Vintage ’66 Princeton Class of 1966 45th Reunion Book Princeton University CLASS OF 1966 MIKE WITTE 45th Reunion Book 3 2011 The Class of 1966 Princeton University Printed in the United States of America by Global Printing Direct. Inc. South Brunswick, New Jersey 2 MIKE WITTE Class Directory and Biographies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . In Memoriam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . “Missing” Classmates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Class Officers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Honorary Classmates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Geographical Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Essays: The MuslimQuestion.com FAQ, by Ted Bent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tractors and the Farmers Who Love Them, by Gary Mount . . . . . Three Men Out, by Henry Von Kohorn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Remembering Chuck Merlini, by Rich Reinis . . . . . . . . . . . . . From the Archive: June 11, 1966 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 191 192 193 194 195 211 218 221 228 232 3 Acknowledgments Our thanks once again to all those classmates who contributed biographical statements and photos. This 45th reunion book uses the same format as our 40th. It is smaller, lacking a class poll and some of the other supplementary materials found in the 40th book — a more modest scale befitting a “minor” major reunion like the 45th. We promise a full-blown effort for the 50th. We thank Chuck Creesy ’65 for his advice on design and production; our printer, Fred Kiley of Global Printing Direct; and John Bruestle ’78 of RE Technologies for his assistance with the class website. We encourage classmates to visit the website (www.tiger66.org) and keep their online biographies current. Jim Merritt 4 Our 40th-reunion logo (Mike Witte) Class Directory and Biographies 5 Editor’s note: Classmates who are deceased, or do not wish to be contacted, or for whom the university does not have a current address are not included in this section. Their names appear on separate lists on pages 192-193. 6 Hussein M. Adam 56 College St., Worcester, MA 01610-2317; (508) 767-0020; hadam@holycross.edu Business: Holy Cross College, Box 165-A, Worcester, MA 01610 Spouse: Fadumo M. Abdisalam John F. Adam 29 Maryhill, St. Louis, MO 63124-1358; (314) 993-8343; jadam2000@aol.co Spouse: Patricia Allen Adam Daniel F. Adams P.O. Box 366, Corona, NM 88318-0366; (505) 849-1186; dadams@plateautel.net Vice President Emeritus, World Bank/International Finance Corp., 1818 H St. NW, Washington, DC 20433; (505) 849-1186 Spouse: Marcia Adams James McCabe Adams 5160 Aster St. Elida, OH 45807-1365; (419) 339-2835 Thomas F. Adams 4137 Bellmawr Dr., Livermore, CA 94550-0132; (925) 455-1164; adams35@llnl.gov Associate Division Leader, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, P.O. Box 808, L-095, Livermore, CA 94551; (925) 422-1248 Spouse: Joan C. Adams William G. Adamson 13 Blackburn Ln., Haverford, PA 19041-1121; (610) 527-2339 Attorney 7 Bruce H. Adee 1975 N.W. Blue Ridge Dr., Seattle, WA 98177-5425; (206) 784-4429; badee@u.washington.edu Associate Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Washington, Box 352600, Seattle, WA 98195-2600; (206) 543-7446 Spouse: Laurie Wieder Adee Edwin W. Aiken (Ed) 663 Torrington Dr., Sunnyvale, CA 94087-2445; eandjaiken@sbcglobal.net Chief, Army/NASA Rotocraft Division, NASA-Ames Research Center, M/S 243-10, Moffett Field, CA 94035-1000 Spouse: Jean Daenzer Aiken Children: William H. Aiken; Julia C. Walker Thomas D. Allison Apartment 8-A, 3750 North Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, IL 60613-4233; (773) 477-6607 President, Allison, Slutsky & Kennedy, P.C., Suite 1880, 208 S. LaSalle St., Chicago, IL 60604; (312) 364-9400 Spouse: Sherry Holland Robert L. Amdur Apt. 3-E, 395 Riverside Dr., New York, NY 10025-1841; (212) 222-4613 David W. Ames 5 Wild Heron Point, Hilton Head Island, SC 29928-3351; (843) 842-4535; amesco@earthlink.net President, Amesco, Inc., P.O. Box 7282, Hilton Head Island, SC 29938; (843) 686-3810 Spouse: Nancy Saner Ames Children: Lindsay, 12/16/71; Kristen (Krissie) Ames Axon, 3/21/74 8 Lynn R. Anderson 22 Burran Ave., Mosman 2088 NSW, Australia; 61-299-694-273; lsanders88@gmail.com Consultant, 22 Burran Ave., Mosman 2088 NSW, Australia; 61-414-447-484 Spouse: Sidney Hubbard Anderson Children: Andrea, 1968 (P.U. ’89); Michael, 1974 (P.U. ’96) Grandchildren: Bibi, Annie, Jack, Shaler, Nina Lynn Forty-five years! No way to make that sound short/small, and no way to make it feel done, either. Met Sidney at the Briarcliff mixer fall ’65 and chased her till she caught me. One family, two Princetonian offspring, both married, and now with grandchildren and all a joy. Sidney and Lynn Anderson, right, with Michael and Andrea and Lived in Princeton their spouses and children, November 2005. 12 years since graduation (Woodrow Wilson School M.P.A. ’74), and in England, Hong Kong, and now Australia for the rest — Sydney for past 25. Three careers — Air Force pilot, banker, headhunter. Still working. Time off is spent sailing, especially ocean (Sydney-Hobart race, etc.), building wooden boats, learning to love opera, and wondering why I don’t take more time off . . . Basically healthy and generally optimistic, politically right/center, and increasingly pondering how best to spend the next 30. Got a fortune cookie last night that read, “You may attend a party where strange customs prevail” — see you at the 45th! Thomas M. Anderson 2120 West Schiller St., Chicago, IL 60622; (773) 643-1312; tmanderson7044@hotmail.com Chairman, Radiological Physicians, Ltd., Mercy Hospital & Medical Center, 2525 South Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60616; (312) 567-2712 Spouse: Gretchen Oppmann Anderson 9 Peter L. Andrus (Pete) 3130 Lake Crescent Dr., Kingwood, TX 77339; (281) 358-2751; plandrus@kelsey-seybold.com Physician, Kelsey-Seybold Clinic, 2755 West Lake Houston Parkway, Kingwood, TX 77339; (713) 442-2122 Spouse: Sharon Noss Andrus Children: Scott C. Binder, 9/7/64; Sean M. Binder, 6/22/66; Ethan L. Andrus, 3/6/73 Thomas R. Armstrong (Tom) 21 Chandler Circle, Weston, MA 02493-1559; (781) 899-7204; tra66@mindspring.com Managing Partner, TRE Associates, 21 Chandler Circle, Weston, MA 02493; (617) 645-4320 Spouse: Elizabeth Guether Armstrong Children: Thomas, 1974; Gregory, 1977 (P.U. ’99) Grandchildren: Brady, Alex, Ryan Looks like time has a parallel with the universe in general: both are accelerating. Seems like just yesterday we were preparing for the ’66 activities in front of Nassau Hall, and then only a little while later saw our son Greg ’99 getting ready for his graduation, and last year his 10th reunion. Liz and I are still both working: she’s a professor at Harvard Medical School, globe trotting courses for H.M.S. and their international outreach activities. I’m a partner with a private equity firm investing in both emerging and developed markets, though I do it only part time these days. Greg, based in Vienna, is following a similar course in the Top: Tom Armstrong and family, New Hampshire 2010. private equity field, running Bottom: Tom Jr. with wife Jenn and Brady, Alex, and Ryan. 10 the European activities for a firm he helped introduce there following his Sloan M.B.A. in ’06. Son Tom and his wife are fortunately living near Boston and are thriving with three young sons who seem to be able to get into almost any sort of mischief around. (Have any of you fellow grandparents encountered a six-year-old manhandling a bike up to an elevated outdoor slide so his four-year-old brother could ride “really fast” down a slide?) Despite our work activities, Liz and I managed to get away to some interesting places since our last reunion, including New Zealand, Australia, various places in Europe, and a couple of Space Shuttle launchings from the NASA viewing site, most recently (STS-132) with our oldest grandson, who is enamored with all things that fly fast. We also decided to set up a warm-weather getaway (to occasionally escape the New England winters) when we acquired an oceanfront condo at John’s Island at Vero Beach, Florida. Maybe that’ll finally give us a reason and way to sharpen our golf skills, which allow for plenty of improvement. If there are other ’66ers in the vicinity down there, we’d love to connect, occasionally now and with greater frequency as we move toward ’66’s fiftieth. We look forward to seeing classmates at the 45th and other venues! James D. Askew (J.D.) 7708 Mountbatten Rd., NE, Tuscaloosa, AL 35406-1146; (205) 758-6772; jaskewj@aol.com Spouse: Pamela M. M. Askew Children: Marisa Welch, 5/77; Amanda Askew, 4/86 Michael L. Ayling 5309 South 70th East Pl., Tulsa, OK 74145-7519; (918) 663-9736; mlayling@alumni.princeton.edu President and Executive Recruiter, MLA Resources, Inc., P.O. Box 35115, Tulsa, OK 74153-0115; (918) 877-3202 Spouse: Virginia Saviano Ayling Edward L. Bailey 91 Boxberry Ln., Rockland, MA 02370 11 William B. Baine P.O. Box 163, 15510 Loyalty Rd., Waterford, VA 20197-0163; (540) 882-3466; william.baine@ahrq.hhs.gov Senior Medical Advisor, Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research, Center for Outcomes and Evidence, Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research, 540 Gaither Rd., Rockville, MD 20850-6649; (301) 427-1504 Spouse: Martha Scott Baine Children: Britton Alexander Baine, 1977 PART THE FIRST (1965-81) It is an ancient Princeton man, And he stoppeth one of three. “By thy shuffling step and drooling lip, Now wherefore stopp’st thou me? “The forclosed’s doors are opened wide, And I am going in; The terms are met, the price is set: They’ll take it on the chin.” He holds him with his now still hand, “There were these trips,” quoth he. “Hold off! unhand me, stooping loon!” Eftsoons his hand dropt he. He holds him with his glittering eye — The speculator’s still, And listens like a three years child: The Princeton man hath his will. The speculator turned to stone: He cannot chuse but hear; And thus spake on that Princeton man, His hushed voice barely clear. The band was cheered, New Jersey cleared, Merrily did we drive. To Pennsylvania’s Chambersburg And Wilson we’d arrive. The Sun went down upon the left, Out of Nassau came we! And I played bright, and danced that night With my bride meant to be. 12 Closer and closer every day, Till at the church past noon — The speculator beat his breast, For he heard his ring-tone’s tune. The mortgage banker placed the call, Red as a beet was he; Rubbing his eyes in panic’s throes BlackBerry’s screen to see. The speculator beat his breast, Yet he cannot chuse but hear; And thus spake on that Princeton man, His hushed voice barely clear. And now internship came, and I Was tired and often wrong: We stuck with Cleveland for two years, Then hastened south along. With chi-squared stats and transport swabs, In CDC pursuit to go To Naples, vibrio my foe, And old words in my head. Two years went fast — EIS blast, Then westward aye we fled. And now came Parkland and VA, And it grew wondrous hot: And Sephadex and microbe sex As a green fellow’s lot. And through June’s heat — how grand to greet — Did smile our woundrous son: Nor slow to try, nor quick to cry, Delighting in all fun. The South was here, the South was there, The South was all around: My Jersey wife has spent her life Midst drawls and Dixie’s sound. Romani noi? Marta, che vuoi? Ben due anni piu’. Poi, per carita’, la TWA Noi tre riporto’ giu’. 13 [nearly 40 more years of the same, às vezes em português a dazhe po-russki] . . . PART THE SEVENTH To AHRQ I ride each day on MARC, And there I spend each day, Explaining VAP’s elastic bands (And don’t foget hygiene for hands), And plots of sepsis’ way. Farewell, farewell! but this I boast To thee, who speculates! He’s published most, who triest most Both man and germ and beast. He’s published most, who triest most All journals great and small; For those few peers who loveth us Give good reviews to all. The Princeton Man, whose eyes are dry, Whose tremor is no more, Is gone: and now the yuppie pest Was stayed from greed no more. He bought from those recession-stunned And did not hide his scorn: A shameful but a richer man, He rose the morrow morn. Brian C. Baker 280 West Rd., Stephentown, NY 12168-9752; (518) 733-6304; bbakerlaw@taconic.net Attorney, P.O. Box 430, 386 N.Y. Route 43, Stephentown, NY 12168-0430; (518) 733-5287 Spouse/Partner: Nancy Marie Petersen Stephen L. Bakke 2765 Pheasant Rd., Excelsior, MN 55331; (952) 471-7264; bakkeco@att.net President, Bakke and Company, 2765 Pheasant Rd., Excelsior, MN 55331-9572; (952) 261-4655 Spouse: Sheila M. Bakke 14 Stuart S. Ball 33 Stephen St., Montclair, NJ 07042; (973) 783-0961 Attorney and Partner, Stuart Ball, LLC, 33 Stephen St., Montclair, NJ 07042-5031; (973) 661-4545; sball@workplacelawyers.com David R. Baraff 630 Llewelyn Rd., Berwyn, PA 19312-2013; davidbaraff@msn.com President, President, UltraVoice, Ltd., 3612 Chapel Rd., Newtown Square, PA 19073-3603; (610) 356-6443 Spouse: Georgia Portner Baraff David W. Barber 811 Hurd Ave., Las Animas, CO 81054-1506 (719) 456-2997; dwbarber@centurytel.net Spouse: Sharon Bates Barber James O. Barney 43 Songbird Dr., Concord, NH 03301-4704; jbarney@sulloway.com Partner, Sulloway & Hollis, PLLC, 9 Capitol St., P.O. Box 1256, Concord, NH 03302; (603) 224-2341 Spouse: Susan Barney John A. Barrett 3311 North Oklahoma, Shawnee, OK 74801-2245 President, Barrett Refining Corp., Suite 19, 1210 South Gordon Cooper Dr., Shawnee, OK 74801-8632; (405) 275-3051 Spouse: Sheryl Suggs Barrett Michael L. Barrett (Mike) Apt. 1702, 1855 St. Francis St., Reston, VA 20190-6255; (571) 313-8774; michael@tigerpaw.com Producer/Director, Tiger Paw Productions, LLC, Apt. 1702, 1855 St. Francis St., Reston, VA 20190; http://www.tigerpawprod.com Spouse: Jaleh Fathian Barrett Children: Cameron, 1974; Tara, 1975 Grandchildren: Cameron (Cammy), Austin (Ace), and Christian (Ty) 15 William R. Barrett (Bill) 28 Pinckney Landing Dr., Sheldon, SC 29941; (843) 846-2732; wrbarrett@att.net Spouse: Nancy Kroll Barrett Children: Campbell; Ben Grandchildren: Oscar Alexander Hellandsvik and Mia Grace Hellandsvik Timothy M. Barrows 50 Blake St., Newton, MA 02460-2028; (617) 965-4040; barrows@draper.com Mechanical Engineer, Charles Stark Draper Lab, 555 Technology Square, Cambridge, MA 02139; (617) 258-2427 Spouse: Ruth Helfrich Barrows James A. Bartholomew 317 North Broad. St., Allentown, PA 18104-4844; (610) 434-1423; jim@scoblaw.com Attorney, Scoblionko, Scoblionko et al., 40 S. Fifth St., Allentown, PA 18101; (610) 434-7138 Spouse: Terri Magnusson Bartholomew Roderick W. Bass Apt. 7, 306 Trinity Court, Princeton, NJ 08540-7026; (609) 734-0956; datb@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse/Partner: Deborah Armington Tegarden Linton Ware Batten 3021 Skipper St., San Diego, CA 92123-3046; (858) 279-2362 William E. Bausch 156 Lessner Rd., Damariscotta, ME 04543-4124; (207) 563-7981; wbausch@juno.com; http://bausch-clan.net Spouse: Mary Stephens Bausch Grandchildren: Kyan, Ryan, and Benjamin 16 Ronald Beall 4425 Village Dr., Bellingham, WA 98226-8083; rbeall@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Sharon Mason Beall John T. Beaty (Terry) 5312 Allandale Rd., Bethesda, MD 20816-2801; (301) 986-4750; tbeaty@brownadvisory.com President, Beaty, Brown Advisory, Suite 800, 7475 Wisconsin Ave., Bethesda, MD 20814; (301) 718-8600 Spouse/Partner: Anne L. Mehringer David P. Beck P.O. Box 670, 9100 Amity Rd., Amity, OR 97101; beck9100@onlinenw.com Co-owner, Casa Blanca Vineyard, 9100 Amity Rd., Amity, OR 97101 Spouse: Jeanne Crawford Beck Children: David Andrew, 8/5/76; Jennifer Jeanne, 3/13/72 J. Robert Bedell 6 Audubon Pond Rd., Hilton Head Island, SC 29928-4142; (843) 816-2667; jrbedell@aol.com Children: Kirk, 1975; Lisa, 1979 (PU ’01) Christopher B. Bedford 6543 Hancock Rd., Montague, MI 49437-9262; (231) 893-3937; chrisbedford@charter.net Spouse/Partner: Lisa A. Walker Louis Michael Bell 2500 Simpson St., Evanston, IL 60201-2175; (847) 491-9007; lmb@gjlaw.com Attorney, Griffith & Jacobson, Suite 3550, 55 West Monroe, Chicago, IL 60602; (312) 236-8110 Spouse: Brigitte Schmidt Bell 17 P. Thomas Benghauser Apt. 606, 1373 Fillmore St., Denver, CO 80206-2456, (303) 861-4716; tom.benghauser@alumni.princeton.edu Edward S. Bent (Ted) 60 Hinkle Rd., Washington, CT 06793; (860) 868-0577; tbent@alumni.princeton.edu Business Manager, Canterbury School, 101 Aspetuck Ave., New Milford, CT 06776; (860) 210-3806 Spouse: Rebecca Lambert Bent. Children: Maxwell S. Bent, 7/04/88 Lloyd M. Bentsen 2145 Troon Rd., Houston, TX 77019-1511; (713) 523-3248; lloyd@houstonchristian.com Spouse: Gayle Flannery Bentsen Philip J. Berg 92 Overbrook Dr., Princeton, NJ 08540-4139 President, Princeton Cybernetics, Suite 159, 301 N. Harrison St., Princeton, NJ 08540; (609) 683-4545; pjberg@princetoncyber.com Spouse: Paula L. Berg Richard L. Berger 4132 41st St. North, Arlington, VA 222074802; (703) 528-5608 Research Scientist, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, 7000 East Ave., Livermore, CA 94550; (925) 422-7419; berger5@llnl.gov Spouse/Partner: Beverly Dick Berger waiting for his lasagna to rehydrate. Eric A. Berman 117 N. Skyline Dr., Fayetteville, AR 72701-4516; eberman01@gmail.com Memphis University School, 6191 Park Ave., Memphis, TN 38119-5399 (901) 761-9004. Spouse/Partner: Joan Traffas 18 Graham G. Berry Apt. 107, 1021 S. Orange Grove Blvd., Pasadena, CA 91105-3517; (626) 403-6763; peteberry@earthlink.net Mail Code 312-87, California Institute of Technology, 414 S. Holliston Ave., Pasadena, CA 91125 (828) 395-8556 Spouse: Virginia Braun Berry Richard S. Beth 6811 Prince Georges Ave., Takoma Park, MD 20912-4862; (301) 270-0435; rbeth@crs.loc.gov Specialist in Legislative Process, Congressional Research Service, Government and Finance Division, LM-304 Library of Congress, Washington, DC 20540-7470; (202) 707-8667 Spouse: Claire Kreymborg Beth William J. Bethune (Thune) Hart Lane Farm, 13618 Goodhart Ln., Leesburg, VA 20176; (540) 822-4237; bethunew@pepperlaw.com Attorney, McCandlish & Lillard, PC, 212 E Market St., Leesburg, VA 20176-3113 Spouse: Linda Joyce Bethune Children: James, 11/12/81; Lisa, 7/11/85 James C. Beverley (Beaver) 7380 South West 54th Court, South Miami, FL 33143-5702; (305) 661-5642; jamescbeverley@bellsouth.net Instructor, language, law, and history; coach, soccer and rugby Spouse: Diane Rosin Beverley Children: Eric Lewis Beverley, 2/19/76; Mark Curtis Beverley, 10/12/79 Lots of changes since I last wrote this piece for the 40th reunion. First, I have retired from teaching law and coaching, at least on a full-time or employee basis. I still do some “guest” lecturing at local high schools and colleges in the areas of law and history — Latin America, Spain — and I am the senior technical advisor, i.e., old fart, for two local soccer teams that I previously coached and that are now coached by former players of mine. My children are gone from the homestead at last, have real jobs — one a professor of South Asian studies at SUNY Stony Brook, New York, the other a professional musician — bass man — here in Miami and wherever else he can get a gig, Spain for one. I shall be a grandfather for one son by reunions and become a father-in law for the other, better late than never. 19 My wife of 36 years, Diane, has retired from full-time teaching as well, although she is still very active as a yoga instructor. With the open schedules we have now, a great deal of travel has been on the agenda these past few years: Oregon, Washington, California, Vermont for our first dose of late fall in 40 years, visits with Bill Barrett and John Lumpkin and family in South Carolina on our way to the Outer Banks for annual stay on the beach (35 years); also see Cruikshank at our old school reunions (St. Andrews, Delaware). The most memorable journey was to Diane, Jim, Mark, and Eric Beverley. Peru, where I spent the greater part of my early childhood. Found the house I lived in 50 years ago, took in the fabulous sites and sights that I was not aware of as a child — Machu Pichu, Cuzco, Colca Canyon, Lake Titicaca, the Amazon. Also found out that I am officially a “third-culture kid,” i.e., someone born in one country, esp. USA, Britain, Germany et al. and raised in another, e.g. India, Africa, Latin America. Did not know that we were a defined cultural entity, just army, diplomatic, church and in my case oil “brats.” I am still playing rugby with the Florida and Miami Old Boys, now in the over-55 and the newly established over-60 division. Every time the age bracket goes up I get fast again.We won the 55’s in Ft. lauderdale last spring, the Knackerfest in Cayman, and the first 60’s in Aspen this fall. Among our regulars are five players from the Princeton town club who have conceded that I am not a bad sort for a “gown” guy.This spring will mark the 47th year since I first went on tour to St. Louis, through a blizzard, with Princeton RFC. Well, someone must be out there to keep the orthopods in our class on their game and in their big sailboats. Happy Trails until we meet again. John S. Bildersee P.O. Box 504, Wynnewood, PA 19096; (610) 667-4272 Professor of Accounting, New York University, Stern School of Business, 40 West Fourth St., New York, NY 10012; (212) 998-0027 Spouse: Marjory Bildersee Frank J. Biondi 110 N Rockingham Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90049-2632; (310) 476-4201; fbiondi@waterviewllc.com 20 Senior Managing Director, WaterView Advisors, LLC, 110 N. Rockingham Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90049; (310) 476-9879 Spouse: Carol Oughton Biondi Paul B. Birkeland 129 Lake Ave. West, Kirkland, WA 98033; (425) 576-5551 Owner, Birkeland & Associates, Suite 455, 218 Main St., Kirkland, WA 98033-6108; (425) 576-5551; birk129@hotmail.com Spouse: Diane Roberts Children: Kimberley Roberts Conn, 1969; Michelle Roberts Anderson, 1972; Analisa Roberts Rutter, 1975; Gretchen Kalb Moren, 1969; Heather Marie Kalb, 1971; Karina Birkeland Stark, 1974; Steffenie Birkeland Evans, 1980; Paul Leonard Birkeland, 1983 Grandchildren: Riley Conn, Sophie Conn, Hannah Anderson, Brady Anderson, Luke Rutter, Parris Stark, Steffenie Stark, Samantha Stark, and Blair Elizabeth Evans Over the past 10 years, I have lost my wife of 31 years (Joyce) to breast cancer, and in December 2010 married a long-time friend, Diane Roberts, who will join me at our 45th reunion. Together we have eight children and nine grandchildren. All of the children are employed and doing well, many in local Seattle-area tech ventures, some in small businesses, and one about to host a web-based cooking channel. I am very proud of all of them, to say the least. In 2006 I took the advice of several real estate friends and liquidated my entire portfolio of West Coast apartments at the top of the market. I felt totally brilliant at the time, only to find that reinvesting the funds in shop- Paul and Diane, center. Standing, from left: Kim and Steve, with Riley and Sophie; Steffenie and Fletcher, with Blair Elizabeth; Analisa and Anthony, with Luke; Michelle and Matt; Ashley Wagenfuhr, Hannah, Paul. Seated on floor: Nathan Brand and Heather; Brady; Gretchen, Mark Moran. 21 ping centers and office buildings was not too smart, and thus am currently caught up in the national real-estate malaise. Hopefully, recovery will come before our 50th reunion. It was a great run, and couldn’t last forever, but this dip is rather unexpected for its severity. I have been blessed with pretty good health, recently took off most of the pounds I gained since our P.U. days, and am working hard to keep the weight off. I have been involved on various boards and officer positions in a number of local organizations and continue to enjoy travel, downhill skiing, boating, and reading. My kids keep me up to speed with the latest technology, which is astounding compared with what we had back in 1966. Notwithstanding a failed marriage and a second wife who died, and a few ailments, life has been good to me, and I feel very blessed. And my new wife, Diane, and family bring enormous joy to me! A locomotive to all the class! Gordon S. Bjorkman Granny Branch Farm, 252 Granny Branch Rd., Church Hill, MD 21623-1308 U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555; gsb_tiger66@yahoo.com Spouse/partner: Jane Keller John H. Black 1900 Capital Blvd., Fairfield, IA 52556-9086; (641) 470-7050 Walter R. Bliss 202 Moore St., Princeton, NJ 08540-3404; (609) 921-2382; walter@walterblisslaw.com Attorney, 321 W. State St., Trenton, NJ 08618; (609) 695-2115 Spouse: Mary Cunningham Bliss Children: Richard, 1977; Margaret (Maggie), 1981; Katherine (Katie), 1985; Elizabeth (Libby), 1989 Grandchildren: Edward Bliss, 2008; Alexandra (Alex) Bliss, 2010 22 Neil J. Bloomfield Suite 100, 901 E St., San Rafael, CA 94901-2850; (415) 459-4616; njb@earthlink.net Attorney, Law Offices of Neil Jon Bloomfield, Suite 100, 901 E St., San Rafael, CA 94901-2850; (415) 454-2294; ; http://njblaw.com Partner: Sheri Children: Jennifer, 1975; Violet, 1981; Erica, 1985 Grandchildren: None yet and I hereby place an order. After a five-year stint as a part-time rancher/farmer/ranch adminstrator and as a part-time Pacific Ocean wave surfer (the shark pit off Dillon Beach is my favorite spot, but occasionally I go back to the baby beach at Dillon; I am solely a long boarder, none of that short board stuff for me), while working full time-plus in law and real estate, I have shed the ranch and moved back to Fairfax. Now just surfing, practising law, and doing special real-estate projects — ­ Erica, Neil, and Sheri at the office. including another West Marin ranch soon! (Two if Sheri has her way.) Sheri and I are both looking forward to Reunions and our traveling entourage is growing daily as we get closer to them — both Violet and Erica decided in the last few days to join us, so this will be a great extendedfamily event for me. Sheri is starting a book — an exposé of the world of horse training, breeding, showing — should be fun when she completes it! My oldest, Jenny, is splitting her time between Thailand, where she is teaching Samba in the jungle, and Wellington, New Zealand, where she is working and has worked at Weta films, going from the hobbit trilogy Return of the King to King Kong (as a texture computer artist, she did his skin). Her boyfriend, Chris, has gone from the New York scene in King Kong to working on the new Disney Logo. My middle daughter, Violet, is coming to Reunions with her signficant other, John Alioto. Violet finished her first two years of college/paralegal training and is now a paralegal at a law office in San Rafael, building up her energy to go on to finish college and go to law school. The youngest, Erica, who joined our family through and with Sheri is coming to Reunions with her and our long-time friend Dominque Palma. Erica and Dominique are both extremely active in the world of equestrian 23 arts, Erica dominating these days the American Paint Horse Association amatuer competitions and foraying out into quarter-horse worlds and other areas of the horse world, with a number of amateur championships under her belt, so to speak. She is working her way through Santa Barbara Community College as she rides and travels around the country with a few of our horses, some of whom log a lot more miles than I do these days. Dieter Bloser 18185 Windswept Circle, Chagrin Falls, OH 44023-2439; (440) 543-2975; dbloser@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Deborah (Debbie) Forbes Bloser Children: Peter Forbes Bloser, 1/16/72 (P.U. ’94); Timothy Philip Bloser, 10/25/73 (P.U. ’96) Grandchildren: Laura Coolidge Bloser, 2007 Not much new to say since last time. Still enjoying retirement and lots of travel. Now have a wonderful little granddaughter, Laura, age 4. Had to give up bagpipes and weightlifting due to increased arthritis (too hard to play the notes properly) and shoulder replacement surgery last year. Debbie and I remain quite happy together. Our Prince­ ton grad sons continue to be happy in their academic careers. Hard to believe that this year they celebrate their 17th and 15th reunions. Dieter and Debbie Bloser in Sonoma Canyon, Arizona. Ralph E. Bodine 660 Lands End Rd., Sidney BC V8L5K9, Canada; (250) 656-3642; bodine@shaw.ca Chief Executive Officer, The Marlin Group, Inc., Suite 202, 17220 Boswell Blvd., Sun City, AZ 85373; (623) 977-7733 Spouse: Linda Sue Bodine Children: Kevin Bodine, 10/4/64; Lisa Bodine Mercado, 11/14/67; Carrie Bodine Ybarra, 4/24/69; Sarah Bodine, 11/16/94; Amy Bodine, 12/27/94; Arthur Bodine, 12/27/94 24 Grandchildren: Jessica Ybarra, Taylor Ybarra, Jake Timberlake, Olivia Mercado, Kelley Bodine, and Kyle Bodine David A. Boetcher 6409 Misty Top Pass, Columbia, MD 21044-6000; (410) 531-7630; dab4293@comcast.net Spouse: Kathleen Tomczyk Boetcher David H. Bonnett 481 Yorkshire Dr., Severna Park, MD 21146-1630; (410) 544-6047 Senior Engineer, Northrop Grumman Corporation, Electronic Systems, MS G13, BWI Airport, Linthicum, MD 21076; (410) 765-4176 Michael Z. Booth 3626 Blufton Mill Rd., Free Union, VA 22940-2010; (434) 823-5232; mikelzb@earthlink.net The Arc of the Piedmont, 509 Park St., Charlottesville, VA 22902; (434) 977-4002 . Spouse: Charlotte Zinsser Booth Viggo Boserup 59 Old Course Dr., Newport Beach, CA 92660-4280; (310) 804-4753; vb@boserup.com Mediator, Boserup Mediation, 59 Old Course Dr., Newport Beach, CA 92660-4280; (310) 471-9700 Spouse: Anne-Marie K. Boserup Henry M. Bostwick P.O. Box 381, Fairhope, AL 36533-0381 Drake Properties, Inc., P.O. Box 912, Daphne, AL 36526-0912; bostfarm@aol.com. Spouse: Donna Bostwick David C. Bothell Unit B415, 180 Harbor Square Loop NE, Bainbridge Island, WA 98110-3439; (206) 842-7723; david.bothell@rbc.com Senior VP/Investment Officer, RBC Dain Rauscher Corporation, Suite 2500, 1201 Third Ave., Seattle, WA 98101; (206) 621-3120 Spouse: Sheryl Lynn Bothell 25 N. Kenneth Boudwin 14 Fountain Blvd., Burlington, NJ 08016-9752; (609) 386-9304; ken.boudwin@aspentech.com Supply Chain Advisor, Aspen Technology, Chapman Rd., Newark, DE 19702; (302) 295-5003 Spouse: Kathleen Coolidge Boudwin Kenneth A. Bourne 1800 Indian Head Rd., Towson, MD 21204-6428; (410) 616-9625; kabourne13@comcast.net Executive Vice President. PNC Bank, 2 Hopkins Plaza, Baltimore, MD 21201; (410) 237-5753 Spouse: Deborah Bell Bourne Richard G. Bowers P.O. Box 813, Le Claire, IA 52753-0813; rbowersjr@aol.com President & Chief Executive Officer, The Bowers Group, P.O. Box 548, Rapids City, IL 61278-0548 Spouse: Alice Bowers Children: Eric Bowers, 1969; India Bowers, 1976; Gail Tapia, 1977 Grandchildren: Jennie Mullard, TJ Mullard, Scott Bowers, Cameron Tapia, Jeff Bowers, Tatum Bowers, Vincent Tapia John Webster Bowman (Bows) 6456 Georgetown Pike, McLean, VA 22101-2212; (703) 893-6483; johnwbowman2@aol.com Deputy Program Manager, North America Telecommunications, Inc., Eastek Services, Ltd., 9015 Rhode Island Ave., College Park, MD 20740; (703) 602-1521 Spouse: Grace Barlow Bowman Frederick N. Bradstreet (Rick) 8308 Appalachian Dr., Austin, TX 78759-8413; (512) 338-9907; rbradstreet@sbcglobal.net Spouse: Lesley Bradstreet Children: Casey Harrington, 6/6/75; Cody Bradstreet, 6/6/75; Stephanie Toups, 6/6/78; Ryan Miller, 6/8/79; Ross Miller, 11/8/82 Grandchildren: Kennedy Guerra, Trey Harrington, Gracyn Harrington 26 Melvyn C. Branch 2899 South Lakeridge Trail; Boulder, CO 80302-9312; (303) 442-8538; melvyn.branch@colorado.edu Joseph Negler Professor of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering Department, Campus Box 427, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309-0427; (303) 492-7427 Spouse: Noelle Bergstrom Branch Children: Miles, 1971; Nicole, 1974 William J. Brauer 519 Pomona Ave., Albany, CA 94706-1426; (510) 526-5287; wjblaw@aol.com Attorney, P.O. Box 9981, Oakland, CA 94613; (510) 430-2250 Seth N. Braunstein 29 Stone Tower Ln., Wilmington, DE 19803-4536 Associate Professor of Medicine, Hospital of University of Pennsylvania, 3400 Spruce St., Philadelphia, PA 19104; (215) 662-7280 Spouse/Partner: Barbara Duffy Brian H. Breuel 100 Hodge Rd., Princeton, NJ 08540; (609) 683-5060; bbreuel@staying-wealthy.com; www.staying-wealthy.com President. Wealth Strategies, LLC, 6 Gordon Ave., P.O. Box 6758, Lawrenceville, NJ 08648-0758; (609) 896-3100) Spouse: Shirley Anne Breuel Children: Erin Kelly Cook, 1967; Quinn K. Breuel, 1970 Grandchildren: Andy Cook and Bailey Cook Edwin B. Bronstein 2404 Naudain St., Philadelphia, PA 19146; (215) 732-7811; edbronstein@comcast.net Artist and Architect, 2404 Naudain St., Philadelphia, PA 19146; (215) 732-8596 Spouse: Sophie Jacobs Bronstein 27 Philip M. Brooks 989 Cragmont Ave., Berkeley, CA 94708-1431 Attorney, Suite 233, 1442-A Walnut St., Berkeley, CA 94709; (510) 528-7996 Spouse: Sara S. Brooks Robert R. Brooks (Bob) 25 Valeria Dr., Pisgah Forest, NC 28768-9618; (828) 862-4343; brooksrr136@gmail.com Spouse: Sherry Kimball Brooks Children: Patrick Kimball, 1971; Joshua David, 1971; Andrew Carroll, 1975; Catherine Pennington, 1979 Grandchildren: Krista Nicole Lawrence W. Brown 4898 Sugar Maple Ln., Dumfries, VA 22026-3018; (703) 670-8199; larryap@comcast.net Newsman, Editor, and Anchor, AP Broadcast Services, Suite 615, 1825 K St. NW, Washington, DC 20006; (202) 955-7250 M. Warren Browne 25 Five Ponds Dr., P.O. Box 398, Waccabuc, NY 10597-0398; (914) 763-5599; warrenbrowne@cs.com John C. Brunner Chemin des Princes 47, Vandoeuvres 1253, Switzerland; 41-22-7500451; john@becswitz.int.ch Oil Consultant, Brunner Energy Consulting, P.O. Box 130, 3780 Gstaad, Switzerland; 41-33-7447278 Spouse: Mary Elizabeth Brunner Robert S. Bruser 157 Sherwood Ave., Toronto, ON M4P 2A9, Canada; (416) 484-6887 Partner, Blake, Cassels & Graydon, Commerce Court West, Box 25, Toronto M5L 1A9, Canada; (416) 863-2618 Spouse: Joan Macdonald Bruser 28 Richard O. Buck 1066 E. 22nd Ave., Eugene, OR 97405-3018; (541) 343-9021 Physician, Suite C, 2201 Willamette St., Eugene, OR 97401; (541) 683-0730 Spouse: Virginia Buck Willard Bunn (Googan) 815 E. Barberry Ln., Lake Forest, IL 60045; (847) 234-6203; willard.bunn@baytreebank.com Vice Chairman of the Board, Baytree Bank, 9 Market Square Court, Lake Forest, IL 60045-1825; (847) 615-3425 Spouse: Jeannette Woodward Bunn Children: Willie, 6/18/72; Anne, 12/2/75; Mande, 11/30/82; Meg, 11/13/84; Grace, 3/9/89 John W. Burke III (Jack) 38600 Stonewall Farm Ln., Middleburg, VA 20117-3036; (540) 687-3275; jwb3rd@aol.com Spouse: Judith Elizabeth Ayers Burke Children: Coventry Ayres Burke David G. Burnett Penthouse 23, 11 E. First St., New York, NY 10003-9194 Spouse/Partner: Claire Lynn Gaudiani John S. Burns 30 Van Car Rd., New Milford, CT 06776; (860) 354-7725 Charles G. Burr 814 S. Rome Ave., Tampa, FL 33606-2835; burrc3@verizon.net Attorney Spouse: Norma Gene Lykes Burr 29 Michael J. Burrill 578 McAlpin Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45220-1534; (513) 281-4030; mburrill@fuse.net Firm owner, architect/planner, Urban Visions, 578 McAlpin Ave., Cininnati, OH 45220-1534; (513) 260-5258; www.urbanvis.com Spouse: Marilyn Helene Burrill Children: Jennifer Helene, 1970; Cynthia Jane, 1974 Grandchildren: Matias Leopoldo Paz, 2001; Dante Gabriel Paz, 2003 I have now retired twice — from 20 years as an Air Force officer and architect/planner, and 13 years in similar roles for the University of Cincinnati. I enjoy transportation and community planning, campus planning, and architectural design jobs that focus on sustainable design (conserving resources for future generations) and plan to keep working. My most recent job, for Parsons Corporation in San Antonio, involved master plans and capital budgets for USAF dorms at 84 bases and improving U.S. Customs and Border Protection space at large airports and land ports. My daughter created a website (www.urbanvis.com) to help with my current job search. Meanwhile, I am testing my retirement-home design skills on a challenging site near Atlanta. Our daughter Jennifer is now teaching English as a second language at Auburn University, thanks to a former boss she worked for in Korea. She and her husband, Leo, and our grandsons, Matias and Dante, moved to Auburn from southern California just before Christmas in 2010, trading nice beaches and good weather for lower living costs and much less traffic. Our daughter Cynthia recovered from major surgery in Germany in 2004 to implant artificial discs in her back, injured in her first six months as a physical therapist in Los Angeles. She now has a growing business in graphics and website design (www.solarlynx.com) and loves to sing her own songs and jazz classics from the Swing Era. She moved from Cincinnati to beautiful Vermont in November 2009. My wife, Marilyn, the girl I met at Princeton, continues to be an outstanding mother, grandmother, and homemaker. Her Mother, Helene, has lived with us almost 20 years and is doing well at age 94. Marilyn and I are both military brats and have lived in so many wonderful places all over the world, it is hard to decide where we should retire. Princeton and Honolulu are at the top of my “favorite places” list, but we have lived longer and feel more at home in the Midwest and Washington, DC, area. When it is really time to retire, we will mostly likely move somewhere “new” like Tennessee or Georgia — the states where we were born. We hope to make a decision before our 50th reunion. But don’t count on it! 30 Jeffrey A. Burt 1855 Plymouth St. NW, Washington, DC 20012-2209; (202) 722-2912 Partner, Arnold & Porter, LLP, 555 12th St. NW, Washington, DC 20004; (202) 942-5929 Spouse: Sandra Cass Burt After 39 years at the law firm of Arnold & Porter, based in Washington, D.C., I retired effective January 1, 2010, and am very much enjoying my new lifestyle — no daily time sheets, no unreasonable client demands, and time to pursue my interests (especially Judaic studies). I have also started a new consulting firm with another retired attorney (who served as inside counsel for a multinational for 25 years) — International Legal Management, LLC, designed to help international companies reduce their outside legal fees and expenses (www.internationallegalmanagementllc.com). We have a particular focus on Russia, where I headed the Moscow office of Arnold & Porter for 11 years. My wife and I have also had occasion to travel more since my retirement — visiting Argentina, Israel, and Greece in 2010, and we look forward to more journeys. Our grandchildren, Nathan, Emma, and Cooper, bring much joy in our lives, and we are trying to spend as much time with them as our schedule and their parents will allow. I am active in our synagogue, servicing as vice president of the National Synagogue, and try to attend Torah classes several days each week. I have been very pleased to see the growth of a vibrant Jewish community on the Princeton campus. I hope my friends from Princeton days will have an opportunity to visit with me when they are in Washington. A. Peyton Bush 479 Audubon St., New Orleans, LA 70118-4947; (504) 862-0346 Partner, Hibernia Homestead Banccorp, 325 Carondelet St., New Orleans, LA 70130-3143; (504) 522-3203 Spouse: Barbara Gott Bush David A. Butler (Dave) 1936 Mill Creek Rd., Macungie, PA 18062-9747; (610) 395-7175; dbutler002@yahoo.com Manager of Business Development, Universal Industrial Gases, 2200 Northwood Ave., Easton, PA 18045; (610) 515-8591 Partner: Mary Raymond As the French say, “Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.” I continue to work for (and am part owner of) Universal Industrial 31 Gases, Inc. Mary and I have been together for 12 years. Felix, the household cat, continues to manage the master bedroom and acts more like an energetic 4-year-old than the circa 15-yearold he is chronologically. Chaucer, our liver-andwhite Springer Spaniel, who was adopted just prior to our 40th reunion, is doing fine as well. Dave Butler and Mary Raymond, October 2010. Universal Industrial Gases, management-owned for 10 years, is moving into a healthy middle age. During the past