year include maintaining her sanity, finishing her first half-marathon at Virginia Beach and going on a spring break trip to England with Michael Reynolds. While in England, they visited Zoia Alexanian in Cambridge and toured the town, admiring architecture, a painting of elephants and duck ponds. All and all, it looks like our first year out of Williams has been a success! We have dozens of classmates volunteering their time and effort in the places where it’s most needed. Many ’08s are already imparting their knowledge through teaching, writing, consulting and business. And plenty of others are striving to further their education as they study medicine, art, law and more. And luckily, most of us are able to find the time to travel and explore the world while still keeping in touch with each other and staying connected to our Williams roots. 2009 Mijon Zulu 18 Sheldon St. Providence, RI 02906 2009secretary@williams.edu SENDPHOTOS W illiams People accepts photographs of alumni gatherings and events. Please send photos to Williams magazine, P.O. Box 676, Williamstown, Mass. 012670676. High-quality digital photos may be e-mailed to alumni.review@williams.edu. SENDNEWS! Y our class secretary is waiting to hear from you! Send news to your secretary at the address at the top of your class notes column. W e dd i n g a l bu m All dates 2008 unless noted 01 Coady ’98 • Freitas: Sept. 13, Scituate, Mass. All ’98 unless noted, left to right: Amy Sechooler, Katie Schultz, Erica Bollerud, Micaela Coady, Nathaniel Freitas (groom), Liz (Mills) Little, Chris Little, Kate (Genung) Taylor, Britta (Beenhakker) Mullany 01 05 02 06 03 07 02 Craig • Bostick ’97: Oct. 4, Washington, D.C. All ’97 unless noted, left to right: (front row) Silas Lum, Pamela (Phillips) Lum, Matt Bostick, Amy Craig (bride), Isaac Pesin, Amy (MacDonald) Buck ’99, Matt Buck; (second row) Sam Coxe, Mariana (Santiesteban) Pesin, Nick Bath; (third row) Dan DeSnyder, Nick O’Donnell, Gardner Gillespie ’67; (fourth row) Minnie Tai-Sangani, Poorab Sangani; (back row) Sarah (Wood) Almy, Clay Almy, Dan Shaw 03 Dahl • Scott ’04: Nov. 8, Waltham, Mass. All ’04 unless noted, left to right: Josh Earn, Jamaal Mobley, Drew Newman, Neil Hoffman, Chris Vaughan, David Riskin, Jacob Scott, Allison Dahl (bride), Mark Gundersen, Jamie O’Leary, Ariel Peters ’06 04 Kiselewich ’04 • Haciski: Aug. 9, Baltimore, Md. All ’04 unless noted, left to right: (front) Sarah Wilson, Maura Commito, Lindsay Holland, Stas Haciski (groom), Becca Kiselewich; (middle) Wendy Stone ’05, Jess Graham ’06, Emily Grannon ’06, Maggie Lee, John Schneider, Julie Allen, Leanne McManama ’03, Tori Scott; (back) Sarah Dickens, Molly Jennings, Baemen Vertovez, Bryan McCoy, Leo Salinger, Dan Gittes Williams People publishes photographs of weddings, commitment ceremonies and civil unions. Photos must be received within six months of the ceremony and may not be altered digitally. 08 04 August 2009 | Williams People | 125 W e dd i n g a l bu m 05 Hausner-Levine ’02 • Clendaniel ’01: Sept. 6, Brooklyn, N.Y. Left to right: (front) Carol (Shirai) Ergas ’01, Alexis Sien ’02, Sara Hausner-Levine ’02, Lizzie Jacobs ’01, Ryan (Grimaldi) Pickard ’01; (middle) Devin Becker ’02, Janna Rearick ’02, Sebastien Ergas ’98, Shawn Song ’01, John CrowleyDelman ’01, Clare Newman ’02, Cameron Clendaniel ’01, Bill Clendaniel ’67, Rishaad Currimjee ’01, Natalie Marchant ’01, Kaitlin (Rahl) Brandt ’02, Nick Brandt ’02; (back) Joe Seavey ’01, Emmett Tracy ’02, Chris Durlacher ’03, Abi Griffith ’01, Stephen Taylor ’01, John Pickard ’99, David Noe ’01 06 Kleinert • Bader ’85: Jan. 18, 2009, Los Angeles, Calif. All ’85 unless noted, left to right: (front) Sam Broeksmit (with daughter Kate), Chris Sayler, Stephanie (Creth) Kilbride, Joan Becker Kelsch, Lesley Feltman Rogers, Michelle Kleinert, Jeffrey Bader, Brenda (Favreau) Lawson, Lewis Epstein ’60, David Bader ’84; (back) David Fairris (former Williams faculty), Randy Rogers, Thomas Feist 07 Montez • Gratian ’98: Nov. 29, Isla Mujeres, Mexico All ’98 unless noted, left to right: (front) Kelly Montez (bride), Tom Gratian; (back) Conrad Oakey, Lauren Guth Barnes, Tony Barnes, Aran Degenhardt, Jed Untereker, Bill Kelsey, Jade Van Doren, Sam French 08 Rosenthal ’03 • Yokoi ’01: Nov. 15, Dover, Fla. All ’03 unless noted, left to right: Freeden Oeur, Katy (Austell) Elortegui, Emily Siegel, Emily Martin, Jennifer Nierman ’02, Karin Rosenthal, Ryu Yokoi ’01, Anjuli Lebowitz, Jasmine Mitchell, Nicole Theriault, Jennifer Roizen, Matthew Shafeek ’01 All dates 2008 unless noted 05 01 06 02 07 03 08 04 126 | Williams People | August 2009 09 Touger ’04 • Olsen ’04: Sept. 6, Canandaigua, N.Y. All ’04 unless noted, left to right: Emily Olsen ’09, Joe Buccina, Zan Armstrong, Charlie Wittenberg, Elliot Morrison, Maggie Popkin ’03, Zach Yeskel, Ohm Deshpande, Adam Grogg, Joanna Touger, Keith Olsen, Jeff Nelson, Emily Isaacson, Ashley English, Steve Seigel, Heather Foran, Loren Silvertrust 09 05 10 06 10 Trautmann ’03 • Chaopricha: Aug. 8, Ithaca, N.Y. Left to right: (front) Jeremy Wilmer ’98, Chris Holmes ’03, Patrick Chaopricha, Nina Trautmann ’03, Kristin Bohnhorst ’03, David Cooperman ’02; (back) Bill Sacks ’03, Kristen Wilmer ’04, Vivian Schoung ’05 11 Ebert ’00 • Bloss: July 26, Guilford, Conn. All ’00 unless noted, left to right: Katie Sullivan, Matt Levy, Anna Frantz, Jeff Grant, Becky Iwantsch, Mariya Hodge, Michael Ebert ’62, Kevin Bloss (groom), Debbie Ebert, David Fuchs, Benjamin Ebert ’92, Daniel Ebert ’96, Jon Kallay, Alicia Kallay, Cristina Santiestevan, Erin Morrissette Ney, Torie Gorges 12 Shevinsky ’01 • Etzion: Oct. 26, Woodbury, N.Y. Left to right: Kate Abbott ’00, Seth Brown ’01, Ben Isecke ’02, Josh Burson ’01, Reuven Etzion, Elissa Beth Shevinsky ’01, Ethan Zuckerman ’93, Rachel Barenblat ’96, Amy Johns ’98, Chris Warren ’96 11 07 08 12 August 2009 | Williams People | 127 W e dd i n g a l bu m 13 Ulmer ’05 • Cart ’05: Sept. 6, Williamstown, Mass. Left to right: (front, kneeling) Peter Rowland ’79, Dan Chapman ’80, Jim Nail ’78, Theodore Cart ’53, Benjamin Cart ’80, Nicole DeCesare ’05, Sarah Austell Cart ’81, Ashley Ulmer ’05, Adam Zamora ’05, Eugenie Du ’07, Alexis Machabanski ’07, Morgan Cronin ’07; (middle, kneeling) Jon Hammon ’80, Jay Halleck ’05, Meghan Bossong ’05, Christopher Tom ’05, Joanna Leathers ’05, Kimberly Ulmer ’07, Kendra Totman ’05, Marie-Adele Sorel ’05, Amy Shapiro Sosne ’05; (back) Nathaniel Basch-Gould ’11, Aroop Mukharji ’09, Chaz Lee ’11, Tim Lengel ’11, Tommy Nelson ’11, Evan Maltby ’11, Gary Jin ’10, Eric Phillips ’09, John Chatlos ’07, John Leathers ’61, Matt Allen ’08, Chuck Shafer ’10, Mijon Zulu ’09, Creston Herold ’06, Courtney Adkinson ’05, James Cart ’05, Harris Paseltiner ’09, Jamiyl Peters ’02, David Senft ’07, Israel Mirsky ’03, Leroy Lindsey ’07, Zophia Edwards ’05, Andy St. Louis ’09, Marisa Cabrera ’07, Matt Earle ’07, Daniel Wollin ’07, Jack Nelson ’07, Katharine Josephson ’07, Jennifer Danzi ’09, Christopher Lee ’07, Olufunmilayo Olosunde ’06, Elizabeth Dill ’07, Barbara Allen Austell ’75, R. Rhett Austell III ’75, R. Rhett Austell Jr. ’48, Kevin Ulmer ’72 14 Becher ’94 • de Mul: Sept. 6, Marion, Mass. All ’94 unless noted, left to right: Jose Marquez ’95, Richard Stamelman (Williams professor of comparative literature, emeritus), David Barker ’50, Kate Becher, Marc de Mul (groom), Rohit Menezes, Erin Caddell, Tanya Schneider All dates 2008 unless noted 13 14 15 15 Kim • Song ’95: March 15, 2009, Brooklyn, N.Y. All ’95 unless noted, left to right: Patty Oey, Vy Bui Rossi ’97, M. Adrian Rossi, Heesung Kim (bride), Christopher Song, YeWon Min, Chris Kim, Rajiv Doshi 16 Read ’80 • Vein: Sept. 29, San Francisco, Calif. Left to right: Chris Vein, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, Christopher Read ’80 16 128 | Williams People | August 2009 17 17 Lee-St. John ’98 • O’Connor ’98: Aug. 9, Williamstown, Mass. All ’98 unless noted, left to right: (front) Ed Yu, Tina Song, Andrew Jawa, Donel Courtney ’99, Katie Golden Kelter, Jennie Lockhart Przybilla, Adena Herskovitz, June Kim, Candice Myers, Jeninne Lee-St. John, Keirn O’Connor, Ben McAnaney ’01, Tracy Saylor Piatkowski ’99, Adam Piatkowski ’97; (back) Bill Kelsey, Jason Mitrakos, Agapito Morgan ’96, Ian Synnott ’97, Jacinto Pico, Bahia Ramos Synnott ’97, Will O’Connor ’11, Tom O’Connor ’79, Claire (Scholz) O’Connor ’78, Kirstin Thomas, Jocelyn Gibbon 18 Verdy • Eisenman ’99: April 11, 2009, Los Angeles, Calif. All ’99 unless noted, left to right: (front) Trevor Pound ’93, Erik Holmes, Andrea (Slate) Daily, Ian Eisenman, Ariane Verdy (bride), Kate Ervin, Kristina Gehrman ’00, Todd Rogers ’01; (back) Seth Resnick, Devin Redmond, Dave Cowan, Jan Postma, Chris Lovell ’77, Jonathan Lovell ’67 18 19 19 Moberg ’99 • Lavoie: Feb. 15, 2009, San Diego, Calif. All ’99 unless noted, left to right: (front) Brian Lavoie (groom), Laura Moberg; (middle) Eric Soskin, Rachel Allyn ’96, Jenny (Orr) Sensenbrenner ’01, Leigh Winter Martin, Ben McAnaney ’01, Devon DiClerico ’01, Jennifer Walcott, Hans Davies, Arlene Spooner, Kathleen Mason, Jennifer Hurley, Emily Palmer; (back) Steve Bennett, Joe Sensenbrenner ’00, Will Slocum, Jonathan Pak, Aaron DeCamp 20 Tirion • Lee ’95: Sept. 28, Park City, Utah All ’95 unless noted, left to right: (front) Nancy Lee ’97, Angela Tirion (bride), David Lee, George Lee ’67; (back) John Thompson III, Alex Shawe, Bob Lee ’69, Jay Ashton, Andy McDonald ’94, Matt Governali, Gretchen Engster Howard, Brooks Gibbins, Frank Puleo 20 August 2009 | Williams People | 129 W e d di ng A l bu m All dates 2008 unless noted 1981 1996 Karen E. Friedman & William Albright, May 31 Agapito E. Morgan & Jennifer Lukemeyer, June 7 Doris A. Quintanilla & Thomas E. Forteith, Dec. 27 1983 Jennifer Catlin & Joshua Malcolm Davis, Nov. 8 1997 1984 Susan Lindfors & Eric Taylor, Aug. 5 1985 Jeffrey D. Bader & Michelle Kleinert, Jan. 18, 2009 Stephen J. Farley & Kelly Paisley, April 25, 2009 1988 Daniel S. Caplan & MaryLiz Ager, March 16 1991 Heidi Beebe & Doug Skidmore, April 5 Stephanie K. Kampf & Michael A. Lefsky, Aug. 2 2002 Cristin Brennan & Michael Kazarnowicz, Sept. 4 2003 D’Arcy T. Robb & Todd Borek, Aug. 8 Adrienne M. Ellman & April Barton, Aug. 16 Laurel A. Hensley & David M. Fedor, Aug. 31 2004 1999 John H. Cavanaugh & Jaclyn Garber Cavanaugh, Nov. 9 Laura Moberg & Brian Lavoie, Feb. 15, 2009 Rebecca Cover & Jason Moses, Oct. 26 Chris Pare & Courtney McDonald, Nov. 8 Daniel S. Knup & Emily George, Aug. 9 Matthew J. Winkler & Maya E. Kessler ’05, Aug. 9 Steven T. Scroggins & Lina Sestokas, Sept. 6 Kameron R. Shahid & Charlotte-Louise Booth, Sept. 6 Jacob Scott & Allison Dahl, Nov. 8 2001 Keith Yi Chu & Sharon Chu, July 12 Cameron Clendaniel & Sara Hausner-Levine ’02, Sept. 6 Elizabeth Smith & Nicholas Barrie Pratt, Oct. 11 1994 Brian Y. Kim & Sophie Devignon, June 7 & 1998 2000 1992 b i rths Bob Feit & Preethy Kolinjivadi, Aug. 24 John J. D’Agostino & Sharon Abramzon, Aug. 30 Matthew Ellis Bostick & Amy Craig, Oct. 4 Craig R. MacDonald & Courtney MacDonald, Nov. 15 Elissa Beth Shevinsky & Reuven Etzion, Oct. 26 Ryu A. Yokoi & Karin Rosenthal ’03, Nov. 15 Richard R. Sarkis & Stephanie Carol Autran ’02, Feb. 14, 2009 a d o p ti o ns All dates 2008 unless noted 1975 1981 1987 Chloe Kittredge to Robert Kittredge, Sept. 27 Tyquan Lamont Davis to Alison Gregg Corcoran, March 10, 2001 Hudson Christopher Via to Mark C. Via, Jan. 17, 2009 1980 Sydney Allen Walsh to Thomas Stephen Walsh, Aug. 26 Owen Englund Lefferts to Nicholas E. Lefferts, Jan. 14, 2009 130 | Williams People | August 2009 1983 Phoebe Lan & Kathryn Xiang Burbank to Kelton M. Burbank, Dec. 25, 2006 1988 Solomon Ori Caplan to Daniel S. Caplan, Oct. 9 Elias A. Bellanca Dullin to Jo Bellanca, Oct. 29 Clementine Perrott to Jeffrey H. Perrott, Dec. 26 1989 Christopher M. Scales Broyles to Rachel A. Scales, May 1 Andrew Schaub to Jill (Applebaum) Schaub, June 4 Jae Hyun Richard Reiss to David J. Reiss, Aug. 3 Katherine Joy Woodard to Carolyn (Darrow) Woodard, Aug. 20 Avi Kagan-Dubroff to Shirley Kagan & Matthew R. Dubroff ’90, Sept. 18 Isaac S. Rabinowitz to Seth D. Rabinowitz, Sept. 23 Thomas John O’Connor to Daniel F. O’Connor & Christina E. Coughlin ’91, Oct. 18 Leonard Arun & Samson Thanit Viner to Naree (Wongse Sanit) Viner, Dec. 11 Logan Tilghman McInnis to Brittain (Shaw) McInnis, Feb. 19, 2009 Anne Dayvault Hooper to William L. Hooper, March 17, 2009 1990 Sofia Naomi Hoff Igharo to Geoffrey Osamede Igharo, April 27 Kate Komaroff to Andrew Komaroff, May 28 Elijah Gillies Levin to Matt Levin, Feb. 28, 2009 1991 Zoe Johnson Kerf to Hilary (Knowles) Johnson, Aug. 22 Zoe Eden Schwager to L. Scott Schwager, Sept. 2 Linnea Post to Linda M. Puth, Nov. 3 Thomas Charles Kidd to Michael R. Kidd, Nov. 11 1992 Patrick Joseph O’Hara to Liz (Gibbons) O’Hara, July 26 Rose Ilse Toder to Dave & Colleen Boland Toder, Aug. 1 Courtney Paige Green to Scott D. Green, Aug. 5 Jared Michael Graham to Frank Parrott Graham Jr., Sept. 29 1993 Elias Anderson Levinson to Eileen M. Anderson, Oct. 19, 2007 Cole Kassis Shullenberger to Luke J. Shullenberger, March 13 Camille Pearl Cranston to David B. Young, May 30 Adelaide V. Merriam Bohannon to Deborah Merriam, Aug. 6 Claire Nepveu Orzel to Chad R. Orzel, Aug. 7 John Sawyer O’Connor to Rosamond Moxon O’Connor, Aug. 16 Graham Charles Eggena to Cheryl Ann Liechty, Aug. 24 Austin Barker to David A. Barker & Heather I. Rieff, Sept. 18 Mary Polyna Koltis to Tom Koltis, Sept. 20 Miles Emerson Kirkwood to Peter S. & Liz (Rosan) Kirkwood ’94, Oct. 31 Alexandre Pound to Trevor W. Pound, Nov. 7 Henry Glasser to Jennifer Gray Glasser, Nov. 16 William Collings Furlanetto to Michael Richard & Nina Pyle Furlanetto, Jan. 28, 2009 Ethan Robert Gredler to Pamela Gail Israel, Feb. 20, 2009 1994 Ellis Anthony Nicholson Miller to Tanya (Nicholson) Miller, Aug. 18 Ariadne Aletheia Wright to Jason & Heather (Weston) Wright ’95, Nov. 7 Nash Steven Cleveland to Chad Cleveland, March 20, 2009 1995 John Robert & Anne Elizabeth Milligan-Wells to Christopher W. Wells, Oct. 29 Luke Bieheller Werwaiss to John A.W. Werwaiss, Oct. 30 Owen Melville Huang to Jeffrey S. Huang, Jan. 3, 2009 Henry Allred to Gretchen Aguiar & Jeff B. Allred, January 2009 Quintana Rose Reidinger to Melinda (Hough) Reidinger, Feb. 9, 2009 Max Zephyr Nadler to Laura Barre Nadler, April 15, 2009 1996 Zachary Bing-Aun Wong to Michael Y. & Jennifer (Alpert) Wong ’97, May 22 Paige Hae-Sol Raleigh to Nikos Raleigh, Aug. 5 Teresa Anne Horner to Kasia Sullivan Horner, Aug. 20 Nathaniel Warren Frey to Gregg Frey, Aug. 30 Miles Caffrey Rosenberg to Jasper M. Rosenberg, Sept. 2 Cooper Ridder Dwight to Griz K. & Mary (Booth) Dwight ’97, Oct. 15 Alice H. Rowley to Sarah J. Heidel, Oct. 28 Teagan Rose Dougherty to Sean D. Dougherty, Oct. 30 Grayson Bohane to Christopher R. Bohane, Oct. 31 Calvin Preben Vestergaard to Marjorie (Hirsch) Vestergaard, Nov. 28 Josephine Eliot Happel to Rachel (Clark) Happel, Dec. 21 Ian Roland Brenninkmeyer to Mary Liz Brenninkmeyer, Dec. 27 Rex Tilden Weiss to Lydia (Vermilye) Weiss, Dec. 30 Sean Christopher Stephens to Holly (Hodgson) Stephens, April 10, 2009 1997 Iris Zoe Vainieri to Christian M. Vainieri & Emily A. Piendak ’99, May 22 Jason Chang to Daniel K. Chang, June 18 Sasha Andreas Giese to Alyssa Trzeszkowski-Giese, Aug. 29 Sofia Evangeline Heinz to Luisa (Rios) Heinz, Oct. 19 August 2009 | Williams People | 131 b i rths & a d o p ti o ns Adelia Asbury Libbey to Margaret (Asbury) & Matthew D. Libbey ’98, Oct. 27 Eliot Ames Fritz to Chandler (Dewing) Fritz, Nov. 2 Leo Simon Elieson to Brian Elieson, Nov. 3 Elizabeth Corrine Pulling to Michele C. Pulling, Nov. 20 Kaitlyn Natalie Carroll to Alexandra (Bodner) Carroll, Dec. 7 Soren Christopher Abel to Susan (Gurgel) Abel, Dec. 26 1998 Chloe Yoonseul Koo to Grant T. Koo, June 19 Jude Alexander Cornett to Linden (Minnick) Cornett, Aug. 22 Malcolm James Canty to Scott & Annaliis Abrego Canty ’01, Aug. 24 Jonathan Elias Houk to Laura N. Del Borgo & Justin S. Houk, Aug. 28 Nina Groskin Sly to Anna J. Groskin & Matthew F. Sly ’99, Sept. 25 Elisabeth Adelaide Oppenheimer to Cyd (Fremmer) Oppenheimer, Nov. 25 Vivian June Herrick to Sharon Rackow Herrick, Dec. 28 Beatrice Schultz Martin to Catherine Schultz, Feb. 8, 2009 Mairi Helena Schilling to Maggie (Macdonald) Schilling, Feb. 12, 2009 All dates 2008 unless noted Caitlyn Jane Burroughs to Susan E. Stanton & David P. Burroughs Jr., April 2, 2009 Graham Lawrence King to Jonathan David & Stephanie Sewell King ’99, May 3, 2009 1999 William Michael McAdam to Michael James & Kelly (Shinn) McAdam, July 11 Nayeli Jasmine Rivera to Miguel A. Rivera, Aug. 22 Maya Sophia Hennessey to Brian S. Hennessey & Verena Arnabal ’01, Aug. 30 Katharine Miranda Abbott to Kate Dunlop, Oct. 1 Hailey Walker Richards to Edward A. Richards, Nov. 15 Adam Samuel Lewis to