five years the company has won and completed several large and complex projects that have added to the company’s visibility and helped to set the stage for additional growth. The job that Mary held at the time of our 40th reunion ended as the first wave of economic slowdown rolled through the economy in mid2009. She has chosen to turn the situation into an opportunity to make a significant career change and is now two years into a Master of Education program at Cedar Crest College. Her program will qualify her to teach high school English and English literature and provide her with certification as an instructor in English as a second language. She is getting valuable practical experience in this skill area by assisting with E.S.L. Bible-study classes at a local church. Mary is active in a number of campus activities and organizations, including a group focused on the specific needs and interests of students who live off-campus. With all of the college-related studying, presentation development, and cultural and social activities going on, I sometimes feel like both of us are back in college. Interestingly, the atmosphere at Cedar Crest is surprisingly reminiscent of Princeton. Founded as a college for women in 1867, the undergraduate side of Cedar Crest remains essentially single-sex. The background of the college president, Carmen Twillie Ambar, includes Princeton connections through her master’s degree in Public Affairs from the Woodrow Wilson School and a stint there as assistant dean for graduate education. President Ambar is an enthusiastic and energetic leader who is dedicated to ensuring academic quality and creation of an atmosphere that fosters empowerment in its students. She has described her job, and the role of the college, in terms Woodrow Wilson would recognize, “helping to make the world a better place, one Cedar Crest student at a time.” 32 One of the benefits of being with Mary is the ability to join in an enjoyable summer ritual — the gathering of her family in Jamestown, Rhode Island. In a typical year, as many as 20 family members and some guests coexist and interact for a week in a classic, soon-to-be-100-year-old summer home with a wonderful view across Narragansett Bay. The overall flavor of the week in Jamestown is much like that at Princeton reunions. The crowd is multigenerational, with many having come there every summer of their lives. It is an enchanting location, and everyone shares a special fondness for the house, its grounds, the quaint and friendly business and town center of Jamestown, the bucolic nature of the island, and for the tradition of gathering there. It is a relaxing, fun, and renewing experience. Andrew Butz 15410 River Rd., Darnestown, MD 20874-3540; abutz@bktc.net. Of Counsel, Bonner, Kiernan, Trebach & Crociata, LLP, Suite 200, 451 Hungerford Dr., Rockford, MD 20850; (301) 340-9155 John H. Caldwell Apt. 48, 7900 E Dartmouth Ave., Denver, CO 80231-4265; (303) 751-0983 Professor, Cell and Developmental Biology, BRB Room 242, UCHSC, Box B111, 4200 E. Ninth Ave., Denver, CO 80262; (303) 724-3190 Spouse: Honora Caldwell Richard G. Carlson Rua Dr. Armando da Silva Prado 379, 04672-041 Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil; 55-1156863972; richardcarlson@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Dorothy Carlson Daniel H. Carmichael 15317 Stoney Spring Rd., Edmond, OK 73013; (405) 279-2740; dhcp66@aol.com Surgeon Spouse: Walta Wilkinson Carmichael 33 Tony Carroll 125 Stoyer Rd., Coatesville, PA 19320-6537; (484) 786-8092; southshire@aol.com President and owner, Southshire Enterprises, 125 Stoyer Rd., Coatesville, PA 19320-6537; (484) 786-8093 Spouse: Jean Marie Carroll James F. Carter 12134 Lawler St., Los Angeles, CA 90066-1906; (310) 397-3058; jimc@math.ucla.edu Computer Programmer, Mathematics Department, University of California at Los Angeles, 405 Hilgard Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90095; (310) 825-2897 Thomas P. Carter 2593 Taylor’s Gap Rd., North Garden, VA 22959; (434) 979-1484; tpcarter@cstone.net Spouse: Ruth Rollins Carter John W. P. Cartwright (Jake) 4015 Silver Lace Ln., Redding, CA 96001-6304; (530) 241-3685; jwpcartwright@gmail.com President and Chief Executive Officer, Solairus Aviation, 201 First St., Petaluma, CA 94952-4288; (707) 769-6023 Spouse: Nancy O’Brien Peter A. Cary 3237 Highland Ln., Fairfax, VA 22031-2809; (703) 849-8524; petercary@cox.net Michael D. Case 1833 Dolce Dr., Las Vegas, NV 89134-6151; wolfcheese@aol.com Distributor, Charlie Case Tire Company, 3655 W. Quail Ave., Las Vegas, NV 89118; (702) 736-0577 34 J. Lauson Cashdollar 734 Fourth St., Beaver, PA 15009-2107; (724) 728-0329; jlauson@cashdollar.com Attorney, The Fourth Street Professional Building, 640 Fourth St., Beaver, PA 15009; (724) 728-4440 Juan M. Castro 2404 Culpeper Rd., Alexandria, VA 22308; (703) 360-0116; juan.castro@hq.doe.gov Senior Cost Analyst, U.S. Department of Energy, NA-4, Room 1J-051, Washington, DC 20585 Spouse: Isis Perez Castro Bruce S. T. Chang Nephrologist, Nephrology Associates of Kentuckiana, PSC, Suite 250, 6400 Dutchmans Parkway, Louisville, KY 40205-3354 Ralph R. Chasteen 9044 Shady Grove Rd., Mechanicsville, VA 23116-2838; (804) 730-9073; ralphchasteen@yahoo.com Sales consultant, Professional Beauty Supply, 7090 Golden Ring Rd., Rosedale, MD 21237-5501; (410) 391-4800 Children: Carter Leighton Chen 117 Einstein Way, East Windsor, NJ 08512-2548; (609) 448-9525; leightonchen777@hotmail.com Spouse: Kay Wang Chen. Children: Christine, 1975; Stephanie, 1987 In the spirit of our 45th-reunion milestone, I submit the following personal milestones reached in 2010: • Kay and I celebrated our 40th anniversary (she’d kill me if this didn’t come first). • Both Kay and I went on Medicare (just before the baby boomers, who will deplete it). • Everybody in the family now has an iPhone (after all, it’s a real com puter). Every year since 1993, someone in our family has brought home a new computer (thanks to my former employer, AT&T). • We have two hybrid cars (each a Prius, albeit different generations — it’s really a computer on wheels). 35 • For the first time, we don’t have at least one daughter living within 10 miles of our home (finally empty nest). • For the first time, both daughters (Christine, Prince­ton ’97, and Stephanie ’09) are gainfully employed simultaneously (leading to their living with their significant others?). • Last year, both daughters racked up more air travel miles than I did and visited more foreign countries (ah, From left, Leighton, Kay, Stephanie, and Christine Chen to be young and footloose). on tour in Egypt, January 2006. • Two members of my family performed publicly in the same piece for first time (Kay on piano and Christine dancing at Bucks County Community College concert). • Kay’s USTA (tennis) team qualified for the nationals for the first time (on bad knees, no less!). • Kay played more piano in the last two years than in the previous 30 (she even sneaks in to use Princeton’s grand pianos). • I have taken more photographs in the last two years than in all the years before (thanks to digital photography and cheap storage). • I have more than one lens for my main camera (seven for my Canon 7D). • Gotten media credit for published photographs (for ballet coverage in the local press). • I have audited more courses at Princeton than I took as an undergraduate (all courses that I actually enjoy taking). • Witnessed resurgence of Tiger basketball under Sydney Johnson ’97 (continuous-season ticket holder since the heyday of Pete Carril). • I’ve survived 10 years since my cancer diagnosis (after pretty much exercising all available options). • I spent more days in the hospital than in any one year before (not by choice, and was able to walk out one day after my knee replacement. . . . Doctors are so conservative). • I rode fewer miles on my bicycles than any year in the last 23 (from Oriental Express to Slow Boat to China). • Between 1993 and 2010, I went to a foreign country every year except 2009 (trying my best to help the world economy). Since our 40th reunion: • We bought our first time share (Park City Mountainside). 36 • Girls performed in their first musicals (Christine in Oklahoma, Stephanie in Footloose). • Christine met her first gazillionaire (adjusting Warren Buffet’s tie). • Christine modeled in her first national ad campaign (Puma with STREB). • Stephanie levitated (Princeton Atelier’s Magic Show). • Using hearing aid (only occasionally, when I have to sit in the back of a large lecture hall). Bucket List: • Come within three minutes of the Nurburgring (174 turns in 14.2 miles) Formula One Grand Prix course record in my computer driving simulation. • Visit all World Heritage Sites personally or virtually via 3D simulations. • Capture apex predators, i.e. tigers, photographically in the wild. • Leisurely around-the-world cruise. Joel M. Cherlow 3305 East First St., Long Beach, CA 90803-2607; (562) 433-8397; joelmc@aol.com Radiation Oncologist, Long Beach Memorial Medical Center, Department of Radiation Oncology, 2801 Atlantic Ave., Long Beach, CA 90801; (562) 933-0300 Spouse: Fran Levine Cherlow Stephen H. Chertock Apt. 711, 5904 Mount Eagle Dr., Alexandria, VA 22303-2538; 703-960-3383; schertock@aol.com Strategic Analyst, Defense Logistics Agency, Stop 6226, 8725 John J. Kingman Rd., Ft. Belvoir, VA 22060-6221; (703) 767-3547 Spouse: Laura C. Chertock Children: Michael, 1967; Amy, 1970; Nicholas, 1975 Grandchildren: Maria Robert N. Chester Managing Director, Lakefront Property, Ltd., P.O. Box 199, Zephyr Cove, NV 89448-0199; (775) 588-8005; rchester@rchester.com Spouse: Annetta Rosenhaus Chester 37 John H. Chidester 160 Hill Rd., Elverson, PA 19520-8967; (610) 469-0369; jchidester@chidesterortho.com Orthopaedic surgeon, Suite 2, 254 Lancaster Ave., Malvern, PA 19355-3087; (610) 644-5040 Sunday C. Chikwendu 22 Pinecrest Rd., New Paltz, NY 12561-1318; (845) 255-6383; chikwens@newpaltz.edu Professor and Department Chair, Mathematics Department, SUNY/ New Paltz, New Paltz, NY 12561; (845) 257-3564 Spouse: Eudora E. Chikwendu William A. Childress 192 North Cove Rd., Old Saybrook, CT 06475-2537; (860) 388-2118 Attorney Spouse: Randi J. Bradbury Lance A. Chilton 2604 Candelaria Rd. NW; Albuquerque, NM 87107-2911; (505) 345-3130; lancekathy@yahoo.com Pediatrician, Young Children’s Health Center, 306-A San Pablo SE, Albuquerque, NM 87108; (505) 262-7594 Spouse: Katherine Vonbriesen Chilton Children: Annelise Bauer, 10/2/71; Noel Chilton de Castro, 12/24/73 Russell L. Ching 1707 Nalulu Pl., Honolulu, HI 96821-1338; (808) 377-5393 Partner, Ching Yuen & Morikawa, Suite 2770, Pacific Tower, 1001 Bishop St., Honolulu, HI 96813; (808) 524-8880 Spouse: Kathleen Chang Ching Anthony F. Christhilf P.O. Box 1524, Annapolis, MD 21404-1524; (301) 261-2703 Attorney, 124 South St., Annapolis, MD 21401; (410) 269-6424 38 John P. Classen 7783 Via Cassano, Burbank, CA 91504-1102; (818) 768-6217; johnclassen17@yahoo.com Spouse: Rachel Simon Classen Curtis L. Clay Apt. 3, 320 N. Marion St., Oak Park, IL 60302; (708) 848-6645; curtis@harlanjberk.com Harlan J. Berk, Ltd., 31 N. Clark St., Chicago, IL 60602-2898; (312) 609-0276) Spouse: Maria Clay Robert C. Clendenin 807 Cherry Rd. NW, Massillon, OH 44647-4221; (330) 830-2367 Spouse: Patricia Ann Clendenin Charles E. Coco Apt. 1612, 701 S. Olive Ave., West Palm Beach, FL 33401-6530; cocoed1@aol.com Spouse: Catherine Kelty Coco Arthur Cohen 19 Flag Ln., Manhasset Hills, NY 11040-1049; (516) 352-4370; cohensq@optonline.net OB/GYN, Suite W75, 2001 Marcus Ave., New Hyde Park, NY 11042-1071; (516) 488-2757 Spouse: Nancy Ellen Cohen Children: Ira D. Cohen, 4/13/70; Douglas M. Cohen, 2/12/72; Lori B. Nevins, 5/12/75 Grandchildren: Jordyn Michelle and Cole Benjamin Jack A. Cohen 36 South New Jersey Ave., Blackwood, NJ 08012-2940; (856) 228-4855; ethveg@comcast.net 39 Jack D. B. Coleman 256 W. Gorgas Ln., Philadelphia, PA 19119-2509; (215) 242-0642; jdbc837@yahoo.com Teacher, William Penn Charter School, 3000 West Schoolhouse Ln., Philadelphia, PA 19144; (215) 844-3460 Spouse: Roxane Coleman Bruce E. Constant 300 York St., Burlington, NJ 08016-1513; (609)531-6144; bconstantjr@aol.com Spouse: Carol P. Constant Lawrence P. Cook P.O. Box 3258, Gaithersburg, MD 20885-3258; (301) 972-6475; l.p.cook@att.net Research Chemist, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Ceramics Division, Gaithersburg, MD 20899; (301) 975-6114 Stephen S. Cook (Steve) 566 River Rd., Belle Mead, NJ 08502-4702; (908) 227-4391; snmrcook@aol.com Orthopedic spine surgeon, University Orthopaedics Associates, 215 Easton Ave., New Brunswick, NJ 08901; (732) 545-0203 Spouse: Nina Wormser Cook Children: Jennifer B. Cook, 2/19/68; Stephen R. Cook, 7/9/70; Matthew W.M. Cook, 10/29/86; Rebecca T. Cook, 8/13/89 Grandchildren: Max, Phoebe (Jennifer); Charlie, Peter, Ben (Stephen) Still working for University Orthopaedics, having fun and with time to play old-timer’s hockey with the Minnesota Old-Timers; fishing and hunting have been productive, and the family’s doing well. My wife, Nina, is tussling with the Chinese factory and trying to find a buyer for her business. Older kids are producing grandkids (five). Matt, age 23, is playing pro hockey for the Hannover Braves (Germany), and Rebecca, 21, is a senior at Penn. My Mom, 93, still holds court at Heathcote Farm and would like to see any ’66ers. Hope to be here for many more reunions. 40 James M. Cooper (Jim) P.O. Box 465, East Glacier Park, MT 59434-0465; (406) 226-9350; jmc@3riversdbs.net Semiretired Ob-Gyn Physician, Northern Rockies Medical Center, 802 Second St. SE, Cut Bank, MT 59427; (406) 873-2251 Spouse: Nell Simunic Cooper John C. Corckran 112 St. Johns Rd., Baltimore, MD 21210-2124; (410) 435-2255; jcorthe3@aol.com President, Clendenin Brothers, Inc., 4309 Erdman Ave., Baltimore, MD 21213; (410) 327-4500 Spouse: Pamela Corckran David M. Corcoran 4206 Stanford St., Chevy Chase, MD 20815-5212; (301) 986-1407; dmcps70@earthlink.net Physician, 4206 Stanford St., Chevy Chase, MD 20815; (301) 986-1407 Paul Edward Corcoran 16 Clifton St., Prospect 5082 SA, Australia; 61-882694768; paul.corcoran@adelaide.edu.au Adjunct Professor of Politics, Department of Politics, Napier Building, Floor 3, Room 10, University of Adelaide, Adelaide SA 5005, Australia, 61-883035609 Paul Corcoran in Melbourne, Australia. Carl W. Corey 88 Bellevue St., West Roxbury, MA 02132-2643; (617) 323-4763; cwcorey@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Barbara (Barb) Corey Children: Sarah, 1976; George, 1977; Alexander, 1982 Carl Corey, Sarah, Alex, Barb, and George. 41 Foster H. Corwith 10 Solana Court, Santa Barbara, CA 93109; (805) 563-5149; fcorwith@aol.com Spouse: Margaret Corwith Children: Foster, 6/15/78; Kate, 12/19/80 Stephen M. Craig 517 Blue Ridge Rd., Indianapolis, IN 46208-3609; (317) 283-7744 Management Consultant, 517 Blue Ridge Rd., Indianapolis, IN 46208; (317) 283-7744 Douglas W. Crase Apt. 6D, 470 W. 24th St., New York, NY 10011-1209; (212) 989-5706 Laurence D. Cromwell 21 Trescott Rd., Etna, NH 03750; (603) 643-6452; laurence.d.cromwell@hitchcock.org Professor, Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center, Department of Radiology, One Medical Center Dr., Lebanon, NH 03766; (603) 650-8315 Spouse: Deborah Davis Cromwell Jay C. Cross 30 Poppy Ln., Berkeley, CA 94708-1408; (510) 525-9487; jaycross@internettime.com; http://jaycross.com Chief Executive Officer, Internet Time Group, 30 Poppy Ln., Berkeley, CA 94708-1408; (510) 528-3105; Spouse: Uta Bawey Cross Children: Austin; James III I used to think of this sort of writing exercise as a résumé update or the sort of claptrap one puts on a questionnaire before joining a board or new company. Now I’m into transparency, warts and all, so what appears below is five minutes of stream of consciousness. On first meeting, I tell people I’m an author. I’ve written a variety of books and articles about how people learn. I’ve become the Johnny Appleseed of informal learning in corporations and government. My calling is to help people learn what it takes for them to be more fulfilled in their work and happy in their lives. In the past year I’ve dropped calling it learning, however, in favor of “working smarter.” Corporations underfund learning, 42 but most executives I talk with go along with investing in getting their people working smarter. After being a one-man band for 10 years, I threw in with some friends to form the Internet Time Alliance. We’re hot-shots in the realms of social media, learning theory, game design, mobile learning, corporate governance, and, well, working smarter. Last month, my speaking engagements took me to Brussels, Berlin, Doha, Stockholm, Maastricht, and London. In 2011, I plan to cut travel and collaborate more remotely; I’ve remodeled the bottom of my house into the Internet Time Lab, a mini-retreat space and video studio. Our son Austin completed his masters in meteorology last year and moved from Fairbanks, Alaska, to Monterey, California. Hoorah! Our miniature long-haired dachshund just underwent back surgery but fails to recognize she’s an old dog and is still enthusiastic about life. That’s the case with me as well. I’ve escaped from the depression that plagued me from my Princeton years until 1997. I plan to travel, write, take pictures, taste great food, and have a good time for my remaining years. Five minutes is up. See you at Reunions. Ernest Cruikshank 29 Wilson Rd., Princeton, NJ 08540-2601; (609) 924-2797; ecruikshank@jamisonfirst.com Senior Vice President, Jamison Eaton & Wood, Inc., Suite 120, 821 Alexander Rd., Princeton, NJ 08540-6352; (609) 945-1411 Paul E. Culley 636 Quintana Pl. NE, St. Petersburg, FL 33703-3128; peculley@hotmail.com Senior Vice President, Sun Bank, Tampa, FL 33602 Spouse: Emily Culley William C. Cummings P.O. Box 121, Oregon, WI 53575-0121 President, Accessible Consulting, 104 South Shuman St., Verona, WI 53593; (608) 848-8649 Spouse: Charlotte Cummings 43 Henry F. Cygan 19 Crawford Dr., Bath, ME 04530-2349; hcygan@mindspring.com President, Cygan and Associates, 19 Crawford Dr., Bath, ME 04530-2349 Spouse: Susan Bysshe Cygan Bernard J. D’Avella (Bud) 105 Rensselaer Rd., Essex Fells, NJ 07021-1400; (973) 228-9153; bdavella@alumni.princeton.edu President and Chief Executive Officer, Prudent Publishing Company, 65 Challenger Rd., Ridgefield Park, NJ 07660-2140; (201) 641-7900, ext. 300 Spouse: Elaine Benucci D’Avella Children: Bernard J. III, 10/3/75; Anthony, 5/22/78 Granchildren: Ben It’s now been almost 13 years since my career change from law to running a business, so clearly the biggest change affecting my life has been a great one. I’m the president of Prudent Publishing Company, the Gallery Collection, which is the largest direct-mail manufacturer and seller of greeting cards, business to business, in the country. We have 300 employees in peak season, all in two locations in New Jersey. The transition was a dream, except of course for difficulties surrounding 9/11 and resulting business fluctuations. But bad times are good for learning how to cope, and we did. Not keeping time sheets is a real blessing, and so is using my people talents and the type of advice I was giving to clients, to run a very nice business. I have more time, much less stress, and overall (to use a class term) we’ve done quite well. The years 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2007 were the company’s best ever, in succession, Bud and Elaine D’Avella at the wedding of their son Anthony to Sandi O’Connell. Next to the bride is Bud’s mom, Aida, age 95. On the right are son BJ, his wife Laura, and grandson Ben. 44 which was a real thrill. Of course we hit the problems of 2008 and both sales and profits dipped, but we’ve managed to keep everyone employed and excellent progress is being made. The nicest thing, overall (that word again!), is that I’ve been able to spend more time with Elaine and the family, play golf, go to the beach, and travel. Life is indeed good. Much big news on the family front since I wrote last — First son BJ ’97 and Laura Zupa (Columbia ’01) were married in 2003. As many of you know, I introduced them. Laura actually sings opera professionally, and made her professional operatic debut at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Verdi’s Il Trovatore Bud and Elaine getting in touch with their Roman roots, St. in June 2005. Then, with a nice contingent Thomas, 2006. of ’66ers in attendance, she sang in Mozart’s Nozze di Figaro at McCarter’s Berlind Theatre in July. This year she sang Micaela in Bize’t’s Carmen, a great role for her. Son BJ received his M.B.A. at Georgetown in May 2003 and is now a senior associate at PriceWaterhouseCoopers, based in Florham Park, consulting to the health industry. For six years they lived in the next town, where our grandson BJD IV (“Ben”) was born in February 2009, and very happily have just moved to Essex Fells, about two blocks away! Anthony (Middlebury ’00) stepped down as executive director of operations for Smile United Kingdom in April 2005; this was after almost two years in London, and before then in Rome working for its Italian office and building foundations in Ireland and some other European countries. He then greatly enjoyed himself at Harvard Business School, graduating in the Class of 2007. His work life took him to New York, where he is now with IDEO New York, a design and innovation consultant to large businesses. In October 2010 he married Sandi O’Connell, an account executive with Diane von Furstenberg, and they live in Brooklyn Heights. Elaine is well and taking great care of all of us and our lives together, with an accent on our grandson Ben. Our extensive travel together has been a real joy, including trips to Egypt and India in 2008. Elaine saw to it that we celebrated my 60th in high style, complete with roast and slide show, which included many Princeton friends. Having your life surveyed by others is a great experience and one I highly recommend. More excitement in 2011: having finished my work of building a strong executive team at Prudent Publishing, and having reached age 66, I’ve decided it’s time to move on. June 30 will be my last day at Prudent and my first day of family business and estate and trust consulting — and more travel and fun with Elaine and the family. 45 Alan R. Dahl P.O. Box 332, Canal Winchester, OH 43110-8810 Spouse: Mary Frieberg Dahl Robert F. Darling Apt. 7, 2238 Hyde St., San Francisco, CA 94109-1546; (415) 474-3993 Senior Counsel, Wells Fargo Bank, NA, Seventh Floor, 633 Folsom St., San Francisco, CA 94107 John E. Davenport 1112 Bellegrove Pl., Charlotte, NC 28270; (704) 846-5357 Physician, Mecklenburg Medical Group, PA, Suite 300, 3535 Randolph Rd., Charlotte, NC 28211 Spouse: Susan Milly Davenport Children: Benjamin, 3/9/75; Daniel, 10/6/77; Rebecca, 2/25/81 Ralph A. Davies 130 Beech St., Pittsburgh, PA 15218; (412) 243-2257; rdavies@dmcpc.com Attorney and Managing Director, Davies McFarland & Carroll, PC, 10th Floor, One Gateway Center, Pittsburgh, PA 15222; (412) 281-0737 Spouse: Anne Lorenzetti Davies Clay S. Davis 2313 Dawns Pass, Knoxville, TN 37919-9104; (865) 693-6137; claydavis2@comcast.net Senior Attorney, Jewelry Television, 10001 Kingston Pike, Knoxville, TN 37922-3339; (865) 692-6000 Spouse: Anita Jane Davis Dennis B. Davis 310 Salem Ave., Spring Lake, NJ 07762-1043; (732) 449-5738; dennisbdavis@aol.com President, Tiger Construction Service Corporation, 5051 Industrial Rd., Farmingdale, NJ 07727; (732) 919-7002 Spouse: Susan Reynolds Davis 46 James V. Davis P.O. Box 1969, Gambier, OH 43022-1967 George L. Dawson 3855 N.W. 35th Pl., Gainesville, FL 32606-6163; (352) 372-3881 Professor, College of Law, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611; (352) 392-6812 Spouse: Sally Dawson Jonathan T. Dawson 6 Shore Haven Rd., Norwalk, CT 06855; (203) 852-1944; sue@dawsoncap.com Chairman of the Board, Dawson Capital Management, Inc., 354 Pequot Ave., Southport, CT 06890-1389; (204) 254-0091 Spouse: Deborah Pratt Dawson Children: Christopher, 1972; Alexandra, 1973 David K. De Longe 79 Cypress St., Millburn, NJ 07041-2026; (973) 763-0236 Schumann Hanlon, L.L.C., Number 15, 30 Montgomery St., Jersey City, NJ 07302; (201) 434-2000 Donald P. Delisi (Don) 4805 134th Place SE, Bellevue, WA 98006-3478; (425) 747-3341; don@nwra.com Senior Research Scientist and Chairman of the Board, NorthWest Research Associates, Inc., 14508 NE 20th St., Bellevue, WA 98007-3713; (425) 644-9660 Spouse: Adele Orr Delisi Children: Bergen, 8/20/80 Charles F. Dewey Apt. 1804-C, 460 S. Marion Parkway, Denver, CO 80209-2588; Attorney Spouse/Partner: Andrea I. Williams 47 Dallas P. Dickinson Unit 3, 33 Maggie Ln., Portland, ME 04103-6506; (207) 828-5330 Brian H. Dickson 60 Whitemarl Dr., Rockcliffe, ON K1L 8J6, Canada Spouse/Partner: Kate Irene Dickson John H. DiLiberti 1013 Starfield Circle, Hillsborough, NC 27278-8597; (919) 960-7235; john@cjnc.net Pediatrician and Epidemiologist Spouse/Partner: Cynthia R. DiLiberti David B. Dollenmayer 6 Proctor St., Hopkinton, MA 01748-1157; (508) 435-6351; dbd@wpi.edu Professor of German, Department of Humanities and Arts, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 100 Institute Rd., Worcester, MA 01609; (508) 831-5246 Spouse: Linda A. Pape Dollenmayer Children: Kate, 1/1/76; Sam, 10/13/84 I’ve discovered a major new direction, almost a new career track, in literary translation. It has rejuvenated me and given me a new set of wonderful colleagues in and outside academia. I translate mostly contemporary fiction from Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. Bruce McA. Draudt 163 Clinton Heights Ave., Columbus, OH 43202-1245; (614) 267-1442 Banker, 163 Clinton Heights Ave., Columbus, OH 43202-1245; Spouse: Nancy Ellis Draudt Steven R. Duback 3212 North Summit Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53211-3151; (414) 964-9318; srduback@yahoo.com Partner, Quarles & Brady, 411 E. Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53202; (414) 277-5883 Spouse: Sally Wood Duback Children: David, 1970; Peter, 1973; Andy, 1978 48 William J. Ducas 194 Village Ave., Dedham, MA 02026-4231; (781) 329-3431; wjducas@yahoo.com Spouse: Sarah Ducas William M. Duncan (Bill) 67 Washburn Rd., Canton, CT 06019-2218; (860) 693-2165; wmduncan@alumni.princeton.edu; www.billduncan.us Spouse: Susan Richardson Duncan Stephen S. Dunham 122 W. Lee St., Baltimore, MD 21201-2421; (410) 837-4147; sdunham2@jhu.edu Attorney, 113 Garland Hall, Johns Hopkins University, 3400 N. Charles St., Baltimore, MD 21218-2680; (410-516-8128) Spouse: Victoria Cass Dunham Edward R. Durkee 11412 Midbury Court, Austin, TX 78748-3915 Henry A. Dwyer 4929 N. Keystone Ave., Chicago, IL 60630-2808; (773) 286-8262; unclek@att.net Spouse/Partner: Helen J. Murray Leroy Eakin (Terry) 5060 Millwood Ln. NW, Washington, DC 20016-2620; (202) 364-4241; terrye@eya.com CEO & Chairman of the Board, EYA, LLC, Suite 300, 4800 Hampden Ln., Bethesday, MD 20814; (301) 634-8600 Spouse: Lindsay McKelvie Eakin Children: Emily, Rory, Alison, Allan 49 Carl E. Eastwick 5 Yearling Way, Lutherville, MD 210934590; (410) 583-0115; ceast@alumni.princeton.edu Counsel, Semmes Bowen & Semmes, PC, Suite 1400, 25 S. Charles St., Baltimore, MD 21201; (410) 576-4786 Spouse: Juliette (Julie) Fox Eastwick Children: Matthew C. Eastwick, 3/15/70 (P.U. ’92); Edward (Ted) C. Eastwick, 2/9/74 Grandchildren: William T. Eastwick, 2001; Andrew J. Eastwick, 2003; Katherine Brook Eastwick, 2004; Carl celebrates his 65th birthday with Will. Charlotte, 2010 My memory is not constructed to recall vivid and amusing anecdotes. I am not adverse to telling a joke on myself, but the stand-up comic lines just do not come. What follows are musings on a selection of the activities which have occupied my time since we shared the lawn, under the elms, in June of 1966. Life in Baltimore Julie and I moved to Baltimore for good in 1972. As I write, a wellknown comedy troupe is staging a send-up of the town in the city itself. A bunch of comedians from out of town are the best possible observers of how this place conducts its business and displays its many foibles and pratfalls. Critics say the show portrays all of the idiosyncratic traits of the town and its people, and I guess I will have to see the show before I note them all. It may be the quirkiest place in the United States. It self-consciously values what most of the country considers trivial. Take lacrosse. Or crabs. We seem to revel in the approval of others — a positive piece in The New York Times, for instance, or being listed not at the bottom of some magazine’s list of best places to conduct some activity or other. It is a place with roots. When asked, “Where did you go to school,” you should reply with the name of your elementary school, not your college. Nevertheless, I am glad to have spent over 38 years living in the town. I turns out to have been a wonderful place to raise a family. I hope that Matthew and Ted join in that view. I am comfortable among the people with whom I have an acquaintance, and we have been fortunate in the warm and enduring friendships we have here. The folks are congenial, and one may find here as many, and sometimes more, of the urban amenities as are found in other cities. We are proud of our culture and often wear neighboring Washington’s sometime disapproval of our ways as a badge of honor. 50 Preparation for retirement It has been said that if you want to make God laugh, just tell Him your plans. Being so warned, I have made no plans. Some years ago, I set an arbitrary age of 70 as “the time.” Our financial adviser says that we can make the leap under present circumstances, although I am not altogether sure of that. I have my health, I enjoy my work, there is no pressure on me to stop, and I can use the income. Nevertheless, I feel as though I have been derelict and ill prepared for the inevitable. I love to sail, but I have no boat nor any preparation for extended life at sea. Moreover, Julie really does not like to spend more than a few days on the water, even in proper yachts. We do enjoy travel, mostly the adventure part of it. An ocean cruise, or a tour with scheduled stops at reliable restaurants and hotels has not been our plan. We tend to the “book the flight then figure out what to do” school. We have been lucky, so far. Much of that good fortune is due to our choices Carl and Julie in Paris, September 2010. of destination, mostly France, where Julie slips in like a native. She does all the negotiating, and I come off as the complete idiot who orders turtles rather than tarts from the menu. Then there is staying with the grandchildren, a whole other occupation. With Julie’s retirement from teaching, she is mostly free to follow the little folks around. My work situation, aided by electronics, allows me to take time off occasionally during the summer and the rest of the year. We hope to use that freedom to get more “face time” with the family. A Thought on Health Care My health is excellent; I have nothing to complain about. I avoid tedious discussions of the various maladies that manifest themselves as the geriatric odometer clicks over. But, I take too many pills to my liking. Two tablets are attributed to my ancestors’ genetics, and a dose of Agent Orange is the source of another, so says the V.A. The daily pill intake is causing me mild anxiety. My concern is not about the big thing, namely, death. It is the act of surrender to my internist and my endocrinologist. Grandchildren Matt and Ted have given Julie and me a total of four grandchildren — 51 William (9), Andrew (7), Katherine (6), and Charlotte (7 months). Their arrival confirms that I have done my part to sustain the cycle of life, and provides me with continuous bursts of joy in that Matt and Ted are now practicing fathers and I get to hang out with the grandchildren. Before Will arrived, I did not think of myself as a child hugger. My own sons were adorable as children, and we squeezed them, and tickled them, and nurtured them as parents do. As my more remote descendants arrived, I felt that I was on less certain ground. My anxieties concerning small children were groundless. I have come to realize that dogs and babies like me. I have long known that most Carl Eastwick, right, and Bud D’Avella flank General David domesticated animals with Petraeus *87 at the Alumni Day luncheon in 2010. fur like me. I even came to terms with a few cats over the years. To my delight and relief, I discovered that I genuinely enjoy the company of my grandchildren, and my articulate grandchildren seem to like to have Granddaddy around. The fact that I am still able to sit on the floor with them surely contributes to the congeniality of our time together, so I am praying that I will remain in shape to do that for awhile. Music Music has always moved me to a greater or lesser extent. Early on, I fell in with some folks who adored jazz, and that was cool. My interest waned as time went on. The low point, I suppose, was in the late ’70s, a period of truly forgettable popular music to this critic’s ear. The scene changed for me when Ted began singing in the choir of the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen. It was a big deal, for him and for me. I was thrilled to hear his boys’ choir perform, and I started hanging around, groupie-like. The director was surely desperate for additional adult voices. At the time, the ensemble relied exclusively on boys to sing the soprano parts and on men to carry the remainder, and men who could carry a tune were in short supply. To my astonishment, he asked me to audition, and then improbably invited me to rehearse. During the following 15 years I learned how to sight-read music and to hold on to a part in the midst of superior voices singing something else. The music was glorious, and making music was satisfying beyond words. Sadly, I had to give up the choir. The life of a volunteer member of a musical group is surprisingly demanding. Like sports in our youth, you 52 cannot miss a practice or a performance and remain on the team for long. Now, I enthusiastically vocalize as a member of the congregation with the hope that I give others the courage to sing out. Then came opera. For a modest contribution, I was elected to the board of the Baltimore Opera Company. That position led to a couple of gigs as a nonsinging piece of movable scenery in productions of Norma and Andrea Chenier. It all came to a tragic, some would say operatic, end. The company went bankrupt after I had the luck and foresight to have resigned from the board several years before the curtain closed. I still adore the opera. I maintain that it is not an acquired taste. In order to enjoy a performance one requires only an appreciation of the inevitability of human folly, a sense of humor, and the ability to suspend belief. It also helps to understand that producing operas is an undertaking as carefully calibrated and choreographed as a surgical operation, except in an opera we always know with 100 percent certainty who dies in the end. O. Seaburn Eaton 4701 Mitford Circle, Montgomery, AL 36106-2913; (334) 272-0119 President, The Eaton Group, Inc., 4701 Mitford Circle, Montgomery, AL 36106-2913; (334) 264-3020 Spouse: Kingsley Briggs Eaton Robert S. Edelman Department of History, University of California at San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92037; (858) 534-4096; redelman@ucsd.edu Spouse: Victoria Yablonsky Edelman John A. Edie (Edes) 11422 Cedar Ridge Dr., Potomac, MD 20854-3762; (301) 765-2277; john.edie@us.pwc.com; www.johnedie.com Director, PricewaterhouseCoopers, LLP, Suite 800-W, 1301 K St., Washington, DC 20005-3317; (202) 414-1569 Spouse: Gail McPherson Edie Children: Brian P. Keare, 07/21/68; Bradley S. Keare, 8/29/70; Nathan C. Hubbard, 5/25/75; Samantha S. Shanley, 7/11/77; Joanna C. Edie, 06/17/81 Grandchildren: Evan Keare, Avery Keare, Hailey Hubbard, and Ila Shanley 53 John S. Edwards 3745 Forest Rd. SW, Roanoke, VA 24015-4509; (540) 343-7434; john@edwardsva.com State Senator, 510 Sun Trust Plaza, 10 East Franklin Rd., P.O. Box 1179, Roanoke, VA 24006-1179; (540) 985-8625; www.johnedwardsva.com Spouse: Sara Catherine Edwards Children: John S. Edwards, Jr., 1975 (P.U. ’98); Dabney E. Edwards, 1978; Catherine L. Edwards, 1982 Granchildren: Trey (John Edwards III), 2/11/08; Sara, 10/20/10; Patrick Graney V, 1/12/10 Cathye and I are looking forward to seeing you at our 45th class reunion. Our oldest children, Jack ’98 and Dabney, and their families hope to join us. Jack was barely eight months old at our 10th reunion, and even now they both try to “come back” with us for major ’66 reunions. I am in my fourth four-year term in the Virginia Senate with increasing leadership responsibilities and assignments on five standing committees and numerous boards and commissions. I also practice law in my home town of Roanoke. My law practice consists of a wide range of litigation, civil and criminal, federal and state, trials and appeals. I am teaching a trial advocacy course at the University of Virginia Law School this semester. Promoting higher education has been a priority of mine in the Senate. Virginia Tech in Blacksburg is part of my district. I also chair the board of trustees of the Roanoke Higher Education Center, which has been called a “national model for the new millennium.” Established by legislation I sponsored, it partners with 12 colleges and universities and other institutions in offering access to affordable higher education in a nonresidential setting. In its first 10 years, over 5,800 bachelors and masters degrees and certificates have been awarded, and over 2,800 students now attend each semester. Our son, Jack (P.U. ’98 and U.Va. Law ’03), married his law school From left: Patrick Graney V, Patrick Graney IV, Dabney Edwards Graney; Cathye and John Edwards; Trey (John III), Kelley, Sara and Jack (John Jr.) Edwards ’98. 54 classmate Kelley Riddle (Rice ’00 and U.Va. Law ’03) in June 2004 in Houston, where they live and practice law. Kearney and Karen Shanahan along with Tiny and Betty Lou Morgan were guests. Jack and Kelley have two children, Trey (John III), born February 10, 2008, and Sara, born October 20, 2010. After both practiced for several years with large firms, Jack now practices law with JohnsonTrent and Kelley is with Littler Mendelson. Our daughter Dabney (U.Va. ’01) married Patrick Graney IV (U.Va. ’00 and U.Va. M.B.A. ’07) in 2006. Dabney works for Accenture and Patrick is an executive with McJunkinRedman, a company servicing the oil industry. In 2005, after working on Accenture projects in Africa, Dabney climbed Mount Kilimanjaro (19,340 feet)! Their son, Patrick Graney V, was born January 12, 2010. After living a few years in Charleston, West Virginia, last spring they too moved to Houston, so now all our grandchildren are living near each other in Houston. Our youngest child, Catherine, now 28, continues to live at home with us, handicapped by cerebral palsy since birth. Cathye and I would love to hear from you and have you visit us when you are in the Roanoke area. Frank W. Eighme 8081 Phaeton Dr., Oakland, CA 94605-4214; (510) 569-5902; frank.w.eighme@uscg.mil Resource Coordinator, U.S. Coast Guard, Alameda, CA 94501; (510) 437-3941. Spouse: Kathryn A. Eighme Richard H. Eisenhart (Rick) 76181 Shawnee Circle, Indian Wells, CA 92210-8743; (760) 340-2220; ricke@dc.rr.com Salesman, California Lifestyle Realty, 50-200 Avenida Vista Bonita, La Quinta, CA 92253; (760) 564-1200 Spouse: Tina Rose Eisenhart Children: Ashley, 06/16/74; Amanda, 05/16/77 Moved from Rochester, New York, to Reno, Nevada, in 1993. Started selling residential real estate in Reno in 1997 and then moved to the Palm Springs area in California in the fall of 2000 to continue the real estate business. Tina and I now live in Indian Wells, California, which is a wonderful community among those desert cities near Palm Springs. My real estate business is focused in La Quinta (another of those desert cities) where such places as PGA West and the famous La Quinta Resort are located. Lots of sunshine, wonderful golf courses, and beautiful resort-residential homes. We just love it here and plan to stay. 55 Thomas F. Eismeier 29 Park St., Portland, ME 04101-4514; (207) 774-8030 William D. Elliot 2525 Orchard Dr., Billings, MT 59102; (406) 534-4794 Ord Elliott 485 Old La Honda Rd., Woodside, CA 94062-2618; (650) 529-2111; ord@changecompanion.com Chief Executive Officer, Change Companion, LLC, 485 Old La Honda Rd., Woodside, CA 94062-2618; (650) 529-2110 Spouse: Linda A. Elliott Children: Emily, 1988 Charles C. Emmons (Charlie) 98 Harborview Dr., Yarmouth, ME 04096-6517; (207) 847-9336; mons@maine.rr.com Senior Commercial Loan Officer, The Finance Authority of Maine, 5 Community Dr., P.O. Box 949, Augusta, ME 04332-0949; (207) 623-3263 Spouse: Margaret Howe Emmons Children: Beth, 1/3/70; Chip, 4/25/72; Matthew, 4/18/77 Grandchildren: Ellie and Annie Chalmers L. Ensminger 563 Pensinger Rd., Greencastle, PA 17225-9566; clensminger@comcast.net W. Douglas Ensminger 2772 Burnt Mill Rd., Lexington, KY 40511-7003; douglas@ensminger.us Spouse: Linda Ensminger Michael P. Equi 27 Wood Way, Cohasset, MA 02025-2127; (781) 383-0461; drtucker@email.msn.com 56 Joe Erlichster 1657 46th St., Brooklyn, NY 11204; (212) 358-8619 Attorney Spouse: Suzan Friedman Lawrence J. Eron 686 Old Mokapu Rd., Kailua, HI 96819; lawrence.eron@kp.org Physician-Physical, 3288 Moanalua Rd., Honolulu, HI 96819; (808) 432-7848 Spouse: Donna Cheng Eron Robert L. Evans 44 Putnam St., West Newton, MA 02465; (617) 964-5048 Director, The Human Relations Service, 11 Chapel Place, Wellesley Hills, MA 02181; (781) 235-4950 Roger A. Evans 15 Laurel Ln., Durham, NH 03824-3131; (603) 868-2451; revans@alumni.princeton.edu Urologist, Manchester Urology Associates at Dover, Suite 402, 10 Members Way, Dover, NH 03820-5933; (603-742-1444) Spouse: Sandra (Sandy) L. Evans Children: Kathryn (Kasey), 1976 (P.U. ’98); Andrew (Drew), 1978 (P.U. ’00); Gregory, 1980 From left: Sandy, Greg, Drew, Kasey, and Roger Evans. 