Joshua M. Lewis, Jan. 14, 2009 Liam Piotr Dworak to Maureen E. Brudzinski, Jan. 31, 2009 Jack Griffin Sweeney Benzon to Sarah E. Sweeney & Paul J. Benzon, Feb. 21, 2009 Alex Frew to Kelly (Becker) & James G. Frew, April 15, 2009 Charlotte Stokes Willett to David P. & Courtney Stokes Willett, April 19, 2009 2000 Sahil Mahajan Bonthala to Vineeta (Mahajan) Bonthala, Sept. 23 Zachary Hale Lehman to Rebecca (Kummer) & Aaron I. Lehman, Sept. 23 OBITU A RIES All dates 2009 unless noted 1929 Synthetic Organic Chemical Manufacturer’s Association in NYC. He spent 2½ years at Williams and belonged to Zeta Psi. He received a bachelor’s (1930) and a law degree (1936) from Harvard. He was a U.S. Army Air Corps captain (WWII). He wrote many nonfiction books S. STEWART GRAFF of Monroe Township, N.J., Feb. 10. Graff was a longtime resident of Irvington-onHudson, N.Y. He was an attorney with Brown, Cross & Hamilton before becoming executive secretary of the 132 | Williams People | August 2009 Linnaea Engler See to Virginia Pyle & Kevin Engler See, Oct. 10 Emily Estes Morgan to Elise (Estes) Morgan, Oct. 13 Jacob Edward Macey to Jeffrey A. & Erin (Dempsey) Macey ’01, Dec. 10 Julia Lester Mason to Daniel Mark Mason, Feb. 1, 2009 2001 Deacon Alexandros Evriviades to Alexi Andreas Evriviades, June 19 2002 Alexandre Jerome Bradley to Sebastien Jerome Bradley, Nov. 16 Isaiah Kingston Blake to Trisha (Barbosa) & Alex S.K. Blake ’03, Dec. 18 Eli Natan Ganitsky to Heather Black Ganitsky, March 8, 2009 2003 Evelyn Byrd Yu to Bethany Sayles Yu, Dec. 1 Patrick John Leyden to Anastasia (Gilman) Leyden, Feb. 6, 2009 Willow June Belflower to Jasmine Klatt Belflower, March 5, 2009 2005 Erin Sophia Tomooka to Grace (Wells) Tomooka, Aug. 13 for children, including The History of World War II and, with his wife Polly Anne, Helen Keller Toward the Light (1965). He served on the scholarship committee of Irvington High School, was a director of the Donald Reed Speech Center and member of the Irvington Narcotics Guidance Council. Among his survivors are a daughter, a stepson, three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. to the Ephraim Williams Society. Among his survivors are his partner Linda Lees, two children and two grandchildren. MacMillen III ’68, a stepson, seven grandchildren and 11 great-grandchildren. 1933 PAUL R. REYNOLDS of Kentfield, Calif., Oct. 3, 2008. Reynolds was an insurance salesman with National Life of Vermont in Rhode Island and California. At Williams he was a JA and belonged to the football and wrestling teams and Alpha Delta Phi. He served in the U.S. Army (1942-45) and received a Bronze Star Medal. He was a director of the Life Underwriters Association. He was an accomplished painter of watercolor landscapes and oil portraits. Among his survivors are two children, four grandchildren and one great-grandchild. rEynolds 1934 DONALD CLAYTON HAMILTON of Monmouth Beach, N.J., March 7. Hamilton was VP of business affairs at CBS News. Previously he was programming head at WORMutual and a consultant to Sony Music Entertainment. He also worked in Broadway theater. At Williams he was manager of the track team, VP of Commons Club and belonged to forum board and Little Theater. He belonged macmillen hamilton 1935 THEODORE L. LUDLOW of Wareham, Mass., May 16, 2008. Ludlow was rector of St. Thomas Episcopal Church in Newark, Del. Previously he was rector of St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in New Britain, Conn., and St. Agnes Episcopal Church in East Orange, N.J. He received a bachelor’s in divinity from Episcopal Divinity School (1938). Among his survivors are two children and four grandchildren. WILLIAM C. MACMILLEN JR. of Lawrence, N.Y., Jan. 8. MacMillen practiced law before beginning a career in the film industry. He later was an investment banker. He spent three years at Williams and belonged to the soccer team and Phi Gamma Delta. He received a law degree from Albany Law School (1937). He was a U.S. Army Air Force major (1942-45) and received the Legion of Merit Award. He belonged to the Ephraim Williams Society. Among his survivors are his wife Barbara, three children, including William C. 1936 RUSSELL B. STODDARD of Woodbridge, Conn., March 17. Stoddard was a general contractor and land developer. He spent four terms as Woodbridge first selectman. At Williams he belonged to Theta Delta Chi. He was a U.S. Marine Corps major (WWII). He was president of the Connecticut Conference of Municipalities, chairman of the Board of Tax Review and board member of Woodbridge Club Inc. As a Williams alumnus he belonged to his 50th reunion committee and the Ephraim Williams Society. Among his survivors are a daughter, two grandchildren and five greatgrandchildren. 1937 PHILIP O. GEIER JR. of Cincinnati, Ohio, Feb. 24. Geier spent his career at machine-tool company Cincinnati Milacron Inc., eventually becoming president and CEO. At Williams he was a JA, manager of the ice hockey team and belonged to the baseball and football teams and Zeta Psi. He received an MBA from Harvard (1939) and honorary degrees from August 2009 | Williams People | 133 OBITU A RIES All dates 2009 unless noted Xavier University (1970) and University of Cincinnati (1971). He was a U.S. Navy lieutenant (1942-45) and received the Bronze Star Medal. He was named a Great Living Cincinnatian by the Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce (1980). He was a director at Armco Steel, Cincinnati Bell, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., Xavier University, Procter & Gamble Co. and others. Among his civic activities he was a board member of Family Services, Boy Scouts and Cincinnati Country Day School. He was chairman of the United Way. As a Williams alumnus he was an admission representative, class VP, president, associate agent, agent and member of his 50th reunion committee and the Cincinnati regional special gifts committee. He belonged to the Ephraim Williams Society. Among his survivors are his wife Susanne, four children, including Philip O. Geier ’70 and Richard E. Geier ’75, brother Eugene Geier ’49, nine grandchildren, including Katherine D. Geier ’00, nephew Rodney P. Geier ’75 and cousins Henry N. Flynt Jr. ’44 and Gilbert G. McCurdy ’44. for Forbes Magazine and a contributor to many trade publications. He covered the Massachusetts congressional delegation for Massachusetts newspapers, including the Boston Herald-Traveler and the Berkshire Eagle. He was a U.S. Army private (WWII). He was a member of the White House Press Corps, the National Press Club and the Cosmos Club. As a Williams alumnus he belonged to his 50th reunion committee. Among his survivors are three children, five grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. geier EDWARD J. MICHELSON of Vero Beach, Fla., March 23. Michelson was Washington, D.C., correspondent and editor 134 | Williams People | August 2009 1938 GEORGE H. CARTER of Duxbury, Mass., Feb. 23. Carter was a psychiatrist in private practice and director of family therapy at E.N. Rogers Memorial Veterans Medical Center. Previously he was associate professor of psychology and supervisor of residency training at Boston University School of Medicine. At Williams he belonged to the soccer team, Kappa Alpha and Phi Beta Kappa. He received a medical degree from Harvard (1943). He was a U.S. Army Medical Corps captain (1944-46). He was a board member of South Country (R.I.) Conservancy. Among his survivors are his wife Persis, two sons, including Richard C. Carter ’70, four stepchildren, five grandchildren, eight stepgrandchildren, two greatgrandchildren and cousin Herbert L. Gutterson ’37. WILLIAM B. DAYTON III of Stonington, Maine, Sept. 21, 2008. Dayton worked in business management at preparatory schools and colleges, including Moore College of Art in Philadelphia. He spent two years at Williams and belonged to the tennis team and Theta Delta Chi. He was a U.S. Army corporal (WWII). He belonged to the Ephraim Williams Society. Among his survivors are his wife Ruth and a daughter. 1939 HOWARD C. BUSCHMAN JR. of Hackettstown, N.J., March 5. Buschman was a clerk for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson and subsequently general counsel for Abex Corp. He then maintained a private law practice in Mountain Lakes. At Williams he belonged to Undergraduate Council, All-Campus Entertainment, Classical Society, the ice hockey team, Delta Phi and Phi Beta Kappa. He was a U.S. Army captain (194146). He received a law degree from Albany Law School (1949). As a Williams alumnus he belonged to his 50th reunion committee and 50th reunion fund committee and the Ephraim Williams Society. Among his survivors are his wife Hildegard, three children, including Charles G. Buschman ’68 and Stephen M. Buschman ’93, six grandchildren, including Mary L. Buschman-Kelly ’99, and two greatgrandchildren. GAYNOR P. COLLESTER of Mount Pleasant, S.C., March 7. Collester worked in public relations for General Electric Co. Previously he worked at the New York Daily News. At Williams he belonged to the tennis team and Delta Upsilon. He was a U.S. Army first lieutenant (1941-46), writing the column “A Villager in Khaki” for the Bronxville News. He was involved with United Way and East Cooper Meals on Wheels, among other community organizations. Among his professional activities he belonged to the Public Relations Society of America and GE’s Elfin Society. Among his survivors are two children, one granddaughter and two great-grandchildren. JOHN C. WHITING II of Springfield, Mo., Jan. 23. Whiting worked in data processing, most recently as assistant director of computer services for the state of Kansas. Subsequently he worked in the supply depot of the Forbes Air Force Base in Topeka, Kan. He spent two years at Williams. He served in the U.S. Army (1941-46). He was a director of the Lions Club and an officer of the American Legion. Among his survivors are his wife Harriet, five children, nine grandchildren and 12 greatgrandchildren. 1940 BENTON F. KAUFFMAN of Columbus, Ohio, Dec. 29, 2008. Kauffman was VP of sales and marketing and then president of Kauffman Latimer Co. wholesale drug company. He was a director of K-L Investment Corp. and Vorys Bros. Inc., and president and chairman of the National Wholesale Drug Association. Among his survivors are his wife Anne, three children, nine grandchildren, two stepgrandchildren, 10 greatgrandchildren and four stepgreat-grandchildren. 1941 WILLIAM M. SEBRING of Naples, Fla., Feb. 16. Sebring was founder of Sebring & Co. in Kansas City, a wholesale distributor of decorative window products. Previously he was labor relations director and division manager of Columbia Mills Inc. At Williams he was manager of the basketball team, cocaptain of the lacrosse team and a JA and belonged to the football team, Gargoyle Society, Purple Key and Alpha Delta Phi. He was a U.S. Navy lieutenant (WWII). As a Williams alumnus he belonged to his 50th reunion fund committee and the Ephraim Williams Society. Among his survivors are three children, six grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. OZ TOWER of Williamstown, Mass., March 24. Tower worked at Chase Brass & Copper Co. and Bridgeport Brass before becoming VP and sales manager of Michigan Seamless Tube. He then owned Connors Brothers Moving & Storage Co. in Williamstown. At Williams he was a JA, captain of the lacrosse team and belonged to Gargoyle Society, Outing Club, the wrestling and football teams and Kappa Alpha. He was a U.S. Army captain (194246). He was president of the Williamstown Youth Center and director of the Williamstown Lions Club, Boys Club and Board of Trade. He also was active with Big Brothers, Special Olympics and Fresh Air Children’s Program. As a Williams alumnus he was a class agent, associate agent and president, chair of the nominating committee for alumni trustee/Tyng Bequest administrator and belonged to his 50th reunion fund committee and the Ephraim Williams Society. Among his survivors are three children, seven grandchildren, including Trevor J. Bayliss ’99, and nephews David S. Tower ’69 and Christopher P. Tower ’75. 1942 RICHARD B. SNYDER of St. Louis, Mo., Sept. 11, 2008. Snyder was a sales manager for several brewing companies, including Carling and Falstaff. At Williams he belonged to Delta Upsilon. He was a U.S. Navy lieutenant (1942-46). As a Williams alumnus he belonged to the Ephraim Williams Society. Among his survivors are two sons, two grandchildren, two stepchildren, seven stepgrandchildren, brother John B. Snyder ’51 and nephew Daniel B. Snyder ’90. THOMAS W. ST. JOHN of Wilton, Conn., Feb. 5. St. John worked in marketing and sales, was a principal with Albee-Campbell Co. and previously was coordinator of the National Catholic Welfare Conference’s War Relief Services in the Middle East and its director in Switzerland. At Williams he belonged to Phi Gamma Delta. He was a U.S. Naval Air Corps lieutenant (1942-46), receiving the Air Medal, and served in the Naval Reserves until 1958. He received a master’s in social work from Columbia University (1948). Among his survivors are his wife Alice, five children and eight grandchildren. 1943 LINCOLN W. ALLAN of West Chester, Pa., Feb. 26. Allan worked in advertising for several companies, including C. Schmidt & Sons Brewery, where he was director of advertising, and Lee Keeler Inc., where he was executive VP. He later ran his own marketing firm and then worked in real estate. He served in the U.S. Army (1943-46). At Williams he was manager of the ice August 2009 | Williams People | 135 OBITU A RIES All dates 2009 unless noted hockey team and belonged to the soccer team, Purple Key, the Record and Psi Upsilon. He was a director of Fairfield Fund Inc., National Cash Reserve Inc. and National Federal Securities Inc., among others. Among his survivors are his wife Nita, six children and 13 grandchildren. 1944 EDWARD F. ENGLE of New York, N.Y., Feb. 7. Engle was associate headmaster and teacher of government and constitutional law at the Dwight School in Manhattan. Previously he worked in advertising and sales promotion and was head of the National Retail Merchants Association. At Williams he belonged to Cap & Bells, Purple Key, the tennis team and Phi Beta Kappa. He was a U.S. Navy lieutenant (WWII), earning six Battle Stars. He received a master’s in American history from NYU (1972). Among his survivors are his wife Eugenie and two sons. LEONARD C. THOMPSON of Prairie Village, Kan., Feb. 19. Thompson was a claims attorney with several insurance companies, retiring as VP with Commonwealth General Insurance Co. At Williams he was a JA, captain of the soccer team and belonged to Gargoyle Society, Outing Club, WCFM, WCA and Psi Upsilon. He was a U.S. Navy lieutenant (1943-46). He received a law degree from Cornell (1948). He was a director of Kansas City Rehabilitation Institute and Citizens Advisory Board of the Missouri Department of Probation and Parole. He was a volunteer with Kansas City Meals on Wheels and the Spurs soccer team. Among his survivors are two daughters, four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. 136 | Williams People | August 2009 CHARLES D. ALLIS of Wilsonville, Ore., March 19. Allis was a stockbroker at Paine Webber. Previously he worked in sales and management with A.O. Smith Co, was VP of sales at McCulloch Motors, was president of Sunriver Inc. and was a vegetable oil broker at Continental Grain Corp. He spent one year at Williams and belonged to Outing Club and Alpha Delta Phi. He was a U.S. Army Air Corps captain (1942-45). He received an MBA from University of Wisconsin. He was chairman and trustee of Oregon Health Services University foundation. Among his civic activities, he was involved with Goodwill Industries, CARE and the International Relief & Rehab Agency. He belonged to the Ephraim Williams Society. Among his survivors are three sons and five grandchildren. WILLIAM D. BREWER of Hingham, Mass., Feb. 10. Brewer served in the Office of War Information in DC and in the American Field Service (1944-45). He spent more than 30 years with the U.S. Foreign Service, serving in Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Syria and Afghanistan. He was ambassador to Mauritius and to Sudan. Later, he was Stuart Chevalier Professor of Diplomacy and World Affairs and department chair at Occidental College. At Williams he was editor of the Gul and Purple Cow, president of News Bureau and belonged to the soccer and ice hockey teams and Theta Delta Chi. He received a master’s in international relations from Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts (1947). Among his survivors are two sons, including John V.E. Brewer ’72, five grandchildren, nephew Christopher B. Williamson ’70 and niece Abby Chaisson Fisher Williamson ’98. JOHN O. COPLEY of Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif., Nov. 18, 2008. Copley served 34 years with the U.S. Air Force, working for the U.S. Space Defense Program and retiring as colonel. He later was on the technical staff of Rockwell International Corp. He spent three years at Williams and belonged to the band and WCFM. He received a bachelor’s in electrical engineering from the Air Force Institute of Technology (1955). He received the National Reconnaissance Pioneer Award as one of 40 founders of U.S. Space Defense Operations. Among his survivors are his wife Theresa, two daughters and a grandson. JOHN S. SHARPE of San Jose, Calif., Oct. 4, 2008. Sharpe worked in merchandising for Crystal Creamery. At Williams he belonged to the Record and Cap & Bells. He received an MBA from Stanford (1949). Among his survivors are two children and seven grandchildren. ROBERT L. STONE of Williamstown, Mass., Jan. 28. Stone left Williams after two years to serve as a U.S. Air Force lieutenant, receiving the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal. He was chairman and CEO of Hertz and, later, executive VP and COO of Columbia Pictures. Previously he held executive positions with NBC and ABC. At Williams he belonged to the tennis team. Among his professional activities he was a board member of John Blair & Co. Among his survivors are his wife Sheila, four children, two stepchildren, six grandchildren, including Wendy L. Stone ’05, brother Donald Stone ’46, nieces Amy Stone ’75, Suzanne Stone ’76, Margaret Stone ’82, Kate Stone Lombardi ’78, Emily Stone Tucker ’03, Alexandra Lee ’04 and Elizabeth G. Lee ’12, nephews Gregory K. Marks ’69, James B. Lee Jr. ’75, Thomas A. Stone ’80 and James B. Lee III ’06, and cousin David S. Greenbaum ’45. stone LAWRENCE N. VAN DOREN of South Orange, N.J., Jan. 9. Van Doren was director of the advertising department at the American Bankers Association. At Williams he belonged to Delta Phi. He was a director of the American Bankers Association. He was a volunteer with the Advertising Club of New York, the Guggenheim Museum and the Frick Collection, among other organizations. He belonged to the Williams Club. Among his survivors are his wife Barbara, three children and 10 grandchildren. 1945 JAMES A. COOPER of Summit, N.J., March 18. Cooper was an investment banker, retiring as VP of First Boston Corp. of New York. At Williams he belonged to Delta Kappa Epsilon. He served in the U.S. Army Air Corps (WWII). Among his survivors are his wife Anne, two children and two granddaughters. WILLARD HALL PEARSALL JR. of Jacksonville, Fla., April 6. Pearsall spent 45 years with Florida Machine & Foundry Co., rising to chairman and CEO. He later was managing partner with FM&F Properties. At Williams he was managing editor of the Gul and belonged to the soccer team and Theta Delta Chi. He was a U.S. Army Air Force sergeant, serving with the Weather Service (1942-46). He received an MBA from Harvard (1949). He was a board member of SunTrust Bank of North Florida. As a Williams alumnus he was a member of his class’s 50th reunion fund committee. Among his survivors are his wife Paula, three children, including Marilla H. Pearsall ’79 and Katharine P. Pearsall ’81, and brother Otis P. Pearsall ’53. ROBERT V. POOLE of Middlefield, Conn., March 18. Poole was superintendent at Mount Higby Reservoir. At Williams he belonged to Cap & Bells and the swimming & diving team. He served in the U.S. Army Air Force (WWII). He was active in the New Haven Hiking Club, the Green Mountain Club and the Appalachian Trail Conference. Among his survivors are his wife Eleanor, three children and three granddaughters. JOHN H. WINANT of Williamstown, Mass., Jan. 13. Winant was VP of industrial relations and facilities for Sprague Electric Co. in North Adams before becoming president of the National Business Aircraft Association in DC. He was named by the Secretary of Transportation to the 1983 Airport Task Force and served on the Special Task Force on Airport Capacity. Early in his career he was a reporter for the New York bureau of the Associated Press. At Williams he was editorial chairman of the Record and belonged to the golf team, News Bureau, the Honor System Committee and Delta Kappa Epsilon. He was a U.S. Marine Corps captain (1943-46; 195152), receiving a Bronze Star Medal and a Presidential Citation. He received an honorary degree from Embry-Riddle University (1985). Among his civic and professional activities, he was secretary of the board of International Business Aviation Council Ltd., president of the Aviation Research & Education Foundation, director of the Williamstown Rural Lands Foundation and corporator of North Adams Regional Hospital. He also was chairman of the NASA Committee overseeing aviation safety reporting and a technical adviser to the Radio Technical Commission for Aeronautics. He was president of the Northern Berkshire Community Fund and a member of the Northern Berkshire Health Systems Planning Committee. Among his many awards, he received the Gilbert Trophy (1991) from the Air Traffic Control Association. He was a member of the International Arthurian Society. As a Williams alumnus he was class secretary, VP, president, chairman of his 60th reunion and a member of the Executive Committee of the Society of Alumni and the Ephraim Williams Society. Among his survivors are his wife Katey, August 2009 | Williams People | 137 OBITU A RIES All dates 2009 unless noted two children, including Peter B. Winant ’74, five grandchildren and three great-grandsons. worked as an insurance underwriter and salesman. At Williams he belonged to the Gul and the debate team. He was a U.S. Navy lieutenant (WWII), receiving a Purple Heart. He studied music theory at the New England Conservatory of Music. Among his survivors are his wife Chela, two sons and five grandchildren. winant 1946 JOHN E. HAMMEL of Wilton, Conn., March 12. Hammel worked with GTE/ Sylvania, retiring as VP of investor relations. He later operated the financial planning firm Jack Hammel Associates. At Williams he belonged to choir, Outing Club, Gul, the lacrosse team and Phi Sigma Kappa. He was a U.S. Navy lieutenant, junior grade (WWII). He received an MBA from the Wharton School at University of Pennsylvania (1950). He served on the ski patrol at Stratton and Okemo mountains in Vermont and was an adviser to the Darien, Conn., Explorer Post 53. As a Williams alumnus he belonged to his 50th reunion fund committee. Among his survivors are seven children, including John Hammel ’78, two stepdaughters, 12 grandchildren and niece Ellin Goetz ’76. F. BRAYTON WOOD JR. of Guadalajara, Mexico, April 3. Wood was a reporter for the Guadalajara Reporter. Previously he was director general and foreign service officer of the U.S. Information Agency and 138 | Williams People | August 2009 wood 1947 RALPH ALLEN KILBY of Reno, Nev., Sept. 20, 2008. Kilby was a physician in private practice. He served in the U.S. Navy (WWII and Korean War) and in the medical corps of the U.S. Army (1960-69), retiring as colonel. He later was on staff at the Mayo Clinic. He spent two years at Williams and belonged to the lacrosse and wrestling teams. He received a bachelor’s (1946) and medical degree (1948) from the State University of New York at Buffalo. He received a master of science in medicine from University of Minnesota (1956) and a master’s in public health from Harvard (1963). He was a diplomate of the National Board of Medical Examiners (1949) and a member of the Alpha Omega Alpha medical honor society. As a Williams alumnus he was class secretary. Among his survivors are three children and two grandsons. DENHAM C. LUNT JR. of Greenfield, Mass., Feb. 11. Lunt left Williams to serve in the U.S. Navy (1943-46) and received his degree in 1948. He spent his career with Lunt Silversmiths, rising to president and chairman. At Williams he was a JA, co-captain of the lacrosse team, captain of the soccer team and belonged to the ice hockey team, WCFM and Alpha Delta Phi. Among his professional activities he spent 30 years on the Executive Committee of the Silver Users Association of DC and was board president of Boston Jewelers Club and 24 Karat Club of the City of New York. Among his civic activities he was president of the United Way of Franklin County, director of Berkshire Life Insurance Co. and Franklin Medical Center and trustee of Northeast Utilities and Deerfield Academy. As a Williams alumnus he belonged to his class’s 50th reunion fund committee. Among his survivors are two sons, three stepchildren, several grandchildren and step-grandchildren and a great-grandchild. 