57 Floyd R. Everhart 16359 East Berry Pl., Centennial, CO 80015-4052; (303) 627-2629; richard.everhart@comcast.net Physician, Radiology Imaging Associates, Suite 200, 10700 E. Geddes Ave., Englewood, CO 80235; (303) 761-9190 Spouse: Marlene Sue Everhart Irving C. Faber 1727 West Wellington Ave., Chicago, IL 60657-4154; (773) 935-6742 Attorney Spouse/Partner: Paula E. Litt Philip J. Faillace 800 Dixon Way, Los Altos, CA 94022-1106; (650) 941-4245; pjfailla@alumni.princeton.edu President, Preferred Software, Inc., 800 Dixon Way, Los Altos, CA 94022-1106; (650) 941-5579 Spouse: Sheila Faillace H. Bartow Farr (Bart) 1602 Caton Place NW, Washington, DC 20007; (202) 338-9383 Partner, Farr & Taranto, Suite 1030, 1150 18th St. NW, Washington, DC 20036-3850; (202) 775-0184 Spouse: Teekie Wagner Farr Carl B. Feldbaum P.O. Box 7161, Ketchum, ID 83340-7100; cfeldbaum@bio.org 330 Mesquite Lane, P.O. Box 7161, Ketchum, ID 83340-7100 Spouse: Laura Jane Klein Feldbaum Michael B. Feldman Unit 915, 420 N.W. 11th Ave., Portland, OR 97209-2970; (503) 222-6214; mfeldman@gwu.edu Professor, Department of Computer Science, George Washington University, Washington, DC 20052 Spouse: Ruth Tenzer Feldman 58 J. Graham Findlay 2426 Dietz Farm Rd. NW, Albuquerque, NM 87107-3151; (505) 344-1980; john@ustrc.com Marketing Director, Cascom Rio Grande, Inc., 2340 Menaul NE, Suite 400, Albuquerque, NM 87107; (505) 899-1870, Ext. 120 Spouse: Nola Munz Findlay Children: Keith Findlay, 9/27/83; Nicholas Findlay, 8/10/85 Paul E. M. Fine 193 Morrell Ave., Oxford OX4 1NF, United Kingdom Professor of Communicable Disease Epidemiology, School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel St., London WC1, United Kingdom; 44-1719272219 Spouse: Valerie Beral Fine John D. Firestone 2320 Wyoming Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20008-1641; (202) 338-5065; johndfire@aol.com Partner, Secor Group, Suite 303, 1101 30th St. NW, Washington, DC 20007-3708; (202) 337-8065 John L. Fischer 5504 Nakoma Dr., Dallas, TX 75209-5622; (214) 358-0453; jfi144@airmail.net President, Dealer Products, Inc., 1185 108th St., Grand Prairie, TX 75050-2504; (817) 695-1818, ext. 201 Spouse: Susan Hewitt Fischer Barry M. Fisher 56 East Bellevue Pl., Chicago, IL 60611-1111; (312) 649-9606; bfish312@aol.com Spouse: Cheryl (Sherry) Haber Fisher Children: Samantha, 4/72; Theodore, 5/73; Michelle, 4/84 Grandchildren: Benjamin, 9; Macy, 7; Charles, 2; Madox, 1 59 W. Anthony Fitch (Tony) 3930 Georgetown Court NW, Washington, DC 20007-2127; tony.fitch@bingham.com Partner, Bingham McCutchen, LLP, 2020 K St. NW, Washington, DC 20006-1806; (202) 373-6695 Spouse/Partner: Leslie Meek Wileman Children: Benjamin, 2/10/77; Nicholas, 7/10/81; Ashley, 3/16/83 Richard E. Fitzpatrick P.O. Box 1296, Rancho Santa Fe, CA 92067-1296; (858) 756-1227; fitzskin@pacbell.net Dermatologist and Partner, Dermatology Associates of San Diego, Suite B-303, 477 El Camino Real, Encinitas, CA 92024; (858) 452-1981 Spouse: Betsy Knuboff Fitzpatrick Graeme L. Flanders P.O. Box 807, Chilmark, MA 02535-0807; (508) 645-2818 Spouse: Judith Young Flanders Mark L. Fleder 4 Kirkview Circle, Westfield, NJ 07090-3443; (908) 232-3043; mfleder@connellfoley.com Attorney, Connell Foley, LLP, 85 Livingston Ave., Roseland, NJ 07068-3702; (973) 535-0500 Spouse: Carolyn Roles Fleder James A. Folts 2641 N.W. Foothill Dr., Corvallis, OR 97330-3129; (541) 758-6225; jfolts@orst.edu Chairman, Department of Art, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331; (541) 737-5672 Spouse: Jeanene Louden Folts John B. Folts Box 4117, Spring Island, Okatie, SC 29909; jbfolts@aol.com Spouse/Partner: Cynthia Warrick 60 Michael A. Forastiere 12 Fernwood Rd., Westport, CT 06880-3707; (203) 226-4955; michael.forastiere@jpmorgan.com Investment banker, JPMorgan Chase Bank, NA, 383 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10179; (212) 272-6162 Spouse: Madeline Turchin Forastiere Children: Noelle, 5/2/84 Grandchildren: Gabriel, 2/4/03; Dayton, 10/25/09 Burton A. Ford 5 Maidstone Court, Skillman, NJ 08558-2221; (609) 466-1340 Director of Development, Recording for the Blind and Dyslexic — NJ, 36A Hibben Rd., Princeton, NJ 08540; (609) 688-0486 Spouse: Marcia Ford Fredric J. Forster 1221 Starboard Way, Corona Del Mar, CA 92625-1321; (949) 759-8912 Principal, Capital Performance Advisors, 1221 Starboard Way, Corona del Mar, CA 92625-1321; (949) 759-8917 Spouse: Aviva Brunner Forster Howard S. Fredman 337 S. Palm Dr., Beverly Hills, CA 90210; (310) 859-2775; hsflawyer@aol.com Attorney, Fredman/Knupfer/Lieberman, LLP, Suite 2200, 1875 Century Park East, Los Angeles, CA 90067-2523; (310) 226-6796 Spouse: Essia Fredman Children: Jocelyn Bly Karney, 1974; Amber Alexandra Tarshis, 1975; Cameron Penn Fredman, 1977. Grandchildren: Paige Hayden Karney and Morgan Alyssa Karney Howard and Essia Fredman, November 2010. 61 Peter B. Freeman 2024 North Orleans St., Chicago, IL 60614-4715; (773) 529-4238; pbf.esq@sbcglobal.net Attorney and Consultant, Cap Gemini Ernst & Young U.S., LLP, 10th Floor, Sears Tower, 233 S. Wacker Dr., Chicago, IL 60606-6301; (312) 879-2926 Spouse: Donna B. Freeman Daniel P. French (Dan) 1127 North Sunset Dr., Piqua, OH 45356-4445; (937) 778-1626; dpfrench99@aol.com Chairman and President, French Oil Mill Machinery Co., 1035 W. Greene St., P.O. Box 920, Piqua, OH 45356-0920; (937) 773-3420 Spouse: Margaret Loomis French Children: Peter Loomis French, 4/26/76; Katherine Taylor “Tayte” French, 12/1/79 Grandchildren: Laura Wells French and Amelia French Philip C. Friday 307 Blue Ridge Trail, Austin, TX 78746-5408; pcfriday@fridaylawyers.com Attorney, Suite 1150, 700 Lavaca St., Austin, TX 78701-3114; (512-472-9291) Spouse: Pam Friday Donald M. Friedman 1802 Waverly St., Philadelphia, PA 19146-1423; (215) 735-5328; dfried55@aol.com John M. Friedman 80 Rocky Mountain Rd., Roxbury, CT 06783-1623; (860) 210-0060 Attorney Spouse: Judith Z. Friedman Paul E. Friedman Apartment 8-B, 188 E. 78th St., New York, NY 10021-0406; 917-842-9044; friedmanp@cbsnews.com 62 Consultant, CBS News, 524 W. 57th St., New York, NY 10019; (212) 975-4321 Spouse: Gillian R. Friedman Children: Rebecca, 2/19/68; David, 10/4/69; Sarah, 5/10/80; Emily, 3/17/85 Charles A. Fritz (Terry) 2476 Church Ln., Kintnersville, PA 18930-1616; (610) 847-5264; tfritz3@aol.com President, Charles H. Mueller Co., River Rd., Star Route 21, New Hope, PA 18938; (215) 862-2033 Bruce Furie 175 Oakland St., Wellesley, MA 02481; (781) 237-2615; bfurie@bidmc.harvard.edu Professor, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center/CLS 903, Harvard Medical School, 330 Brookline Ave., Boston, MA 02215-5491; (617) 735-4002 Spouse: Barbara Cantor Furie Children: Eric Furie, 10/7/73; Gregg Furie, 9/12/75 It will be 45 years from Houseparties weekend, May 1966, when Barbara (Princeton *65 and my organic chemistry lab instructor in Chemistry 303-304) and I celebrated our marriage with a lake party down at Lake Carnegie. So the Princeton 45th coincides with our 45th wedding anniversary. Barbara and I still work together at Harvard Medical School, where we are both professors of medicine. And, yes, we remain loyal Princetonians in a sea of crimson. We maintain a research operation devoted to the study of thrombosis and blood coagulation, and I continue to see patients with bleeding and thrombotic disorders. So what’s new in the past five years? Our son Eric (P.U. ’95) remains at University of Southern California School of Cinematic Arts. He has gone from being a student to a techie to staff in charge of creative computing to adjunct faculty Barbara and Bruce Furie. teaching a course in motion capture 63 animation every semester. This school has gone from analog to digital in the past 15 years, and Eric has led the charge. As a computer engineer and one invested in creative film making, he has been perfect for this role. He teaches his motion capture course with Robert Zemekis (Eric does 99 percent of the work), and he has just completed design, construction, and implementation of one of the largest performance-capture studios in the country at U.S.C. The other son, Gregg (P.U. ’97), graduated from Harvard Medical School, where he spent an extra year working for the C.D.C. in Guatamala. He completed his medical residency at the University of Pennsylvania last June and has moved to Yale, where he is a Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar participating in health policy research. While so many of our friends are retiring, we continue life in the fast lane. In medical research, you are either in the fast lane or you are out of it. We have developed some novel methods for imaging thrombus formation in living mice. This work has major implications for understanding the primary cause of heart attacks and strokes. This work has kept us busy on the lecture tour, and over the past years we have traveled all over the world. As presidents, Barbara and I organized a congress of the International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis for approximately 8,000 colleagues in Boston in 2009 and I am now secretary-general of this organization. However, health issues have finally grounded me, at least for the time being. Soon, more time to be spent at our house in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, hopefully cruising on our boat, Karass. Stephen J. Gaal 176 Eastern Promenade, Portland, ME 04101-4425; (207) 775-4329; steve@gaal.com Spouse: Wendy Whittemore Gaal David C. Garlow (Dave) 75 Poplar St., Apt 2F, Brooklyn, NY 11201; (718) 237-5128; dgarlow@nyc.rr.com Vice President, Country Risk Management, AIG, 175 Water St., New York, NY 10038; (212) 458-3563 Spouse: Eleanor Garlow Children: Marjorie, 6/26/77; Daniele, 8/27/79 Bruce L. Gates 635 Church St. SE, Salem, OR 97301; (503) 585-8314; bgates@willamette.edu 64 Professor of Management, Willamette University, Salem, OR 97301; (503) 370-6444 Children: Stephanie Lane, 10/94; Chloe Elizabeth, 10/01 John J. Ghingher 901 Hillside View Rd., Parkton, MD 21120-9753; (410) 343-3221; jghingher@saul.com Attorney and Partner, Saul Ewing, LLP, 9th Floor, 500 E. Pratt St., Baltimore, MD 21202; (410) 332-8748 Spouse: Patricia Moore Ghingher Gary W. Gilbert P.O. Box 11, Hollis, NH 03049-0011; (603) 465-2573; treenboxne@aol.com New York Manager, Treen Box & Pallet Corp., 2 Wellman Ave., Nashua, NH 03064; (603) 882-8931 Spouse: Lois M. Gilbert Thomas S. Gilbert Apt 8D, 20 Beekman Pl., New York, NY 10022-8043; (212) 759-0211; tsgcap@gmail.com Chairman and CEO, Syzygy Therapeutics, LLC, 7th Floor, 405 Lexington Ave., New York, NY 10174-0700 Spouse: Shelley Rea Gilbert Michael E. Gillespie 9980 Oak Valley Dr., Clarkston, MI 48348; (248) 922-0932 John W. Glasser 1912 Edinburgh Terrace NE, Atlanta, GA 30307-1114; jglasser@cdc.gov Mathematical Epidemiologist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Rd. NE, Atlanta, GA 30333; (404) 639-8780 Spouse: Jane E. Glasser 65 John Paul Godich 8014 Sargent Ridge, Indianapolis, IN 46256-1873; (317) 849-1641; U.S. Magistrate Judge, U.S. Courts, Judiciary, U.S. Courthouse, Room 355, 46 E. Ohio St., Indianapolis, IN 46204; (317) 229-3630 Spouse: Suzanne Geringer Godich Charles P. Gogolak 824 Rue de Ville, Naples, FL 34108-8531; (239) 598-1983; cpgogo@comcast.net Spouse: Marion Madeira Gogolak Daniel R. Goldenson (Dan) Twin Maples Farm, 68 Keene Narrows Rd., Bremen, ME 04551-3261; (207) 563-3800; dangoldenson@gmail.com Medical Publisher, Goldenson Partners, LP, 68 Keene Narrows Rd., Bremen, ME 04551-3261; (207) 529-4128 Children: Andrew, 1/30/74; Jeffrey, 8/17/76 Grandchildren: Max (5), Zoe (3), Lucy (1) After living in Princeton for 40 years, Suzanne and I decided to move to New England in 2004, following the sale of my medical Internet indexing and publishing business to Thomson Healthcare. Our plan was to divide our time between a home in Harvard Square, Cambridge, near our two sons and their families, and our rural, seaside farm in Bremen, Maine, the latter becoming our legal official residence in 2006. Still not ready to retire, I started another publishing business in Maine — my third — on life skills education in 2008, called Starting Out, Inc., which I expanded rapidly and sold to McGraw-Hill in the fall of 2010. And, once again, the retirement option came up, but I wasn’t ready! Dan and Suzanne Goldenson with Max, Lucy, and Zoe. 66 Unlike my prior business sales, the Starting Out, Inc. deal did not require an employment agreement, so I was again free to start still another business — this one called Compliance Publications, Inc., which is scheduled for launch in the spring of 2011. Focused on a new OSHA certification program called SHARP, the business involves creating state-by-state training manuals to help companies qualify for approval under a program that, among other benefits, spares them from having inspections for two years at a time, and qualifies them for discounts on workers’ comp and liability insurance. The rest of my family has been pursuing their own entrepreneurial interests. Three years ago Suzanne started a successful agricultural business, the Heirloom Tomato Sauce Company, which grows, processes, and packages a high-end organic marinara sauce is sold in gourmet outlets, mostly in Maine. (See http://heirloomtomatosauceco.com.) Our older son, Andy, lives in Newton, Mass., and was married on our Maine farm in 2004. Both he and his wife Jennie are Cornell grads, and now have three wonderful children: Max (5), Zoe (3), and Lucy (1). Andy is an inventor of specialized sensors, including one for underwater surveillance being developed for the Navy and for Lockheed Martin. Jennie is on leave as an elementary school teacher. Jeff Goldenson, P.U. ’99, is also married to a wonderful teacher, Natalie Dean, and they live in Cambridge. After graduating from the MIT Media Lab in 2008, Jeff was ready to launch his own innovative new software tools to help libraries provide better user services. Harvard hired him, and he is busy at work in a special digital media lab pursuing his many ideas with a group of other young researchers. The Goldensons welcome hearing from classmates in Cambridge or Maine. My email is dangoldenson@gmail.com. Richard A. Goldfine 256 Bonad Rd., Chestnut Hill, MA 02467-3642; (617) 469-0860 Robert H. Goldie 9 Osborn Rd., Rye, NY 10580-1320; (914) 967-3760; rgoldie@ssbb.com Partner, Satterlee Stephens Burke & Burke, Suite 1130, 230 Park Ave., New York, NY 10169-0005; (212) 818-9200 Spouse: Julia H. Goldie 67 Michael L. Goldstein 2720 Shadybrook Ln., Salt Lake City, UT 84121-1539; (801) 277-1535; mlgoldsteinwna@aol.com Neurologist, Western Neurological Association, 1151 E. 3900 S., Salt Lake City, UT 84124; (801) 262-3441 Spouse: Barbara Goldstein Glenn P. Goltz 4240 Arguello Way, San Diego, CA 92103-1506; (619) 299-0440; gpg325@cox.net Spouse: Barbara Sue Goltz Children: Joshua, 8/10/72; Sarah, 2/22/74 Barbara and I look forward with great pleasure to our 45th reunion. We thank our class officers and the entire Reunion Committee — especially Tiny and Turk — for their long commitment to our class and thank Jim for continuing to assemble and edit our class reunion book. This year there seems much less to report. The course of our lives, choice of activities, and interests remains steady, positive, and constant. We continue to spend our summers cruising the rivers and waterways of Europe aboard our canal boat L’Amitié. This marks the 15th summer of quiet exploration and pleasant returns to the beautiful towns and quaint ports we love so much. Most of my Princeton roommates and their wives have joined us in these travels and we look forward to more visits from David Kidd, Phil Nicholson, Andy and Sue Zimmerman, Gib and Peggy Hentschke, David and Lynn Williams, and hope that John and Paula Hamilton, Gary and Pam Mount, and Jon Waage will soon have more free time in their summer schedules so that they will join us soon. We have gradually added long-distance bicycling to our summer fun. Thanks to wonderful dedicated cycle paths we have biked most of the major European rivers and have, in addition, completed several of the major Swiss, Dutch, and Italian national routes. Our “secret weapons” are our foldable Brompton bicycles, which allow us to make connections easily and independently using public transportation. We spend our winters mostly in our home of 40 years here in San Diego, and we continue to take at least one long trip each winter to the southern hemisphere and one long trip to leisurely enjoy New York City. This year we will make our first visit to Bhutan and then fly to New Zealand, where we will bike the Otago Rail Trail, hike the Routeburn Track, and motor cruise with friends in the Bay of Islands near Auckland. Our children, Joshua and Sarah, are doing well and progressing nicely and love their lives and their work. Joshua is a physician who, having completed his neurology residency at 68 Brown, has chosen to practice intensive end-of-life care giving with San Francisco Hospice. He lives with his active family in the Bay Area and is an avid biker, runner, and kite surfer when his work schedule allows. Sarah, P.U. ’96, has her own firm, which specializes in consulting internationally and providing global health strategies to governments and large N.G.O.s. She is the world-wide coordinator for the introduction of the human papilloma virus vaccine and does vast amounts of international travel and teaching. While we continue with our community-based volunteer activities, we have not recently taken on any new responsibilities. I continue to help teach a long-established science enrichment program in a local inner-city school to fourth and fifth graders, which has resulted in these classes repeatedly getting the highest science scores in the city. A full term as chairman of the San Diego Country Criminal Grand Jury left me full of admiration for those working on our behalf in the criminal-justice system and totally surprised by the extent of criminal activity around us, of which I had not been earlier aware. Recently, I have given more attention to painting and piano playing, with rewarding results. My efforts are now focused almost entirely on the jazz standards, especially Gershwin, and on impressionist-style California and French plein-aire paintings. My plan to crisscross San Diego County by foot has almost been completed. This summer I completed with friends my fifth (and probably final) Tour du Mont Blanc hike, and Barbara hiked the Inca Trail in Peru. This fall I joined our local genealogy group and have started some very enjoyable work on our family histories. We remain extremely grateful that our lives have been so rich and rewarding. We believe strongly that our good educational opportunities, especially Princeton and Barnard, have played enormous rolls in our success and happiness and we are thrilled with the success of our alma maters to promote diversity and opportunity. We sadly regret that our country has remained so long at war, that there does not seem to be the political means or will to protect our environment, and that our government at so many levels appears so fractured and incapable of doing better. Over time, we remain hopeful, but are less optimistic for the future than we would like to be. We worked strongly for the election of President Obama and have supported efforts for single-payer, comprehensive national health care. (We admire so much the work that classmate T.R. Reid has done in his writing and his programs for PBS to communicate the positive choices other nations have employed to promote improved national health.) We are working hard in San Diego to get more and safer bike lanes and a better public library for our city. We send our good wishes to all of our classmates and wish each of you well in everything you are doing. 69 John C. Goodrich P.O. Box 366, Hardwick, MA 01037; (413) 477-0328; 385barre@comcast.net Self-Employed Consultant Spouse: Linda Young Children: Bob Mason, 7/64; Leah Caldes, 10/72; Jennifer Mannion, 2/68 Grandchildren: Aimee Mason, Mikayla Mannion, Jordan Mannion As I look over the personal essay that I wrote five years ago, I feel blessed that almost nothing has changed, other than a few more gray hairs (hard to find on a bald man . . .) and a little less strength in my arms. I continue to enjoy all of the family, community, professional work, and good health as I did five years ago, and more so! Perhaps the gift of aging is to mellow and appreciate what you have even more? Linda and I continue to spend as much time as we can with her three children and three granddaughters — all of them live within an hour of us. Our rambling 1700s farmhouse in the country provides a great retreat for all of them. And, we have grown to appreciate more and more what a truly special small, rural town we live in. Although we are not far from cities and Linda and John Goodrich. world-class health care, we are 30 minutes from any major highways and the pace of life here is reminiscent of what we were able to enjoy when we first came to Princeton nearly 50 years ago. From the leisurely conversations, the helping hands, and the friends who stop by rather than call, email or tweet … to our weekly farmer’s market on the Common, the oldest community fair in America, and the everyother-Friday “Martini Hour” salon at the local Land Trust headquarters, both Linda and I feel we have many more friends in this community than Granddaughter Jordan helps John and Linda celebrate their anywhere else either of us has ever lived. So, we birthdays, which are just five days apart. 70 spent the past year doing some remodeling to our old farmhouse to prepare it for when we will need more modern and one-floor living. A few years ago we traded the camper van we had been traveling in for over 10 years for a Honda Civic Hybrid and began to treat ourselves to nights in small inns and condominiums, after spending a less-than-enjoyable year waking up in a tent to temperatures below freezing. This year, we drove most of the East Coast — from Cape Breton Island to South Florida. Oh, and did I forget to mention that the Civic gets four times as many miles per gallon as the camper van did? Although I was “retired” a couple of times in my 50s, my consulting work has been full-time so far in my 60s, and I’m pleased to say that the past couple of years have been the most enjoyable and rewarding so far. I work as an independent consultant for small towns in Massachusetts, as well as state and federal agencies, providing collaborative governance facilitation and mediation for often-contentious public policy debates and disputes. Repeating what I wrote five years ago, there is no doubt in my mind that my Princeton engineering and liberal arts education gave me a great grounding to be able to both contribute and continue to learn through this kind of work. Andrew J. Goodwin (Andy) 1201 Cromwell Court, Jones Creek, GA 30022-6273; (770) 442-8998; agoodwin@optimuminvestment.com Chairman, Optimum Investment Advisors, 100 Wacker Dr. S., Suite 2100, Chicago, IL 60606-4006; (312) 782-1515 Spouse: Sandra Galloway Goodwin Mitchell J. Goroski P.O. Box 261, Ray Brook, NY 12977 Spouse: Jane Schneider Goroski Stephen Andre Goscin (Steve) 9225 Chetwood Dr., Colorado Springs, CO 80920-5127; (719) 528-2542; sgoscin@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Beverly Pendergrass Goscin Children: Christopher, 9/23/75; Melissa, 2/27/66 Grandchildren: Kathryn and Tony 71 Jeffrey C. Graf 2621 E. Dekist St., Bloomington, IN 47401; (812) 332-0561; jeffrey.graf@gmail.com Librarian, Indiana University, 10th and Jordan, Bloomington, IN 47405; (812) 855-0100 Anthony P. Grassi (Tony) 363 Belfast Rd., Camden, ME 04843-4509; (207) 236-4666 Spouse: Sally Stonebraker Grassi Children: Prentice, 2/11/72; Laurie, 2/14/75 Grandchildren: Joseph Marvin L. Gray 4820 40th Ave. West, Seattle, WA 98199-1122; (206) 283-7311; montygray@dwt.com Partner, Davis Wright Tremaine, Suite 2600, 1501 Fourth Ave., Seattle, WA 98101; (206) 628-7665 Spouse: Jill Miller Gray Thomas E. Greacen P.O. Box 997, Dulce, NM 87528-0997; tgreacen@hotmail.com Spouse: Sharon Hope Greacen Robert V. Greco 15 Pilgrim Rd., Wellesley, MA 02181-2427; (781) 235-4716 Judge, Framingham District Court, 600 Concord St., Framingham, MA 01701-0390; (508) 875-4525 Spouse: Marjorie Cavicchio Greco Children: David, 12/28/78; Carolyn, 1/28/84 Jeffrey M. Green 3 Avigayil St., Abu-Tur, Jerusalem, Israel; 972-26732828; marjef@gmail.com Freelance Translator/Writer Spouse: Judith Rubinstein Green 72 Richard B. Greenberg Unit 3, 414 Beacon St., Boston, MA 02115-1115; (617) 266-2451; rbgjjb@verizon.net Principal, RBG Associates, 414 Beacon St., Boston, MA 02115; (617) 859-0890 Spouse: Janet Bobit Greenberg Andrew E. Greene Le Manoir, 281 chemin des Agneaux, Saint Martin d’Uriage, 38410 Uriage, France; 33-476597694; andrew.greene@ujf-grenoble.fr Doctor, University of Grenoble, SERCO-Chimie Recherche, Université Joseph Fourier, BP 53X, 38041 Grenoble Cedex, France Children: Kristina Greene, 1973; William Greene, 1976 Douglas A. Greene 51 Darren Dr., Basking Ridge, NJ 07920-4107; (732) 302-5822 Executive Vice President, Clinical Science and Product Development, Merck & Co., Inc., One Merck Dr., P.O. Box 100, Whitehouse Station, NJ 08889-0100; (732) 594-7272 Spouse: Sarah Greene Joseph D. Greulich Apt. 206, 263 Lyndenglen Dr., Ann Arbor, MI 48103-6983; (734) 369-4727; josephgreulich@comcast.net Occupation and Business Address: President & CEO, Anderson Development Co., 1415 E. Michigan St., Adrian, MI 49221-3499; (517) 438-5200 Spouse: Mary Skoglund Greulich Edward Groth (Ned) 75 Clifford Ave., Pelham, NY 10803-1702; (914) 738-5956; nedgroth@cs.com Groth Consulting Services, 75 Cliffird Ave., Pelham, NY 10803-1702; (914) 738-5956 Spouse: Sharon Begley Groth Children: Sarah; Daniel 73 Robert N. Haarlow 31 Sweet Bay Ln., Hilton Head Island, SC 29926-1717; (843) 682-2021; bob.haarlow@thomashart.org Middle School Principal, Thomas Hart Academy, 852 Flinns Rd., Hartsville, SC 29550-7160; (843) 332-4991 Spouse: Sarah McCanless Haarlow John W. Haeger P.O. Box 18450, Stanford, CA 94309-8450; (650) 325-9496; jwhaeger@gmail.com Special Projects Director, Stanford University Libraries, Stanford University, 101 Green Library, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-6004; (650) 723-5553 Spouse/Partner: Julianne A. Frizzell Update since our 40th Reunion: Back to work half-time late in 2006, this time as special projects director for the Stanford University Libraries. The work involves primarily international collaborative projects, e.g. full digitization of the more than 500 manuscripts in the Parker Library at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. Parker is the least known of the three most important early-modern library foundations in England. Its holdings, collected mostly from English monasteries at the time of their dissolution, account for a substantial proportion of all extant manuscripts in AngloSaxon, and include several magnificently illuminated Bibles. More info at http://parkerweb.stanford.edu for the very curious. I have also managed to generate a sequel to my first book about wine: Pacific Pinot Noir: A Comprehensive Guide for Consumers and Connoisseurs (University of California Press, 2008). Could re-retirement and yet more wine be lurking in the near future? Watch this space five years hence for the answer. George S. Haight 1637 Palmer Dr., Laramie, WY 82070-8207; georgeshaightiii@me.com General Surgeon Spouse: Devona Kelley Haight R. Walter Hale 2050 Fransworth Dr., Nashville, TN 37205-2700; (615) 354-8891 Spouse: Faye Hale 74 Isaac D. Hall 170 East Kuiaha Rd., Haiku, HI 96708-5430 Attorney, Law Offices of Isaac Hall, 2087 Wells St., Wailuku, HI 96793; (808) 244-9017 Spouse: Dana Naone Hall William E. Hall 317 Pleasant Ave., Peaks Island, ME 04108; (207) 766-2514; wehall@alumni.princeton.edu Martin’s Point Health Care, 891 Washington Ave., Portland, ME 04103-2737; (207) 253-6290 Spouse: Ann Hennessy Hall Colin W. Hamilton 1304 East Bay Shore Dr., Virginia Beach, VA 23451-3709; (757) 425-0164; colinham@pol.net Orthopedic Surgeon Spouse: Barbara Vancelette Hamilton Children: Scott, 5/31/68; Trevor, 12/31/69 Grandchildren: Justin Spurgeon, Emily Spurgeon, and Tristan Hamilton John D. Hamilton 619 Oak Ave., Davis, CA 95616-3626; (530) 758-6659; jd_hamilton@comcast.net Senior Physician, Kaiser-Permanente Medical Center, 2025 Morse Ave., Sacramento, CA 95825; (916) 480-6935 Spouse: Paula Smith Hamilton Children: Allison Webster; Pamela Webster Grandchildren: Marena Richardson, Isabelle Stromberg, Nalin Richardson, Tess Stromberg We have the joy of healthy grown-up daughters Pamela and Allison and the joy of the families they have created. Ray Richardson is an oceanographer and scientist working in Rhode Island and married to Pamela. Andrew Stromberg is a child and adolescent psychiatrist working in the Boston area and married to Allison. Pam and Ray have two children, Marena and Nalin, involved in theatre, musicals, singing, the French horn, ensemble, and tap dancing; Allison and Andy have two children, Isabelle and Tess, involved in musicals, video, the flute, and hiking to Belmont Center for pizza. We have been very fortunate as a family to be able to get together part of the summer. 75 Paula remains deeply interested in adult psychotherapy, especially for couples, and has expanded her interest in Imago psychotherapy for couples to develop her own unique style. She sees couples and individuals in a private-practice format in Davis, California. She has developed an ongoing interest most recently in what is called “internal family systems,” an unusual approach which has kept her work fresh. She loves spending summers on Nantucket and I always take a big block of vacation in mid-summer to join her there. We’ve hosted various roommates in the past and now are often joined with grandchildren. I am now in my 22nd year with Kaiser Permanente (KP) as a senior physician, responsible for child and adolescent psychiatry (CAP) programs in the North Sacramento area. I’ve been involved in developing groups for the CAP programs for KP throughout the region for adolescents with mood disorders. My research has been focused on treating youth with mood disorders. Our research group, along with Jane Gillham ’86, was the first to do a randomized trial showing that a program designed to prevent depressive symptoms reduced the number of youth with depressive symptoms who developed the full syndrome of major depression. I continue to work and see a full panel of kids and their families with an office in Sacramento while living in Davis. Our staff of child and adolescent psychiatrists has grown from 1.5 when I started (and yes I was the 1.0) to 11 in the Sacramento area! This has been good for plan members, since it’s beefed up programs a lot. As the editor for several years of a series on evidence-based practice in CAP for the child psychitary journal JAACAP, I and other authors made a solid effort to push the practice of our profession toward effectiveness. I received a Master of Science from Oxford University in 2004 for a study examining the five-year outcome of adolescents treated at KP for major depression. My most recent paper came from a project focused on organizational processes at KP and their relationship to efforts to implement evidencebased practice in CAP. It showed the effects of market-share pressures on implementation of evidence-based practices. Thomas C. Hanks 860 Hamilton Ave., Palo Alto, CA 94301-2119; (650) 327-0240 Geophysicist, U.S. Geological Survey, 345 Middlefield Rd., Menlo Park, CA 94025; (650) 329-5634; thanks@usgs.gov Spouse: Margaret Elizabeth Hanks George R. Hansen 2257 Hickory Hill Rd., Chadds Ford, PA 19317-9342; (610) 388-2053; 76 george.hansen@rbcdain.com Vice President, RBC Dain Rauscher Corporation, Suite 305, Little Falls Centre Two, Wilmington, DE 19808; (888) 651-9846 Spouse: Elizabeth (Lisa) Lippincott Hansen Philip E. Hansen 22 Manning Blvd.Albany, NY 12203-1708; (518) 482-9131; hansenpd@earthlink.net Patent Agent, Heslin Rothenberg Farley & Mesiti, PC, 5 Columbia Circle, Albany, NY 12203; (518) 452-5600 Spouse: Dianne Bensinger Hansen Douglas R. Hansmann (Doug) P.O. Box 11684, Bainbridge Island, WA 98110-5684; (206) 842-1564; doug.hansmann@gmail.com Chief Operating Officer, EKOS Corporation, 11911 North Creek Parkway S., Bothell, WA 98011-8809; (425) 415-3111 Spouse/Partner: Nancy Lee Scharf Children: Catmandu; Sasha Richard B. Harding 21 Buttonwood Ln., Darien, CT 06820-2807; (203) 655-4671 President, Humphreys & Harding, Inc., 420 Lexington Ave., New York, NY 10170; (212) 697-0390 John L. Hardwick 2552 Edgewater Dr., Eugene, OR 97401-1541; johnhardwick@mac.com Senior Research Associate, Chemistry Department, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403; (541) 686-4753 Spouse: Claudia Hardwick Kenneth R. Harney 3801 Bradley Ln., Chevy Chase, MD 20815-4254; (301) 652-6626; kenharney@aol.com Syndicated Columnist and President, Harney Corporation, Suite 702, 6900 Wisconsin Ave., Chevy Chase, MD 20815; (301) 657-8220 Spouse: Andrea Leon Harney 77 Carl B. Harper 6060 Billings Rd., Mt. Hood, OR 97041-7614 Richard L. Harriman 3716 Columbine Dr., Modesto, CA 95356-1431; harrimanlaw3@sbcglobal.net Attorney, Suite B, 1130 L St., Modesto, CA 95354-0893; (209) 526-3429 Spouse: Manching L. Harriman William J. Harrison (Bill) P.O. Box 813, 100 Old Rancheria Rd., Nicasio, CA 94946; (415) 662-2625; bharri4055@aol.com Director, Burmese Migrants Education Project The Burma cause has been a nearly full-time proposition for the last five years. My one-man organization, the Burmese Migrants Education Project, supported by many generous friends and classmates, operates schools in Thailand for Burmese migrant workers and provides humanitarian assistance in Burma’s Irrawaddy Delta, where millions lost everything following a devastating cyclone in 2008. Burma is a mess, but I’m not giving up. Time is divided between frantic and hot Southeast Asia and peaceful and cool Nicasio, a beautiful village in the rolling hills of Marin County, just north of San Francisco. Life is good. I feel lucky. Notwithstanding the sad realization that William Faulkner’s legacy is safe, I look forward to tomorrow. Robert A. Harsh 387 Mason Rd., Essex, NY 12936-2813; harshck@westelcom Spouse: Carole Kielsmeier Harsh Johnson M. Hart (John) 7 Pond Brook Circle, Weston, MA 02493-1425; (781) 237-4387; jmhart62@gmail.com Spouse: Linda S. Hart Children: Robert, 1974; Elizabeth, 1977 Grandchildren: Andrew Hart 2009; William Hart, 2009 78 Linda and John Hart with daughter Elizabeth at her wedding in July 2010; at right are son Bob, his wife, Megan, and their twins, William and Andrew. Frederick L. Hartmann 119 W. Third St., Hinsdale, IL 60521-4019; (630) 325-4483 Partner, Schiff Hardin, LLP, 7200 Sears Tower, Chicago, IL 60606; (312) 876-1000 Spouse: Sally F. Hartmann David B. Harwi 2042 Mount Vernon St., Philadelphia, PA 19130-3236; (215) 235-3743; dbh@triagemediation.com President, Triage Mediation Services, Inc., 2042 Mount Vernon St., Philadelphia, PA 19130-3236; (215) 235-7711; www.triagemediation.com Children: Ashley B. Harwi, 11/3/80; Daniel H. Harwi, 12/24/83 Stephen R. Harwood (Steve) 93 Van Ripper Ln., Orinda, CA 94563-1129; (925) 254-8397; sharwood@cypressleasing.com President, Cypress Financial Corp., Suite 420, 188 The Embarcadero, San Francisco, CA 94105-1233; (415) 951-4610 Patricia Monger Harwood Children: Will, 11/24/76; Tim, 9/13/79; Alison, 1/30/83 Peter Hatch 255 Withrow Ave., Toronto, ON M4K 1E3, Canada 79 Gordon D. Heaton (Coach) 1162 Oakview Dr., Wheaton, IL 60187-3074; (630) 668-2215; ballandtrain@aol.com Children: Diana, 2/25/77 Robert W. Heinze 1347 Center St., Redlands, CA 92373-7004; (909) 793-1014; bheinze@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Elizabeth (Betsy) Ratcliffe Heinze Children: Margaret W. Heinze, 1969; Robert R. Heinze, 1972; Currie E. S. Heinze, 1974 Grandchildren: Andrew R. Benecchi, 2001; Elizabeth M. Benecchi, 2002; Spencer W. Benecchi, 2007; Kate W. Heinze, 2007; Kiley R. Heinze, 2010 John H. Heminway 141 Village Crossing Way, Bozeman, MT 59715-3817; (406) 582-0042; bar20@aol.com President. Everwild Media, Suite 615, 1560 Broadway, New York, NY 10036-1537; (800) 726-4264 Spouse: Kathryn H.Wilmerding Heminway A. Faxon Henderson Apt. A-107, 13230 Polo Club Rd., Wellington, FL 33414-7254; (561) 795-1511; afhenderson@earthlink.net Attorney, P.O. Box 3208, Palm Beach, FL 33480; (561) 659-0102 Spouse: Cornelia B. Henderson Nelson H. Hendler 1718 Greenspring Valley Rd., Stevenson, MD 21153; (410) 653-2403; docnelse@aol.com Director, Mensana Clinic, 1718 Greenspring Valley Rd., Stevenson, MD 21153; (410) 653-2403 Children: Lee, 5/17/68; Sam, 3/5/76; Alex, 9/16/77; Lindsay, 12/8/81; Josepha, 10/3/85 80 Nelson Hendler, on safari, with a greater kudu. Guilbert C. Hentschke 2142 Portland St., Los Angeles, CA 90007-1913; (213) 747-0686; ghentsch@usc.edu Dean, Rossier School of Education, University of Southern California, WPH 901F, Los Angeles, CA 90089-4039; (213) 740-3491 Spouse: Margaret Peterson Hentschke Stephen E. Herrmann (Steve) 312 High Ridge Rd., Wilmington, DE 19807-1510; (302) 654-5642; saherr@aol.comsaherr@aol.com President, Richards Layton & Finger, PA, 1 Rodney Square, P.O. Box 551, Wilmington, DE 19899; (302) 651-7730 Spouse: Susan Agoos Herrmann Children: Adam, 12/18/72; Douglas, 2/22/76 C. Dana Hershey 8820 Winged Bourne, Charlotte, NC 28210-5940; (704) 554-0239 Staff Anesthesiologist, Southeast Anesthesiology Consultants, Department of Anesthesiology, 1000 Blythe Blvd., Charlotte, NC 28203; (704) 355-2372 Spouse: Nancy Perry Hershey Michael A. Herships 166 Montauk Highway, P.O. Box 1033, Quoque, NY 11959; (631) 653-4486; mherships@yahoo.com Psychologist, Suite 202, 222 Middle Country Rd., Smithtown, NY 11787-2814; (631) 361-9338 Spouse/Partner: Candyce Brokaw Wayne B. Hewitt 8009 Rose Hill Rd., Lenexa, KS 66215-2630; (913) 492-4091; whewitt8009@gmail.com Instructor, Billsoft, Inc., Suite 200, 10100 W. 87th St., Overland Park, KS 66212-4628; (913) 859-9674 Spouse: Carol Thomas Hewitt 81 Curtis A. Hicks 675 East