1949 THEODORE F. BRIGHAM of Wilton, N.H., March 18. Brigham was owner of Sebec Marine and worked in business administration at Digital Equipment Corp., Sanders Associates Inc. and Datasec Corp. Most recently he was a self-employed contractor. At Williams he belonged to WCFM, Cap & Bells and the squash team. Among his survivors are his wife Olga, two children, three granddaughters, brother Richard T. Brigham ’47 and cousin Peter E. Driscoll ’61. JOHN HENDEE JR. of Hartland, Wis., Jan. 4. Hendee served in the U.S. Navy (1944-46) prior to entering Williams. He spent more than 40 years with U.S. Bank, starting as a teller and rising to president and chairman. At Williams he belonged to the basketball and sailing teams and Sigma Phi. He received an MBA from University of Wisconsin-Madison (1956). He was on the board of the Greater Milwaukee Committee and a trustee of Froedtert Memorial Lutheran Hospital Trust. He also was a board member of United Way, Goodwill Industries and the Milwaukee Boys & Girls Club Inc., among others. As a Williams alumnus he was Milwaukee regional secretary, member of the Milwaukee regional major gifts committee and special gifts committee, admission representative and associate class agent. Among his survivors are his wife Kathleen, three children, two stepchildren, six granddaughters and brother Thomas R. Hendee ’51. 1950 PETER A. NIELSEN of Trumbull, Conn., March 11. Nielsen was a microbiologist for Procter & Gamble and later worked as a consultant. At Williams he belonged to News Bureau and Beta Theta Pi. He was a U.S. Navy seaman, 1st class (194446). He received a master’s (1956) and PhD (1960), both in microbiology, from Columbia. He was a member of the National Publications Committee for the National Power Squadron and commander in chief for the Housatonic River Power Squadron. He was a Eucharistic Minister at Christ Episcopal Church Tashua. As a Williams alumnus he was an associate class agent. Among his survivors are his wife Barbara, two children and two grandchildren. WILLIAM H. WARD of Westminster, Md., Jan. 7. Ward was a communications security analyst for the National Security Agency. Previously he was industrial relations supervisor for Westinghouse Electric and worked at the Social Security Administration. At Williams he belonged to the sailing team and Theta Delta Chi. He served in the U.S. Coast Guard (1951-53). He received a master of science (1954) and PhD in industrial psychology (1956), both from Purdue. He belonged to the Midwestern, Eastern and American psychological associations. Among his survivors are his wife Anita, three children and six grandchildren. 1951 BERKELEY C. BIDGOOD of Charlotte, N.C., Jan. 3. Bidgood worked for Dibrell Brothers Inc., promoting the sale of U.S. tobacco abroad and retiring as senior VP and director. He spent one year at Williams and belonged to the freshman football team and the squash and track teams. He served in the U.S. Marine Corps (1943-45). He attended Babson College. He was a director of American National Bank and Trust Co. and Danville Regional Health Center, trustee of Danville Community College and the Wayles R. Harrison Memorial Fund and president of the Danville YMCA. Among his survivors are his wife Pocahontas, four children, three stepchildren, nine grandchildren, six stepgrandchildren and one great-grandchild. H.M. BAIRD VOORHIS of New York, N.Y., Jan. 3. Voorhis was a partner with Grigsby, Voorhis & Co. investment counselors. At Williams he belonged to Outing Club, the Record and Chi Psi. He was a U.S. Air Force first lieutenant (1951-53). He received an MBA from Harvard (1955). He was president of Pelham Family Service and Greenburgh-Graham Union Free School District Board and trustee of Graham Windham Child Caring Services and the Collegiate School of New York. As a Williams alumnus he was an admission representative and associate class agent. Among his survivors are his wife Doffy, four children, including Marcia Voorhis Andrew ’84, cousin Richard I. Johannesen Jr. ’56 and niece Cornelia B. Mason ’77. 1952 IHOR KAMENETSKY of Mount Pleasant, Mich., July 29, 2008. Kamenetsky fled Ukraine during WWII and studied history at the University of Graz, Austria, before coming to Williams. He was professor of political science at Central Michigan University and was chairman of the university’s Interdisciplinary Committee on Developing Nations. He received a master’s (1955) and PhD (1957), both in political science, from University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign. He published numerous articles and five scholarly books, including Hitler’s Occupation of Ukraine, 1941-1944: A Study in Totalitarian Imperialism (1956). Among his survivors are his wife Christa, a son and two grandchildren. PETER S. MYKRANTZ of Columbus, Ohio, April 2. Mykrantz was a stockbroker with A.G. Edwards & Sons Inc. and previously Paine August 2009 | Williams People | 139 OBITU A RIES All dates 2009 unless noted Webber Jackson & Curtis. At Williams he belonged to Chi Psi. He was a U.S. Navy lieutenant (1953-56). He was on the board of Buckeye Boys Ranch, Gladden Community House and GTE Corp. As a Williams alumnus he was an admission representative, Central Ohio regional president, an alumni career counseling representative and a member of the Ephraim Williams Society. Among his survivors are his wife Jane, two sons, including Donald M. Mykrantz ’82, six grandchildren, including Lauren E. Mykrantz ’12, cousins S. Noel Melvin ’48, Timothy B. Blodgett ’51, Robert H. Jeffrey ’51, John C. Harris ’52, Walter Jeffrey Jr. ’59, David L.K. Jeffrey ’63, Seton J. Melvin ’82 and Anne T. Melvin ’85, and niece Catherine Kessler Chatas ’88. Army (1946-48) and the Air Force Reserve (1952-67). He was a foster grandparent in the Burns Mid Elementary School in Saco, Maine, and a library volunteer. Among his survivors are three sons, several grandchildren and cousin Arthur V. Lewis Jr. ’48. WALTER V. PALMER of Guthrie, Okla., Feb. 18. Palmer was a petroleum engineer with Union Oil and Tenneco. He later became involved in real estate and was owner of Palmer Properties. At Williams he belonged to the lacrosse team, glee club and Phi Gamma Delta. He was a U.S. Air Force lieutenant (Korean War), retiring from the Air Force Reserves as a captain. He received a bachelor’s in petroleum engineering from University of CaliforniaBerkeley. He was president of Edmond (Okla.) Family Services. Among his survivors are a son and three grandchildren. STEPHEN T. WHITTIER II of Scarborough, Maine, Nov. 29, 2008. Whittier was assistant VP of Mount Vernon Mills Inc. At Williams he was manager of the football team and belonged to the lacrosse team, news bureau, Cap & Bells, Purple Key and Delta Psi. He served in the U.S. 140 | Williams People | August 2009 1953 PAUL B. CLIFFORD of Ocean City, Md., April 9. Clifford worked at Monumental Life Insurance Corp., retiring as second VP. At Williams he belonged to the wrestling team and Zeta Psi. He was a U.S. Navy lieutenant (1953-57) and served in the Navy Reserves (1957-63). He received an MBA from Harvard (1959). He was board president of Florence Crittenton Services of Baltimore and Young Audiences of Maryland, which honored him in 1997. Among his survivors are his wife Carol, four children, two stepchildren, seven grandchildren, brother Frederic M. Clifford ’58, nieces Cornelia C. Wareham ’74 and Haley J. Clifford ’87 and nephew Barry S. Clifford ’91. ALAN G. EDDY of Scarborough, Maine, Dec. 11, 2008. Eddy was an applied mathematician. His varied career included work on Eniac, the first room-sized computer; helping to design a nuclear reactor shield for the nuclear submarine Skate; participation in seeding clouds to create clear spaces over airports; and as a computer analyst for the National Institutes of Health coordinating the effort to compile HIV/ AIDS research data. He also was a manager of financial systems development for the U.S. Railway Association. He received a master’s degree from University of Pennsylvania (1955). He was the first solo circumnavigator to sail the globe in a fiberglass boat (1963-68). Among his survivors are a sister and several nieces and nephews. SETH L. SCHAPIRO of New York, N.Y., March 12. Schapiro was a partner with the law firm Schapiro, Wisan & Krassner and then practiced privately. Previously he was theatrical manager, lawyer and executive for Frank Music Corp. At Williams he belonged to Cap & Bells, the football team and Delta Sigma Rho. He was a U.S. Army Medical Corps private (1953-55). He received a law degree from Columbia (1958). He was a trustee of Elisabeth Irwin High School, The Little Red Schoolhouse and the Altschul Foundation. As a Williams alumnus he was an associate class agent, class agent, president and co-chair of his 50th reunion fund committee, a member of the Manhattan regional special gifts committee, N.Y. Metropolitan Association regional VP and VP of the Williams Club Board of Governors. Among his survivors are his wife Jill, four children, including Joshua L. Schapiro ’83, and nine grandchildren. 1954 MALCOLM D. JEFFREY of Bexley, Ohio, Jan. 19. Jeffrey was VP and resident manager of Dynamic Funds Management Inc. Previously he worked for the Chicago Corp. and was in sales for Jeffrey Corp. At Williams he belonged to Chi Psi. He served in the U.S. Army (1954-56) and U.S. Army Reserves. He was a board member of The Players Theater, the Mount Carmel School of Nursing, the Phoenix Theatre for Children and the Bexley Education Foundation. He received the Mighty Oak Award from the Trees for Bexley Commission. He was a trustee of Planned Parenthood. He was president of Chi Psi National fraternity. As a Williams alumnus he was Columbus regional special gifts chairman and belonged to the Williams Club. Among his survivors are three children, including Scott W. Inboden ’77, four grandchildren, brother Walter Jeffrey Jr. ’59, cousins S. Noel Melvin ’48, Timothy B. Blodgett ’51, Robert H. Jeffrey ’51, Joseph A. Jeffrey Jr. ’57 and David L.K. Jeffrey ’63 and nephew Andrew D. Jeffrey ’86. CHARLES H. SYMINGTON JR. of Spring Island, S.C., March 4. Symington was an investment banker and executive director of S.G. Warburg & Co. At Williams he belonged to the squash and tennis teams and Alpha Delta Phi. He received a law degree from Harvard (1956). He was a director of 3i Corp., Camping World and INA Life Ins. Co. of NY and board vice chairman of NASD Board of Governors. He was a trustee of Princeton Day School and Columbia Presbyterian Hospital. As a Williams alumnus he was an associate class agent. Among his survivors are his wife Bailey, three children, including Gaye R. Symington ’76, and five grandchildren. PAUL WESLEY ZECKHAUSEN JR. of Wilbraham, Mass., Feb. 25. Zeckhausen was senior minister of Wilbraham United Church and the August minister at Union Chapel in Hyannisport, Mass. He also served as interim or part-time minister for several other parishes in Massachusetts and Connecticut. At Williams he belonged to WCA, marching band, Theta Delta Chi and the baseball team. He played semi-professional baseball with the Cape Cod League. He received a master’s in divinity from Union Theological Seminary (1957), master’s in sacred theology from Yale Divinity School (1961) and a PhD in ministry from Andover Newton Theological School (1977). He founded and was president of the Wilbraham Counseling Center and was active in many civic and interfaith organizations. A book of his sermons, When Things Don’t Go Your Way, was published in 1996. As a Williams alumnus he was an associate class agent. Among his survivors are his wife Suzanne, two children, three grandchildren, brother William A. Zeckhausen ’56 and niece Dina Zeckhausen ’84. Phi Beta Kappa. Among his survivors is his daughter Brooke Sabin ’90. sabin 1957 COLEMAN F. CHURCH 3RD of Bishopville, Md., Dec. 6, 2008. Church worked in the insurance industry before becoming president of International Conduit Corp. He later was VP of investments for Prudential Bache Securities and a stockbroker with Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. He spent one year at Williams and belonged to the soccer and lacrosse teams. He graduated from Rollins University (1957). He was a U.S. Navy lieutenant (195861). He received an MBA in banking from Rutgers University (1967). He was a director of the Palm Beach County (Fla.) Salvation Army, advisory trustee of the U.S.S. zeckhausen 1956 FREDERIC H. SABIN III of Springfield, Va., Feb. 11. Sabin was a Middle East specialist for the Central Intelligence Agency, spending nine years in the Middle East. He served in the U.S. Marine Corps (1957-1961). At Williams he was a junior advisor and belonged to Sigma Phi and church August 2009 | Williams People | 141 OBITU A RIES All dates 2009 unless noted Constitution Foundation and an economics teacher at the American Institute of Banking. Among his survivors are his wife Claire, two children and four grandchildren. was president of the Cleveland and Shaker Heights Rotary Clubs and was a Paul Harris Fellow. He was a member of the U.S. Rotary Club curling team and president of the Great Lakes Curling Association. As a Williams alumnus he was regional admission representative and chair, a member of the Cleveland regional special gifts committee, associate class agent and member of his 50th reunion fund and reunion committees. Among his survivors are his wife Elizabeth, two daughters, including Lisa Listerman ’91, a granddaughter and nephews Frank H. Carpenter ’92 and John G. Howland ’72. 1958 ROBERT H. BUCHER of Denver, Colo., Nov. 23, 2008. Bucher was an investment banker, most recently VP of RBC/Dain. At Williams he belonged to the baseball team and Phi Gamma Delta. He received a master’s in history from Columbia (1959). He was a president of the Lincoln Club of Colorado and commissioner of Denver Soccer Club. Among his survivors are his wife Judy, a daughter and two grandchildren. 1959 BRUCE M. LISTERMAN of Chagrin Falls, Ohio, March 17. Listerman spent his career in international management, including as general marketing manager for Corning Glass Works, Anderson International and Picker International. He later was director of business development and then consultant with Traveline. At Williams he was a junior advisor and belonged to College Council, the Record, Gul, the football team and Alpha Delta Phi. He served in the U.S. Marine Corps (195763). He received a degree in international management from the American Graduate School of International Management (1964) and an MBA in marketing from Wharton School of Finance (1966). He was a trustee of University School and Urban Community School, board member of Shaker Lakes Nature Center and was president of the University School Alumni Council. He 142 | Williams People | August 2009 1961 RICHARD EVANS SMITH of Garnet Valley, Pa., March 23. Smith worked in sales for Procter & Gamble before working in marketing positions with Benton & Bowles, Marschalk, Lorillard, International Paper and American Tobacco. He retired as VP of marketing and sales from John Middleton Inc. At Williams he belonged to Purple Key and Gul, received a Tyng Scholarship and was president of Phi Gamma Delta. He was a U.S. Army private. He received an MBA from University of Pennsylvania. Among his survivors are his wife Judy, three children and six grandchildren. 1962 JOHN T. CALHOUN of Silver Plume, Colo., March 22. Calhoun was a selfemployed theater director and designer. Previously he was a teacher at Fort Lewis College in Durango. At Williams he was a junior advisor and belonged to Cap & Bells, Gargoyle Society, Outing Club, Phi Beta Kappa and Beta Theta Pi and was a Tyng Scholarship recipient. He received a PhD in theater from University of Colorado at Boulder (1972). Among his survivors is his wife Claudia. KIMBALL C. HART of Oslo, Norway, March 10. Hart was a self-employed photographer specializing in outdoor images in places that were hard to get to. At Williams he belonged to Outing Club, the Nordic ski and rugby teams and Delta Psi. He received a master’s in German from Middlebury College (1963). He was an avid outdoorsman and led an expedition across the Baltic from Helsinki to Stockholm, among other pursuits. He belonged to the Ephraim Williams Society. Among his survivors are his wife Randi, two children, a granddaughter and a brother. 