Rd., Richmond, MA 01254-9668; (413) 698-3296; dhicks@berkshirecc.edu Musician, Norman Rockwell Museum, 9 Glendale Rd., Stockbridge, MA 01262; (413) 298-4100 Spouse: Mary Anne Hicks Mikk Hinnov 5 Holly Court, Bridgewater, NJ 08807-2559; (908) 722-0569; mhinnov@aol.com Senior Vice President and Underwriting Officer, American International Group, Inc., 5 Wood Hollow Rd., Parsippany, NJ 07054-2899; (973) 331-8543) Spouse: Linda C. Hinnov Children: Erik, 3/15/67; Erin, 9/29/70. Grandchildren: Eli David Y. Hinshaw P.O. Box 213, Gracie Station, New York, NY 10028-0016; (212) 722-1100 Leonard F. Hirsh (Len) 52 Bridle Way, Newtown Square, PA 19073; (610) 325-2057; trout911@comcast.net Spouse: Linda Stretch Hirsh Children: Caroline Hirsh Knight, 8/71; Melissa Skinner, 3/74; Leonard F. Hirsh III, 6/77 Grandchildren: Avery Skinner and Marjorie Knigh Robert D. Hochberg 1119 North Woodbine Ave., Narberth, PA 19072-1244; (610) 667-4036; roberthochberg@comcast.net Spouse: Melinda Wineburgh Hochberg John H. Hodge 246 Chester Rd., Devon, PA 19333-1627; (610) 688-3246; hodgejh@aol.com Duffy Real Estate, Inc., 527 East Lancaster Ave., St. Davids, PA 19087; (610) 254-9292 Spouse: Mary Gindhart Hodge 82 John K. Hoerster 1415 42nd Ave. E., Seattle, WA 98112-3807; (206) 323-2475; johnh@saltchuk.com Vice President, General Counsel & Chief Ethics Officer, Saltchuk Resources Inc., 1111 Fairview Ave. N., Seattle, WA 98109-4418; (206) 652-1117) Spouse: Carol Hoerster Children: Katherine, 1979; John Benjamin, 1981 At the end of 2009 I finished a 10-year stint (on top of an earlier 10year stint) as chairman of my favorite law firm, Garvey Schubert Barer (120 lawyers, offices in Seattle, Portland, Washington, D.C., New York, and Beijing, full-service but probably best known for international trade and transportation). My plan for 2010 was to develop a practice representing nonprofit organizations, lead G.S.B.’s (very robust) pro bono program, and start moving toward part-time. Out of the blue, a major client of the firm asked me to consider coming in-house, I got intrigued, G.S.B. was supportive, and so on September 1, 2010, I joined Saltchuk Resources as vice president, general counsel, and chief ethics officer (their title, not mine; hard to fit on a business card). Saltchuk is the parent of a family of maritime, air cargo, fuel distribution, and real estate companies with combined annual revenues pushing $2 billion and about 5,000 employees. Saltchuk has never had an in-house counsel and I’ve never been one, so we’re learning as we go. I have committed to do this full-time through 2014, so my glide path to part-time just got longer. In the meantime, Carol retired from the Seattle public schools in June 2010, going out with a bang by being honored at a Seattle Seahawks game as a Symetra Hero in the Classroom in recognition of her work as a speech pathologist. Carol is just as happy that I’m still working instead of being underfoot at home. Her mother and my parents live in the Seattle area, and Carol is helping everyone in every way. Our daughter, Kate, received a Ph.D. in clinical psychology from U.C. San Diego/San Diego State in May 2010 and has a post-doctorate fellowship at the V.A. Hospital in Seattle. She married Jeff Stelling in 2007, and they have bought a house/put down roots in Seattle. Our son, Ben, received an M.A. in social work from N.Y.U. and is working with children and their families for Catholic Community Services. He married Eryn Karpinski in 2009, and they have bought a house/put down roots in Portland, where Eryn is an associate with my favorite law firm, Garvey Schubert Barer. Kate and Ben have become very close friends as adults, and Jeff and Eryn are wonderful additions to the family. No grandchildren yet, but interest all the way around. In my mind, I haven’t retired from basketball, but I last played competitively in 2008. I play tennis and jog a few times each week, and have 83 plans to start playing golf again. Carol and I have both been very active at St. Mark’s Episcopal Cathedral for many years; most recently Carol was senior warden during an especially challenging two years, and I have been chancellor since 2000. I also am a long-time board member of Athletes for a Better World. (I’m proof you don’t need to be an athlete to serve on the board; biggest thrill was spending some time with John Wooden, in whose honor A.B.W. gives an annual award.) I also serve on the visiting committee for the Evans School of Public Affairs at the University of Washington, which has given me an up-close look at the important role played by public universities and the financial challenges they are facing. I don’t get to see as many ’66 classmates as I would like, but Carol and I do get to spend regular time with Don and Adele Delisi because we have been in a small gourmet club together for many many years. And we spent a great evening with Wid Slick the night President Obama was elected, climaxing just after I drove Wid back to his hotel with my being caught in the middle of the biggest, friendliest, most festive “riot” since our “riot” as undergrads. (What in the heck were we thinking back then?) Finally, still one more shout-out to Dave Swayze for arranging my blind date with Carol at Miami of Ohio a mere 46 years ago. James K. Holman (Jim) 2713 35th St. NW, Washington, DC 20007; (202) 342-0897 Chairman, Wagner Society of Washington, D.C. Spouse: Diana Lang Holman Children: Adams, 11/11/66; Hilary, 12/22/69 Grandchildren: Isabelle, 7/7/00; Charlotte, 4/12/04 About to publish third book on the operas of Wagner. Still playing scratch golf. Jonathan S. Holman (Jon) 1592 Union St., San Francisco, CA 94123-4531; (415) 751-2700; jsh@holmangroup.net President, The Holman Group, Inc., 1592 Union St., San Francisco, CA 94123-4505; (415) 751-2700; jsh@holmangroup.net; www.holmangroup.net Spouse: Carole White Holman Children: Melissa 84 Lawrence S. Horn (Larry) 2 Thompson Court, Morristown, NJ 07960; (973) 540-0197; 1horn@sillscummis.com Partner, Sills Cummis & Gross, PC, Business Crimes & Tax Litigation Department, 1 Riverfront Plaza, Newark, NJ 07102-5418; (973) 286-4818 Spouse: Jacelaine F. Horn Children: Debbie, 7/17/71 (P.U. ’93); David, 8/19/74 Allan Horwich 216 W. Concord Ln. Chicago, IL 60614-5743; (312) 649-5618; ahorwich@schiffhardin.com Partner, Schiff Hardin, LLP, 6600 Sears Tower, 233 S. Wacker Dr., Chicago, IL 60606; (312) 258-5618 Spouse: Carolyn Allen Horwich Children: Benjamin, 1977; Diana, 1980; Eleanor, 1983; Flannery, 1985 Theodore S. Hoster Suite 200, 2306 Orchard Ln., Centennial, CO 80121-2650; (303) 474-4649) tedhoster@comcast.net Chief Financial Officer, Triumph Marketing Group, LLC, Suite 200, 2306 Orchard Ln., Centennial, CO 80121-2650; www.approachit.net Spouse: Linda Trapp Hoster Paul E. Hudak 5231 Herzell Woods Court, Fairfax, VA 22032-3916; (703) 425-7080 Senior Associate and Consultant, Booz-Allen & Hamilton, Inc., 8283 Greensboro Dr., McLean, VA 22102-3812; (703) 902-2601 Spouse: Virginia Willis Hudak Peter G. Huenink Apt. 1108, 2721 First Ave., Seattle, WA 98121-3521; (206) 906-9111; huenink@vassar.edu Spouse: Barbara Anderson Huenink 85 Henry N. Hulter 17 Wellbrock Heights, San Rafael, CA 94903-3787; (415) 472-3742; hulter@cgl.ucsf.edu Professor of Medicine, San Francisco General Hospital, UC Renal Center, Building 100, San Francisco, CA 94110; (650) 866-7275 Spouse: Marilyn Nelson Hulter Hazen G. Hunt 27294 Las Nieves, Mission Viejo, CA 92691-1011 Russell T. Hurlburt 3058 Via Del Corso, Henderson, NV 89052-4137 Professor, Department of Psychology, 4505 S. Maryland Parkway, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV 89154; (702) 739-3305 Spouse: Roberta Jean Hurlburt Barrie L. Hurtubise 122 Pine Tree Rd., Radnor, PA 19087-3735; (610) 688-1812 Financial Consultant, Janney Montgomery Scott, Janney Montgomery Scott, Floor 8, 1801 Market St., Philadelphia, PA 19103-1675; (610) 640-9428 Ernest W. Hutton (Ernie) 172 Pacific St., Brooklyn, NY 11201-6214; (718) 834-8881; ehutton@huttonassociates.com President, Hutton Associates, Inc., Suite 901, 1 Union Square W., New York, NY 10003; (212-206-0460) Spouse/Partner: Anne Frances Moore Children: Elizabeth Hutton, 1973 (P.U. ’95); Elinor Hutton, 1980; Philip Mezzatesta (stepson), 1976; Alex Mezzatesta (stepson), 1982; Marya Mezzatesta (stepdaughter), 1984 Wendell Yin You Ing 3991 Kilauea Rd., Volcano, HI 96785; (808) 985-7434 86 David W. Ingraham 4982 Gunston Court, San Diego, CA 92130; ingraham20@hotmail.com Spouse: Marcia Ann Ingraham Robert H. Jackson 14 Philip Dr., Princeton, NJ 08540-5410; (609) 924-8945; rhjackson66@msn.com Spouse: Karen Bache Jackson Carl B. Jacobs 376 Chapman Rd., P.O. Box 283, Keene, NH 03431-0283; (603) 352-0421; cjacobs@ne.rr.com Spouse: Ruth Faust Jacobs Krist A. Jake 2719 Filbert St., San Francisco, CA 94123; (415) 567-2006; kjake@redcap.com President, Redwood Capital Corporation, P.O. Box 475668, San Francisco, CA 94147; (415) 921-3606; http://redcap.com Spouse: Laurie Galbraith Jake Michael G. Janis Apt. 1, 201 Watchung Ave., Bloomfield, NJ 07003; (201) 745-3976; mjanis6464@yahoo.com President and Chief Executive Officer, HCR Software, Suite 302, 201 W. Passaic St., Rochelle Park, NJ 07662; (201) 490-4611 Spouse: Dale Rene Janis Keith S. Jennings 31 Audubon Pond Rd., Hilton Head Island, SC 29928-4153; (843) 363-2382 Beach Investment Counsel, Suite 220, 300 Barr Harbor Dr., Conshohocken, PA 19428-3902; (610) 940-1111 Spouse: Beverly Bowers Jennings 87 Clinton A. Johnson 3109 Lewiston Ave., Berkeley, CA 94705-2716 1814 Franklin St., Oakland, CA 94612-3427; (415) 273-8886 Kent E. Johnson 630B Luxor Landing Rd., Goreville, IL 62939-3293; (618) 995-1238; kej66@alumni.princeton.edu Urologist Lathrop P. Johnson 1002 Shellbark Rd., Muncie, IN 47304-3178; (765) 747-9610 Professor of German, Ball State University, 2000 University Ave., Muncie, IN 47306; (765) 285-1368 Spouse: Susan Johnson M. Davis Johnson 48 Ludlow Dr., Chappaqua, NY 10514-1212; (914) 241-4918; djohnson@kurzman.com Partner, Kurzman Karelsen & Frank, LLP, 23rd Floor, 230 Park Ave., New York, NY 10169-0061; (212) 867-9500 Spouse: Mary Ann H. Johnson R. Craig Johnson 12 Days Landing, Biddeford, ME 04005-9266; (207) 284-1114 Spouse: Elizabeth Johnson Robert L. Johnson (Rob) Apt. 4, 2504 Mandell St., Houston, TX 77006; (713) 520-6428; rjohnson@alumni.princeton.edu Attorney, Suite 140, 4550 Post Oak Place Dr., Houston, TX 77027-3106; (713) 629-0456). Spouse/Partner: Patricia E. Holland Children: Will Holland-Freed, 11/24/76; Robert L. Johnson IV, 5/12/77; Meredith L. Johnson, 5/4/82; Clark K. Johnson, 4/24/89 W. Marshall Johnson P.O. Box 131, Orient, NY 11957-0131; (631) 323-3534 88 William E. Johnson (Bill) 5351 Spring Meadow Dr., Dallas, TX 75229-4332; (214) 363-8383; taxatty@wejohnsoniii.com President and Director, Johnson Timber and Land Company, Ltd., Suite 650, 3141 Hood St., Dallas, TX 75219; (214) 922-8884 Spouse: Kathleen McNamy Johnson Children: Billy Gilbert Underwood (Trey), 6/4/74; Christopher Charles Underwood, 11/2/75; William E. Johnson IV (Will), 3/2/84 E. Richard Jones Apt. 702, 840 Powell St., San Francisco, CA 94108-2006; (415) 773-2230; rick@joneswine.com Proprietor, Jones Family Vineyards, 3884 Silverado Trail, Calistoga, CA 94515; (707) 942-5215 Children: Stephanie Bailey, 1972; Heather Melvin, 1973 Grandchildren: Madeline Bailey, Lindsey Bailey, Georgia Melvin, and Graham Melvin Landon Y. Jones (Lanny) 20 Hibben Rd., Princeton, NJ 08540-6804; (609) 924-1420; landon.jones@verizon.net Editor and Author. Spouse: Sarah Brown Jones Children: Rebecca, 11/30/71 (P.U. ’93); Landon III, 6/20/75 (P.U. ’97); Cassie, 10/2/79 Grandchildren: Jane Lillian Urciuoli, 2001; Nina Crane Urciuoli, 2004; Luke Deskins Jones, 2006; Adam Edmondson Jones, 2008 Let’s see . . . what was I saying? . . . My car keys were right over there before I got up . . . Oh, wait, was it something about our reunion book? Sarah and I have spent most of the past decade as a happily retired couple living in Princeton, New Jersey, just a couple of blocks from the university. I continue to ply my trade as a part-time author, though I find that my productivity has slowed in recent years. I do an occasional magazine piece (a favorite was on the 50th anniversary of Buddy Lanny and Sarah Jones, Wyoming 2010. 89 Holly’s death) and am currently trying to breathe life into a book idea that vaguely involves the late great St. Louis Browns baseball team. I continue to serve on the graduate advisory board of Princeton’s English department, whose biannual meeting schedule suits me well. I also serve on the board of the Rita Allen Foundation, a Princeton-based philanthropy that is in the process of reinventing itself. Sarah and I celebrated out 40th anniversary last year by taking our three children and their families on a sentimental journey to the A-Bar-A Ranch in Wyoming, where we went for many years while they were growing up (hence the photo of us outfitted as suburban cowboys). We spend most of every summer at our cabin in Montana, outside of Bozeman, where we have enjoyed hosting visiting classmates over the years. We now have four wonderful grandchildren — two in New York City and two in Philadelphia — and see a lot of them, as well as of our younger daughter, Cassie, who is a painter and lives in Brunswick, Maine. The only recent downer is that Sarah and Cassie were separately diagnosed with celiac disease last year, which means that they have said goodbye to cupcakes and pastas and other gluten-laden goodies — not a welcome event, but they have adapted with good cheer (and good substitutes). I often think about something my biographical subject, William Clark, wrote in his 63rd year, to his son George Rogers Hancock Clark: “Do not suffer yourself to be unhappy from misfortunes or disappointments. We all have to meet them and should bear them with firmness, resolved to use every exertion to better our situation, and gain the good will of our fellow Creatures. My children are now my first consideration, and to see them &c will be a consideration in my old age not to be equaled by other events.” We think he got it right. See you at Reunions! Robert D. Jordan (Bob) 2215 Bentivar Farm Court, Charlottesville, VA 22911-2205 Spouse: Maryann McGee Jordan Children: John D. Jordan, 9/29/77; Charles A. Jordan, 2/29/80 Edward C. Joyce Apt. 8, 114 The Fenway, Boston, MA 02115; (617) 266-7084; edwcjoyce@aol.com Consultant, B.L. Makepeace, Inc., 125 Guest St., Brighton, MA 02125; (617) 782-3800 Ed Joyce at Sugarloaf. 90 Wallace P. Judd 18401 Tea Rose Pl., Gaithersburg, MD 20879-4639; (301) 740-3523 Z. D. Kadzamira Vice Chancellor. University of Malawi, Chancellor College, Box 280, Zomba, Malawi; zimanikadzamira@africa-online.net Spouse: Esme Patricia Kadzamira. Children: Thoko, 1970; Masoatengenji, 1972; Tamanda, 1975; Tinyade, 1980. Grandchildren: Lina and Thembi Wilfried E. Kaffenberger (Will) 5826 Bent Twig Rd., McLean, VA 22101-1808; (703) 522-3152; wkaffenberger@verizon.net Managing Director and CEO, Kaffenberger, LLC, 5826 Bent Twig Rd., McLean, VA 22101-1808; (703) 407-8553 Spouse: Carol Jean Kaffenberger Children: Jennifer Collins (P.U. ’95), 1/26/73; Ross Kaffenberger (P.U. ’99), 9/20/77; Sarah Kaffenberger, 4/20/79 Grandchildren: Crosby Collins C. William Kaiser 50 Glen Dr., Doylestown, PA 18901-2928; (215) 345-8881 Spouse: Diane Lasky Kaiser John W. Kalmbach Apt. 1, 746 W. Bittersweet Pl., Chicago, IL 60613-2310; (773) 868-9096; jkcgo@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Sally S. Kalmbach George B. Kaplan Apt. 1100, 3121 N. Sheridan Rd. Chicago, IL 60657; (773) 404-2251 Robert A. Karasek Apt. 1, 27 Cogswell Ave., Cambridge, MA 02140; (617) 491-1428 91 Richard J. Kates (Dick) 8 Alpine Meadow, Avon, CT 06001; (860) 677-6168; rkates7940@yahoo.com Gynecology and Obstetrics, PC, 100 Retreat Ave., Hartford, CT 06106; (860) 246-8568 Spouse: Maxine Paula Kates Children: Robin, 1970; Stephen, 1973 Grandchildren: Matthew Walden, Lauren Walden, Alexis Walden, and Jordan Kates David J. Keetley P.O. Box 270, Round Top, TX 78954; (979) 249-5391 Spouse: Ora Keetley William N. Kelley (Bill) P.O. Box 1101, Woodland, WA 98674-1100 Children: Bill Kelley III, 1969; Emily, 1970 John R. Kelso 8261 S.W. 185 Terrace, Miami, FL 33157-7328; (305) 238-4143; johnrkelso@yahoo.com Attorney, Levey, Filler, Rodriguez, Kelso, et al., Suite 900, 1688 Meridian Ave., Miami Beach, FL 33139-2712; (305) 672-5007 Spouse: Antoinette M. Kelso. Children: Anna-Liege, 08/31/79 J. Wade Kennedy 492 Columbine St., Denver, CO 80206-4247; jwk@kennedypartners.com Principal, Sage Petroleum, 1410 High St., Denver, CO 80218-2609; (303) 800-5930 Spouse: Roberta Rosenthal-Kennedy Paul C. Kepler c/o McKenna Surf, 96 McKenna Alanui Dr., Kihei, Maui, HI 96753; wkepler@aol.com Owner, Seascape Sports Club, 1505 Seascape Blvd., Aptos, CA 95003; (831) 688-1993 Spouse: Winnie Kepler 92 David E. Kern (Dave) 7 Midvale Rd., Baltimore, MD 21210-2113; (410) 532-9417; dkem@jhmi.edu Physician, Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, 4940 Eastern Ave., Baltimore, MD 21224-2780; (410) 550-0509 Spouse: Susan Kathryn Gauvey Children: Megan “GK” Gauvey-Kern, 9/18/81; Kevin Gauvey-Kern, 10/16/84; Elizabeth Gauvey-Kern, 6/6/89 Bert G. Kerstetter 8A Greenholm St., Princeton, NJ 08540-3700; bkerstetter88@gmail.com President, Everfast, Inc., 203 Gale Lane, Kennett Square, PA 19348-1768; (610) 444-9700 David H. Kidd 5195 68th St., San Diego, CA 92115-1749; (619) 462-7810; d.kidd@cox.net Frank W. Kilpatrick 5888 Timber Ridge Trail, Madison, WI 53711-5180; (608) 271-3365; fwkilpat@wisc.edu Physician-Physical, UW Health, Suite 405, 20 S. Park St., Madison, WI 53715; (608) 287-2435 Spouse: Mary Jo Freitag Kilpatrick David M. Kinard Unit D, 40 Ocean Pathway, Ocean Grove, NJ 07756-1690; (908) 433-0921; davidmkinard@aol.com Partner: Ruth Cowan Children: David R. Kinard, 1984; Nicole E. Kinard, 1986; Lauren M. Kinard, 1989 After a four-year Navy obligation, I went to work in New York as a trust officer. Did financial services management for many years, becoming CFO or president of various companies. Bought into an Internet start-up in 1998, determined to make tons of money. Luckily, actually made a couple of pounds. Decided to become an investment adviser/broker. Pretty good with the investment advice but a terrible salesman. Eventually ended up with a salaried investment-advisor position with UBS handling large “difficult” accounts. 93 Along the way got divorced and moved for three years to what had been our summer home in Ocean Grove, New Jersey, and made a lot of friends. After being laid off from UBS in December 2008 I bought a condo near the beach in Ocean Grove. While unemployed I helped start a new history club in New York, The Civil War Forum of Metropolitan New York (www.cwfmny.org) which meets monthly with a cocktail hour, dinner, and a speaker. We have more than 60 members, a website, and a quarterly newsletter; we also sponsor trips to Civil War sites. I was honored to be elected president of the organization. I’m honored, too, by the Princeton Class of ’66 appointing me as treasurer. I have been a volunteer for years in “Dialing for Dollars” in the Annual Giving campaigns. While I have not always succeeded in prying out a contribution, it is great talking with classmates who have always listened with respect and thoughtfulness. Rufus G. King 3403 34th Place NW, Washington, DC 20016-3135; (202) 237-7785; arking3@aol.com Chief Judge, Superior Court of D.C., 500 Indiana Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20001-2131; (202) 879-1600 Children: Alexander, 1987 John P. Kipp 17 Falmouth Rd., Falmouth, ME 04105-1841; (207) 781-5458; jkipp1@maine.rr.com. Spouse: Phyllis P. Hewitt Alexander L. Kirkpatrick 2421 Landings Circle, Bradenton, FL 34209-9675; (941) 761-2455 Commercial Realtor, Michael Saunders and Co., 965 Riverside Dr., Palmetto, FL 34221; (941) 729-3245 Spouse: Elizabeth Tieken Kirkpatrick John S. Kizer 4300 Highway 54 W., Chapel Hill, NC 27516-8284; (919) 942-6337; jskizer@med.unc.edu Professor, School of Medicine, C-B7005, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599; (919) 966-1456 Spouse: Carolyn C. Kizer 94 Robert J. Klahn 410 Irving Dr., Brandywine Hills, Wilmington, DE 19802-1218; (302) 764-3330; bobstones@comcast.net Computer Scientist, Computer Sciences Corporation, Christiana Corporate Center, 400 Commerce Dr., Newark, DE 19713; (302) 391-6566 Spouse: Sharon Klahn Robert Y. Kopf 204 Edgeworth Ln., Sewickley, PA 15143-1053; (412) 741-6725; ryk@smithfieldtrustco.com CEO and Chairman of the Board, Smithfield Trust Co., Suite 650, 1 Riverfront Center, 20 Stanwix St., Pittsburgh, PA 15222-4801; (412) 261-8902 Spouse: Susan Rowland Kopf William C. Koplovitz Apt. 24-C, 145 Central Park West, New York, NY 10023-2004; (212) 874-0466 Private Investor Spouse: Kay Ann Koplovitz Kenneth L. Kreidmann (Ken) 10 Parkview Pl., Mount Kisco, NY 10549-1815; (914) 244-6335; kkloyd@aol.com Partner: Anne Davies John P. Kretzmann 4145 North Greenview Ave., Chicago, IL 60613-1924; (773) 472-4632 Senior Research Associate, Center for Urban Affairs and Policy Research, Northwestern University, 2040 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, IL 60208; (847) 491-3395 Spouse: Ingrid E. Kretzmann 95 Kenneth E. Krosin 5948 Searl Terrace, Bethesda, MD 20816; (301) 229-9016; kkrosin@foley.com Partner, Foley and Lardner, LLP, Suite 500, 3000 K St., Washington, DC 20007; (202) 672-5332 Spouse: Ruth Henn Krosin Stephen G. Krum 2735 Fort Scott Dr., Arlington, VA 22202-2304; (703) 684-7026; stevekrum@earthlink.net Project Director, U.S. Dept. of Energy and Navy, Washington, DC 20585; (202) 603-5590 Spouse: Alice Williams Krum Zdenek J. Kubes Rue de Lausanne 44, Morges 1110, Switzerland; kubes@imd.ch Professor of Strategy, IMD, 23 Chemin De Bellerive, Lausanne 1007, Switzerland; 41-216180263 Spouse: Veronica Kubes Anthony Kulczycki 503 Warren Ave., St. Louis, MO 63130; (314) 721-1946; akulczyc@wustl.edu Associate Professor of Medicine, School of Medicine, Washington University, 660 South Euclid Ave., Box 8122, St. Louis, MO 63110; (314) 454-7360 Spouse: Judith Mary Brokaw Kulczycki Francis U.L. Kwok 78 Woodlawn Ave. W., Toronto, ON M4V 1G7, Canada; (416) 966-9641; fkwok@zeidlerpartnership.com Partner, Zeidler Partnership/Architects, 315 Queen St. W., Toronto, ON M5V 2X2, Canada; (416) 596-8300 Spouse/Partner: Nancy Haston 96 Nancy and Francis Kwok in Turkey, 2010. James R. La Fountain 474 Kaymar Dr., Amherst, NY 14228-3059; (716) 691-4623; jrl@buffalo.edu Professor, Deptartment of Biological Sciences, SUNY-Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14260; (716) 645-2896 Spouse: Kathleen Laura La Fountain Jay J. Lagemann 18 Wequobsque Rd., Chilmark, MA 02535-1716; (508) 645-9601; jay@gowildisland.com Artist, Wild Island Studios, 18 Wequobsque Rd., Chilmark, MA 02535; (508) 560-0151 Spouse: Marianne Neill Lagemann Charles A. Lagreco Architect and Principal, School of Architecture, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089; (213) 740-2092; lagreco@usc.edu John G. Lamb, Jr. 939 Acequia Madre, Santa Fe, NM 87505-2885; lambjoh@earthlink.net Partner: Dave Perry-Miller Albert J. LaMontagne 3029 Waterfront Court, Chattanooga, TN 37419-1548; (423) 822-9327 Spouse: Alva LaMontagne Ronald J. Landeck 1210 Wallen Rd., Moscow, ID 83843-8463; (208) 882-1760; rjlandeck@moscow.com Attorney, Ronald J. Landeck, PC, Suite 9, 693 Styner Ave., P.O. Box 9344, Moscow, ID 83843-8337 Spouse: Debra K. Wyatt 97 Frank L. Langhammer 5051 Millwood Ln. NW, Washington, DC 20016-2619; (202) 966-2552; fll@langhammerandco.com; www.Langhammerandco.com Spouse: Betty B. Langhammer Children: Chris, 1980; Katie, 1976 George H. Largay 21 Terrell Rd., Woodbury, CT 06798-3526; (203) 263-3738; georgelargay@aol.com Dawson-Herman Capital Management., Inc., 354 Pequot Ave., P.O. Box 760, Southport, CT 06490; (203) 254-0091 Spouse: Sheila Kiley Largay Children: Blaire Farrar, 1969; Bryan Largay, 1970; Ery Largay, 1976; Galen Largay, 1980 Grandchildren: Owen Farrar, Megan Farrar, Aiden Largay, and Gillian Largay Francis G. Larkin (Frank) 2282 Stage Rd., Guilford, VT 05301-8734; (802) 254-5832 Spouse: Marty Ramsburg Children: Nate Ramsburg, 1985 Henry J. Larsen 1005 Greenhill Rd., Mill Valley, CA 94941-3498; (415) 381-3284; larsengr@aol.com Consulting Engineer, Larsen Engineering Inc., Suite 206, 200 Gate 5 Rd., Sausalito, CA 94965-1457; (415) 332-7754 Spouse: Lee Victoria Larsen William G. Larsen (Sandy) 1600 Sobre Vista Rd., Sonoma, CA 95476 Merlin Freelancers, Inc., Suite 1640, 201 Spear St., San Francisco, CA 94105; (415) 495-0900 John R. Laughlin 307 Upper College Terrace, Frederick, MD 21701-4818; (301) 662-9410; 98 johnlaughlin@live.com President, Ridgecrest Investments, Inc., Suite 303, 550 Highland St., Frederick, MD 21701-5783; (301) 695-5736 William R. Leahy (Roller) 8813 Kensington Parkway, Chevy Chase, MD 20815-6711; (301) 657-4147; wrleahymd@aol.com Physician, Neurological Medicine, Suite 201, 7500 Hanover Parkway, Greenbelt, MD 20770; (301) 982-7944 Spouse: Christine Miller Leahy Children: Eleanor Leahy, 10/7/79, William M. Leahy, 5/17/82 Since our 40th reunion, there have been some “age appropriate” changes: less work, more leisure, opportunities to work with several younger generations (neuro-cognitive expansion) and appreciation for newer learning opportunities. Chris and I are in the empty nest . . . Ellie, married in 2009, is completing a second graduate program at N.Y.U. after teaching in N.Y. public schools on the Lower East side for four years, living at an “epicenter” of her generation, Brooklyn, and is preparing to work in administrative capacities in urban education, either with public school system or charter school The Leahys: Roller, Chris, Eleanor, Will. system. Our son, Will (P.U. ’04), returned to China after graduation for one year and continued in China policy work and at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in China-related issues before returning to law school in Ann Arbor. He (thank the Lord) will begin employment in May with the Washington office of Aiken Gump. We have been traveling (three Princeton Journey adventures included . . . highly recommended), I have begun yoga during past three years, squash and running have been replaced by the elliptical, volunteering with our local church and other nonprofits here in Maryland. I remain president of Neurological Medicine, now in 31st year, working only during the daytime and focused on integrating our practice into the ever-changing landscape of “health care.” . . . Enough of this. Eight years ago I joined the board of Princeton Project55, now serving as president with the institution today known as Princeton AlumniCorps. The organization has “matured” and is transitioning into a multi-generational Princeton experience . . . true to the mission established in 1989, but now engaging alumni from the 1960s, ’70s, and ’80s placing experienced 99 and talented alumni in the nonprofit world . . . chapters “2 and 3.” It has been very rewarding to work with the talents of classmates Lanny Jones, Jody Kretzmann, Tom Allison, and Charlie Plohn on the expanding horizons of this organization. AlumniCorps, as well as the programs which I established preparing secondary-school students for careers in health care as certified nurse assistants and home-health aides, allows for constant exposure to the younger and hipper generations. It continues to be rewarding also, to “mature” with so many ’66ers here in the Washington area. The three decades in medicine have allowed me to see each day as a new dawning. Each human encounter remains interesting . . . my hope is that I have given as much as I have been so blessed to receive. Edward E. Leamer 2311 Achilles Dr., Los Angeles, CA 90046; 323-436-5220; edward.leamer@anderson.ucla.edu UCLA School of Management, P.O. Box 951481, 110 Westwood Plaza, Suite C 507, Los Angeles, CA 90095; (310) 206-1452 Spouse/Partner: Ama Neel Andrew C. LeCompte Apt. K-201, 802 Elm Croft Blvd., Rockville, MD 20850; (301) 869-7255; andyleco@cs.com Freelance Interpreter Spouse/Partner: Svitlana Novikova Albert G. Lee 106 Greenwood Ave., Rumford, RI 02916-1935; (401) 434-7614; aglee@aol.com Executive Recruiter, Albert G. Lee Associates, 106 Greenwood Ave., East Providence, RI 02916; (401) 434-7614 David B. Lee (Dave) 51 Sagamore Ave., Medford, MA 02155-2156; 781-395-3030; david_b.lee@tufts.edu CEO/Publisher, Remedy Health Media, LLC, Suite 1900, 500 Fifth Ave., New York, NY 10110-1902; (212) 695-8271 Spouse: Hallie Stephenson Lee. Children: Bailey, 3/23/95; Steve, 3/23/95 100 Edward V. Lee 1511 Red Oak Dr., Silver Spring, MD 20910-1550; (301) 589-3408; evl3@aol.com Program Education Manager, American Physical Society, 1 Physics Ellipse, College Park, MD 20740; (301) 209-3245 Spouse: Alice Richey. Children: Kathryn Richey, 1974 Eric Hung Mun Lee Apt. 51, 2222 Q St. NW, Washington, DC 20008-2837 Director, Office of Government Affairs, AT&T Corp., 10th Fl., 1120 20th St. NW, Washington, DC 20036 William Lehr 3003 N.E. 181st St., Seattle, WA 98155-4113; (206) 361-0913; lehr66@earthlink.net Writer Spouse: Ellen Lehr Thomas M. Lemberg 409 Hayfield Ln., Wayland, MA 01778-3308; (508) 358-1184; tlemberg@yahoo.com Spouse/Partner: Marcy Gefter W. Bruce Leslie 54 Park Ave., Brockport, NY 14420-1927; (585) 637-8285; bleslie@frontiernet.net Professor, Department of History, SUNY at Brockport, Brockport, NY 14420-2956, (585) 395-5691 Partner: Tessa V. Harding Children: William Andrew Leslie, 11/25/70; Sarah Acton Leslie, 10/17/72 Grandchildren: Isabella Roeske, Ethan Roeske 45 Years On: As a good ’60s lad, I write this while I’m high — quite literally, as I’m in a long tin can hurtling toward New Zealand at 40,000 feet. We’re off to see Tessa’s younger son — well, really to see two young grandchildren! It can’t be five years already!?! For our 40th I reported on “five busy, lucky, brief years” and I feel so fortunate to report that again for another semi-decade, professionally and personally. It has been more difficult for Tessa. Our 40th reunion effectively was Tessa’s retirement party. Soon 101 102 ISABELLA ROESKE she began facing some challenges — spending several years caring for an ailing stepmother and then adding a bionic hip. But she is bouncing back, happily occupied singing in choral groups, consulting with several health policy groups, and helping to run the shop in the small Suffolk, England, village she retired to just before our 40th. The Atlantic Ocean continues to separate Tessa and me much of the time — but thank goodness for jumbo jets, email, and satellite phone connections. And my fortuitous membership in Wolfson College, Cambridge, gives me a second academic home only 60 miles west of Tessa’s home. Teaching remains a consuming passion. Whatever frustrations the academic shortcomings of state-college students sometimes provoke, most are well intentioned and Bruce Leslie and grandson Ethan. conscientious young people who will contribute very positively to society. The generation gap has become a chasm, but age brings patience and perspective. The thought that students may equate me to their grandparents sobers me, but may contribute to the warm feelings that emerge in most classes. In scholarship, the medium and the message get confused in my specialty of history of higher education. Several years were dominated by being the lead person in a conference and then a book celebrating the 60th anniversary of the State University of New York (a.k.a. SUNY). Over beer I had complained to my campus’s acting president that SUNY had failed to win New Yorkers’ hearts and minds and needed a sense of its history. Suddenly he was catapulted into the SUNY chancellorship and put me in charge of using the 60th anniversary of Gov. Thomas E. Dewey’s creative act to raise our profile on the public’s horizon. Careful what you pray for! A wonderful collateral benefit of my specialty is that it leads me to Princeton in various ways. Most satisfying was contributing to the “Woodrow Wilson as Educator” conference, appropriately sponsored by the Woodrow Wilson School. My paper tried to dissect the role Wilson’s Anglophilia played in his remarkable reforms at Princeton and ultimately in his disastrous conflict with Andrew Fleming West over the Graduate College. “Dreaming Spires in New Jersey: Anglophilia in Wilson’s Prince­ ton” will appear with the other conference papers in a book next winter. Much as I enjoy scholarship and divining the angels sitting on the head of a pin, increasingly my satisfaction stems from what the history profession calls “public history.” That term covers translating our often arcane work for broader audiences and working to preserve historical memory. I’ve particularly done that through my Princetoniana oral history project. Having found, to my shock, that the Princeton University Archives possessed very few oral histories, I initiated a project to record some Tigers roaring reflectively and retrospectively. Among those have been Bob Rawson ’66 and Josh Billings ’33, whom Stas’ Maliszewski had brought to several Plohn Hall Big Three parties. We have almost 30 transcripts available online on the Mudd Library website for anyone who would like to sample these intriguing life stories. The Class of ’66 has played an exceptional role in preserving the mystic chords of memory that bind Princetonians. When I become chair of the Princetoniana Committee, after Reunions, I will assume a position held by our classmate Jamie Spencer for an unprecedented two terms in the 1990s. And as chair I’ll sit on the Alumni Council Executive Committee, which will be chaired by none other than Henry Von Kohorn ’66! This year is the centenary of the birth of my father, Class of 1933, poignantly . . . the march of time. I assembled with my marvelous two siblings to drink his favorite cocktail (dry Manhattan, no cherry) at his grave. Fortunately my wonderful stepmother (Smith ’38) continues to be a model of how good health, a liberal education, and a positive mental attitude can combine into graceful aging. So I’m finally accepting that I’m a grandfather — ­ aren’t we too young for that!?! My daughter, who also teaches history, has provided me with two lovely young additions to the family tree and I’m an honorary grandfather to Tessa’s three lovely young ones. As we glide toward our 50th reunion I can only hope that the good health and general happiness of those around me and for all of us in the Class of 1966 continue for another semi-decade. My only confident prediction is that my ties to Tigertown, to ’66, and to my native New Jersey will continue growing. Charles E. Letocha (Chuck) 444 Rathton Rd., York, PA 17403-2866; (717) 846-0428; cm.letocha@gte.net Ophthalmologist, Ophthalmology Associates of York, 1945 Queenswood Dr., York, PA 17403; (717) 846-6900 Spouse: Maureen Jordan Letocha Children: Richard, 6/11/74; Anne: 8/29/75 Grandchildren: Abby, 8/24/02; Nathan, 5/26/04 Things have not changed much since past major reunions. I continue to practice general ophthalmology in York, Pennsylvania. One of my partners 103 is Ken Brein ’78. Hobbies include ophthalmic history, collecting ophthalmic antiques, and gardening. As yet, I have no plans for retirement. My wife, Maureen, works part time as a labor and delivery nurse. Our son, Richard, is a trust officer at M&T Bank in Baltimore and our daughter, Anne, is an assistant professor of nursing at the University of Iowa. Our granddaughter, Abby, is in third grade and our grandson, Nathan, is in first grade. Both their parents graduated from Duke, so they are all Duke fans. Mark D. Levine 5701 Barrett Ave., El Cerrito, CA 94530-1408; (510) 232-6516 Division Director, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Environmental Technology Energy Division, Room 4000, Building 80, Berkeley, CA 94720; (510) 486-5238 Spouse/Partner: Irma Delores Herrera Harlan J. Levy 26 Brainard Rd., West Hartford, CT 06117-2201; (860) 231-7234; harlan.levy@gmail.com Reporter and Consumer Columnist, Journal Inquirer, P.O. Box 510, Manchester, CT 06045-0510; (860) 646-0500 Spouse: Patricia Weiss Levy Clayton H. Lewis 425 Arapahoe Ave., Boulder, CO 80302-5824; (303) 443-5626; clayton.lewis@colorado.edu Professor, Computer Science Department, Campus Box 430, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309; (303) 492-6657 Spouse/Partner: Alcinda Cundiff Bernard E. Lewkowicz 328 Marcott Rd., Cottekill, NY 12419-9801; (845) 687-9124 Standards and Compliance Analyst, N.Y. State Office of Mental Health, Poughkeepsie, NY 12607; (845) 452-8000 John K. Leydon P.O. Box 146, Aldie, VA 20105-0146; (703) 542-2501; jkleydon@gmail.com Past 30 years of career spent in international aerospace/defense/tele104 communications with Northrop Grumman & General Dynamics . . . last five years as telecom advisor to Ministry of ICT and GD executive officer, Cairo, Egypt . . . retired at the end of 2004 to horse farm in northern Virginia . . . quiet bachelor life . . . books, music, garden, friends, travel . . . no dependents except yellow lab and geraniums . . . sadness and occasional bemusement at our international follies, Orwellian doublespeak and foregone opportunities . . . but otherwise cheerful and doing fine. John Leydon on assignment in Alexandria, Egypt, 2003. Charles J. Libby (Chuck) Unit 2, 15 Adams St., Somerville, MA 02145-2601; 617-623-6217; clibby@att.net Spouse/Partner: Lindsey C. Lawrence Larry A. Lindsey 7974 Mission Vista Dr., San Diego, CA 92120; (619) 583-3671 James C. Linville 46 S. Beach Dr., Rowayton, CT 06853-1737; (203) 838-5776 Consultant Spouse: Vicky Clarke Linville Andrew A. Littauer 177 Library Pl., Princeton, NJ 08540-3072; (609) 497-6307; alitt4383@aol.com Freelance Writer and Poet Spouse: Anya Shetterly Littauer John L. Logan 62 William St., Princeton, NJ 08540-5201; (609) 924-7537; jlogan@princeton.edu Literature Bibliographer, Firestone Library, B-13-P, Princeton University, 1 Washington Rd., Princeton, NJ 08544-2098; (609) 258-3296 Spouse: Jan Heckenkamp Logan 105 Walter G. Lohr 2020 Skyline Rd., Ruxton, MD 21204-6441; (410) 825-0760; wglohr@hhlaw.com Partner, Hogan & Hartson, 111 S. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21202; (410) 659-2764 Spouse/Partner: Elizabeth Grieb Peter S. Longstreth 301 West Gravers Ln., Philadelphia, PA 19118-3745; (215) 248-2547; plongstreth@pidc-pa.org President, Philadelphia Industrial Development Corp., Suite 2600, 1500 Market St., Philadelphia, PA 19102-2100; (215) 496-8181 Spouse: Elizabeth Steel Longstreth Children: Hadley, 12/7/73; Mandy, 6/16/75; Jack, 1/6/78 Grandchildren: Anna, Courtney, Eliza (Hadley’s); Elizabeth, Ian, Katherine (Mandy’s); Grace, Sophie (Jack’s) The highlight of my life is fishing with Jim Merritt. The Longstreth clan, third generation. Richard A. Low P.O. Box 82, 938 Bay Rd., Hamilton, MA 01936; (978) 468-7619; richardlow@aol.com. Spouse: Joan Whitney Low Richard F. Lowenstein 6009 Kingsbury, St. Louis, MO 63112-1303; (314) 721-6009; richlion@prodigy.net Photography Dealer, Richard Lowenstein Gallery, 6009 Kingsbury, St. Louis, MO 63112 106 John H. Lumpkin 490 Alexander Circle, Columbia, SC 29206; (803) 422-3327; john@jhlumpkin.com Consultant. Spouse: Emily S. Lumpkin Children: Robert Glenn Lumpkin, 7/17/71; Frances Lumpkin Webster, 3/9/73; Harriett Rutledge Lumpkin, 11/10/76 Grandchildren: Frances (France) Alcorn Webster, 2004; Emma Campbell Lumpkin, 2008; Julien Frost Parker, 2010; John Davis Lumpkin, 2010; Hope Henry Webster, 2010 Life continues to be good at age 66. A very beautiful and accomplished spouse. All of our children now married. Five grandchildren. Three “rescue” puppy dogs. Professionally, I continue to slow down somewhat (although having five 529 college accounts for our grandchildren keeps both Emily and me motivated!) My particular work (as I type this on January 2, 2011) includes providing advisory work for a national health care REIT, for a state University and for a regional law firm. Community-wise, I’ve continued to chair the Mid­lands Business Leadership Group (45 or so CEOs/ business owners in central South Carolina focused upon issues impacting the region), to serve on the board of New Carolina (formerly the South Carolina Competitiveness Council) comprised of business, governmental, and community leaders charged with influencing and enhancing the economic direction of the state, and to serve on a variety of other institutional The Lumpkins, July 2010. Top row: John and Emily; Deacon Webster, with France (mother Frances absent). Bottom: and community boards. Andy and Harriott Parker, with Julien; Eliza and Glenn Our personal lives since Lumpkin, with Davis and Emma. Canines, from left: Echo, the 40th have included a Claire, Trenholm, Kraemer. number of changes. Our youngest, Harriott, got married in 2008, and she and Andy had Julien in May 2010; they live in Charleston. Our oldest, Glenn, and his spouse, Elisa, had two children, Emma, now age 2 1/2, and Davis, also born last May; the Glenn Lumpkins live in Columbia. Our middle child, Frances, and spouse Deacon Webster had their second child, Henry, in early December 2010; they live in Brooklyn with Henry and France, age 6. We (Emmie and Partner as we are being called by our grandchildren) look forward to “Going Back” this coming May. 107 John E. Lupton 2879 Old River Rd. NE, Siletz, OR 97380-9709; john.e.lupton@noaa.gov Oceanographer, U.S. Department of Commerce, NOAA, Hatfield Marine Science Center, Newport, OR 97365; (541) 867-0198 Mark Lurie 8 Ohlone St., Portola Valley, CA 94028-8052; (650) 851-7041 Ophthalmologist, Kaiser Permanente, 39400 Paseo Padre Parkway, Fremont, CA 94538; (510) 795-3030 Spouse: Judith D. Lurie William A. Lutz P.O. Box 233, 6450 Fleecydale Rd., Carversville, PA 18913-0233 Principal, Deloitte & Touche, Floor 26, 1700 Market St., Philadelphia, PA 19103-3935; (215) 405-7880 Richard A. Lydecker Apt. 706, 101 Westcott, Houston, TX 77007-7031 Henry S. Lynn 2878 Shook Hill Rd., Birmingham, AL 35223-2617; (205) 871-3440 Chairman of the Board, Sterne, Agee & Leach, Inc., Suite 1210, 505 N. 20th St., Birmingham, AL 35203 (205-226-3266) Guy F. Lytle 484 Roarks Cove Rd., Sewanee, TN 37375-3024; (931) 598-9220; glytle@sewanee.edu Dean and Juhan Professor of Divinity, School of Theology, University of the South, 335 Tennessee Ave., Sewanee, TN 37383-0001; (931) 598-1288 Spouse: Maria R. Lytle Lewis P. MacAdams Apt. 908, 215 W. 7th St., Los Angeles, CA 90014-1966; (323) 662-5880; leweye@aol.com Writer. Spouse: JoAnne Klabin MacAdams 108 John B. MacDonald 8 Forge Rd., Monroe, NY 10950-3908; jmacd@alumni.princeton.edu Social Sciences Teacher, O’Neill High School, Route 9W, Highland Falls, NY 10928; (845) 446-4914 Spouse: Ronnee Ellen MacDonald Children: Melinda, 3/2/79; Josh, 3/25/82; Sarah, 4/16/85 James T. MacGregor Apt. 2A, 20 Greene St., New York, NY 10013; (212) 343-0818; jtm@abmac.com President, Abernathy-MacGregor Group, 13th Floor, 501 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10022; (212) 371-5999 Spouse/Partner: Claire Montgomery Frank G. MacMurray 8312 N. Edison, Portland, OR 97203; (503) 735-3864; fgmacmjr@comcast.net Attorney. Spouse: Eloise Damrosch MacMurray John D. Magenheimer 13 Hermit Ln., Westport, CT 06880-1114; (203) 227-3634; jmagen@us.ibm.com Program Manager, International Business Machines Corp., Route 100, Somers, NY 10604; (914) 766-2733 Spouse: Christine O’Sullivan Magenheimer Peter S. Mager 28 Wimbledon Circle, Waltham, MA 02451; (781) 890-2084; p.mager@computer.org President, PSM Associates, 28 Wimbledon Circle, Waltham, MA 02451; (781) 890-2084 Daniel H. Magill (Ham) 270 Red Oak Trail, Athens, GA 30606-1363; (706) 546-0882 Doctor, Athens Cardiology Group PC, P.O. Box 5860, Athens, GA 30606; (706) 546-8510 Spouse: Brenda Ballard Magill 109 Paul Mahlstedt 2169 N.W. 140th Ave., Pembroke Pines, FL 33028-2850; (954) 399-8660; pmahlstedt@gmail.com Science Applications International Corp., Suite 250, 9800 N.W. 41st Street, Doral, FL 33178-2983; (305) 677-7612 Spouse: Cristina (Cris) Perez Mahlstedt Children: Douglas Mahlstedt, 1972; Andrew Mahlstedt, 1976; Daniela Perez, 1994 Walter B. Mahony Apt. 18-C, 450 West End Ave., New York, NY 10024-5351; (212) 799-2776; peter.mahony@stantec.com Associate, Stantec Consulting, 50 West 23rd St., New York, NY 10010; (212) 366-5600 Victor H. Mailey 163 River Rd., New Bedford, MA 02745-6229 Richard Edward Malina 30 Suzanne Ln., Pleasantville, NY 10570-1512; (914) 769-1603; richard.malina@mail.cuny.edu Assistant General Counsel, City University of New York, 535 E. 80th St., New York, NY 10021; (212) 794-5430 Spouse: Wendy Malina Stanislaw Maliszewski (Stas’) 14301 Green Rd., Glyndon, MD 21136-4830; (410) 429-4621; stas@maliszewski.org Managing Director, GSC Partners, Suite 110, 300 Campus Dr., Florham Park, NJ 07932-1039; (973) 593-5411 Spouse: Julia Armstrong Jitkoff Children: Aleksandra Tatur Maliszewski, 1973; Stanislawa, 1976; Roman, 1977; Rictavia, 1983 Grandchildren: Janina Maliszewski 110 Joseph McElroy Mann 13992 Stoney Gate Place, San Diego, CA 92128-3657; (858) 385-1804; jmannmd@sbcglobal.net Hand Surgeon, 163 N. Date St., Escondido, CA 92025-3364; (760) 747-7272 Spouse: Marcia Mann John F. Marino 79 E. 5th St., Corning, NY 14830-3140; (607) 936-0252 Spouse: Nina M. Marino H. David Marshak (Dave) 881 Mohican Court, Walnut Creek, CA 94598-4431; (925) 932-6436; marshak.david@att.net Chief Executive Officer, Marshak Associates West, 881 Mohican Court, Walnut Creek, CA 94598; (925) 932-6436; www.marshakassociateswest.com Spouse: Suzanna Huff Marshak Children: Elizabeth, 7/15/74; Joseph, 8/29/76 Previous work: 1980-2003: Bank of America, San Francisco, vice president and technical manager, chairman of Security Committee for the Interlink debit card switch, which is now owned by VISA. This committee consisted of senior managers from each of the other four Interlink banks and myself, representing Bank of America. I evaluated encryption techniques and established PIN encryption requirements for POS (point of sales) terminals. This involved working with many of the leading encryption experts in the U.S. For this position, I was on loan to In- Dave Marshak, center, with classmate T.R. Reid in San terlink and reported directly Francisco, September 2009, during T.R.’s promotional tour for his book on health care. At left is Laura Petrillo ’04. to its CEO. I was also chief developer for the Real Time Rates Trading system, which lets corporate treasury departments do foreign exchange payments 111 at their site. This system used an interconnected network of robot and server computers. Bank of America had 2,700 corporate customers all over the world who used this service and did about a billion dollars a day in FX deals through this system. I was in charge of all aspects of this from its creation in 1987. This included working with senior business managers, developing prototypes, and managing developers and diverse units all over the world. 2000: NB3 Inc., San Francisco, Chief Technology Officer. NB3 was a dot.com startup in which I had a substantial equity position. I worked there concurrently with my job at Bank of America. Marshak Associates: 1986-1987:CEO. Managed project to implement PIN security for Lucky Stores (Now Albertson’s) ATM card and credit-card POS systems using the Interlink switch. Supported Lucky Stores electronic transaction switching systems. Currently, I am on the executive committee of the East Bay Jewish Community Relations Council (JCRC) and chair of its Interfaith Committee. I am a member of the Interfaith Speakers Bureau of the Islamic Networking Group. I agree with the ninth-century Muslim philosopher Al Kindi that truth is paramount and can be found in teachings from many traditions all over the world. I am currently studying Islamic philosophy. Charles F. Martin 3239 Riverview Dr., Triangle, VA 22172-1421; (703) 221-1833 Physics Teacher, Woodbridge Senior High School, 3001 Old Bridge Rd., Woodbridge, VA 22192; (703) 497-8000 Spouse: Linda Thompson Martin Gerald C. Martin 520 Kenilworth Ave., Duluth, MN 55803-2112; (218) 724-0015 District Court Judge, State of Minnesota, St. Louis County Court House, Duluth, MN 55802 Spouse: Beverly Kay Martin Middleton A. Martin (Sandy) 1030 Pine Hill Rd., McLean, VA 22101-2233; (703) 356-5577; mamartin66@cox.net Spouse: Anne Newhard Martin Children: Ansley, 2/68; Annie, 12/71; Ginger, 5/73; Margot, 9/77 112 Grandchildren: Wiley, 2/01; Elizabeth, 8/02; Harry; 9/02; Chapin, 2/06; Katherine, 6/06; Caroline and Rebecca, 9/06; Helen and Scarlett, 9/07; Angus, 10/10 William V. Martin 584 N. 4395 Rd., Pryor, OK 74361-2105; cwmartin4682@aol.com Spouse: Carole Wilson Martin Theodore S. Martner 10539 Troon Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90064-4437 John S. Mason 4967 Karen Ray Dr., Antioch, TN 37013-3518; (615) 781-0139; jsmason@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Sandra Campbell Mason Owen R. Mathieu 44 Longview Dr., Marblehead, MA 01945-1163; (781) 639-1998; nspedi@earthlink.net Physician, Suite 202, 100 Highland Ave., Salem, MA 01970; (978) 740-0634 Spouse: Eileen Haley Mathieu E. Terry Mattke Apt. 501, 2950 Baltic Ave., Virginia Beach, VA 23451-3047; (757) 961-0061. Spouse: Patricia A. Mattke Geoffrey M. Mayo 581 Flanders Rd., Woodbury, CT 06798; (203) 266-4416; geoffreymayo@gmail.com AUDIOis, 581 Flanders Rd., Woodbury, CT 06798; (646) 319-6894; http://audiois.com Spouse: Lynn Stobaeus Mayo Children: Will, Eliza, Lucy Grandchildren: Cooper, Kiefer, Theo I’ve been working with my son, Will, in developing a website called AUDIOis. We’re about to launch the site, designed to broadcast live and 113 move sound between people, between devices, between applications. All done in the browser. I’m helping get the website up and running, kind of a Jack of all trades. And having a ball working with Will. My older daughter, Eliza, moved to Lawrence, Kansas, from San Francisco a couple of years ago. Her husband, John, is a lawyer there. She’s a graphic designer and fine artist, specializing in monotype printing. They have two boys — Cooper, 6, and Kiefer, 4. My younger daughter, Lucy, lives in Manhattan with her husband, Spencer. She works for Demos, a nonpartisan public-policy research and advocacy organization, while Spencer works at Teach for America. They have one son — Theo, 2. Lynn and I are mostly in Connecticut for the time being, turning the loft over to Lucy and her family for a while. Lynn teaches tai chi and chi gung and thoroughly enjoys it. James H. Mays P.O. Box 1428, Camden, ME 04843-1428; (207-\) 518-8433; jimmays@gmail.com President, Micronautics, Inc., P.O. Box 1428, Camden, ME 04843-1428; (207) 236-0610 Spouse: Nancy Lubin Mays James McAfee (Jim) 1503 Willingham Rd., Richmond, VA 23238-4727; jbmcafee2@gmail.com; www.megafees.blogspot.com Spouse: Deirdra H McAfee Children: Charlotte, 1977; Andrew, 1980; John, 1984 Grandchildren: James Garrett I retired in 2009, after 33 mostly stimulating but occasionally hair-raising years with the Federal Reserve — as associate secretary of the Federal Reserve Board in Washington during Paul Jim McAfee and grandson James. Volcker ’49’s years as chairman, and after that as general counsel of the Richmond Reserve Bank. No matter what you’ve heard or suspected, the financial meltdown was not entirely my fault. Our kids have grown into adults I cherish and admire, and who have flown the coop: Charlotte and her husband are lawyers; John teaches theater; and Andrew’s just recently 114 back from the Peace Corps. Sixty-six became the greatest year again in 2009 when my grandson, James, was born on my 66th birthday. This year Deirdra and I will celebrate our 40th wedding anniversary — the best is yet to be — and for once she did not ghostwrite my reunion-book entry. Donald L. McCabe Apt. 2412, 28 W. Third St., South Orange, NJ 07079-1791; (973) 762-1260; dmccabe@andromeda.rutgers.edu Professor, Management and Global Business, Rutgers Business School, 1 Washington Park, Newark, NJ 07102-3122; (973) 353-1409 Spouse: Dorothy (DJ) Murtaugh McCabe Children: Melissa Ann Lagemann, 1967; Thomas Allan McCabe, 1969; Elizabeth Ann Cocco, 1969 Grandchildren: Thomas Allan McCabe, 1998; Margaert Anna McCabe, 2002; Jessica Kelly Lagemann, 2000; Emily Ann Lagemann, 2010; Michael Anthony Cocco, 2002; Molly Elizabeth Cocco, 2005 The two biggest changes in my life since our 40th are: (1) the addition in 2010 of my sixth, and likely last, grandchild — Emily Ann Lagemann — and, (2) the addition of an unnamed number of pounds. The former is a definite keeper, the latter I’d love to shed. By the time of Reunions, my grandchildren will range in age from 1 to 13. Each of my three children has contributed two to the fold — four girls and two boys. Four of my grandchildren live within a very short distance and for two years or so the other two are residing in Ireland. DJ and I are still happily married and will celebrate our 45th anniversary a few months after Reunions. A few more aches and pains, but life is good! I continue to teach at Rutgers Business School and DJ is still working at UMDNJ’s Tuberculosis Center as a nurse educator. It seems highly unlikely that TB will be cured before DJ is ready to retire. Her goal is maybe another two years, and I hope to work until I turn 70, in 2014. Benjamin W. McCleary P.O. Box 5730, Wakefield, RI 02880; 401-783-6223; bwmccleary@seaviewcapital.com SeaView Capital, LLC, Suite 703, 40 Westminster St., Providence, RI 02903-2329; (401) 490-4845 Spouse: Jean Muchmore McCleary Children: Benjamin Pierce McCleary, 5/6/70; Katherine M. Walton, 9/1/72 115 Stephen E. McClymont 250 Edsall Rd., Elbert, TX 76372-5402; (940) 862-5567 Farmer/Rancher Spouse: Judith Edsall McClymont Jeffrey N. McCollum 1302 West Chilton Ave., Gilbert, AZ 85233-4628; (480) 634-1990; jmccollum66@cox.net Spouse: Jennifer McCollum Richard S. McConnell (Rich) P.O. Box 1211, Black Mountain, NC 28711-1211; (828) 669-1402; richmcconnell66@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Joy Elayne McConnell Children: Jeremy David, 1970; Samuel Warren, 1979 Grandchildren: Trinity Rain As an Army brat, I grew up all over the East Coast and in Japan and Germany. My career Army officer father retired and I attended a mediocre public high school in St. Louis. It was easy to do well because no one cared to try. NROTC scholarship — applied to last available slot at P.U. Totally unprepared for academic rigors. Impressed with the faculty, campus, and most of the classmates I got to know. Still value highly friendships with Allison, Weimer, Kulczyski, and Lee and their brides. Replaced Al Rich McConnell at home in Black Mountain, N.C. Rockhold in Triangle Club in the spring and toured with Von Daler the next year. Made Ding. English department classes the high point of a fascinating education. Scholarshiprequired calculus, and science classes still a mystery to me. Campus Club was great — the JV Tube room, billiards with Kadzamira, hiring the Cowsills, purchasing all the liquor for club parties at the age of 20, playing shoot the moon on the patio with Tabler, spring of senior year playing volleyball and discovering Route One roadhouses with great jukeboxes. For reasons still unclear to me, I elected to become a Marine officer 116 rather than an ensign. I showed up at an appointment on campus to have my name placed on some insurance policy benefiting P.U., only to notice all the other NROTC students who had selected the Marine Corps had somehow also had their names drawn to be insured. Got through Marine training and went to Pensacola for flight school as a second lieutenant. Got engaged to Joy, who was working on her M.A. at U. Chicago. Could — Not — Fly. Married her and was transferred to California, from which on three day’s notice I was instantly transformed from a newly trained tank officer to an infantry officer and shipped to Vietnam at the end of the 1968 Tet Offensive. Every Marine, after all, is basically a grunt. Vietnam was tougher than calculus. WIA 5/18/68 and hospitalized in Japan. Recuperated on Okinawa, where Joy visited me for 45 days and became the unlucky recipient of all I had experienced, seen, and heard in my truncated tour. But for her I would likely be less stable than I would like to think I am. We had two delightful years together in Japan, where Jeremy was born. I was asked to run the brig (Marine jail) on base, which promptly suffered a 4th of July prisoners’ riot. Small fires were set but no one was hurt and I declined the strong suggestion of some senior officers that I restore order with loaded weapons. I was fired from that position and we were social outcasts for our last six months in Japan while I testified as an eyewitness in general courts martial. After calculus, not flying, and Vietnam, the hardest thing I attempted was law school. Virtually no one smiled at the insanely competitive factory I attended. Got involved in student government and Vietnam Veterans Against the War, and worked as a prosecutor before and after graduation in 1974. Our second son, Sam, was born in 1979. We lived happily in Webster Groves, Missouri, while I moved from small, to medium, to large law firms as a trial lawyer in St. Louis. Worked and enjoyed trying cases for nine years throughout the U.S. for Continental Baking Company (Twinkies and Wonder Bread). Took a similar position at the corporate headquarters of FedEx Express in Memphis for nine more years, tried a ton of discrimination cases and mentored young attorneys. Retired November 30, 2009. Joy and I now live outside of Black Mountain, in the Blue Ridge Mountains east of Asheville, North Carolina, and cannot believe how lucky we have been to be able to come to this truly beautiful part of the country. We are up a dirt-and-gravel road a mile and a half off the pavement, way up in the treetops — over which we see magnificent sunrises and sunsets. Like Tiny, I find retirement has been greatly underrated and underreported. If word got out no one would work. Overall, life to date has been an amazing journey. Princeton has been a very special part of it. As has Joy. 117 Champe C. McCulloch 217 Ribera Ln., Millington, MD 21651-1482; (410) 928-9940; champe.mcculloch@gmail.com President, Maryland AGC, 1301 York Rd., Suite 202, Lutherville Timonium, MD 21093-6005; (410) 321-7870) Spouse: Mary Jo McCulloch Children: David, 11/28/64; Kelly, 10/25/65; Andrew, 4/9/70; Meg, 11/21/72 John M. McDonough 1407 North Dearborn St., Chicago, IL 60610; (312) 440-1962; jmcdonough@sidley.com Partner, Sidley Austin Brown & Wood, LLP, 1 S. Dearborn St., Chicago, IL 60603-2302; (312) 853-7483 Spouse/Partner: Susan J. Moran Jeffrey H. McMahon 25 Mount Pleasant St., Cambridge, MA 02140-2613; (617) 354-4209 Independent Scholar Anthony J. McEwan 3931 Latigo Canyon Rd., Malibu, CA 90265-2802; (310) 457-9830; tony_mcewan@msn.com Richard C. McGinity Space 140, 530 Beaufort St., Laramie, WY 82072-1750; mcg@sscg.com President, College of Business, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071-2000; (307) 766-3444) Robert B. McGinley (Ginley) 4292 Marquette Dr., Mobile, AL 36608-1838; (251) 342-7826; rbmut@aol.com Orthopedic Surgeon, Orthopedic Group, Suite 100, 1720 Spring Hill Ave., Mobile, AL 36604 Spouse: Kelly Alexander McGinley Children: Rob, 1/1/72; Kathryn, 10/22/75; Buss, 4/2/84 118 R. David McLaughlin 19745 Peach Ridge Rd., Goshen, IN 46526-9103; rdmcla66@yahoo.com Director of Marketing, Habitat for Humanity, 2526 Peddlers Village Rd., Goshen, IN 46526-1001; (574) 533-6109 Spouse: Linda L. McLaughlin Thomas E. McLaughlin Apt. F1, 96 Main St., Foxboro, MA 02035-1834; addynaptime@aol.com Richard McMillan P.O. Box 229, Gibson Island, MD 21056-0229; (410) 255-4731); rmcmillan@crowell.com Attorney, Crowell and Moring, LLP, 1001 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20004; (202) 624-2580 Spouse: Barbara Ann McMillan Howard McMorris Apt. 12A, 365 West End Ave., New York, NY 10024-6566; howardmcm@aol.com Chief Executive Officer, 1120 Partners, Inc., Suite 1006, 575 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10022-8511; (212) 605-0322 Spouse: Clare Tweedy McMorris G. Wells McMurray 7 Calle Varada, Santa Fe, NM 87507-7615; (505) 438-6681 College Counselor Director, Greenhill School, 4141 Spring Valley Rd., Addison, TX 75001; (972) 628-5455 Spouse: Susan McMurray William G. McPheron P.O. Box 845, Abiquiu, NM 87510-0845; mcpheron@stanford.edu Spouse: Elaine McPheron After a 35-year academic career, I recently returned to my native New Mexico. The last two decades of my professional life were spent at Stanford, where I was curator for American and British literature and also served the university in various administrative positions. I am now emeritus. Margaret and I live along the Chama River, just north of Santa Fe. 119 Theodore G. Meeker 47-441 Huinene St., Kaneohe, HI 96744-4640; (808) 239-5876; tgmeek@gmail.com Spouse: Gretchen Marie Meeker Children: Harvey H. Meeker, 1974 James G. Mengert 1155 University Dr. NE, Atlanta, GA 30306-3316; (404) 874-4001; jgmengert@mindspring.com Independent Communications Consultant, 1155 University Dr., NE, Atlanta, GA 30306; (404) 874-4001 John I. Merritt (Jim) 51 N. Main St., Pennington, NJ 08534; (609) 737-0496; merritt66@verizon.net. Editor and Writer Spouse: Nancy Russell Merritt Children: Jennifer, 9/19/69; Melissa, 10/19/72 Grandchildren: Fiona N. Swope, 4/19/00; Malcolm R. Swope, 1/31/02; Eirene Zoë Merritt-Valaris, 6/15/10 Sooner or later we all get to a point where we cease being productive members of society in the conventional sense of doing stuff society is willing to pay us to do. There are other compensations, of course. At the end of 2006 I finished my seventh and final year as editor of We Proceeded On, the quarterly journal of the Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation. My tenure coincided with the three-year Lewis and Clark bicentennial and was maybe the best job I’ve ever had. I immersed myself in a subject I cared deeply about and did whatever I pleased — for all practical purposes I reported to no one, and no one reported to me. I flatter myself by thinking that when I left the job I may have known as much about Lewis and Clark as anyone on earth. I moved on with the idea of writing more books, but the month or so Nancy and Jim Merritt, right, with Ian and Jennifer Swope, Fiona and Malcolm, Martha’s Vineyard, June 2010. 120 I’d planned to take off before bearing down on some big project stretched into more months, and then into years. Now, more or less guilt free, I enjoy getting up in the morning without any set plans beyond the ritual of breakfast, coffee, and The New York Times. I write occasional articles on obscure topics for obscure, if respected, scholarly publications. (See, for example, my recent pieces on the World War I letters of Edward A. MacMillan ’14, for The Princeton University Library Chronicle, and on John H. Slack, a forgotten 19th-century fish culturist, and his futile efforts to establish a salmon run in the Delaware River, for The American Fly Fisher.) I tend to my vegetable garden, dabble in genealogy, work fitfully trying to improve my French, a subject I ingloriously flunked twice at Princeton, and fish — usually alone, occasionally with Peter Longstreth, who refuses to retire so we can fish together more. Nancy and I remain happily ensconced in our home in Pennington, nine miles west of Princeton, where we’ve lived since 1975. Increasingly our lives revolve around our children and their families. Our older daughter, Jennifer Swope, and her husband, Ian, live in Winchester, Massachusetts, outside Boston. Jenn works parttime as a curator at the Museum of Fine Arts and does some adjunct teaching in her field of American material culture. Ian works for a design firm specializing in museum exhibits (credits include the Marine Corps museum at Nancy and Eirene, August 2010. Quantico, Virginia, and the Infantry museum at Ft. Benning, Georgia). Their kids, Fiona and Malcolm, are 11- and 9-year-old incarnations, respectively, of Taylor Swift and Tom Brady. Malcolm began playing Pop Warner football last fall, a transformative experience, and Fiona is a rising star in Winchester’s annual Nutcracker ballet. In 2007 our younger daughter, Melissa, married Markos Valaris, of Athens, Greece. They met as graduate students at the University of Pittsburgh. In the fall of 2009 they moved to Sydney, Australia, to take up faculty positions in the philosophy department at the University of New South Wales. (She’s a Kant scholar, he’s an epistemologist.) We visited them twice in 2010 — in February and again in August, two months after Melissa gave birth to our third grandchild, a dark-eyed beauty with a fetchingly exotic name, Eirene Zoë Merritt-Valaris. For the foreseeable future we’ll be making the 10,000-mile, 22-hour fight to Australia at least once and probably twice a year. We love the energy and buzz of Sydney and expect eventually to explore other parts of Australia. (One of the ancillary pleasures of these visits is catching up with Lynn and Sidney Anderson.) I recall a conversation with Lanny Jones a few years after we’d gradu121 ated. We were in our mid-20s and at the start of a phase in life that seemed to stretch indefinitely into the future. With formal schooling behind us, he observed, our lives had become “open-ended.” Hopefully they will remain so for a few more years. In the words of our generational peer Keith Richards, “Good to be here. Good to be anywhere.” A. James Mettler 39 Cherry Ln., Tallman, NY 10982-0426; (845) 357-6561; jmettler39@aol.com. Spouse: Ellie C. Mettler Barry Metzger 4341 Embassy Park Dr. NW, Washington, DC 20016-3607; (202) 290-1645; barry.metzger@bakernet.com International Attorney, Baker & McKenzie, 815 Connecticut Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20006-4050; (202) 452-7077 Spouse: Jacqueline Ivers Metzger Robert S. Middleton 27193 Bailey’s Neck Rd., Easton, MD 21601; (410) 822-5937; middleton@goeaston.net Anesthesiologist, Tidewater Anesthesia Associates, Memorial Hospital at Easton, Easton, MD 21601; (410) 822-1000 Michael S. Milder (Mike) 6025 N.E. Kelden Pl., Seattle, WA 98105-2045; (206) 525-2316; msmilder@comcast.net Physician, Swedish Cancer Institute, Second Floor, 1221 Madison, Seattle, WA 98104; (206) 386-2242 Spouse: Sarajane Epstein Milder Children: Jonathan, 10/23/71; Daniel, 11/21/73 Christopher A. Mill (Kit) 300 Riverside Ave., Riverside, CT 06878-2314; (203) 698-3535; kitmill66@gmail.com. Spouse: Susan Kurtz Mill Children: Courtney Allen, 11/8/79; Edwin Alexander; Tate, 1/7/83 Changes: (1) Lini and Josep are gone. (2) I’ve got a new son. Scott Dore, Princeton and Tiger Inn ’02, married Courtney Mill, Penn ’02, in 122 October of ’08. Courtney’s comment: “Now I have to put up with two of you fools.” Living in Brentwood. Both working hard, bought a place, happy, done. (3) I’m much older, I’m on Medicare … for now. No changes: (1) Susan Mill, timeless after 41 years, same weight, same bony ankles. (2) Tate Mill, Penn ’05, still working for AmEx on his way overseas with them. (3) We’re still living in Connecticut while yearning to return to California, but have you seen who’s running that state? Not going to happen. Jack R. Millard 25 Rocky Pond Rd., Boylston, MA 01505-1511; (508) 869-6027; mil1784@aol.com President, Worcester Radiology, Inc., 121 Lincoln St., Worcester, MA 01613; (508) 753-8151 B. Jackson Miller 34 Crooked Mile Rd., Darien, CT 06820-2001; (203) 655-9987 Vice President, General Motors Asset Management, 767 Fifth Ave., New York, NY 10153; (212) 418-6400 Spouse: Lynsie Schaberg Miller Granville G. Miller 5808 Old Oak Ridge Rd., Greensboro, NC 27410-9265; (336) 294-2752 Physician Assistant, Cardiothoracic & Vascular Surgeons of, Greensboro, 2704 Henry St., Greensboro, NC 27405-3633; (336) 621-3777 Spouse: Sharon Lenore Miller H. Lyman Miller 50 Bernal Ave., Moss Beach, CA 94038-9789; (650) 563-9052 Jeffrey L. Miller 4916 Bay Way Dr., Tampa, FL 33629-4804; (813) 286-8342; doffices@tampabay.rr.com Physician, Rheumatology, 3218 West Azeele, Tampa, FL 33609; (813) 879-1188 Spouse: Nancy Steinberg Miller 123 Shelby C. Miller (Pete) 40 Maynard St., Northborough, MA 01532-1108; (508) 736-3613; scmiller40@gmx.com William L. Miller 66 E. Castlefield Circle, Tucson, AZ 85704-5784; wlmnet@aol.com Adjunct Professor, School of Business Administration, D3257 Bus Administration, Room 1234, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109; (734) 763-9317 Spouse: Janet G. Miller John B. Mitchell 7484 Washington Ave., St. Louis, MO 63130-4048; (314) 725-2519; jbmitchelljr@sbcglobal.net General Counsel, Wehrenberg Theatres, Inc., 12800 Manchester Rd., St. Louis, MO 63131; (314) 822-4520 Spouse: Joelle M. Mitchell Paul F. Mitchell Apt. 1902, 1460 Ghent Ave., Burlington, ON L7S 1X7, Canada; paulfmitchell@sympatico.ca Business Editor, The Hamilton Spectator, 44 Frid St., Hamilton, ON L8N 3G3, Canada; (905) 526-3283 Spouse: Paulene Anne Mitchell William E. Mitchell 223 Atherton Ave., Atherton, CA 94027-5434; (650) 326-0883; wemdecal@aol.com President & Chief Executive Officer, Sequel Capital Management, LLC, 2777 San Tomas Expressway, Santa Clara, CA 95054-4972; (408) 987-1003; www.arrow.com Spouse: Jan Schreyer Mitchell Children: Alden M. Mitchell, 12/22/75; Amanda M. Mitchell, 10/19/77; Alyssa Mitchell, 4/24/85 Lynn M. Moak Apt. 7, 8800 Gallant Fox Rd., Austin, TX 78737; (512) 288-9306; lmoak@moakcasey.com. Spouse: Mary McKeown-Moak 124 William D. Montross 7207 Fire Spike Rd., Charlotte, NC 28277-1956; (704) 246-6171; wmontross@carolina.rr.com SupplyNet Services, LLC, 17811 New Mark Ave., Charlotte, NC 28278-8632; (704) 504-9853 Spouse: Linda Marie Montross John B. Moore 3423 Fowler Ave., Santa Clara, CA 95051-2715 Frank T. Morgan 1530 The Preserve Trail, Chapel Hill, NC 27517; (919) 545-2213; morganassociates@nc.rr.com Spouse: Nancy Bishop Morgan George D. Morgan 27140 Shell Ridge Circle, Bonita Springs, FL 34134-8782; (239) 947-4755 Spouse: Cathleen O’Daniel Morgan Richard G. Morgan (Tiny) 314 Palais Verde, Montgomery, TX 77356; (936) 449-4419; rmorgan@frw-law.com Spouse: Betty Lou Morgan Children: Richard G. Morgan III, 1973; Jonathan R. Morgan, 1976 The past five years have been in many ways frustrating, challenging, and, now, fulfilling. I will briefly relate the developments because other classmates may have experienced the same type of roller coaster. Five years ago I was managing partner of the Houston office of a nationwide law firm. After a change in management of the firm, the decision was made to drop energy law (my specialty), telecom law, and administrative law. Unlike race horses put out to stud, I was faced with looking for a position without a “book of business” (reduced because my time had been spent administering firm business). The obvious prospect was an in-house position in an energy business. After all, I had over 30 years’ experience and a wealth of knowledge and contacts. Hold on, Tiny. How old are you? Well, my age doesn’t matter; I will take a lower position regardless of title. Too bad but that position (read “all positions”) have been filled! 125 Frustrated and, frankly, a bit scared, I joined some young litigators I had hired at my former firm who struck out on their own. They are accomplished commercial litigators and could help me with my few remaining client matters; they are also wonderful young folks. So there I toiled, handling my remaining client matters. The situation was bleak but not desperate. Brian Breuel had long been my financial guru so, together, we planned a strategy that assumed no new clients and a continuing decline in existing client matters. As a result, Betty Lou and I “downsized” our home, bought a home north of Houston on Lake Conroe, and prepared for a functional retirement at the end of 2005. It sounds easy but it was not! Our Houston home was Betty Lou’s dream home and it was tough for her to part. Getting medical insurance was neither pleasant nor inexpensive. Explaining and reassuring Betty Lou that once I stopped workTiny, right, and Rocky Wayburn. ing we would NOT run out of money in two months was difficult. After all, I had worked from the time I was 14 and she had worked until we moved to Houston. Emotionally, the transition was tough. But we did make the change. For my part, I am convinced retirement is underrated. I enjoy coffee and the newspaper (I use the word loosely in describing the Houston Chronicle) on the patio, playing tennis four times a week, and taking golf lessons with Betty Lou. (Golf must be the Devil’s sport; how can it be so difficult to hit a ball sitting perfectly motionless on the ground?) I read two or three books a week, take walks, and really enjoy the slower, more quiet pace. One small downside is the distance from our house to stores for groceries and BL’s shopping. But that simply means we need to be more organized on our outings. Betty Lou and I are having a wonderful time. Of course, now that I am home most of the time (I still go into the office every three or four weeks for a day) Betty Lou has a list of chores for me. We are still sorting through how much I really have to do for my share. We plan to travel a fair amount while we enjoy good health. We are truly blessed, particularly with our dear friends. We have enjoyed immensely visits by the Nahases, D’Avellas, Eastwicks, Plohns, Krosins, Birkelands, Thacher, and Von Kohorn. We look forward to more visits from friends. 126 Jonathan S. Morse 1587 Valecroft Ave., Westlake Village, CA 91361; (805) 379-2699; jmorse@morselawgroup.com Attorney, The Morse Law Group, 2800 28th St., Santa Monica, CA 90405-2934; (310) 396-0700 Spouse: Liane P. Morse Gary B. Mount 330 Cold Soil Rd., Princeton, NJ 08540-2002; (609) 924-2310; gbmount@alumni.princeton.edu Owner, Terhune Orchards, 330 Cold Soil Rd., Princeton, NJ 08540-2002; www.terhuneorchards.com Spouse: Pamela Hasenzahl Mount Children: Reuwai (P.U. ’94), Tannwen (P.U. ’98), Mark Grandchildren: Maya, 6; Tess and Sasha, 3; Becket, 2 Pam and I continue our life of farming — engaging and sharing our farm with the public at Terhune Orchards, just five miles south of Princeton. The farm has grown to about 200 acres since we purchased it in 1975, and the number of crops has increased from 3 to 36. A few years ago we began growing wine grapes and making wine on the farm. This is our second year of wine production. We offer eight varieties, and sales are good. Our enterprise is bolstered by the full-time addition of our daughter Tannwen and the interest and participation of daughter Reuwai, as well as by the engagement of their husbands, Jim Washburn and Mike Hanewald, and children. (Hooray for grandchildren!) Our son, Mark, is an Army infantry sergeant who has survived three tours in Afghanistan and is now a recruiter in Bellingham, Washington. Pam and Gary Mount, bottom right, seated next to daughter Tannwen, with Becket. Behind Tannwen is her husband, Jim, and Reuwai and husband Mike with their children, Maya, Tess, and Sasha. 127 In addition to selling at the farm and at area farm markets, and operating a popular pick-your-own business, we supply restaurants and schools in Princeton. You might see our names on some of the menus. We’ve also been much engaged in hunger-relief efforts. Fifteen years ago we started New Jersey Farmers Against Hunger. Today this organization annually distributes to needy families over a million pounds of produce donated by N.J. farmers. Most of the credit goes to Pam. We are truly fortunate. We’ve been healthy and happy. Our family is doing well and we love what we do. We believe our farm makes a difference in our community, and we are thankful. P. Robert Moya (Bob) 5119 E. Desert Park Ln., Paradise Valley, AZ 85253-3055; (480) 991-1906; prmoya@cox.net Partner, Quarles & Brady, LLP, 2 North Central Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85004-2391; (602) 230-5580 Spouse: Sara Dreier Moya Children: J. Brill Moya, 1974 (P.U. ’95); Joshua D. Moya, 1976 (P.U. ’98) Grandchildren: Jacob F. Moya, 2004; Michael R. Moya, 2007 William J. Moyse (Bill) 401 Rio Dr., Chesapeake, VA 23322; bmoyse341@yahoo.com Spouse: Judith Ann Moyse. Children: Jennifer and David Robert S. Mueller P.O. Box 77784, Washington, DC 20013-7784 Director, Federal Bureau of Investigation, 935 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20535-0001; (202) 324-3444 Spouse: Ann Standish Mueller David G. Mulock 195 17th Ave. N., St. Petersburg, FL 33704; (727) 823-3424; daves5star@aol.com Lawyer, Carlton Fields, St. Petersburg, FL 33701 Spouse: Lenore Skinkle Mulock John J. Nagorniak 31 Shoreline Dr., Foxboro, MA 02035-1116; (508) 543-9853; 128 john@foxstnfin.com Chairman of the Board, Foxstone Financial, Inc., 1600 Boston-Providence Highway, Walpole, MA 02081; (508) 660-0088, Ext. 2553 Spouse: Jill Hampton Nagorniak Children: Peter, 1971; Joy, 1975 Grandchildren: Christopher, 2000; Alyson, 2004 Robert E. Nahas (Bob) 268 Wyckoff Ave., Wyckoff, NJ 07481; (201) 444-9246; bobn@24seveninc.com Vice President, 24 Seven, Inc., Floor 4, 120 Wooster St., New York, NY 10012-5200; (212) 966-4426, ext. 154 Spouse: Virginia (Virg) Decker Nahas Children: Josh, 1973; Drew, 1976 John S. Newbold 1705 Walnut Bottom Rd., Carlisle, PA 17013-9151; (717) 243-3949 Stephen M. Newman (Steve) 109D Palm Bay Dr., Palm Beach Gardens, FL 3418-5782; (561) 626-4262; snewman@nixonpeabody.com Nixon Peabody, LLP, Suite 203, 7121 Fairway Dr., Palm Beach Gardens, FL 33418; (561) 691-5424 Spouse: Gayle Emily Newman Children: Holly Newman Kroft 2/4/08; Deborah Newman, 9/26/76 Grandchildren: Charles Newman Kroft, 2/4/08; Lucas Newman Kroft, 4/7/10 Practicing law as a partner with the Nixon Peabody law firm. Slowing down to half time in 2011. Have become an avid duplicate bridge player, having played regularly in college with roommate Wendell Ing at Wilcox Hall and then basically giving up the game for 42 years. Achieved “life master” status with the American Contract Bridge League (truly meaningless, unless you don’t have it) this past November. Both daughters are grown and living in New York City. In order to spend more time with the family, Gayle and I rented an apartment on the Upper East Side. We live in Florida from mid-October until mid-June and divide the four summer months between Buffalo (our former home) and N.Y.C. Thankfully, everyone’s health is good and we are very much enjoying or senior citizen status. 