1964 RICHARD C. MAGNUSON of White Bear Lake, Minn., Jan. 2. Magnuson was chairman of BioMedix Inc. Previously he was owner and president of Operating Managements Inc. At Williams he belonged to AMT production council, the rugby and ice hockey teams and Kappa Alpha. He was a trustee of the Minnesota Museum of Art; director, treasurer and finance committee chairman of Minnesota Landmarks Inc.; and director of Spartan Manufacturing Co. Among his civic activities he belonged to the St. Paul Drug Advisory Board, Chamber of Commerce Industrial Development Committee and Community Development Corp. and was a member of the St. Paul Academy and Summit School alumni boards. As a Williams alumnus he was president of the North Central Alumni Association and belonged to the Minneapolis/ St. Paul regional special gifts committee and his class’s 25th reunion fund committee. Among his survivors are his wife Ginny, three children, including Anne Hartnett ’88 and Sarah M. Romans ’90, and eight grandchildren. 1965 STANTON P. COERR of Chapel Hill, N.C., March 12. Coerr was founder and president of Coerr Environmental Corp., specializing in environmental science and policy consulting for the natural gas industry. Previously he was president of Maudarin Systems Inc. and held positions at NASA, Radian Corp., Wachovia Bank and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. At Williams he belonged to the soccer and sailing teams and Zeta Psi. He served in the U.S. Marine Corps. He received a master’s in economics and public policy from Princeton (1968). He held several national records in the sport of soarplaning. Among his survivors are his wife Linda, three children and five grandchildren. 1966 DOUGLAS B. SCHWAB of Los Angeles, Calif., March 26. Schwab was an attorney for 35 years, most recently in private practice. At Williams he belonged to the Alpine ski and tennis teams, Outing Club, the Record, Chi Psi and Phi Beta Kappa. He received a law degree from Harvard (1969). He was a member of the Massachusetts and California bar associations, co-chairman of the antitrust section of the Barrister’s Club and an alternate delegate to the California State Bar Convention. Among his survivors are his wife Lisa, five children, including Eric Schwab ’92, and a granddaughter. 1967 ROBERT P. HAMMELL of Alexandria, Va., Dec. 11, 2008. Hammell was an architect, most recently with Boggs & Partners in Annapolis. At Williams he was co-captain of the soccer team and belonged to the track team and WCFM. He served in the U.S. Army (1969-71). He received a master’s in architecture from Yale (1975). He was a member of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) Government Affairs Committee. Among his professional activities he was a member of Lambda Alpha National Honorary Land Economics Society. He managed projects that won numerous AIA Design Awards, including renovations of the Library of Congress, the Lincoln Memorial and the Jefferson Memorial. As a Williams alumnus he was an associate class agent and member of the Williams Club. Among his survivors are his wife Ginny and two children. THOMAS R. MAHLER of Edina, Minn., Dec. 16, 2008. Mahler was secretary and general counsel for mahler Analysts International Corp. Previously he was a partner with the law firm Wright West & Diessner. He received a law degree from University of Minnesota (1970). Among his survivors are his wife Barb, three children, two stepdaughters and 12 grandchildren. 1969 MAJOK AYUEN of Bor, Sudan, date unknown. Ayuen was lieutenant to Col. John Garang, the leader of the Sudan People’s Liberation Army. Previously he was assistant secretary general of the High Executive Council of Southern Sudan. He began his career as a lecturer at Khartom Polytechnic and worked for the Ministry of Finance. He received a master’s in economics from the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University (1971). Among his survivors is cousin Mom K.N. Arou ’73. 1972 RANDOLPH Q. MCMANUS of Washington, D.C., April 12. McManus was a senior partner with the law firm Baker Botts, specializing in energy regulatory matters, transactions and litigation. At Williams he belonged to College Council, the Record, Young Republicans and Zeta Psi. He received a law degree from University of Houston Law School (1975). Among his professional activities he was editor of the American Bar Association Energy Litigation Subcommittee newsletter and chairman of the Electric Utility Litigation Subcommittee. As a Williams alumnus he was DC regional association VP, special gifts vice chairman, admission representative and chair of the DC executive committee August 2009 | Williams People | 143 OBITU A RIES All dates 2009 unless noted as well as member of his class’s 25th reunion fund committee. He belonged to the Williams Club. Among his survivors are his parents and a brother. as a research assistant at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and in publishing. At Williams she belonged to the squash team. She received a master’s in library and information science from Long Island University (1995). She was a consultant to Three Village Historical Society and board member and development volunteer with Planned Parenthood of Suffolk County. She received the Catherine Logan Award for Service to Survivorship by the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship (2004). As a Williams alumna she received the College’s Bicentennial Medal in recognition of her achievements in lung cancer awareness (2001). Among her survivors are her husband Jamie ’81, two children, her mother and her father Howard DeLong ’57 and a brother. DAVID H. SHAWAN JR. of Columbus, Ohio, Dec. 15, 2008. Shawan was general manager of Advance Graphics. Previously he was an administrative officer at Bank One of Columbus. At Williams he belonged to the football team. As an alumnus he was an associate class agent. Among his survivors are cousins John B. McCoy ’65, John C. Vorys ’75 and Jeanny Vorys Simaitis ’82 and nephew John Taylor McCoy ’01. HAMILTON B. WOOD of Contoocook, N.H., Feb. 27. Wood was a clinical social worker at Warren Street Family Counseling Association and a counselor at Kearsarge Regional Middle School. Previously he worked as a psychotherapist at Twin Rivers Counseling Center. He received a master’s in teaching elementary education from The Prospect School Teacher Education Program (1974) and a master’s in clinical social work from Smith (1985). He led an after-school guitar club at Kearsarge Regional Middle School. Among his survivors are his wife Lisa, two sons and cousins Michael B. Wood ’74 and Robert L. Wood ’74. 1981 KAREN DELONG PARLES of Setauket, N.Y., Feb. 16. Parles was founder and executive director of Lung Cancer Online Foundation and editor of lungcanceronline.org. Previously she was a librarian at Frick Art Reference Library. She also worked 144 | Williams People | August 2009 1984 J. SCOTT PILEGGI of Queens, N.Y., March 21, 2008. Pileggi was a gym manager and personal trainer. Previously he was a legal assistant for several firms. At Williams he belonged to the marching band and Phi Beta Kappa. He studied law at UCLA School of Law and planned to enroll in the CUNY College of Law in 2009. Among his survivors are his partner Jim Joyce and a sister. 1997 CHRISSY (CLAWSON) AUDIBERT of Arlington, Mass., Feb. 13. Audibert worked for several firms in San Francisco, including the startup Getoutdoors.com and nonprofit environmental organization Lighthawk. Previously she was a consultant at Monitor Co. in Cambridge, Mass. She also was a park ranger at Yellowstone National Park. At Williams she belonged to the soccer, lacrosse and basketball teams, peer health and gospel choir and was a teaching assistant. She was affiliated with Student Conservation Association and was an Urban Youth Corps crew leader. Among her survivors are her husband Matthew, her parents and a brother. Other Deaths DALLAS HURD, Grad Art ’40, of Port Townsend, Wash., April 11, 2008 JOHN L. HALEY JR. ’42 of Marietta, N.Y., May 31, 2008 ROBERT J. GUTELIUS ’43 of Manning, S.C., Nov. 29, 2007 IRVING M. DAY JR. ’44 of Deep Creek Lake, Md., April 7 EDWARD T. BROADHURST JR. ’45 of White Plains, N.Y., Dec. 27, 2003 WILDER A. PICKARD II ’48 of Evanston, Ill., Nov. 27, 2008 T. PETER PLUMB ’50 of Fort Pierce, Fla., June 30, 2008 DON STUART MASHBIR ’53 of Tahoma, Calif., Nov. 16, 2008 GEOFFREY S. COVERT ’59 of Lakeway, Texas, June 28, 2008 WESLEY Y.Y. WONG ’61 of Honolulu, Hawaii, Nov. 22, 2007 WINSTON R. WILLIAMS ’72 of Winthrop, Mass., April 22, 2008 Obituaries are written based on information that alumni and their families have supplied to the College over the years. 01267-0676 Williamstown, MA P.O. Box 676 Editorial Offices