129 John S. Nicholas 37 Holly Hill Ln., Southbury, CT 06488-2652 Philip T. Nicholson 2215 Mesa Dr., Boulder, CO 80304, (303) 546-6921; philipnicholson@comcast.net Writer Spouse: Elizabeth Markham Nicholson Children: Virginia S. Nicholson; Noelle I. Nicholson; Melina N. Willinger Grandchildren: Savannah Willinger Theodore W. Nicholson 19084 Benson Ln., Ft. Bragg, CA 95437; (707) 964-1130 Spouse: Ethel Nicholson James A. Nix 1937 38th Street NW, Washington, DC 20007-2102; (202) 965-1506; jimnix@alumni.princeton.edu. Spouse: Ann Nix John S. Nixdorff 6132 Allwood Court, Baltimore, MD 21210-1141; (410) 377-8879 Roger B. Nold P.O. Box 1527, 1 Park Ave., Hampton, NH 03842-2113; (603) 964-7726 President, Noldesign Incorporated, P.O. Box 1527, Hampton, NH 03842; (603) 926-3909 Tom R. Norris 2521 Broadway St., San Francisco, CA 94115-1113; (415) 922-6835; trnorris@tomnorris.com Orthopaedic Surgeon, Tom R. Norris, MD, PC, Suite 510, 2351 Clay St.,San Francisco, CA 94115-1931; (415) 392-3225, ext. 15 Spouse: Margaret Swierbutowicz Norris 130 Francis E. Nuessle (Frank) 103 Camelot Ln., Newtown Square, PA 19073-4412; 610-356-0936; fnuessle@verizon.net Consultant, PMIs, 103 Camelot Ln., Newtown Square, PA 19073-4412 Spouse: Eileen O’Brien Nuessle Wilson Chukwunwike Obi Apt. 10E, 320 South Harrison St., East Orange, NJ 07018-1326; (973) 677-7152; wilsonobi@verizon.net M. Kenneth Oboz 249 Old Hollow Rd., North Ferrisburg, VT 05473-6005 Consultant, Enhanced Medical & Insurance Systems, Apt. 1602, 1077 Race St., Denver, CO 80206-2833 Spouse/Partner: Nina Falsen David T. O’Dell 8181 Berry Dr., Evansville, IN 47710-4951; (812) 867-6725; dto@evansville.net Owner, 60 Minute Photo, 8181 Berry Dr., Evansville, IN 47710; (812) 477-3805 Spouse: Virginia F. O’Dell W. Sean O’Donoghue 315 E. 56th St., New York, NY 10022-3730; (212) 753-1153; seanodon@alumni.princeton.edu Robert T. O’Keeffe 111 North Magnolia St., Pearl River, NY 10965; (845) 735-5346 Ross A. Odell Graduate School of Biomedical Engineering, University of New South Wales, Sydney 2052 NSW, Australia; 61-2-9385-3920 131 Daniel K. Okereke Apt. 1G, 560 Lefferts Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11203-1038; uniquediva18@hotmail.com Charles M. Oman (Chuck) 5 Highland Terrace, Winchester, MA 01890-1318; (781) 729-7625; cherryoman@comcast.net Director, Man-Vehicle Laboratory, Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Room 37-219, MIT, Cambridge, MA 02139; (612) 253-7508 Spouse: Cherryl Huested Oman Children: Katherine M. Oman, 2/12/78; Peter S. Oman, 5/18/82 William C. Osborn 22 Emerson St., Brookline, MA 02445-6846; (617) 734-1221; wosborn@aol.com Managing Director, Commons Capital Management, LLC, 320 Washington St., Brookline, MA 02445; (617) 734-1047 Spouse: Lynn Osborn Arthur E. Osborne 262 Princess Palm Rd., Boca Raton, FL 33432-7514 Executive Vice President, United National Bank, 1645 Palm Beach Lakes Blvd., West Palm Beach, FL 33401; (561) 688-9400 Spouse: Marilyn Wilhelm Osborne Edward L. Overtree 6123 Vista Terrace, Orefield, PA 18069-9077; (610) 391-1481 Attorney, PPL Corporation, 2 N. 9th St., Allentown, PA 18101-1139; (610) 774-5529 Spouse: Edith Hough Overtree Kenneth A. Owen 6119 South Joplin, Tulsa, OK 74136-2107; (918) 496-3681 Manager, Oklahoma Mobil Concrete, Inc., 10313 E. 48th St., Tulsa, OK 74146; (918) 622-3930 132 Larry S. Owen 176 Los Trancos Circle, Portola Valley, CA 94025; (650) 851-2867; lsowen@alumni.princeton.edu Managing Director, Real Estate Investments, Owen Capital Group, LLC, Suite 288-605, 3130 Alpine Rd., Portola Valley, CA 94028-7549 Spouse: Joan C. Owen Sener Ozsahin 722 Sokak, No. 12/2, Yildizevler, Cankaya, 06550 Ankara, Turkey; 90-3124422099; s.ozsahin@ttmail.com Children: Selim Ozsahin, 11/28/78 Anozie A. Ozumba 10964 139th St., Jamaica, NY 11435-5500 James A. Papa 3945 Walnut Grove Ln., Beavercreek, OH 45440; (937) 429-4380; jamesapapa@msn.com Chief Engineer, Science Applications International Corp., 4031 Colonel Glenn Highway, Dayton, OH 45431-1601 Spouse: Regina M. Papa Children: Antony, 1974; Vincent, 1987 William B. Parent 1831 Main St., Glastonbury, CT 06033-2943; (860) 633-6265; bill.parent@att.net Spouse: Sheila McCarthy Parent Gordon A. Park 908 Caddy Dr., Cobourg, Canada; (905) 372-2712; gpark2@cogeco.ca Spouse: Mary A. Park Children: Roger, 1974; Kirby, 1977 133 James L. Parmentier (Jim) 175 South Great Rd., Lincoln, MA 01773-4112; (781) 259-0798; jparmen@aol.com Associate Professor, Clinical Investigation Program, MGH Institute of Health Professions, 36 First Ave., Charleston Navy Yard, Boston, MA 02129; (617) 724-6327 Spouse: Elizabeth (Beth) Fowler On a bookcase in my mother’s home is a picture of a small boy standing in the middle of Washington Road waving a football pennant with an orange “P” on it. I know the “P” is orange, even though the print is in black and white, grainy, and dog-eared, with the delicate scalloping around the edges that characterized Brownie prints from that era. The year is 1947. The boy is three and the pennant is as long as he is tall. He is watching a river of men that completely fills 1879 Arch and stumbles down the steps toward Prospect Avenue. It was the fifth reunion of the Class of 1942. The men stumble because each one is covered head- Jim and Beth Parmentier. to-foot in a heavy monk’s robe, complete with a hood and cowl (but no fly) to which steps (and urinals) posed a serious challenge. The temperature and humidity combined to make as sweltering a June day as Princeton can offer, and those robes had to be the worst choice of reunion costumes since the P-rade began. Somewhere in that river was my dad, but I can never pick him out in the picture. Perhaps in that river was Steve Ferris’s Dad, and Bill Johnson’s dad, and Joe Mann’s and Jim Merritt’s and Walt Smedley’s and Ed Whitman’s, but I didn’t know any of them and I doubt that they were there. But I had been there, even before. In the summer of 1944 (so I’m told on good authority) I attended on-campus lectures in utero, since my mom was a townie. After her 1943 graduation from Wellesley and marriage two weeks later, she came back home in June of 1944 to live with her mom while Dad went to repair planes on Ford Island. There have been Parmentiers (or their conjugal relatives) at Princeton on and off since 1936. They graduated in ’39, ’41, ’42, ’50, ’66, ’69 and ’71, as well as (I just discovered on TigerNet) a Noel Parmentier who graduated in the Class of 1872, which intriguingly disrupts my family tigertree. But there will be no more. None of my sisters or my cousins or 134 my aunts have, as the song goes, “sent their sons to Princeton … it’s better than Cornell.” (Gotta be careful here … Beth is a fourth-generation Cornellian. What if she reads this? “It’s only a song, Beth, really! The lyricist just needed something to rhyme with “hell.” Right. That’ll help a lot.) So, anyway, that tigertree ends. But I have another. The Class of ’66 has become my Princeton family tree. I can’t remember who asked me to be Class Scribe. Bob Nahas, probably, or maybe Bud D’Avella. Here I want to thank them, publicly and in print, for considering me a worthy successor to Charlie Emmons, Bill Bethune, T.R. Reid, Jeff McCollum, and Lanny Jones. (I know there must have been some practical aspects to that decision, but still, I appreciate it.) For 20 years now, writing to deadline every two weeks with severe word restrictions and just dribbles of scribbles on dues-slips to work with has given be a unique view of our class, of our university, of our generation, and of our world. It has kept me close to Princeton and to its many projects and activities. It has gotten me to the edge of high social circles, such as backstage at McCarter. It has taken me, through the Princeton Prize in Race Relations, to the brink of tough social issues that I might never have known or understood. As a faculty member at three other universities over 40 years I am well aware that Princeton the university does much more than offer a unique four-year undergraduate experience. For many people, that is the sum total of their college remembrance and association. But not at Prince­ ton. From my perch on PAW I have stayed in touch with that undergraduate experience and also helped maintain and promote a network of friends that both grows and shrinks as the years go by. I expect that I have known most of you who read this text for many more years than four. We’re currently friends. Why else would you bother to read it? We may not have . . . probably didn’t . . . meet while we were on campus but I’ll bet I know you. I’ll bet I have written or spoken to you sometime over the The Iolanthe in full sail with Jim Parmentier at the helm. past 20 years, perhaps about your own family, perhaps about your career, or your books or your triumphs and, at some sadder times, perhaps about your own tragedies. You are part of my family. Thanks for staying in touch! In June of last year I retired from my teaching post at Mass General Hospital’s Institute of Health Professions after a continuous career of 135 mediocre research in both academic and pharmaceutical industry institutions. There were no great discoveries, and no one now reads the papers that I wrote. My efforts to coordinate H.I.V./AIDS education in developing countries pretty much fell apart due to lack of funding, but along the way I learned a fair amount about how to do it. I.H.P. is a graduate school that offers a variety of health-related clinical and practical Master’s-level degrees from nursing and physical training to radiology, informatics, and speech communication. I don’t do clinical work, and so in recent years my efforts focused on developing, teaching, and administering an online program of clinical investigation. The students came from all over the country . . . and in the early years of this decade the techniques for online instruction were just being developed. They’re better now, and I am still learning and incorporating new ones into my current teaching. I live in Brunswick, Maine, and am a faculty member in the Biopharma Educational Initiative, a degree program in the School of Health Related Professions at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ). I fell into this position three years ago when I was approached by an audience member after giving a talk at a national scientific meeting on the competencies I thought clinical researchers needed to have before they should be allowed to conduct clinical studies of new drugs or devices on humans. As sometimes happens to outspoken folk I was invited to help UMDNJ design a program to do just that . . . and then teach in it. It was “put up or shut up” time, and it looks like I’ll have gainful employment for several more years. Although the “gain” isn’t very “full” there is a lot of satisfaction in seeing programs develop the way you suggest. For those who are interested, you can check out the BEI at http://shrp.umdnj.edu/ dept/biopharma/index.html. So that’s an update on my 40th reunion biography. Anyone who wants to know about earlier years can check that 40th write-up. It covers the same sailing, singing, and science activities that have characterized me since my years at Princeton. Beth and I are still together (28 years) and Iolanthe is sheltered in a barn on Great Island, about six miles from here, patiently waiting the coming summer and a trip back up into the Bay of Fundy. I bought a motorcycle a few years back (my fourth in 40 years), but I wrote about that in the November 1 issue of last year’s PAW. I have built four small boats over the years, and our classmate Hank Cygan (now a neighbor living in nearby Bath) has promised to help me build at least one more before we both get old. In summary, I’m healthy, I have plenty to do, I have all the toys I need, I have a home in Maine, and I have a wife whom I love and who loves and supports me. At 66, I’m happy . . . and I hope you are, too! 136 Robert Dial Parrott (Dial) 684 Main St., South Glastonbury, CT 06073-3115; (860) 633-2908; dparrott@uks.com Partner, Updike Kelly & Spellacy, PC, 1 State St., P.O. Box 31277, Hartford, CT 06103-1277; (860) 548-2618 Spouse: Sally Wister Parrott. Children: Sam, 9/8/86; Max, 6/9/8 David T. Partridge P.O. Box 435, Brookside, NJ 07926-0435; (973) 543-4996; dtp777@gmail.com Spouse: Mary Burke Partridge Lex Allen Passman 2851 Georgetown Rd., Pottsboro, TX 75076-6923; l.passman@comcast.net John N. Peabody, Jr. 1190 Stone Rd., Westminster, MD 21158 Eric G. Pearson 701 W. Gravers Ln., Philadelphia, PA 19118-4140; (215) 247-1287 Spouse: Virginia R. Pearson Charles J. Peischl 46 North Fairview St., Nazareth, PA 18064-1617; (610) 759-7062; cjpeischl@pzlblaw.com Attorney/Partner, Peters Moritz Peischl Zulick, Landes & Brienza, LLP, 1 S. Main St., Nazareth, PA 18064; (610) 759-1530 Spouse: Gwyneth A. Peischl Children: Kara Peischl Dodson, 1970; Jonathan K. Peischl, 1973 Grandchildren: Caroline M. Zidek, 2001; William C. Dodson, 2010 Daniel A. Per-Lee 1517 Hiddenbrook Dr., Herndon, VA 20170-2809; (703) 471-8218; dperlee@aol.com Spouse: Elaine Shepherd Per-Lee 137 Alan Pestronk 6 Forest Ridge Pl., Saint Louis, MO 63105-3006; (314) 727-0573 Professor, Department of Neurology, Washington University School of Medicine, Box 8111, 660 South Euclid, St. Louis, MO 63110; (314) 362-6981 Michael A. Peterman 520 Homewood Ave., Peterborough, ON K9H 2N3, Canada; (705) 745-0654; mpeterman@trentu.ca Spouse: Caroline Willmott Peterman Ronald G. Peters 115 Deerfield Dr., Oneonta, NY 13820-4606; (607) 643-0069; peters@cloud9.net President, Government Law Systems, LLC, 500 West Putnam Ave., Greenwich, CT 06830; (203) 861-9100 Lawrence C. Petrowski 1809 East Nicolet, Phoenix, AZ 85020; (602) 870-9210; lpetrowski@stinson.com Partner, Stinson Morrison & Hecker, LLP, Suite 2100, 1850 North Central Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85004-4584; (602) 279-1600 Spouse: Paula R. Petrowski Michael Wolf Pflaumer 6 Summit Ln., Berkeley, CA 94708-2213; (510) 549-3449; pflash@comcast.net Electrical Engineering Consultant Spouse: Ann Adams Pflaumer Paul S. Pilcher P.O. Box 77, Wellfleet, MA 02667; (508) 349-5114 Attorney George J. Pilicy P.O. Box 20955, Wickenburg, AZ 85358-5955; (928) 684-3358 138 Arizona Public Service Company, 5801 South Winterburg Rd., Tonopah, AZ 85354; (623) 393-5969 Spouse: Carol L. Pilicy Charles J. Plohn 162 Library Pl., Princeton, NJ 08540-3018; (609) 683-1488; cplohn@aol.com Spouse: Dorothy Yost Plohn Children: Chandler Fay Plohn Dektas, 11/18/77; Charles Raymond Plohn, 6/8/79 Granchildren: Michael Christopher Dektas III (Mikey), 1/18/07; Lily Dorothy Fay Dektas, 5/25/09 Since penning a paragraph for our 40th reunion book, the most significant changes in our lives have been becoming grandparents (Mikey in January 2007 and Lily in May 2009) and my retirement from Merrill Lynch. Our daughter, Chandler, her husband, Michael Dektas, and their two children live in Cincinnati. We see them often but not often enough. Our son, Charles, has started a freelance photography business and has had some early success with published photos of the Cotuit Kettleers of the Cape Cod Baseball League and Charles Plohn (in DaVinci hat) and family in reviewing stand, of the Princeton University 2010 P-rade. From left: son-in-law Michael Dektas with Mikey, campus for a slideshow for son Charles with Lily, daughter Chandler, and Dorothy. the Aspire capital campaign. Each year we especially enjoy our family vacation on Nantucket. Dorothy continues to be involved in New Jersey state and local community organizations, but at a less frenzied pace than when we were younger. No need to change the sentiment from our 40th book . . . she remains my trophy wife now after more than 40 years of marriage. After almost 35 years with Merrill Lynch, I retired in July 2008 and managed to say farewell to the firm and the old Yankee Stadium at the same time with a party for family and some friends in the Merrill suite behind home plate at a Yankee game. It was truly a field-of-two-dreams event! I certainly don’t miss the daily commute nor the changing culture on Wall Street. I obviously miss the compensation but most especially the “action” of investment banking and equity trading. Retirement is not exactly what I thought it would be . . . but I am get139 ting better at it. A meaningful amount of my time is spent in interaction with Princeton University . . . auditing courses, attending football and basketball games, coordinating the P-rade while also serving as Grand Marshal for the past three years (a job I expect to do through 2012), and hosting our annual fall Class of 1966 event at Plohn Hall. Thomas J. Pniewski 117 Avenue A, New York, NY 10009-5809; tjpny@aol.com Director of Cultural Affairs, The Kosciuszko Foundation, 15 E. 65th St., New York, NY 10021 Paul Ponomarev 346 Chatham Rd., Columbus, OH 43214; (614) 481-0837; ponomar@math.ohio-state.edu Professor of Mathematics, Ohio State University, 231 W. 18th Ave., Columbus, OH 43210-1101; (614) 292-9853 David W. Ponthan 4354 Wooddale Ave. S., Saint Louis Park, MN 55424-1061; (952) 920-4343; magicmmp@fishnet.com Middle Manager, Ford Motor Company, 966 Mississippi Blvd., St. Paul, MN 55104; (651) 696-0509 Don C. Porter 75240 Vista Corona, Palm Desert, CA 92211-9021; (310) 275-7231; porteraia@att.net Architect William L. Pressly (Bill) 6135 31st St. NW, Washington, DC 20015-1515; (202) 244-8530; wpressly@umd.edu Professor, Department of Art History and Archaeology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742; (301) 405-1493 Spouse: Nancy Lee Pressly Children: David, 3/27/74 Grandchildren: William, Caitlin As always, health seems to play a major role in our lives. Four years ago Nancy underwent the Whipple procedure at Johns Hopkins for pancre140 atic cancer. She was one of the lucky ones, with the surgery providing the cure. Right now I am undergoing radiation treatment for prostate cancer, which is only a small bump in the road compared to what Nancy went through. Our grandchildren — William, who is 4 1/2, and Caitlin, 2 1/2 — are flourishing, and we spend a lot of time in Atlanta enjoying their company. Next year I will again be acting chair of the Department of Art History and Archaeology at Maryland. My latest publications are The Artist as Original Genius: Shakespeare’s “Fine Frenzy” in Late-EighteenthCentury British Art (University of Delaware Press, 2007) and James Barry, 1741-1806: History Painter, coedited with Tom Dunne (Ashgate, 2010). Seymour Preston 49 New St., Katonah, NY 10536; seymourp@earthlink.net Managing Director, Goldin Associates, LLC, 18th Floor, 350 Fifth Ave., New York, NY 10118-1801; (212) 593-2255 Spouse: Suzanne G. Preston Children: Eliot, 3/4/83 Michael L. Pribyl 132 Fort Greene Pl., Brooklyn, NY 11217; (718) 624-7796; mpribyl@paulsegalassociates.com Partner, Paul Segal Associate Architects, Floor 4, 28 W. 25th St., New York, NY 10010-2742; (212) 631-9200 William G. Price (Bill) 3769 Bridle Pass, Ann Arbor, MI 48108-2789; (734) 769-0701; wgpricejr@gmail.com Spouse: Diane Garbaccio Price Joel R. Primack 575 High St., Santa Cruz, CA 95060-2642; (831) 425-1194; joel@ucsc.edu; http://scipp.ucsc.edu/personnel/profiles/primack.html Professor, Department of Physics, University of California at Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA 95064; (831) 459-2580 Spouse/Partner: Nancy Ellen Abrams Children: Samara, 1980 141 Carlos J. Quijano 4 Amy Ln., Cumberland Foreside, ME 04110; (207) 871 4668; carlosq@coastofmaine.com President, Coast of Maine, Inc., 145 Newbury St., Portland, ME 04101; (207) 879-0002; www.coastofmaine.com Spouse: Jean McCloud Quijano Children: Lisa Q. Wolfinger, 11/18/65; Alexandra Q. Grippando, 1/22/73; Jennifer Q. Sax, 3/24/74 Grandchildren: Asa Wolfinger, 1990; Ezra Wolfinger, 1991; Cyrus Wolfinger, 1993; Noah Wolfinger, 1996; Owen Grippando, 2005; Sarai Sax, 2006; Elspeth Grippando, 2007; Avi Sax, 2009 Thomas C. Ragan 271 Flying Point Rd., P.O. Box 2807, Southampton, NY 11969-2807; (631) 287-9383; tragan@rf-law.com Partner, Ragan & Freeman, LLP, 11 E. 44th St., New York, NY 10017-3608; (212) 204-3505 Jon D. Raggett 26226 Camino Real, Carmel, CA 93923-9240; (831) 624-0886; kayakraggett@yahoo.com Executive Director, Schools Ecoles Escuelas, Box DD, Carmel, CA 93921; (831) 883-1534 Spouse: Victoria Campion Raggett Arthur D. Randall Apt. B, 321 9th St. NE, Washington, DC 20002; (202) 543-7568 Richard J. Raskin Apt. H, 416 W. Grant Pl., Chicago, IL 60614-9319; (773) 477-4448; richraskin@aol.com Attorney, Suite 601, 155 North Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60601; (312) 938-0380 Spouse: Cynthia S. Raskin Children: John, 1981; Julie, 1985 142 21300 Brantley Rd., Shaker Heights, OH 44122-1936; (216) 321-4869; rrawson@jonesday.com Partner, Jones Day, 901 Lakeside Ave., Cleveland, Ohio 44114; (216) 586-7216 Spouse: Judith Harris Rawson Children: Alexander H. Rawson (P.U. ’01); Gregory S. Rawson My offering for the 40th reunion book arrived too late for publication, so what follows incorporates some of that content with an update on events since the 40th. My love affair with Princeton has now lasted for more than 45 years; it gets richer and more satisfying every year. You Classy ’66ers have played a substantial role in this relationship! I’m forever grateful to the dean of admissions for having had the insight/courage to admit all of us to this great place! As I have said to some of you, I have had the honor and privilege of serving Princeton as a trustee in significant part because you guys expressed confidence in me during our days on the campus. My tenure on Princeton’s board, which began just before our 20th and ended just before our 40th, was a thoroughly satisfying experience, largely because of the remarkable associations it afforded with so many wonderful Princetonians. Supported by Princeton’s truly remarkable alumni, the university has prospered on all fronts: Beautiful in our days, the campus is even more so today; the faculty and the student body are stronger and more diverse; and excellent as our education was, Princeton is academically broader and deeper than it was then. In all this progress, members of the Class of ’66 have played a significant role — Bob and Judy Rawson at Oxford University during a break from Professor John V. Fleming *63’s Chaucer in support of Annual Giving, of schools committees, of athletics, Alumni College, September 2007. of the Princetonian and the PAW, of the Princeton AlumniCorps (formerly Project 55), of regional alumni associations, of the class itself, and in numerous other ways. Thanks go to all! 143 JIM MERRITT Robert H. Rawson Unlike many of you whose retirement I envy, I’m still lawyering away at Jones Day, where I’ve now been for 40 years, mostly trying antitrust cases. Many years ago I became involved in the firm’s management, and I was responsible for managing the Cleveland office for 15 years. In the late fall of 2008, with the blessing of my law partners, I became interim dean of the School of Law of Case Western Reserve University, allowing me to serve the profession in a different manner and to see lawyers from a different perspective. For a variety of reasons the university’s president asked me to extend my “interim” service, so I will continue through the end of June 2011. Then, I expect to return full time to Jones Day. Extracurricularly, I have devoted most of my time to education issues, both the urban challenges in K through 12 and the fiscal and other issues facing higher education in the Cleveland area. In 2005-2006, at the request of American Bar Association President Michael Greco ’65, I chaired the A.B.A. Commission on Civic Education and the Separation of Powers, which sought to contribute to the American public’s understanding of, and appreciation for, the role of our courts. In 2007 I was appointed to the board of Cleveland State University, and I currently serve as vice-chair of the board. This offers me the opportunity to contribute to the advancement of urban education for our region. Judy completed her second term as mayor of Shaker Heights in 2007. She remains energized by the economic development and budget issues of our inner-ring suburb and of our county. Recently, a small group of reformers, including Judy, rode a corruption tsunami in order to pass a new county charter that introduces separation of powers and clear accountability. The Democratic power base opposed it — and lost. Then Judy trichaired the transition workgroup on economic development, for improved strategic, collaborative decision-making. The new officials took office January 1. Now we’ll see whether reform works! Our son Alex ’01 and his wife, Anh, are working as hard as ever at McKinsey and the Gates Foundation, respectively, with still a little time to enjoy just about every outdoor activity Seattle offers. They just bought a lovely house near downtown and are expecting a little girl as this is written. So Judy and I will be dusting off our skills with babies, and supporting Continental/United in a big way. Greg (Colgate ’04) and Taryn, a recent Harvard Law graduate, have each accepted jobs for next year in San Francisco/Silicon Valley. After three years with Princeton-inspired Teach for America, teaching in the Bronx and then mentoring beginning teachers in Brooklyn, Greg is now completing his M.B.A. at the School of Management at Yale. Taryn is currently clerking for Federal Judge Droney in Hartford. Oh — and they are getting married at Yale over Labor Day weekend. In short, all is well on our various fronts, and Judy and I look forward very much to catching up with our friends when we meet at the 45th! 144 Montfort S. Ray 10 Warren Dr., Savannah, GA 31407-1210 Attorney John S. Redpath 331 East 83rd St., New York, NY 10028-4360; (212) 737-0525; johnsredpath@me.com Senior Vice President and General Counsel, Canoe Ventures, LLC, Floor 39, 1251 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020-1104; (212) 364-3633 Spouse: Suzanne Allen Redpath William T. Reed Partner, School Street Capital Group, P.O. Box 3065, Westport, MA 02790-0701; (610) 892-8059; wtr@sscg.com Spouse: Heather Heath Reed Louis H. Reich 206 Devonhall Ln., Cary, NC 27518-2679; (919) 267-4704 Psychiatrist Spouse: Susan Dion Reich Steven D. Reich (Steve) 202 Stratford Park Circle, Del Mar, CA 92014-3255; (858) 755-6321; steve.reich@sbcglobal.net Spouse/partner: Constance (Connie) E. Gonczy Children: Blair Justin Fire Reich, 12/2/77; Blair Jesse Ellyn Reich, 9/18/79 Grandchildren: Isabella Marie Reich, 2010; Adella Vaille Olivetti, 2010 “You can be whatever you want, but get your M.D. degree so you have something to fall back on,” my mother said to me over 45 years ago. Fortunately, I took her advice. I got my degree, trained as a medical oncologist, and then became a drug developer. There are actually a few cancer drugs on the market in part because of my efforts, and I am proud of that. All Jesse and Justin Reich with Izszy and Adella. 145 that experience and it’s still paying off. I continue in clinical research of new drugs as a consultant, working part time. It certainly beats the highpressure jobs I’ve had in the past. Last year was great because both my sons had little girls. They are precious! They live on the other side of the continent, so I don’t get to visit with them. Fortunately, with computer technology I get to see them, but not near as often as I would like. My mother was right about something else — the importance of education. I am thankful for the education I received at Princeton. Who knows, maybe my grandkids will attend. John Reichel (Jeff) 1060 Congress Valley Rd., Napa, CA 94558-5306; (707) 252-7075; jeffreichel@comcast.net. Spouse: Linda Zwick Reichel Children: David, 7/5/73; Lauren, 7/18/77 Thomas R. Reid (T.R.) 3090 S. Madison St., Denver, CO 80210;(303) 504-9807; trreid@princeton.edu Rocky Mountain Bureau Chief, Washington Post, Room 100, 3090 S. Madison St., Denver, CO 80210-6540; (303) 949-8046 Spouse: Margaret Mary (Peggy) McMahon Children: Homer, 8/16/75; Penelope, 4/22/82; Willa, 1/30/84 Geoffrey George Reinhard 1 Harvard Circle, Berkeley, CA 94708-2206; (510) 704-1932 Professor, Department of English, City College of San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94112 Richard G. Reinis (Rich) 288 North Saltair Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90049; (310) 472-0774; rreinis@steptoe.com Senior Partner, Steptoe & Johnson, LLP, Suite 2900, 2121 Avenue of the Stars, Los Angeles, CA 90067-5034; (310) 734-3242; Spouse: Lois Barbara Reinis Children: Wendy, 1967; Joanna, 1969; Michael, 1971; Robert, 1974; Hilary, 1983 146 Rich at a Tiger game, wearing no. 12 in memory of Chuck Merlini. J. Frank Remley 16 Old Farm Way, Newbury, MA 01951-1732; (978) 465-0922; jfremley@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Cheryl E. Remley Victor M. Reusch 9995 W. 85th Pl., Arvada, CO 80005-1203 Research Professor, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Denver, Denver, CO 80208; (303) 871-3661 William B. Rhoads (Bill) 34 Plattekill Ave., New Paltz, NY 12561-1920; (845) 255-0253; rhoadsw@newpaltz.edu Professor Emeritus, Department of Art History, State University College, New Paltz, NY 12561 Spouse: Sally Miller Rhoads Bruce S. Ribner 2276 Fairoaks Rd., Decatur, GA 30033-1200; (404) 417-0225; bribner@emory.edu Epidemiologist, Emory University Hospital, Suite B-705, Emory University, 1364 Clifton Rd. NE, Atlanta, GA 30322; (404) 727-1580 Spouse: Barbara Sue Ribner David A. Richardson 2318 Cheryl Pl., Los Angeles, CA 90049-1216; dav3id@earthlink.net Spouse: Carol Carfango Richardson Richard L. Riemer 553 29th St., Oakland, CA 94609-3512; (510) 835-8575 Psychotherapist, 3871 Howe St., Oakland, CA 94611; (510) 547-1738 147 Richard F. Riesenfeld 2685 E. Eagle Way, Salt Lake City, UT 84108-2802; (801) 583-2815; rfr@cs.utah.edu Professor, School of Computing, University of Utah, 50 S. Central Campus Dr., Salt Lake City, UT 84112-9205; (801) 581-7026 Spouse: Elain Cohen Riesenfeld Charles J. Riggi 13 Shoridge, East Hampton, NY 11937-3132; (631) 267-3884 Spouse: Michele James Stevens Riggi Douglas B. Ritter 44 Blackberry Ln., Berwick, PA 18603; (570) 542-3547; dbritter@pplweb.com Mechanical Engineer, PPL Susquehanna, LLC, 769 Salem Blvd., Berwick, PA 18603-6828 G. Harry Robinson 27W 280 Birch St., Winfield, IL 60190-1041; (630) 682-4670; harryandreetrobinson@comcast.net Spouse: Reet Reinberg Robinson Mike Robinson 1300 Douglas St., Big Spring, TX 79720; (432) 263-0042; mrobinson@robinsondrlg.com Engineer, Robinson Drilling of Texas, P.O. Box 311, Big Spring, TX 79721; (432) 267-5277 Spouse: Monika Robinson Donald J. Rodenbach 3709 Orchid Pl., Emmaus, PA 18049-1638 Attorney, Zumas and Rodenbach, 65 E. Elizabeth Ave., Bethlehem, PA 18018; (610) 866-7716 148 Philip D. Rodenberger (Phil) 2012 Evergreen Court,Yakima, WA 98902; (509) 453-2256; prodenberg@cwcmh.org Psychiatrist and Medical Director, Central Washington Comprehensive Mental Health, 402 S. 4th Ave., Yakima, WA 98902-3546; (509) 573-3629 Spouse: Karen Children: Wendy Kuppenheimer, 8/27/71; Tim Rodenberger, 6/16/73; Drew Rodenberger, 5/29/73; Amanda Kaminsky, 2/24/77; Alyson Fleming, 5/7/80 Grandchildren: Jack Kuppenheimer, 7; Will Kuppenheimer, 5; Paul Kuppenheimer, 3; Wyatt Byrne, 7; Rory Byrne, 5; Isabel Rodenberger, 6; Julia Rodenberger, 4; Hazel Kaminsky, 3; Violet Kaminsky, 1 Six years ago, I made a career change of sorts, leaving my private practice of psychiatry in Pennsylvania and moving to Yakima, Washington, to accept a position as the medical director of a large community mentalhealth agency. My wife, Karen, and I had raised seven kids between us. They were comfortably settled, mostly up and down the Eastern seaboard, literally from Portland, Maine, to Clearwater, Florida. We were looking for an adventure that would help us establish a life experience that was uniquely ours to share. While our children and nine grandchildren remain an integral and joyful part of our lives, we have enjoyed the pleasures of living in the distant Pacific Northwest. Personally, a career change has been a gratifying and growthful experience. The work pace is less demanding and the challenges of serving the mental-health needs of patients within a community context have been rewarding. Given continued good health and soundness of mind, I hope to be working for at least another four years. The past two years I have been invited to interview high school students applying to Princeton. This experience has been personally gratifying in that it continues to restore my faith in our younger generation and allows me to express my affection for the Princeton experience, which I will always regard with fond appreciation. Richard D. Rogers 371 Indian Harbor Rd., Vero Beach, FL 32963-3510; (772) 231-2187; rd-rogers@sbcglobal.net Chairman of the Board, Hobie Cat Company, 4925 Oceanside Blvd., Oceanside, CA 92056-3099; (760) 758-9100 Spouse: Julie Grote Rogers 149 Andres Roomet 15 Lewis Creek Rd., Hinesburg, VT 05461-9705; (802) 482-2769; aroomet@madriver.com Physician-Neurologist, Neurological Associates of Vermont, 89 S. Williams St., Burlington, VT 05401; (802) 862-5759 Spouse: Louise Bentley Roomet Barnett Rosenberg 15 Hillcrest Manor, Rolling Hills Estates, CA 90274-4884; (310) 377-7631; barney.rosenberg@gmail.com Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary, Meggitt, PLC, Atlantic House, 3 Aviation Park,West Bournemouth International Airport, Christchurch BH23 6EW, United Kingdom; (805) 526-5700 Spouse: Sharon C. Rosenberg Paul D. Ross 441 Dusty Rock Rd. NW, Riner, VA 24149-3514; (540) 763-3730; pdross@swva.net Engineering Consultant, Alum Ridge Associates, 441 Dusty Rock Rd. NW, Riner, VA 24149-3514; (540) 763-3730 Robert S. Ross 4603 Kenmore Dr. NW, Washington, DC 20007-1914; (202) 338-0951; rross@cozen.com President, Cozen O’Connor Public Strategies, LLC, 11900 Market St., Philadelphia, PA 19103; (215) 665-6976 Spouse: Louise P. Ross David K. Rubenstein 1220 E. 22nd St., Minneapolis, MN 55404-2945; dkrube@aol.com 1602 Selby Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104; (651) 642-9144 Ira Henry Rubenzahl 12 Fort St., Northampton, MA 01060-4208 President, Office of the President, Capital Community College, 61 Woodland St., Hartford, CT 06105 150 J. Dennis Russell Unit 301, 301 W. G St., San Diego, CA 92101-6055; (619) 239-2525; dennis.russell@ cox.net Consulting Engineer, Teradata Corp., 17095 Via del Campo, San Diego, CA 92127-1711; (858) 485-3365 Spouse: Janis Russell James L. Russell (Jim) 333 Riviera Circle, Larkspur, CA 94939-1508; (415) 927-2301); russell996@sbcglobal.net Chief Financial Officer, DR Technologies, Inc., 7740 Kenamar Court, San Diego, CA 92121; (858) 677-1235 Spouse: Candace Edwards Lewis P. Rutherfurd Room 1404, Harcourt House, 39 Gloucester Rd., Wanchai, Hong Kong; 852-2528-5717; iavm@iavmhk.com Managing Director, Inter Asia Venture Management, Ltd., 14th Floor, China Hong Kong Tower, 8 Hennessy Rd., Hong Kong, Hong Kong; 852-5285717 Spouse: Katharine Sanger Rutherfurd Henry M. Rutledge 450 Rolling Rd., Salisbury, MD 21801; (410) 742-2450 Attorney, Department of Labor, 1100 N. Eutaw St., Baltimore, MD 21201; (410) 767-2973 John McG. Rutledge 11727 Flintwood Dr., Houston, TX 77024-5110; (713) 464-3902; rutledge31@aol.com Spouse: Helen (Sue) Schliem Rutledge Children: S. Courtney Rutledge Burkett, 8/20/66; Helen Tiffany Rutledge Wilten, 10/3/67; Dorsey Paige Rutledge Prince, 5/27/69 Grandchildren: Cassidy Leigh Prince, 1995; Ryan Matthew Prince, 1997; Sloane Margaret Wilten, 1998; Emily Nicole Prince, 1999; Helen Brooke Wilten, 2000; Mitchell McGrady Prince, 2000; Jonathan Fisher Burkett, 2003; Reece Anne Wilten, 2003 151 William H. Sachs 3 Morgan Pl., Princeton, NJ 08540-2609; (609) 688-0314; wsachs@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Iliana Ingeborg Bjorling-Sachs Carl P. Sahler 4214 W. Lake Rd., Canandaigua, NY 14424-8353; (585) 394-3827; cpsahler@yahoo.com Physician, Canandaigua Medical Group, PC, 335 Parrish St., Canandaigua, NY 14424; (585) 394-3827 Spouse: Olle Jane Elizabeth Sahler B. Lance Sauerteig 130 Edgehill Rd., New Haven, CT 06511-1320; (203) 562-0842; lance@blsstrategic.com BLS Strategic Capital, Inc., Suite 200, 8 Church Ln., Westport, CT 06880; (203) 221-3240 Spouse: Robin S. Sauerteig G. Paul Savidge (Red) 249 Foreside Rd., Falmouth, ME 04105; (207) 781-2168; redsvdg@hotmail.com Clinic Medical Director, Family Planning Association of Maine, Family Planning Association of Maine, P.O. Box 587, Augusta, ME 04332-0587; (207) 622-7524 Spouse: Mary Savidge Children: George, 9/67; Sarah, 6/9/69; Jonathan, 7/71 Grandchildren: Maya, Jonah, Summer, Annika, Emma, Shippen Alvin A. Schall (Tony) 103 Grafton St., Chevy Chase, MD 20815-3425; schall@cafc.uscourts.gov U.S. Circuit Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, Federal, 717 Madison Pl. NW, Washington, DC 20439; (202) 312-5510 Spouse: Sharon LeBlanc Schall Children: Amanda L. Schall, 5/25/77; Anthony D. Schall, 4/16/81 152 David R. Schatz 3204 Jessie Harbor Dr., Osprey, FL 34229-8995; (941) 918-2107; schatz@ncf.eduschatz@ncf.edu Associate Professor, Humanities Department, New College of Florida, 5800 Bay Shore Rd., Sarasota, FL 34243-2109; (941) 359-4360 Children: Sarah Deschenes, 11/9/71; Elizabeth Schatz, 1/5/77 Grandchildren: Jack Deschenes, 2000; Michael Deschenes, 2002; Andrew Deschenes, 2004 Henry J. Scherck (Terry) 290 North Ahwahnee Rd., Lake Forest, IL 60045-2067; 847-234-3621; tscherck@comcast.net Managing Director and Global Practice Leader, Life Sciences, Diversified Search Odgers Berndtson, Suite 3100, 200 S. Wacker Dr., Chicago, IL 60606; (312) 674-4705 Spouse: Denise O’Leary Scherck Children: Amanda S. Elbing, 2/24/78; John Henry Scherck, 5/20/86 John E. Schleh 3026 N. Broad St., Philadelphia, PA 19132-2406; (215) 226-2050; jschleh@juno.com Director, Teen Haven, 3026 N. Broad St., Philadelphia, PA 19132; (215) 226-2050 Eric W. Schneider 247 Vista del Lago Way, Venice, FL 34292-5324; ericsharon01@gmail.com Programmer and Analyst Spouse: Sharon Ann Schneider F. G. Schonenberg P.O. Box 467, Wynantskill, NY 12198-0467; (518) 283-6801; fgsbass@yahoo.com Attorney Spouse: Midge Rogers Schonenberg Children: Kathy, Lisa, Cori, Fred Grandchildren: Cydney, Michael, Jacob, Kevin, Sam, Sara 153 Stephen J. Schreiber Apt. 12-E, 444 E. 82nd St., New York, NY 10028-5946; (212) 535-1346; aeschreiber@yahoo.com Spouse: Aileen E. Schreiber Children: Jason Schreiber, 1979 Retired from lawyering in 2006, a few years earlier than planned because of long-developing eye problems. Traveling beyond the N.Y.C. area is difficult, and I am unable to read as much as I’d like. Nevertheless, I am enjoying pleasures of retirement that I long looked forward to: I lead my life on a schedule of my own, not clients’, choosing; I’m no longer couped up in a Manhattan office building when I’d prefer to be in Central Park or roaming the narrow streets of the West Village; and music, which I always considered one of the chief joys of life, has assumed an even greater meaning for me. In the 1990s, it became clear that my eye problems would prohibit me from using a computer. So my secretary operated my email for the remainder of my working days and I, fortunately, was exempted from the requirement to carry a Blackberry (which I probably would have checked each time I awakened during the night, thus inducing insomnia and, eventually, lunacy) and to use successive waves of communications technologies. Fortunately, too, Aileen (who now operates email for me) is in good health and enjoying retirement from the grueling life of an N.Y.C. publicschool teacher (although she has been saddled since 2006 with the responsibility of overseeing the care of her mother and, until his death in 2010, her father). At the other end of the age spectrum, our son, Jason, graduated from Harvard Business School in 2007 and immediately relocated to Los Angeles. He works on the investment side of a private-equity firm (CIM Group) that focuses on real estate and infrastructure. When I think about the fact that 45 years have passed since our graduation, it occurs to me that the 45th reunion class in 1966 was the Class of 1921 — men who graduated a year after commercial radio was introduced and seven years before penicillin was discovered. Given the accelerating pace of technological and medical innovation and social change since we graduated, I wonder if most of today’s undergraduates don’t view us as creatures from a more remote time than we viewed the men of ’21. Rufus K. Schriber 3004 Hearthstone Rd., Williamsburg, VA 23185-7523 Spouse: Kathy Hill Schriber 154 James R. Schueler Apt. 103, 225 Beach Rd., Tequesta, FL 33469-2835; (561) 748-8712 Lawrence T. Scott 134 Langdon St., Newton, MA 02458-1983; (617) 630-0626; lawrence.scott@bc.edu Professor, Department of Chemistry, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467-3860; (617) 552-8024 Spouse: Dawn Scott Thomas R. Scott (Tom) 10758 Puebla Dr., La Mesa, CA 91941; (619) 334-8984; tom.scott@sdsu.edu Vice-President for Research, Mail Code 8220, San Diego State University, 5500 Campanile Dr., San Diego, CA 92182-1010; (619) 594-2978 Spouse: Bonnie Kime Scott Children: Heather Sheila Scott, 3/20/70; Ethan Kime Scott, 9/10/74; Heidi Cathryn Molly Scott, 6/16/78 Grandchildren: Evan Lee Jones, 2002; Avery Thomas Jones, 2005 John H. Scully Apt. 3, 2900 Scott St., San Francisco, CA 94123-3829; (415) 409-4279; john.scully@spopartners.com Managing Director and Investment Counselor, SPO Partners & Co., Suite 3215, 591 Redwood Hwy., Mill Valley, CA 94941-6000; (415) 383-6600 Spouse: Regina Kulik-Scully Children: Brian P. Scully, 5/31/71; Kathryn S. Peterson, 12/22/74; Peter V. Scully, 2/23/76; Elizabeth M. Scully, 3/29/78; Johnny L. Scully, 9/9/82; Shannon C. Scully, 6/4/87 Grandchildren: Spencer, 7/7/06; Charlotte, 10/1/08; Logan Jack, 2/15/09 No major changes except three glorious grandchildren. Still gainfully employed at SPO Partners, a public/private investment group founded in 1971 and enjoying it as much as ever. I did publish a Cold War spy thriller entitled Preemptive Strike (available on Amazon.com!), including a few of my classmates in fictional roles. You’ll just have to buy it to see if you’re in the book! 155 Robert F. Seely 207 Lake Ave., Metuchen, NJ 08840-2316 Of Counsel, Grunfeld, Desiderio et al., 25th Floor, 399 Park Ave., New York, NY 10022; (212) 973-7766. Spouse: Rebeccah S. Seely Paul Segal Apt. 11C, 127 W. 79th St., New York, NY 10024; (212) 799-7304; paulsegalfaia@gmail.com Architect and Partner, Gensler, Rockefeller Center, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020-0001; (212) 631-9200; www. paulsegalassociates.com Spouse: Ryna Appleton Segal. Children: Emma, 1986; Sarah, 1984 Since Princeton, I’ve lived on the Upper West Side in New York City. Eight years ago I married a terrific woman, Christine Flynn, a Wellesley and N.Y.U. Law grad, who has had several extraordinary careers in government and real estate. We have two kids in college. I have been practicing architecture for 35 years with my partner Michael Pribyl ’66*69 and a great staff. For about 10 years we also had a Seattle branch, but the commuting got to be a drag, so we turned it over to our staff there (though I love Seattle, my heart is in N.Y.C.). Practice has given me great opportunities, including interesting clients (even a Beatle and several Time magazine cover subjects) and projects. Right now we are doing mostly educational work — private schools, several law schools, and campus plans. We’ve done pretty much every sort of project, which has given us a fascinating peek into all sides of life — personal, corporate, not-for-profit, etc. Current work often includes very complex design, zoning, and engineering issues, which keep it very challenging. It has also been a springboard for other side careers. I’ve spent a lot of time on civic and professional issues, helping write the landmarks and zoning guidelines to preserve the Broadway theaters and keep Times Square a vibrant entertainment district, serving as president of the A.I.A./ N.Y.C. and later of the New York Foundation for Architecture, a group that, among other things, teaches architects to teach K-12 kids in N.Y.C. public schools about the built environment. An insurance company for whom we have designed headquarter and branch offices for 30 years asked me 10 years ago to be on its board, so I’ve had a chance to see from the inside how a large property and casualty insurance company works (very well, I might add). For the last 20 years I’ve had the extremely satisfying opportunity to teach at Columbia’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation. The students (particularly those from Princeton) are bright and motivated; they get a GREAT crop there. I teach “professional practice,” 156 and have just finished a textbook for these required courses, published last month by W.W. Norton. It’s called (surprisingly enough) Professional Practice: A Guide to Turning Designs into Buildings. Writing a book was a very satisfying experience, a chance to distill and set down everything I’ve learned since Princeton (at 144 pages I guess that doesn’t say much for how much I’ve learned since getting my Princeton graduate degree in 1969). Hopefully it will be useful for everyone involved in the building process, not just architecture students, but also clients. In retrospect, my undergraduate and graduate education at Princeton provided a great springboard for life and practice. My only regret is that I don’t remember more of it! I see I’ve run out of space, so I won’t have room to tell you about the strange things I’ve heard about some of our classmates. Maybe at the 45th? Look forward to seeing everyone in May! Sami Sehayik 1983 PGA Blvd., North Palm Beach, FL 33408-3037; (561) 627-3327 Eric G. Sellix P.O. Box 1109, 660 Tichenor St., Clatskanie, OR 97016-1109; (503) 728-3769; egsellix@clatskanie.com Owner and Manager, Hump’s Restaurant, Inc., P.O. Box 1109, Clatskanie, OR 97016; (503) 728-2626. Spouse: Pamela Sellix Michael R. Serwatka Export Guesthouse, 302 Jiaoda 1, Xingqing Road, Xian Jiaotong University, Shaanxi 710049, People’s Republic of China Terry Seymour 2310 Ballybunion Rd., Center Valley, PA 18034; (610) 882-8256 (May-Oct.); 13994 Royal Pointe Dr., Port Charlotte, FL 33953; (941) 624-6496 (Nov.-Apr.) Independent scholar Spouse: Adrienne Seymour Children: Scott, 11/16/72; Linda, 5/24/74; Jane, 12/22/78 Granchildren: Olivia Seymour (June 2010) The last few years have been ones of transition. At the end of 2010 I finally retired from my investment practice, turning the business over to my son, Scott. I had eased out gradually, working less each year at the 157 158 JIM MERRITT ADRIENNE SEYMOUR business and more on my scholarly endeavors. I am now eager to devote my full attention to these pursuits. Most of my work involves bibliography. My first book, A Guide to Collecting Everyman’s Library, continues to sell very well even though it is now almost six years old. I am just about ready to publish a larger successor to this work but have become side-tracked by my latest project. Two other books, to which I am a contributor, will appear in the spring of 2011. My interest in Samuel Johnson and his circle extends back over 30 years. The year 2009 marked the 300th anniversary of Dr. Johnson’s birth and there were many conferTerry Seymour at the site of the Globe Theatre, September ences and celebrations. I attended the most notable 2007, during John V. Fleming *63’s Chaucer Alumni College. of these, three days at Har- Below: Searching for used-book bargains with Bob Rawson. vard in August followed by a week at Pembroke College, Oxford, in September, and culminating in Lichfield, Dr. Johnson’s birthplace. These events provided unique opportunities to luxuriate in all the current critical activity and meet the most significant Johnson and Boswell scholars from around the world. Early in 2010 I was elected to the Johnsonians, unusual for someone without a formal academic affiliation. The Johnsonians was founded in 1948 by Mary Hyde, later Viscountess Eccles. Typically there are about 100 members, mostly academics, but with a smattering of collectors and Johnson enthusiasts. Mrs. Hyde (now deceased) left her magnificent Johnson collection to Harvard. Growing out of all this activity and my book-collecting interests, I developed my current project in cooperation with the Boswell Office at Yale. Some of you may recall the exceptional exhibit last year at the Library of Congress where Thomas Jefferson’s personal library was reconstructed and placed on display. My hope is to perform a similar feat for Boswell. Unlike Jefferson, who was a meticulous record-keeper, Boswell and his heirs documented the family library in fits and starts. There was no inventory or sale of his books upon his death. Thus, I am embarked upon a massive detective job, using auction records, book-seller catalogues, and partial inventories performed at various stages. The work has put me in touch with librarians around the world, and will necessitate some travel this year. Even when institutions have excellent digital records they seldom capture all the information I require. Many of the libraries lost valuable provenance information when records were converted from cards to computerized data. I continue to play golf year around. My regular partner in Pennsylvania is Jim Bartholomew. Jim provides a steady hand to complement my erratic game. My mere appearance on the course sends most woodland creatures scrambling for safety. My running has slowed to a crawl: no photos, please. In the interests of continuity, however, I furnish the following updated statistics as of year end 2010: career miles: 38,370; career races: 452. Rounds of golf per year (last six years average): 140. While wintering in Florida I have spent more time practicing the piano. Last year I performed in public for the first time since high school. I selected one of the easier Beethoven piano sonatas but it was rewarding to work at the instrument again instead of just dabbling, as I have done for the past 50 years. Adrienne and I enjoy travel, with Italy our favorite destination. We have a few more spots in the world we would like to see, and as with most of us in the Class of ’66, we hope to have the time and the good health to get there. Jeffrey R. Shafer (Jeff) Apt. 6C, 35 N. Moore St., New York, NY 10013; (212) 226-8530; jeffrey.r.shafer@citigroup.com Vice Chairman, Citigroup Global Markets, Inc., 388 Greenwich St., New York, NY 10013; (212) 816-1246 Spouse: Mary Louise Terenzio Shafer Children: Lara Bruhn, 1971; Karen Peltier, 1974 Grandchildren: Simon Bruhn, 2002; Clare Peltier, 2004; Owen Bruhn, 2005 159 J. Kearney Shanahan 2035 Chestnut Hills Dr., Cleveland Heights, OH 44106-4601; (216) 791-3982; kshanahan@shanahanfirm.com Attorney, The Shanahan Law Firm, LLC, 1750 Huntington Building, 925 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, OH 44115; (216) 363-1700 Spouse: Karen Flynn Shanahan Children: Colleen Flynn Shanahan, 1976; Moira Kearney Shanahan, 1979; J. Kearney Shanahan Jr., 1981; Brendan Flynn Shanahan, 1984 Charles S. Shaver (Charlie) P.O. Box 11063, Station H, Ottawa, ON K2H 7T8, Canada; (613) 825-1147; c.shaver.is@rogers.com Physician, Internal Medicine, Appletree Clinic, 1580 Merivale Rd., Ottawa, ON K2G 4B5, Canada; (613) 723-5890 Spouse: Elizabeth Shaver Children: Andrew Eric, 1978; Christine Elizabeth, 1982; Matthew Stuart, 1982 I was born in Montreal, but my father, a neurosurgeon, moved to the United States when I was two years old. After his death, I received full-tuition scholarships to Princeton and then Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. In April 1968, while at Hopkins, I witnessed the Martin Luther King riots. I spent a summer in Kingston, Ontario, and met my future wife — a resident of Ottawa. I returned to Toronto and then to Ottawa for residency training. As the Quebec separatist movement grew, it appeared to me that a powerful argument had been overlooked by those in the federal government, namely that when a person required admission to any hospital in Canada, one of the questions asked by the clerk was, “Are you a resident of Canada?” For those from Europe or the United States, the interprovincial rate was quadrupled to about $3,000 per day; almost certainly this would have been true as well for residents of an independent Quebec. Moreover, residents of Quebec, like all other North Americans, were aging, and many were developing medical conditions that would disqualify them from obtaining private travel insurance to visit friends and relatives in other Canadian provinces. I used these arguments in a series of letters and op-ed articles in major newspapers from Vancouver to St. John’s. I also paid out of my own pocket for half a dozen of the best articles to be translated into French. These were eventually published in most major Quebec newspapers. 160 Le Journal de Montreal has a circulation of 400,000. If even one of my articles caused only 10 percent of its readers to vote to remain in Canada, that would be 40,000 additional votes. How many votes decided the 1995 Quebec referendum? — 55,000! Over the years, I have written articles dealing with physician portability for Quebec residents, pharmacare, financial protection of health care professionals during a pandemic, and the need to provide incentives to retain older physicians in the work force. In May 2010, I was one of 12 physicians in the province to receive a life membership award from the Ontario Medical Association. I am still in full-time practice in internal medicine. I supervise regular and nuclear stress ECGs at my local community hospital and see new consultations and follow-up patients at a local outpatient clinic. My wife, Elizabeth, worked for the federal government and then did consulting until her retirement about a year ago. We have two sons and one daughter. The older son is working in Toronto. The other two are still in Ottawa. We are still living in a passive solar house that we designed ourselves and built in 1980. It is on an acre lot adjacent to a golf course. My chief interest in summer is gardening, and I have collected several hundred varieties of hostas, iris, and daylilies. Mark J. Shensa 2538 San Marcos Ave., San Diego, CA 92104; (619) 282-5011; shensa@nosc.mil SSC-SD, 49590 Lassing Rd., Code D0299, San Diego, CA 92152-6146; (619) 553-5702 Hamilton L. Shields Bottom Farm Barn, Holtspur Bottom, Beaconsfield, Bucks HP1 9BS, United Kingdom; 44-1494671284 Spouse: Sarah Robinson Shields Robert M. Sigler 3560 Eastbourne, Troy, MI 48084-1108; (248) 643-0868; rsigler@comcast.net Spouse: Julie Sigler 161 Richard H. Siller P.O. Box 157, Fairfax, VT 05454-0157; (802) 849-6803; rick.siller@ge.com Engineer, GE HealthCare, 40 Idx Dr., South Burlington, VT 05401; (802) 859-6516 Spouse: Joyce Ann Siller Richard A. Singer 6042 South St., Halifax, NS B3H 1S7, Canada; richard.singer@dal.ca Professor, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Department, Tupper Building, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS B3H 1X5, Canada; (902) 494-8847 Spouse: Christine A. Barnes G. William Sisley (Bill) 16 Dexter Dr. S., Basking Ridge, NJ 07920-1552; williamsisley@gmail.com Children: Amanda; Andrew E. Lemoine Skinner 1334 Eighth Ave., San Francisco, CA 94122; (415) 566-1365 Of Counsel, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati Profess, 650 Page Hill Rd., Palo Alto, CA 94304-1050; (650) 565-3977 Spouse: Kathleen Malley Skinner Peter G. Skinner P.O. Box 267, Gaylordsville, CT 06755 Spouse: Elissa Skinner Daniel J. Skvir 109 Rollingmead, Princeton, NJ 08540-4067; (609) 924-7368; dskvir@pds.org Orthodox Chaplain, Murray Dodge Hall, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544; (609) 924-6700 Spouse: Tamara Turkevich Skvir 162 John C. Slaybaugh 9412 Pamlico Ln., Great Falls, VA 22066-3808; (703) 759-5027 Spouse: Barbara Lamon Slaybaugh William L. Slick P.O. Box 2184, Las Vegas, NM 87701-2184; (505) 425-9635; wid_slick@hotmail.com General Manager, Plaza Hotel, 230 Plaza, Las Vegas, NM 87701; (505) 425-3591 Spouse: Katherine Ann Slick John B. Slidell (Slides) 15 Taney Ave., Annapolis, MD 21401-2711; (410) 268-4868; jslidell@bozzuto.com Executive Vice President and Principal, Bozzuto Group, Suite 400, 7850 Walker Dr., Greenbelt, MD 20770; (301) 446-2212 Spouse: Mary Elizabeth Slidell Children: Mark, 1/7/72; Duncan, 7/27/74; Tara, 2/16/82 Grandchildren: John, 3/10/06; Hallie, 3/10/06; Anna, 10/11/08; Jackson, 5/13/10 I am continuing to work in real estate development as a founding owner of the Bozzuto Group (now 22 years in business). I hope to work for another two years or so in the business, which is mainly centered in the Mid-Atlantic region. Work takes a lot of my time, but I still enjoy it greatly. While I gave up running a few years ago (knee and ankle injuries), I continue to play some racquetball and also cycle, ski, and play golf. So I continue to be quite active. Mary also continues to operate her children’s clothing business in Annapolis. When she has spare time, she dabbles in her hobby of taxidermy. Our two sons, Mark and Duncan, live in the Washington, D.C., area, which is nice for us. Mark is in his fellowship as a pediatric surgeon at Children’s Hospital in Washington, and Duncan works for my company. Our daughter, Tara, John at our 40th reunion. recently moved from Las Vegas to Aspen (good move!). We hope she will continue to stay there for an extended period since it is fun for us to visit! Both boys are married, and we have four 163 grandchildren (two boys and two girls). Since they live nearby, we see a good deal of them, which is great! Attached is a photo from our last reunion, which I hope to somewhat resemble at our 45th! If you are down our way in Annapolis, give us a call. Walter Smedley 605 Railroad Ave., Haverford, PA 19041-1221; (610) 642-4912; wsmedley@bmtc.com Banker, Brynmar Trust Company, Bryn Mawr, PA 19010; (610) 526-2330 Spouse: Kathleen Cortright Smedley Albert E. Smith (Al) 1772 Hearthglow Ln., Charlottesville, VA 22901-1272; (434) 978-4402; alsmithvmd@alumni.princeton.edu Veterinarian, Charlottesville Veterinary Hospital, 865 Rio East Court, Charlottesville, VA 22901; (434) 973-4341 Spouse: Julia Finlay Smith Children: Adam Royall Smith, 7/29/83; Douglas Michael Smith, 9/29/86 Bruce P. Smith 2420 Margolin Ln., Clearwater, FL 33764; (727) 536-8786; bpsmd@tampabay.rr.com Internist, Suite 103, 9555 Seminole Blvd., Seminole, FL 33772; (727) 393-5428. Spouse: Marilyn R. Smith Howard G. Smith 78 Pilgrim Rd., West Hartford, CT 06117-2243; (860) 233-3765; hgsmd716@aol.com Pediatric Otolaryngologist, Pediatric Ear, Nose & Throat Associates, Suite 101, 345 N. Main St., West Hartford, CT 06117; (860) 236-3277 Spouse: Judith Smith Macklin Smith 1304 Iroquois Pl., Ann Arbor, MI 48104-4636; (734) 995-0741; macklins@umich.edu Professor, Department of English, Angell Hall, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109; (734) 764-6330 Spouse: Lynette Andrea Smith 164 Marschall I. Smith 435 Portland Ave., St. Paul, MN 55102-2214 Vice President and General Counsel, 3M Company, 3M Center St., St. Paul, MN 55144-1000; (651) 733-1191 Spouse: Debra Mitts Richard J. Smith 624-12 East Alameda, Santa Fe, NM 87501; (505) 983-7574 Spouse: Layne Vickers Smith Stephen H. Smith 945 Tarragon Ln.; Milford, OH 45150-5508; (513) 831-1157; ssplanman@aol.com Certified Financial Planner, Capital Ideas, 945 Tarragon Ln., Milford, OH 45150-5508 Spouse: Donna Smith Children: Camilla, 5/12/79 Timothy C. Smith (Tim) 945 Bay St., San Francisco, CA 94109-1141; (415) 346-3220; timothy.c.smith@marsh.com Senior Vice President, Marsh Risk & Insurance Services, 345 California St., San Francisco, CA 94104; (415) 743-8245; Spouse: Ilia Salomone Smith Children: Justin, 1981; Felicia, 1978 It seems strange to be contemplating my 45th reunion. The last Princeton reunion which I attended was our 25th. Where have the past 20 years gone? Living in San Francisco for the past 30-plus years and wife Ilia being a teacher have made a trip to New Jersey in May more of a challenge than when she and I were living in N.Y.C. prior to our move to California. This reunion will be especially bittersweet because my daughter, Felicia Antonia, who was brutally murdered seven years ago here in S.F., was with Ilia, son Justin, and me at our 25th. I still remember her at the P-rade: a plucky, happy-go-lucky 13-year-old at the time, a mischievous but radiant grin stretching from ear to ear, a class of ’66 “bikers” hat perched at a rakish angle on her head. She marched proudly and full of excitement in the P-rade back then. I continue to be haunted by that memory. I know I 165 will feel her presence and will have a few aches in my heart when the 45th reunion class lines up for the P-rade in a few months. I’m blessed with Ilia, my wife of 38 years, whom I love more and more each day, and with 29-year-old San Francisco-born-and-based son Justin, who has a huge heart and the charm and grace to go with it. I find it very energizing to be still working. It’s a gift. It gives me a focus, a sense of purpose, fulfillment, and achievement in my daily life. I’m the senior citizen in the office and am probably viewed by many of my colleagues as an antique even though I don’t feel like one and hope that I don’t act like one! I have no plans to retire as long as I continue to enjoy my work as much as I do now and continue to be productive. My volunteer work with nonprofits here in S.F. has been very fulfilling and rewarding. Over the years I’ve served as board member or board chair of a variety of nonprofits like the Boy Scouts, our local church, an Italian language school (Ilia’s!), pre-schools, a youth guidance organization, and Parents of Murdered Children. These organizations have provided for me a rich tapestry of life for which I am personally very grateful. If I find the P-rade in May as sustaining as I think it will be, God willing and if the creek doesn’t rise, I’ll be back for our 50th in 2016! W. Lamar Smith 483 E. Via Ensenada Circle, Palm Springs, CA 92264-9044; (760) 799-8796; wls2@mac.com Thomas A. Snell 501 S. 16th St., San Jose, CA 95112; (408) 279-2976; tomsnell2002@yahoo.com Business Manager, San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles, 520 S. First St., San Jose, CA 95113; (408) 971-0323 Spouse/Partner: Sarabelle Hitchner David A. Sonnenberg (Dave) 1509 Calhoun Ln., West Chester, PA 19380-6712; (610) 692-1996; dasp66@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Carol McAfoos Sonnenberg Children: Laura, 6/27/67; David Jr., 3/3/69; Christy, 12/29/74; Jenny, 12/29/74 166 Mento A. Soponis (Chuck) 4730 S.W. 103rd Way, Gainesville, FL 32608-7180; (352) 336-1698; msoponis@yahoo.com Spouse: Gaylin Gramse Soponis Children: Justin, 12/25/73; Trevor, 2/11/77 I have had my eyes checked, and rechecked. I have even put a new mirror in the bathroom. Yet, I still see this wizened old coot staring back at me every morning. I just do not understand how this happened! And, given my lack of short-term memory, I am startled anew every morning. There are things I never do forget. Without question, I have been blessed with good fortune beyond reasonable measure. For the past half century, I have enjoyed good health, a warm and loving and supportive family, treasured friends, and the opportunity to collaborate with gifted people in pursuing their dreams to create new enterprises. Now, I treat each day as a new gift, to be enjoyed to the full. It is fun to make up for all those golf rounds I missed due to work and weather, still chasing that elusive 10th hole-in-one. Chuck Soponis laying low in the Everglades. Gauylin, a law professor, affords me this luxury as she continues to work at improving the minds and work product of future lawyers. She continues to be my greatest joy. I revel as a proud father watching my boys struggle with life decisions and pursue their dreams. I am immensely proud and grateful to be a Princetonian and an active participant in the Princeton family. Reunions are such a special time to savor and reflect on and renew our bonds to this great institution. I hope to see you there. Michael Spence 768 Mayfield Ave., Stanford, CA 94305-1044; (650) 856-4909; amspence_98@yahoo.com Professor of Management, Stern School of Business, New York University, 44 W. Fourth St., New York, NY 10012-1126 Spouse: Monica Cappuccini Spence 167 Jamie Spencer 923 Ridgetree Ln., St. Louis, MO 63131; (314) 965-4057; jspencer@alumni.princeton.edu Associate Professor of English, St. Louis Community College, 3400 Pershall Rd., St. Louis, MO 63135; (314) 595-4445 Spouse/Partner: Anna Ahrens Children: Jamieson Spencer, 1974; Kate Spencer, 1977; Chip Reichardt, 1969; Eric Reichardt, 1971; Anna Ruth Kratky, 1982; Mary Beth Kratky, 1985 Stephen P. Spielberg 201 Goldenrod Dr., Upper Gwynedd, PA 19446-7605; stephen.p.spielberg@gmail.com Director, Center for Personalized Medicine and Therapeutic Innovation, Childrens Mercy Hospital, 2401 Gillham Rd., Kansas City, MO 64108-4698 Spouse: Laurel Axelrod Spielberg Jolyon C. Sprowles (Jol) 80 Boyer Rd., Stafford Springs, CT 06076; (860) 870-9713; jols0706@hotmail.com Process Engineer, TYCO Electronics Printed Circuit Div., 4 Old Monson Rd., Stafford, CT 06075; (860) 684-5881 Spouse: Alice L. Sprowles Children: Amy, 7/18/73; Karen, 5/23/76; Christie, 4/29/81 Grandchildren: S. Carson Tucker, 2004 Theodore M. Stanger (Ted) 169 Cedar Ln., Princeton, NJ 08540-5349; tmstanger@alumni.princeton.edu Writer; http://www.zenpcmulhouse.com/tedstanger Spouse: Virginia Benson Stanger Children: Alexei, 1978; Leo, 2008 After leaving Newsweek in the mid-90s (Bosnia was my last war), I tried being a tennis bum at a suburban Paris club with wonderful clay courts that only the French know how to maintain. Lacking talent, I turned to writing humorous but argumentative books in French, for the French public. The third one, with the hard-to-translate-into-English title of Sacrés Français! (roughly, How About Those French!), stayed on 168 the best-seller lists for half a year in 2003. And so six more in the same vein followed, the most recent being Sacrées Vacances!, devoted to the idea that the French take too much time off work. Not bad, I thought, for somebody who got gentleman C’s in French 101 and 102. I thought I had found a second career — until I got the French tax bill. Plus, I had become what journalists respect the least but need the most — a creature of (French) radio and TV, somebody the media can depend on for a sound bite. A quick-quote artist. Ugh. Then my second wife had a son in 2008, and we decided to raise the boy like an authentic American and settled in Princeton, where we moved in late 2010. Alas, I have yet to encounter an authentic American in Princeton, but too late now. Barry R. Steinberg 722 Palisades Dr., Pacific Palisades, CA 90272-2800; bsteinb@alumni.princeton.edu Producer and Director Spouse: Madeline Jaffe Steinberg Stuart G. Steingold 5211 Partridge Ln. NW, Washington, DC 20016-5338; (202) 686-5716; sgsteingold@yahoo.com Spouse: Celia Newburg Steingold Children: Marissa Leigh; Alison Clare Paul M. Stella 18945 Blackhawk St., Northridge, CA 91326-3332; (818) 368-6303; p.stella@att.net M.T.S., California Institute of Technology, 1200 E. California Blvd., Pasadena, CA 91125-0002 Spouse: Nancy Dellecese Stella Edward J. Steube 313 Central Park, Mount Vernon, NY 10552-1118(914) 664-0611 Spouse: Joan Daly Steube 169 David P. Stewart 1101 North Gaillard St., Alexandria, VA 22304-1607; (703) 461-7233; dstew76798@comcast.net Visiting Professor, Georgetown University Law Center, Georgetown University, 600 New Jersey Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20001-2075; (202) 662-9010 Spouse: Jennifer Lynn Kilmer Children: Jason, 6/23/97; Jonathan, 7/10/79; Daniel, 12/30/86; Mary, 5/25/90 Emil Stipanovich 6850 El Pomar Dr., Templeton, CA 93465; emilstipanovich@earthlink.net Owner, Oliver’s Twist, 4039 Burton Dr., Cambria, CA 93428-3001; (805) 927-8196. Spouse: Frank Tafelski J. David Stitzer (Stitz) 827 Nathaniel Trail, Warminster, PA 18974-6145; sailingjds@aol.com President, Industrial Nameplate, Inc., 29 Indian Dr., Ivyland, PA 18974; (215) 322-1111 Children: John D. Stitzer, Jr., 9/30/74; Jamie S. Cahill, 8/7/71 Grandchildren: Lucie S. Cahill, 2005 James W. Stoops 1618 Carriage House Dr., Suffield, OH 44260-9648; (330) 628-1569; mickybitzko@aol.com Clinical Psychologist, Child Guidance Centers, 312 Locust St., Akron, OH 44302-1878; (330) 762-0591 Spouse: Bonnie Shears Stoops Eugene C. Struckhoff Dogford Rd., Etna, NH 03750 Attorney, Struckhoff Law Office, P.O. Box 759, Lebanon, NH 03766-0759 Kenneth K. Stuart Apt. E, 2975 S. Washington St., Englewood, CO 80113-1683; kenkstuart@hotmail.com 170 Chief Judge, 18th Judicial District, 7325 S. Potomac St., Englewood, CO 80112; (303) 649-6332. Spouse: Barbara Stuart Gerald A. F. Sumida Apt. 701, 1015 Wilder Ave., Honolulu, HI 96822; (808) 587-7048; gsumida@carlsmith.com Of Counsel, Carlsmith Ball, LLP, 1001 Bishop St., Honolulu, HI 96813; (808) 523-2528; www.carlsmith.com Spouse/Partner: Heidi Karin Wild David S. Swayze 155 Christina Landing Dr., Wilmington, DE 19801-5255; (302) 654-3488; newhorse@verizon.net Attorney, Parkowski Guerke & Swayze PA, Suite 203, 800 N. King St., Wilmington, DE 19801-3544; (302) 654-3300 Spouse: Sally B. Swayze Hugh B. Sweeny 265 Second St., Jersey City, NJ 07302-2827; (201) 798-4480 Attorney, City of Jersey City, New Jersey, Old Courthouse, 280 Grove St., Jersey City, NJ 07306; (201) 547-4309 Norman G. Tabler (Norm) 313 Millridge Dr., Indianapolis, IN 46290-1117; (317) 575-3290; ntabler@iuhealth.org Senior Vice President and General Counsel, Indiana University Health, Inc., 340 W. 10th St., Indianapolis, IN 46202; (317) 962-3306 Spouse: Dawn Martin Tabler Children: Rachel, 1/3/76. Grandchildren: Masie, 2004 Frederick W. Talcott 8602 Irvington Ave., Bethesda, MD 20817-3604; (301) 493-6199; talcott.fred@epa.gov Operations Research Analyst, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20460; (202) 566-0062 Spouser: Carolyn L. Talcott Children: Monica Catherine, 1977; Lauren Christina, 1978 171 Webster G. Tarpley 115 Goucher Terrace, Gaithersburg, MD 20877-1265; webstertarpley@yahoo.com President, Washington Grove Books, P.O. Box 1486, Washington Grove, MD 20880 Spouse: Leah Tarpley Rockwell C. Tenney Apt. 3, 364 Seventh St., Brooklyn, NY 11215-7509 Attorney Theodore R. Tetzlaff (Ted) 1845 North Lincoln, Chicago, IL 60614;(312) 951-0211; tedtetzlaff@gmail.com General Counsel, Ungaretti & Harris, 3500 Three First National Plaza, Chicago, IL 60602-4252; (312) 977-4150 John H. Thacher (Turk) 154 Beaumont Rd., Devon, PA 19333-1849; (610) 687-6591; jthacher@alumni.princeton.edu President, Baker Industries, Inc., 184 Pennsylvania Ave., Malvern, PA 19355; (610) 296-9795; www.bakerindustries.org Spouse: Carol Saam Thacher Children: Ashley B. Thacher, 3/20/72; Kimberly B. Thacher, 5/19/73; John H. Thacher III, 1/21/81 Grandchildren: Blake, 3/18/09; Thacher, 10/5/10 Our family is still absolutely incredible. Ashley was married to a terrific young man (Ralph Williams) in June of 1978 — they now have two The Thachers, Christmas 2010: John, Kim, Ralph (with Blake), Ashley (with Thacher), Carol, Turk. 172 young sons, Blake and Thacher — as most of us know well, grandchildren are a tonic for everything. Kim still lives in N.Y.C. and still works for J. Crew — she has a wonderful significant other (Kevin Spagnoli). Our son, John, works for Studley, Inc. (a commercial real-estate firm) and lives in Philadelphia — he also has a real keeper as a significant other (MaryKris Greco). Family gatherings are one of the highlights of our lives — more so with the two “ankle-biters.” Carol is in her 24th year in real estate — she is still doing well, as I always thought she would (in spite of the recession). As expected, she is still the “glue” of the family. For the past eight years I have been running a wonderful nonprofit — Baker Industries (www.bakerindustries.org). We are a 31-year-old 501(c) (3) nonprofit workforce development program employing and finding outside employment for the disabled, recovering substance abusers, parolees, and the homeless. Over the past 18 years an average of 62 of our employees have joined the regular work force each year — individuals who have ceased being a drain on society and are now contributors to society. It is a unique organization in that we blend these four different elements of our vulnerable adult population in a work-training program, but also because we do it without accepting any government support. It is extremely gratifying and I truly enjoy what I do. Our Princeton friendships are amazing and still seem to expand each year. We love going to our “Minis.” I am an honorary member of my Dad’s class (1941) — I have always felt they (’41) were somewhat immortal and it is very sad to see them slipping away at a fairly rapid pace. My father passed away in June 1978 and I started a scholarship at Princeton in his memory. It now provides three or four scholarships each year. This year there are four recipients and I know them all — which is a real treat. We are looking forward to a fantastic 45th. One of the many advantages of being involved in reunions is the bond we create with the undergraduate crewmembers — a bond that seems to grow over the years. We hope to see you in May! Richard E. Thomas (Richie) 14 Wells East Dr., Hilton Head Island, SC 29926-2024 Consultant, The Millennium Consulting Group, P.O. Box 516, Madison, NJ 07940; (973) 822-2249 Spouse: Suzanne Thomas Kenneth L. Thompson 4 Napier St., Cambridge CB1 1HR, United Kingdom; 44-1223-363846 173 J. Mills Thornton 206 Seminole Dr., Montgomery, AL 36117-4027; jmthrntn@umich.edu Professor, Department of History, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1003; (734) 764-6305 Spouse: Brenda Booth Thornton John D. Thorpe P.O. Box 900, Bolinas, CA 94924 Michael C. Tice (Mike) 4359 Orange Wood Ave., Ft. Myers, FL 33901; (239) 334-0051; miketice@aol.com. Attorney Children: Lonnie 10/4/87; Christopher 5/3/96; Sarah 8/22/97 Looking back on the 20 years that have passed since our 25th reunion, I see these main highlights of my life: First, Susan and I adopted two more children in addition to Lonnie: Sarah (now 13) and Christopher (14). Both are potential Princetonians. Susan and I separated and eventually divorced, and she has since remarried, to a gentleman named Carl Kester. Susan and I remain friends, however, and over the years we have remained committed to raising the children together. I continue to practice law, though my practice has its ups and downs — mostly Lonnie, Sarah, and Christopher Tice. downs, recently, because health concerns have reduced the amount of referrals I receive from other attorneys, the traditional source of most of my business. A few years ago I put aside any thoughts of further songwriting and have instead concentrated on writing a novel, Temple of Mercy. The setting is largely the Shriner’s Hospital in Tampa, where Lonnie was a patient for many years. I am immensely enjoying the task of writing the book. Can’t wait to introduce my classmates to my children! Theodore D. Tieken 2430 Lakeview Ave., Chicago, IL 60614; (773) 477-9785 Chairman of the Board, Babson Farms, Inc., Suite 1120, 174 400 North Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60611-4104; (312) 661-7055 Spouse: Charlotte Head Tieken James P. Timbie (Jim) 4608 Merivale Rd., Chevy Chase, MD 20815-3708; (301) 657-8326; jtimbie@att.net Senior Advisor, State Department, Office of the Under Secretary, Washington, DC 20520; (202) 647-4404 Spouse: Janet A. Timbie Children: Anna, 3/2/80; Clare, 12/23/84 Robert M. Tobin 611 S. Irena Ave., Redondo Beach, CA 90277-4356; (310) 540-8267; Physician, Suite 300, 10880 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90024-4105; (310) 954-1975 Spouse: Julie Harris Tobin Children: Kimberly, 1966 Grandchildren: Billy, 1997 Henry H. Tomlin 10681 Copper Lake Dr., Bonita Springs, FL 34135-8438; Loonecho@comcast.net Spouse: Barbara Fitzgerald Tomlin Michael K. Tooke Unit 4, 50 Beacon St., Boston, MA 02108-3524; (617) 720-0786; mktooke@cs.com Spouse: Nancy Briggs Tooke Preston McC. Torbert Apt. 1502N, 4800 S. Chicago Beach Dr., Chicago, IL 60615; (773) 538-3566; preston.m.torbert@bakernet.com Partner, Baker & McKenzie, 2800 Prudential Plaza, Chicago, IL 60601-6384; (312) 861-8000 175 William T. Torgerson 975 Melvin Rd., Annapolis, MD 21403-1315; (410) 268-8956; billtorgerson@comcast.net Spouse: Maureen Torgerson. Children: John Torgerson, 5/4/74 I used to be amused by retired friends saying they were so busy they couldn’t imagine how they ever had time to work. I now find myself one of them. I retired in 2009 from Pepco Holdings, Inc., a utility holding company where I had worked since the early 1980s. My last job there was vice chairman and chief legal officer. Since retiring, Maureen (my wife for going on 43 years) and I have been throwing stuff away, knocking off a long list of deferred projects around the house, refitting a cruising sailboat, and sorting out where to spend our time between Annapolis, said boat, and a condominium in Utah. In the “keeping oneself out of Maureen’s hair” category, prior to retirement I signed up for several charitable and social organization responsibilities, the most time-consuming of which has been serving as commodore of the Annapolis Yacht Club. That will last until the end of this year, after which Maureen and I have our sights set on cruising in the Caribbean for a while. Our son, John, and his wife, Kate, live nearby in Annapolis, and the three of us enjoy racing an Etchells sloop around the Annapolis area. I thought I would be playing a lot of golf, but there just hasn’t been time. Philip C. Tower Suite 250E, 7047 E. Greenway Parkway, Scottsdale, AZ 85254-8107; pctower@toweraz.com Attorney, 1965 Pine Tree Dr., Prescott, AZ 86303-6418; (928) 277-1105 Spouse: Sherilyn Rose Tower Thomas Payton Towler 1780 Deerhill Trail, Topanga, CA 90290-4256; (310) 455-3772); rtpprod@gmail.com RTP Productions, 1780 Deerhill Trail, Topanga, CA 90290-4256 R. Edward Townley Apt. 111, 180 John Olds Dr., Manchester, CT 06042-8819; (860) 432-9665; revedtownley@yahoo.com Senior Minister, Unity of Greater Hartford, 919 Ellington Rd., South Windsor, CT 06074-3567 176 M. Jay Trees 704 S. Ridge Rd., Lake Forest, IL 60045-2754; (847) 234-3628; jtrees@trees-invest.com President, Trees Investment Counsel, Suite 640, 70 W. Madison St., Chicago, IL 60602; (312) 368-1200. Spouse: Susan Smith Trees Thomas N. Tureen 2247 Clay St., San Francisco, CA 94115-1929; (415) 441-6380; tntureen@gwi.net. Spouse: Erin M. Lehane Thomas E. Unterman 1451 Amalfi Dr., Pacific Palisades, CA 90272; (310) 573-9701; tom@rusticcanyon.com Managing Partner, Rustic Canyon Partners, Suite 6050 W, 2425 Olympic Blvd., Santa Monica, CA 90404; (310) 998-8002 Spouse: Janet M. Unterman. Children: Rebecca, 6/12/81; Amy, 4/24/85 Peter N. Upton 88 Fern St., Hartford, CT 06105-2226; (860) 673-4709; peteruptonlaw@yahoo.com Attorney, Tarlow Levy Harding Dloney, P.O. Box 887, 10 Talcott Notch Rd., Farmington, CT 06032; (860) 676-3110 Spouse: Lisa M.E. Upton Ronald Van Buskirk 104 Tananger Springs Dr., Denison, TX 75021; 903-818-2650; rvanbk@hotmail.com Spouse: Karen Ann Van Buskirk Children: Bryan, 2/14/74; Benjamin, 6/18/76; Anna, 11/15/84 Grandchildren: Kristen, 1995 David W. Van Horne 525 Picacho Ln., Santa Barbara, CA 93108-1222; (805) 969-6767; dvh@rain.org Partner, Price Postel and Parma, LLP, Suite 400, 200 E. Carrillo St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101; (805) 962-0011 Spouse: Polly Hills Van Horne 177 Nicolas A. Vargas Vice President, Grupo Popular, Torre Popular, Avenue John Kennedy, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic Stephen G. Vlastos 1346 E. Bloomington St., Iowa City, IA 52245; (319) 338-8337 Professor, Department of History, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242; (319) 335-2221 Spouse: Mary Ann Rasmussen Robert P. Vogel 1463 Huntington Rd., Abington, PA 19001-2103; (215) 885-3362; vogelbobvogel@cs.com Spouse: Jean Jackes Vogel John K. Von Daler Ingemannsvej 28, 1964 Frederiksberg C, Denmark; vondaler@mail.tele.dk Spouse/Partner: Alice Pedersen Henry Von Kohorn 2 Tierney Ln., Westport, CT 06880-5420; (203) 255-8563; henryvk@gmail.com President, Von Kohorn & Associates, Inc., P.O. Box 1079, Greens Farms, CT 06838; (203) 259-8000. Spouse: Meredith Von Kohorn Children: Isabelle Von Kohorn, 9/15/75; Emily Kotzen, 12/21/78 Grandchildren: Emerson Cole Rising, 2007; Arlo Atticus Rising, 2009 Writing an essay for our 45th Reunion feels like popping a cork for making the playoffs. It may be appropriate, but isn’t it somewhat premature? Shouldn’t we save the champagne for winning the title or, in our case, for making it to the Big 5-0? But as I reflect on the years since the our 40th, I realize that my life has been Henry Von Kohorn with grandson Emerson, August 2010. in a transition that is worth 178 examining. Five years ago, I had one parent; today, none. Five years ago, I had no grandchildren; today, two. Five years ago, I had an office to go to; today, I work from my home — and not all that hard. Five years ago, we were comfortably settled in our Westport, Connecticut, home. Today, we are planning our first move in 32 years — to Princeton, no less. What we think of as a stable time of life has really not been that stable at all. On the plus side, Meredith and I (our 40th anniversary is next February) are in good health, but we both have had serious operations recently. On the other hand, dementia seems right around the corner. How many of you registered for our 45th reunion twice? Raise your hand, Henry. They send a notice, I write a check. Thank you Turk for not cashing the Henry and Meredith on a Princeton alumni trip to Egypt. second one. Other than our move to Princeton, which has been all-consuming, we’ve pretty much taken our foot off the accelerator. This is a pleasant stage of life if you’re in reasonably good health and have some resources. Our children, Isabelle and Emily, make us proud every day. Our grandsons, Emerson and Arlo, could not be sweeter. Like all of us, I worry about the country they are growing up in — whether it is equipped to address the myriad critical issues we face. I worry about a world where a single contagion — biological, financial, or political — can spread with breathtaking speed and affect us all. I am lucky to have a number of interests — Princeton being foremost among them — that keep my head in the game. My knees and hips still allow me to play squash three or four times a week. I take our Labrador retriever, Babe, for a two-mile walk every morning. We travel some and love to go to New York to see the occasional show or cabaret performance. We eagerly look forward to the stimulation of living life in a university community — especially “our” university community. To use Jim Parmentier’s formulation, “’66 is 66” — in my case, 67 by Reunions. The actuaries tell us that by the time we reach 80, roughly half of us will be gone. According to our memorialist, Norm Tabler, almost 10 percent already are. In that sobering context, things seem pretty good, and for the first time in my life perhaps, I have come to fully appreciate our continuing good fortune. See you at the Big 4-5! 179 Jonathan K. Waage 72 Ash St., Rehoboth, MA 02769; jonathan_waage@brown.edu Professor, Division of Biology & Medicine, Brown University, Box GW 208, Providence, RI 02912; (401) 863-2435 Spouse: Gabriele Mucha Waage Addison C. Waid Apt. 612, 1800 Huntington Blvd., Hoffman Estates, IL 60195-2743; (847) 882-1649 James A. Walker 43895 Calle Las Brisas West, Palm Desert, CA 92211 Real Estate Developer, Princeton Developments, 36 Eleftherias Voula-Pigadakia, Athens 16673, Greece; 30-1895475 Spouse: Anastasia Fermonaelou Walker Douglas C. Walters 730 Pleasure Ave., Ocean City, NJ 08226-3400; (609) 399-8913; dwalters@sureperformance.com Chief Information Officer, C.N.A. Plaza, Chicago, IL 60686; (212) 918-5248 Stephen Lee Walthall 22 Cheyenne Crescent, Whitesboro, NY 13492-2926; (315) 736-2482 Attorney, Penberthy, Kelly and Walthall, 400 Mayro Blvd., Utica, NY 13501; (315) 724-3158. Spouse: Lynn W. Walthall Edward Z. Walworth (Ted) 8 Manning Ave., Lewiston, ME 04240-5921; (207) 782-1011; ezwmd@aol.com Surgeon, Androscoggin Clinical Association, 710 Main St., Lewiston, ME 04240; Candace, Liza, Nancy, and Ted Walworth at (207) 783-1449 Spouse: Candace Cooper Walworth Nancy’s Maine Law School graduation in 2007. Children: Elizabeth (Liza), 7/31/75; Nancy, 10/25/77 180 Francis B. Ward (Frank) 761 Delaware Ave. SW, Washington, DC 20024; (202) 453-8358; wardf@state.gov Principal Deputy Coordinator, U.S. Department of State, IIP/FO, 301 Fourth St. SW, SA-44, Washington, DC 20547; (202) 453-8358 Spouse: Bonnie S. Gutman Children: Hillary L. Ward, 3/1/75; Andrew M. Ward, 1/3/79 Robert S. Warwick 11126 Big Canoe, Jasper, GA 30143; (706) 268-2108; rswarwick@tds.net Spouse: Susan Warwick Livingston V. Watrous (Vance) 62 Fairfield St., Buffalo, NY 14214-2006; (716) 832-5588; watrous@acsu.buffalo.edu Professor, Department of Art History, 605 Clemens Hall, SUNY, Buffalo, NY 14260; (716) 645-2435 Spouse: Harriet Blitzer Watrous Gates J. Wayburn, Jr. (Rocky) 1 Sugarloaf Ln., Brentwood, TN 37027; (615) 739-6320; rockeye@comcast.net Guardian Eye Associates, Suite 300, 4306 Harding Pike, Nashville, TN 37205; (615) 383-0468 Spouse: Martha Haxthausen Wayburn Children: Christopher Wayburn, 10/21/71; Leigh Burns, 8/29/74 Grandchildren: Jackson Wayburn, 7/6/07; Caroline Burns, 9/26/06; William Burns, 4/10/09 I have been practicing ophthalmology in Nashville since 1976 and have no plans to retire anytime soon. Twink and I celebrated our 40th anniversary on an Alaskan cruise in August 2010. I had a fly-fishing trip to Patagonia in January 2010 with a few days extra in Buenos Aires. Since we have a daughter and grandchildren in London we are able to cross the big pond a few times a year. We have a son and daughter and three grandchildren. We are enjoying travel and still enjoying each other after all these years. Our health is good as is our general outlook on life. I am happy in my chosen profession and have never regretted being a doctor. My son and his wife are both architects in Portland, Oregon. My daughter is a Wharton M.B.A., as is her husband. She is an executive with International SOS and 181 has a fascinating job with a lot of world travel. Her husband, Mike Burns, is an executive vice president with Pimco and is in the London office at present. This is all for now. R. Randolph Weast 397 Vanderbilt Rd., Asheville, NC 28803-3039; (828) 274-2461 Radiologist and Vice President, Asheville Radiology, P.O. Box 2959, Asheville, NC 28802; (828) 253-3322. Spouse: Donna Smith Weast George B. Weiksner 164 E. 81st St., New York, NY 10028-1804; (212) 628-4666; george.weiksner@credit-suisse.com Vice Chairman, Credit Suisse First Boston Corporation, 23rd Floor, 11 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10010; (212) 325-2361 Spouse: Sandra Smiley Weiksner Children: Michael, 1973 (P.U. ’95); Nick, 1975 Gary W. Weimer 298 Tinkers Trail, Aurora, OH 44202; 330-562-8112 Senior Director of Principal Gifts, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, 9500 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, OH 44195; (216) 445-7076 Spouse: Mary Elizabeth Weimer Children: Inga Elizabeth Walker; Kirk Ayleston Weimer Ronald Weinstein 2355 Hillhurst Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90027-2955; (323) 666-8939; rw@jmbm.com Partner, Jeffer, Mangels, Butler & Marmaro, LLP, 10th Floor, 2121 Avenue of the Stars, Los Angeles, CA 90067; (310) 785-5313 Spouse: Diane Kanner Jeffrey M. Weiss 778 Steuben Dr., Sunnyvale, CA 94087-2246; (408) 735-7946; jeffrey.weiss@sri.com Chief Scientist, Engineering R&D Division. SRI International, 333 Ravenswood Ave., Menlo Park, CA 94025; (650) 859-4638) Spouse: Carol Weiss Children: Erika, 1976; Theodore, 1978 182 I’m afraid I’ve not been very active in P.U. reunion activities, although I do attend an occasional event of the Northern California Princeton Club. My excuses include living on the wrong coast and the fact that for decades Princeton’s reunion dates coincided with Vassar’s. Since my wife is Vassar ’66, the conflict was traditionally resolved by not going to either reunion (and we’re still married, since 1967). I send greetings to my classmates at the 45th reunion and certainly treasure the years that I spent at Princeton as some of the best of the many good years I’ve Jeffrey and Carol Weiss at their daughter Erika’s been fortunate to have. I’m in reasonably good shape wedding, July 2007, Solana Beach, California. and still enjoy doing R&D in applied physics, which I hope to do for a while longer. I wish everyone good health and happiness. One of these years, we’ll make it back. Richard P. Welcome 643 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, IL 60202-2533; (847) 332-1981; welcome643@comcast.net Principal, The Welcome Group, Suite 400, 5750 Old Orchard Rd., Skokie, IL 60077-1061; (847) 494-2848 Spouse: Marcia Banas Welcome. Children: Christopher, 12/17/80 Stephen Brent Wells (Steve) 57 Pepper Ln., New Canaan, CT 06840-3829; (203) 966-8857; wellssb@hotmail.com Founder and Managing Director, The Solaris Group, LLC, 598 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10022; (212) 582-5029; www.solarisgroupllc.com. Spouse: Andrea E. Wells Children: Christopher Coyle, 1/14/71; Amanda Smith, 1/15/74; Peter Wells, 12/10/77; Amy Wells (d.), 3/10/71 Thomas L. Wenger 1114 Watts St., Durham, NC 27701; (919) 682-9026; twenger@mindspring.com 183 Theodore P. Werblin 2301 Bland Rd., Bluefield, WV 24701-4156; (304) 327-5444 Ophthalmologist, 1115-C Stafford Dr., Princeton, WV 24740; (304) 487-6123 Spouse: Sara Michele Werblin Charles E. Wertheimer (Charley) 13604 McQueens Court, Jacksonville, FL 32225-4912; 904-221-1927; werthce@aol.com Spouse: Nancy Matson Wertheimer Children: Kristin, 1/6/73; Brian, 1/20/75; Jeffrey, 1/20/75 James L. West 100 May Apple Ln., Middlebury, VT 05753-8574; (802) 388-1627; west@middlebury.edu Professor, Department of History, Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT 05753; (802) 443-5758 William G. Wetzel (Bill) 1802 Ball Mill Court, Dunwoody, GA 30338; (770) 394-5935; thewetz@mac.com Spouse: Pamela Fitch Wetzel Children: Jill, Holly. Grandchildren: Taylor, Amelia, Nicholas, Emma Richard B. White (Rich) 506 Crockett St., Seattle, WA 98109-2135; (206) 283-4584 Spouse: Joan Emily White. Children: Rebecca, 2/17/77 Emily and I are approaching a new phase with daughter Rebecca and her husband, Jason, expecting our first grandchild in April! I completed a challenging re-design of their house in Ballard two years ago and they are currently in a major “nesting” panic, completing all the finish painting and other details. We are finally planning to escape Seattle’s waterlogged winters for more than a few weeks and stay at our North Palm Beach condo for three months this year. I’ve just now retired and Emily is winding down enough of her teaching duties and research to telecommute. We’ve taken up kayak sailing — a geriatric form of windsurfing — which we practice with delight in a 22-foot outriggered tandem in Florida and two singles in the Northwest. Later this year I plan on converting a 184 Honda Odyssey into the ultimate gourmet tail-gater with a built-in icebox, shower with hot and cold running water accessible under the hatch, and a full-size bed forward. We will still continue to tent-camp safari-style in places like Ashland, Oregon, but need something that works for short stays, remote sites, and in the wet off-season. The typical aches and pains plague us but not enough yet for us to give up on secular animism and embrace Buddhism. As the wise old Rabbi said, “If there is no self, then whose arthritis is this?” Rich White, right, and his brotherin-law with Rich’s tandem kayak in Florida. John E. Whitman 1570 Sixth Ave. North, Long Lake, MN 55356-9593; (952) 475-3748 Freelance Writer and Photographer. Spouse: Donna Nichols Whitman Thomas H. Wickenden Apt. 305, 520 E St. NE, Washington, DC 20002-5247; (602) 570-7504; tom.wickenden@asu.edu Spouse: Beth Helene Wickenden Jonathan M. Wiener 10615 Blythe Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90064-3313; (310) 558-0132 Professor and Historian, Department of History, University of California, Irvine, CA 92717; (949) 856-6521 185 W. Bradford Willauer 8 Sanctuary Ln., Prouts Neck, ME 04074-9475; (207) 883-7025; bwillauer@headinvest.com Headen Associates, 121 Middle St., Portland, ME 04101; (207) 773-5333 Spouse: Ann Willauer David L. Williams Apt. 24F, 2 Avery St., Boston, MA 02111-1015; (617) 423-5575; dwilliams@msada.org Executive Vice President, Massachusetts State Auto Dealers Association, Suite 505, 59 Temple Place, Boston, MA 02111; (617) 451-1051 Spouse: Lynn Stoess Williams. Children: Gwyn Williams, 1967 John B. Williams School of Education, 2115 Benjamin Building, University of Maryland at College Park, College Park, MD 20742-1165; (301) 405-3589 Sankey V. Williams 307 Brentford Rd., Haverford, PA 19041-1718; (610) 649-4244; sankey@wharton.upenn.edu Sol Katz Professor of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, 1220 Blockley Hall, 423 Guardian Dr., Philadelphia, PA 19104-6021; (215) 662-3795 Spouse: Constance Hess Williams Children: Elizabeth, 7/14/75; Jennifer, 8/17/78 Roblin J. Williamson 17253 Agate St. NE, Bainbridge Island, WA 98110-1064; (206) 842-3119 Attorney, Davies Roberts & Reid, 101 Elliott Ave. West, Seattle, WA 98119; (206) 285-3610 Russell R. Willis 12 Carrington St., Millner 0810 NT, Australia; 61-889852134; walkabout@ais.net.au Proprietor, Willis’s Walkabouts, 12 Carrington St., Millner 0810 NT, Australia; 61-889852134 Spouse: Lynda D. Prior 186 Donald F. Willson-Broyles 2795 North 67th Ave., Eau Claire, WI 54703-9797; (715) 833-0950 Psychotherapist, Luther/Midelfort Behavioral Health Clinic, 1221 Whipple St., Eau Claire, WI 54701; (715) 838-5369 Spouse: Marnee Willson-Broyles Peter A. Wilson 4616 47th St. NW, Washington, DC 20016-4437; (202) 686-0808; peter_wilson@rand.org Senior Research Staff, RAND Corporatiion, 1200 South Hayes St., Arlington, VA 22202-5050; (703) 413-1100 Peter L. Wilson 186 Nearwater Ln., Darien, CT 06820-5717; (203) 655-9335; pwilson722@aol.com Spouse: Carolyn McCurdy Wilson Martin J. Winch 19300 Innes Market Rd., Bend, OR 97701; (541) 330-6241 Michael C. Witte (Mike) 12 Voorhis Point, South Nyack, NY 10960; (845) 358-9095; macaroni3@aol.com Cartoonist, baseball consultant Spouse: Sally Schaum Witte Children: Griffin Schaum Witte, 9/18/78; Spencer Charles Witte, 6/15/82; Andrew Philip Witte, 7/31/87 As the 45th rapidly approaches, I am a most lucky man. I recently celebrated my 38th anniversary with my wonderful wife, Sally, a family therapist who has expanded her practice to include loving work for a Sloan-Kettering program offering therapy to families dealing with familymember cancer. I’m enormously grateful that both Sally and I — and all of the members of our immediate family — have thus far been spared the kind of health misfortune that she now encounters professionally. Yesterday, I met my oldest son at Newark airport upon his return from two weeks in Cairo’s Tahrir Square reporting on the harrowing events there for The Washington Post. Griff (P.U. ’00 and married to a classmate, teacher/writer Emily Bliss) has regularly put himself at physical risk covering Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the Israel-Gaza war. Now the Post’s 187 deputy foreign editor, he has been associated with two Pulitzer Prizes as writer and editor. I’m proud of his talent and grateful for his safety. Since the 40th, middle son Spencer spent two years studying Arabic in Syria (including a month in Beirut reporting on the harrowing war between Israel and Lebanon), followed by two years at Oxford getting a master’s degree in Arabic and international relations. To my considerable relief, he has chosen at the moment to forego potentially hazardous foreign interests to pursue a lifelong fascination with baseball as cofounder, with his father, of the game-changing firm Classic Baseball Consultants. Our youngest son, Drew, graduated from Emerson College in 2009 and works part-time in Manhattan while pursuing his multiple creative interests as a rap artist, musician, filmmaker, actor, stand-up comedian, cartoonist, and writer. As his father can personally testify, it’s a struggle to get started in creative fields, but I have full confidence in both his talent and perseverance. Again to my considerable relief, he has shown little interest in the politics of South Asia or the Middle East. I keep hanging in there. Cartooning is still my principal profession, although the magazine/newspaper industry is in serious decline, as is the volume of my drawings. I fill the spare time with the above-mentioned consulting firm, after five years as a pitching consultant for the St. Louis Cardinals. Classic Baseball Consultants has identified the common mechanical secrets of historic ballplayers and aspires to redefine the conventional theories of pitching and hitting, thereby reducing pitching injury and eliminating the need for performance-enhancing drugs. At age 67, I have no plans to retire. I’m a most lucky (and grateful) man — waiting for the other shoe to fall but hopeful that it takes its time (knock on wood). P.S. I’m still at work on my book about the secret of golf but will relentlessly share that secret with anyone at Reunions who dares to show interest! The Wittes in Beirut, 2006: Emily, Griff, Sally, Mike, Drew, and Spencer. 188 Guy G. Woelk 346 Snowden Ln., Princeton, NJ 08540-3632; (609) 683-1899; gwoelk@alumni.princeton.edu Spouse: Nancy S. Woelk Children: Galen, 9/8/69; Megan, 1/14/72 Grandchildren: Lina Rose, 2004; Wolf, 2007; Beckett, 2007; Rex, 2009 Josiah O. Wolcott (Joe) 21400 Locust St., Willits, CA 95490-4639 Charles B. Wolfe 1022 Briar Ridge, Houston, TX 77057; (713) 461-9692 Attorney, Suite 200, 3820 West Alabama, Houston, TX 77027; (713) 871-1144 Spouse: Margaret Feagins Wolfe Jeffery H. S. Wood Penthouse Apt., 19E. 79th St., New York, NY 10021-0122; (212) 249-1119 Freelance Writer Michael LeB. Wood P.O. Box 4008, Taos, NM 87571. Spouse: Barbara Wood Brian R. Wright 2621 Pine Bluff Dr., Vestal, NY 13850-2909; (607) 797-5934 Special Counsel, Hinman, Howard and Kattell, LLP, 700 Security Mutual Building, P.O. Box 5250, Binghamton, NY 13902-5250; (607) 231-6856 Spouse: Josie B. Wright Peter C. Wylie 8634 Gateshead Rd., Alexandria, VA 22309-4041; (703) 780-3028 Secretary and General Counsel, The Retired Officers Association, 201 N. Washington St., Alexandria, VA 22314-2539; (703) 838-8167 Spouse: C. Clair Wylie 189 Mark A. Yeoman 219 Heritage Oaks Ln., Houston, TX 77024-7309; (713) 781-0492; jyeoman@houston.rr.com Physician and President, Cardiology Associates of Houston, PA, Suite 323, 909 Frostwood, Houston, TX 77024; (713) 467-0605 Spouse: Jacqueline Gilman Yeoman Tom Chi Tien Yin 5109 Tomahawk Trail, Madison, WI 53705-1370; (608) 231-1142; yin@physiology.wisc.edu Professor, Department of Physiology, Medical School, University of Wisconsin, 290 Medical Science Building, Madison, WI 53706; (608) 262-0368 Spouse: Lillian Tong. Children: Eric, 1978; Laura, 1983 William E. Young 606 N.W. 11th Ave., Portland, OR 97209-3260; (503) 525-8847 Social Worker Spouse: Rachel Young E. Anthony Zaloom 502 Homat Virginia, Minato-Ku 4-11-2, Tokyo, Japan Attorney, Mori Sogo Law Offices, NKK Building, Marunouchi 1-1-2, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 100-0005, Japan; 81-352237700 Spouse: Vivian Wong Zaloom Anthony Zee 1011 Via Bolzano, Goleta, CA 93117-1801; (805) 967-0803; zee@itp.ucsb.edu Professor of Physics, Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106; (805) 967-2274 Spouse: Gretchen Gallagher Zee Andrew W. Zimmerman 120-A Cross Keys Rd., Baltimore, MD 21210 Pediatric Neurologist Spouse: Lenore Nelson Zimmerman 190 In Memoriam NameDate of Death Nicholas Bachko Robert Q. Baker F. Martin Belmore Alden S. Blackstone Rexford T. Brown W. Randolph Brundage Ronald E. Burns Charles M. Cannon John A. Carlson Randall M. Chastain Charles O. Cook Arthur F. Davidsen Mark L. Davidson Richard D. de Camp M. Richard Doublier Robert D. Dreiss Richard J. Dzimiszkiewicz Archibald C. Elias Michael J. Evans Richard M. Farrell Spencer W. Franck Franklin H. Frederick Theodore M. French H. Burton Gay Robert F. Goheen ’40*48 (hon.) Joseph C. Graddy James R. Green Robert E. Greenlaw Joseph G. Greenleaf M. Brooke Halsey William N. Havener Richard W. Hogan Donald P. Hubbard George L. Humphrey Stephen K. Ingersoll Roger W. Jones William E. Kane Warren S. Kafer Tajudeen A. Kasim February 5, 1967 September 18, 2002 September 5, 2004 1988 October 16, 2006 July 13, 1966 July 25, 2003 June 7, 1966 March 10, 2009 May 20, 2004 April 9, 2008 July 19, 2001 June 18, 1998 March 19, 1994 September 27, 1993 October 10, 1970 September 16, 2001 July 10, 2008 January 20, 1975 March 1984 October 23, 2009 November 3, 1970 September 23, 2001 December 3, 2010 March 31, 2008 July 15, 1990 March 10, 1993 March 3, 2004 April 14, 1972 July 21, 1969 August 22, 1993 March 8, 2008 September 28, 1963 April 1, 1996 November 1, 1966 December 27, 2005 October 30, 1991 unknown 1982 191 Edward L. Katzenbach Edwin A. Keeble Stephen R. Koller Robert E. Lamberton Gilbert Lea Joseph M. Luongo David L. McCarroll Charles A. Merlini George W. Miner Richard T. Muller Jeffrey M. Norton Edward C. Nykwest Charles J. Okstein Robert H. Purrington W. Lee Rawls Gregg E. Rice Alan G. Rockhold Ronald A. Rogerson (hon.) Andrew N. Sears John J. Secondi David F. Sexton John W.H. Simpson James E. Swan Jordan Taylor Dag Tellefsen John O. Theobald Reginald F.N. Ungern Bruce P. Vanda James C. Westfall Edward B. Whitman Richard I. Wile Daniel A. Winterbottom Austin A. Wright August 12, 1997 February 28, 1969 March 22, 1991 April 22, 1985 May 15, 1992 April 5, 2008 December 6, 2002 August 26, 2009 July 23, 1986 October 17, 2007 May 5, 1985 October 13, 2005 March 26, 2006 February 27, 1971 December 9, 2010 January 19, 2003 January 22, 2011 August 8, 1987 November 9, 2002 May 28, 1985 September 26, 2007 September 19, 1993 November 2, 1986 January 6, 2001 September 12, 2000 May 1, 2003 October 18, 2009 February 9, 1996 October 17, 2003 July 27, 1995 November 17, 2005 October 28, 2004 February 11, 2005 “Missing” Classmates Editor’s note: The following list includes classmates with no known addresses as well as classmates with known addresses who don’t wish to be contacted. If you’re in the first category or know the address of someone who is, please advise Jim Merritt (51 N. Main St., Pennington, NJ 08534; merritt66@verizon.net). James R. Aikens 192 Rajaona Andriamananjara Stanley B. Borup * Bruce W. Boyer Edward M. Coe * Martin E. Cummings Gerald M. Horton George Klints Frederick T. Koyle Leland D. Lafont Franklin P. Lawee William C. McEwen Peter C. Miller Antony Papert * Richard C. Randall John H. Smolens * Gordon B. Steven * Walter E. Stockman * William F. Thompson * Peter D. Waring * Profiled in the 1966 Nassau Herald. * Hiroshi Watanabe Charles R. Whaley Jeffrey S. Willner Stephen H. Wilson Richard A. Zeis Joseph J. Zizzi Classmates with known addresses on Alumni Records’s “do not contact” list: Christopher Conly * James H. Dashow Michael H. Davis Rolf N. Gulbrandson Charles C. Hewitt Robert M. Klein Shelby C. Miller Marshall B. Otwell Class Officers Brian H. Breuel, President Michael L. Barrett, Vice President Christopher A. Mill, Vice President James L. Parmentier, Secretary David M. Kinard, Treasurer Carl E. Eastwick, Immediate Past President Regional Vice Presidents New England: Thomas R. Armstrong Mid-Atlantic: Michael G. Janis Southeast: Nelson Hendler Southwest: John A. (Rocky) Barrett, Jr. Midwest: Barry M. Fisher West Coast & Rockies: Glen P. Goltz Overall Officers Reunion Chairs for Life John H. Thacher, co-Reunion Chairman Richard G. Morgan, co-Reunion Chairman Charles J. Plohn, Extraordinaire 193 Class officers, cont. Class Associate Chair Elaine B. D’Avella Planned Giving Chair John J. Nagorniak AG Class Agent Robert E. Nahas Class Memorialist Norman G. Tabler Web Master Johnson M. Hart Class Executive Committee Daniel F. Adams John T. Beaty Dennis B. Davis Jonathan T. Dawson John A. Edie Lawrence S. Horn Krist A. Jake Landon Y. Jones Stephen Krum William R. Leahy John H. Lumpkin Donald L. McCabe John I. Merritt Gary B. Mount Robert E. Nahas Larry S. Owen Robert H. Rawson John H. Scully G. William Sisley J. David Stitzer Richard E. Thomas Michael K. Tooke Guy G. Woelk Brian R. Wright Honorary Classmates Fred A. Hargadon (Dean of Admission, retired) Milbrey S. Mara (Associate Director for Reunions, Alumni Council) Margaret M. Miller ’80 (Director, Alumni Council) Harold T. Shapiro *64 (President, Princeton University, retired) William Tierney (former coach, Men’s Lacrosse) Shirley M. Tilghman (President, Princeton University) 194 Geographical Index Alabama Birmingham Henry S. Lynn, Jr. Fairhope Henry M. Bostwick Mobile Robert B. McGinley Montgomery O. Seaburn Eaton III J. Mills Thornton Tuscaloosa James D. Askew ARKANSAS Fayetteville Eric A. Berman Arizona Gilbert Jeffrey N. McCollum Paradise Valley P. Robert Moya Phoenix Lawrence C. Petrowski Tucson William A. Miller Wickenburg George J. Pilicy III California Albany William J. Brauer Berkeley Philip M. Brooks Jay C. Cross Clinton A. Johnson Michael W. Pflaumer Geoffrey G. Reinhard Beverly Hills Don C. Porter, Jr. Bolinas John D. Thorpe Boulder Creek Marshall B. Otwell Burbank John P. Classen Calistoga E. Richard Jones Cambria Emil Stipanovich Carmel Jon D. Raggett Corona Del Mar Fredric J. Forster Del Mar Steven D. Reich El Cerrito Mark D. Levine Ft. Bragg Theodore W. Nicholson Goleta Anthony Zee Indian Wells Richard H. Eisenhart, Jr. La Jolla Robert S. Edelman La Mesa Thomas R. Scott Larkspur James L. Russell Livermore Thomas F. Adams Long Beach Joel M. Cherlow Los Altos Philip J. Faillace Los Angeles Frank J. Biondi, Jr. James F. Carter Howard S. Fredman Guilbert C. Hentschke Charles A. Lagreco Edward E. Leamer 195 Lewis P. MacAdams, Jr. Theodore S. Martner Richard G. Reinis David A. Richardson Ronald Weinstein Jonathan M. Wiener Malibu Anthony J. McEwan Mill Valley John H. Scully Mission Viejo Hazen G. Hunt Modesto Richard L. Harriman Moss Beach H. Lyman Miller Napa John Reichel III Newport Beach Viggo Boserup Nicasio William J. Harrison, Jr. Oakland Frank W. Eighme Oakland Richard L. Riemer Orinda Stephen R. Harwood Pacific Palisades Barry R. Steinberg Thomas E. Unterman Palm Desert Don C. Porter, Jr. Palm Springs W. Lamar Smith, Jr. Palo Alto Thomas C. Hanks Pasadena Graham G. Berry, Jr. Porter Ranch Paul M. Stella Portola Valley Mark Lurie Larry S. Owen 196 Rancho Santa Fe Richard E. Fitzpatrick Redding John H.P. Cartwright, Jr. Redlands Robert W. Heinze Redondo Beach Robert M. Tobin Rolling Hills Estates Barnett Rosenberg Sacramento John D. Hamilton San Diego Linton W. Batten Glenn P. Goltz David W. Ingraham David H. Kidd Larry A. Lindsey Joseph McE. Mann III J. Dennis Russell Mark J. Shensa San Franciso Robert F. Darling Jonathan S. Holman Krist A. Jake Tom R. Norris E. Lemoine Skinner III Timothy C. Smith Thomas N. Tureen E. Anthony Zaloom San Jose Thomas A. Snell San Rafael Neil J. Bloomfield Henry N. Hulter Santa Barbara Foster H. Corwith David W. Van Horne Santa Clara John B. Moore, Jr. Santa Cruz Joel R. Primack Sausalito Henry J. Larsen Sonoma William G. Larsen, Jr. Stanford John W. Haeger Michael Spence Sunnyvale Edwin W. Aiken Jeffrey M. Weiss Topanga Thomas P. Towler Walnut Creek H. David Marshak Westlake Village Jonathan S. Morse Willits Josiah O. Wolcott III Woodside Ord Elliott Colorado Arvada Victor M. Reusch, Jr. Boulder Melvyn C. Branch Clayton H. Lewis Philip T. Nicholson Centennial Floyd R. Everhart, Jr. Theodore S. Hoster Colorado Springs Stephen A. Goscin Denver P. Thomas Benghauser John H. Caldwell IV Charles F. Dewey J. Wade Kennedy Thomas R. Reid III William G. Tierney (hon.) Englewood Kenneth K. Stuart Las Animas David W. Barber Connecticut Avon Richard J. Kates Canton William M. Duncan Darien Richard B. Harding, Jr. B. Jackson Miller, Jr. Peter L. Wilson Gaylordsville Peter G. Skinner Glastonbury William B. Parent Hartford Peter M. Upton Manchester R. Edward Townley New Canaan Stephen Brent Wells New Haven B. Lance Sauerteig New Milford John S. Burns Norwalk James C. Linville Old Saybrook William A. Childress Riverside Christopher A. Mill Rowayton James C. Linville Roxbury John M. Friedman, Jr. South Glastonbury Robert Dial Parrott Southbury John S. Nicholas III Southport Jonathan T. Dawson Stafford Springs Jolyon C. Sprowles Washington Edward S. Bent 197 West Hartford Harlan J. Levy Howard G. Smith Westport Michael A. Forastiere III John D. Magenheimer Henry Von Kohorn Woodbury George H. Largay Geoffrey M. Mayo District of Columbia Jeffrey A. Burt Leroy Eakin III H. Bartow Farr III John D. Firestone Warren Anthony Fitch James K. Holman Rufus G. King III Frank L. Langhammer Eric Hung Mun Lee Barry Metzger Robert S. Mueller III James A. Nix William L. Pressly, Jr. Arthur D. Randall Robert S. Ross, Jr. Stuart G. Steingold Francis B. Ward III Thomas H. Wickenden II Peter A. Wilson Delaware Wilmington Seth N. Braunstein Stephen E. Herrmann Robert J. Klahn, Jr. David S. Swayze Florida Boca Raton Arthur E. Osborne III Bradenton Alexander L. Kirkpatrick 198 Clearwater Bruce P. Smith Cutler Bay John R. Kelso Ft. Myers Michael C. Tice Gainesville George L. Dawson Mento A. Soponis Green Cove Springs W. Bardford Willauer Jacksonville Charles E. Wertheimer, Jr. Jupiter Brian R. Wright Naples Charles P. Gogolak William G. Warburton North Palm Beach Sami Sehayik Osprey David R. Schatz Palm Beach A. Faxon Henderson, Jr. Palm Beach Gardens Stephen M. Newman Pembroke Pines Paul W. Mahlstedt Port Charlotte Terry I. Seymour South Miami James C. Beverley St. Petersburg Paul E. Culley, Jr. David G. Mulock Tampa Charles G. Burr Jeffrey L. Miller Tequesta James R. Schueler Venice Eric W. Schneider Vero Beach Richard D. Rogers West Palm Beach Charles E. Coco, Sr. Georgia Athens Daniel H. Magill III Atlanta John W. Glasser James G. Mengert Big Canoe Robert S. Warwick Decatur Bruce S. Ribner Dunwoody William G. Wetzel Jasper Robert S. Warwick Savannah Montfort S. Ray Tybee Island Montfort S. Ray Hawaii Haiku Isaac D. Hall, Jr. Honolulu Russell L. Ching Gerald A. F. Sumida Kailua Lawrence J. Eron Kaneohe Theodore G. Meeker Kihei, Maui Paul C. Kepler Volcano Wendell Yin You Ing Iowa Fairfield John H. Black Iowa City Stephen G. Vlastos Le Claire Richard G. Bowers, Jr. Idaho Ketchum Carl B. Feldbaum Moscow Ronald J. Landeck Illinois Chicago Thomas D. Allison, Jr. Thomas M. Anderson, Jr. Louis Michael Bell Henry A. Dwyer Irving C. Faber Barry M. Fisher Peter B. Freeman Andrew J. Goodwin III Allan Horwich John W. Kalmbach John P. Kretzmann John M. McDonough Richard J. Raskin Theodore R. Tetzlaff Theodore D. Tieken, Jr. Preston McC. Torbert M. Jay Trees Evanston Richard P. Welcome Goreville Kent E. Johnson Hinsdale Frederick L. Hartmann Lake Barrington Addison C. Waid III Lake Forest Willard Bunn III Henry J. Scherck III Oak Park Curtis L. Clay Wheaton Gordon D. Heaton Winfield G. Harry Robinson 199 Indiana Bloomington Jeffrey C. Graf Evansville David T. O’Dell Goshen R. David McLaughlin Indianapolis Stephen M. Craig John Paul Godich Norman G. Tabler, Jr. Muncie Lathrop P. Johnson Kansas Lenexa Wayne B. Hewitt Kentucky Lexington W. Douglas Ensminger Louisville Bruce S. T. Chang Louisiana New Orleans A. Peyton Bush III Massachusetts Boston Richard B. Greenberg Edward C. Joyce Michael K. Tooke David L. Williams Boylston Jack R. Millard Brookline William C. Osborn Cambridge Robert A. Karasek, Jr. Jeffrey H. McMahon Chestnut Hill Richard A. Goldfine 200 Chilmark Graeme L. Flanders Jay J. Lagemann Cohasset Michael P. Equi Dedham William J. Ducas William Sisley Foxboro Thomas E. McLaughlin John J. Nagorniak Hamilton Richard A. Low Hardwick John C. Goodrich Hopedale Andrew W. Zimmerman Hopkinton David B. Dollenmayer Marblehead Owen R. Mathieu, Jr. Medford David B. Lee New Bedford Victor H. Mailey Newbury J. Frank Remley III Newton Timothy M. Barrows Lawrence T. Scott Northampton Ira Henry Rubenzahl Richmond Curtis A. Hicks Rockland Edward L. Bailey Somerville Charles J. Libby, Jr. Waltham Peter S. Mager Wayland Thomas M. Lemberg Wellesley Bruce Furie Robert V. Greco Wellfleet Paul S. Pilcher West Newton Robert L. Evans, Jr. West Roxbury Carl W. Corey Weston Thomas R. Armstrong Johnson M. Hart Westport William T. Reed, Jr. Winchester Charles McM. Oman Worchester Hussein M. Adam Maryland Annapolis Anthony F. Christhilf John B. Slidell William T. Torgerson Baltimore John C. Corckran, Jr. Stephen S. Dunham David E. Kern John S. Nixdorff Bethesda John T. Beaty, Jr. John A. Edie Kenneth E. Krosin Frederick W. Talcott Chevy Chase David M. Corcoran Kenneth R. Harney William R. Leahy, Jr. Alvin A. Schall James P. Timbie Church Hill Gordon S. Bjorkman, Jr. College Park John B. Williams Columbia David A. Boetcher Darnestown Andrew Butz Easton Robert S. Middleton Frederick John R. Laughlin Gaithersburg Lawrence P. Cook Wallace P. Judd Webster G. Tarpley Gibson Island Richard McMillan, Jr. Glyndon Stanislaw Maliszewski Lutherville Carl E. Eastwick Millington Champe C. McCulloch Parkton John J. Ghingher III Rockville Andrew C. LeCompte Ruxton Walter G. Lohr, Jr. Salisbury Henry M. Rutledge V Severna Park David H. Bonnett Silver Spring Edward V. Lee Stevenson Nelson H. Hendler Takoma Park Richard S. Beth Towson Kenneth A. Bourne, Jr. Westminster John N. Peabody, Jr. Maine Bath Henry F. Cygan, Jr. 201 Biddeford R. Craig Johnson Bremen Daniel R. Goldenson Brunswick James L. Parmentier Camden Anthony P. Grassi James H. Mays Cumberland Foreside Carlos J. Quijano Damariscotta William E. Bausch Falmouth John P. Kipp, Jr. G. Paul Savidge Lewiston Edward Z. Walworth Peaks Island William E. Hall, Jr. Portland Dallas P. Dickinson Thomas F. Eismeier Stephen J. Gaal Yarmouth Charles C. Emmons, Jr. Michigan Ann Arbor Joseph D. Greulich William G. Price, Jr. Macklin Smith Clarskton Michael E. Gillespie Montague Christopher B. Bedford Troy Robert M. Sigler, Jr. Minnesota Duluth Gerald C. Martin Excelsior Stephen L. Bakke 202 Long Lake John E. Whitman Minneapolis David W. Ponthan David K. Rubenstein St. Paul Marschall T. Smith Missouri Saint Louis John F. Adam Anthony Kulczycki, Jr. Richard F. Lowenstein John B. Mitchell, Jr. Alan Pestronk Jamie Spencer Mississippi Jackson Rexford T. Brown Vicksburg William V. Martin Montana Billings William D. Elliot Bozeman John H. Heminway, Jr. East Glacier Park James M. Cooper North Carolina Asheville R. Randolph Weast Black Mountain Richard S. McConnell, Jr. Chapel Hill John S. Kizer Frank T. Morgan Charlotte John E. Davenport C. Dana Hershey, Jr. William D. Montross Durham Thomas L. Wenger Greensboro Granville G. Miller Hillsborough John H. DiLiberti Pisgah Forest Robert R. Brooks New Hampshire Concord James O. Barney Durham Roger A. Evans Etna Laurence D. Cromwell Hampton Roger B. Nold Hanover Stephen P. Spielberg Hollis Gary W. Gilbert Keene Carl B. Jacobs, Jr. Lebanon Eugene C. Struckhoff New Jersey Basking Ridge Douglas A. Greene Belle Mead Stephen S. Cook Blackwood Jack A. Cohen Bloomfield Michael G. Janis Bridgewater Mikk Hinnov Brookside David T. Partridge Burlington N. Kenneth Boudwin, Jr. Burlington Bruce E. Constant, Jr. East Orange Wilson Chukwunwike Obi East Windsor Leighton Chen Essex Fells Bernard J. D’Avella, Jr. Jersey City Hugh B. Sweeny III Metuchen Robert F. Seely Millburn David K. De Longe Montclair Stuart S. Ball Morristown Lawrence S. Horn Ocean City Douglas C. Walters Ocean Grove David M. Kinard Pennington John I. Merritt III Margaret M. Miller ’80 (hon.) Princeton Roderick W. Bass Philip J. Berg Walter R. Bliss, Jr. Brian H. Breuel Ernest Cruikshank III Fred A. Hargadon (hon.) Robert H. Jackson Landon Y. Jones, Jr. Bert G. Kerstetter Andrew A. Littauer John L. Logan Milbrey S. Mara (hon.) Gary B. Mount Charles J. Plohn, Jr. William H. Sachs Harold H. Shapiro *64 (hon.) Daniel J. Skvir Theodore M. Stanger Shirley M. Tilghman (hon.) Guy G. Woelk 203 Skillman Burton A. Ford III South Orange Donald L. McCabe Spring Lake Dennis B. Davis Westfield Mark L. Fleder Wyckoff Robert E. Nahas New Mexico Albuquerque Lance A. Chilton John Graham Findlay William G. McPheron Corona Daniel F. Adams Dulce Thomas E. Greacen El Prado Michael LeB. Wood Las Vegas William L. Slick Santa Fe John G. Lamb, Jr. G. Wells McMurray II Richard J. Smith Nevada Henderson Russell T. Hurlburt James A. Walker Las Vegas Michael D. Case Zephyr Cove Robert N. Chester New York Airmont A. James Mettler Albany Philip E. Hansen 204 Amherst James R. La Fountain, Jr. Brockport W. Bruce Leslie Brooklyn Joe Erlichster David C. Garlow Ernest W. Hutton, Jr. Daniel K. Okereke Rockwell C. Tenney II Buffalo Livingston V. Watrous Canandaigua Carl P. Sahler, Jr. Chappaqua M. Davis Johnson Corning John F. Marino Cottekill Bernard E. Lewkowicz East Hampton Charles J. Riggi Essex Robert A. Harsh Jamaica Anozie A. Ozumba Katonah Seymour Preston, Jr. Le Roy Charles J. Riggi Manhasset Hills Arthur Cohen Monroe John B. MacDonald Mount Kisko Kenneth L. Kreidmann Mount Vernon Edward J. Steube, Jr. New Paltz Sunday C. Chikwendu William B. Rhodes New York Robert L. Amdur David G. Burnett Douglas W. Crase Paul E. Friedman Thomas S. Gilbert Robert H. Goldie David Y. Hinshaw William C. Koplovitz, Jr. James T. MacGregor Walter B. Mahony III Howard McMorris II W. Sean O’Donoghue Thomas J. Pniewski Michael L. Pribyl John S. Redpath, Jr. Stephen J. Schreiber Paul Segal Jeffrey R. Shafer George B. Weiksner, Jr. Jeffery H. S. Wood Oneonta Ronald G. Peters Orient W. Marshall Johnson, Jr. Pearl River Robert T. O’Keeffe Pelham Edward Groth III Pleasantville Richard e. Malina Quoque Michael A. Herships Ray Brook Mitchell J. Goroski, Jr. South Nyack Michael C. Witte Southampton Thomas C. Ragan Stephentown Brian C. Baker Waccabuc M. Warren Browne Whitesboro Stephen Lee Walthall Wynantskill F. G. Schonenberg, Jr. Ohio Aurora Gary W. Weimer Canal Winchester Alan R. Dahl Chagrin Falls Dieter Bloser Cincinnati Michael J. Burrill Cleveland Robert H. Rawson, Jr. Cleveland Heights J. Kearney Shanahan Columbus Bruce McA. Draudt Paul Ponomarev Dayton James A. Papa Elida James McCabe Adams Gambier James V. Davis, Jr. Massillon Robert C. Clendenin Milford Stephen H. Smith Mogadore James W. Stoops Piqua Daniel P. French Oklahoma Edmond Daniel H. Carmichael Pryor William V. Martin Shawnee John A. Barrett, Jr. Tulsa Michael L. Ayling Kenneth A. Owen, Jr. 205 Oregon Amity David P. Beck Clatskanie Eric G. Sellix Corvallis James A. Folts Eugene Richard O. Buck, Jr. Mt. Hood Carl B. Harper Portland Michael B. Feldman Frank G. MacMurray, Jr. William E. Young Martin J. Winch Salem Bruce L. Gates Siletz John E. Lupton Pennsylvania Abington Robert P. Vogel Allentown James A. Bartholomew Beaver J. Lauson Cashdollar Berwick Douglas B. Ritter Berwyn David R. Baraff Carlisle John S. Newbold III Carversville William A. Lutz Chadds Ford George R. Hansen, Jr. Coatsville Tony Carroll Devon John H. Hodge John H. Thacher, Jr. 206 Doylestown C. William Kaiser, Jr. Emmaus Donald J. Rodenbach Greencastle Chalmers L. Ensminger Haverford William G. Adamson Walter Smedley III Sankey V. Williams Kintnersville Charles A. Fritz III Macungie David A. Butler Malvern John H. Chidester IV Narberth Robert D. Hochberg Nazareth Charles J. Peischl Newtown Square Leonard F. Hirsh, Jr. Francis E. Nuessle Philadelphia Edwin B. Bronstein Jack D. B. Coleman Donald M. Friedman David B. Harwi Peter S. Longstreth Eric G. Pearson John E. Schleh Pittsburgh Ralph A. Davies Radnor Barrie L. Hurtubise Sewickley Robert Y. Kopf, Jr. Warminster J. David Stitzer West Chester David A. Sonnenberg Wynnewood John S. Bildersee York Charles E. Letocha Rhode Island Rumford Albert G. Lee, Jr. Wakefield Benjamin W. McCleary South Carolina Columbia John H. Lumpkin, Jr. Hilton Head David W. Ames J. Robert Bedell Robert N. Haarlow Keith S. Jennings Richard E. Thomas II Okatie John B. Folts Sheldon William R. Barrett, Jr. Tennessee Antioch John S. Mason Chattanooga Albert J. LaMontagne Knoxville Clay S. Davis, Jr. Nashville R. Walter Hale III Gates J. Wayburn, Jr. Sewanee Guy F. Lytle III Texas Austin Frederick N. Bradstreet Edward R. Durkee Philip C. Friday, Jr. Lynn M. Moak Big Spring Mike Robinson Dallas John L. Fischer, Jr. William E. Johnson III Denison Ronald Van Buskirk Elbert Stephen E. McClymont Houston Lloyd M. Bentsen III Robert L. Johnson III Richard A. Lydecker, Jr. John McG. Rutledge Charles B. Wolfe Mark A. Yeoman Kingwood Peter L. Andrus Montgomery Richard G. Morgan Pottsborough Lex A. Passman Rosenberg Edward L. Overtree Round Top David J. Keetley, Jr. Utah Salt Lake City Michael L. Goldstein Richard F. Riesenfeld Virginia Aldie John K. Leydon, Jr. Alexandria Juan M. Castro Stephen H. Chertock David P. Stewart Peter C. Wylie Arlington Richard L. Berger Stephen G. Krum Charlottesville Robert D. Jordan Albert E. Smith, Jr. 207 Chesapeake William J. Moyse Dumfries Lawrence W. Brown Fairfax Peter A. Cary Paul E. Hudak Free Union Michael Z. Booth Great Falls John C. Slaybaugh Herndon Daniel A. 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Brunner Turkey Ankara Sener Ozsahin United Kingdom Bucks Hamilton L. Shields Cambridge Kenneth L. Thompson Oxford Paul Elmer M. Fine MIKE WITTE Our 40th-reunion logo 210 TheMuslimQuestion.com FAQ By Ted Bent Ted and Rebecca Bent opened their home for two months to a Pakistani amputee and her father. It was a learning experience for all of them. Editor’s note: Ted Bent is the business manager of the Canterbury School, in Washington, Connecticut. The website TheMuslimQuestion.com is fictitious and used here as a literary conceit. The events described occurred in December 2006–January 2007. This article originally appeared in the Winter 2007 issue of Pallium, the magazine of the Canterbury School, and is reprinted by permission. Q: Why did you set up this website? A: People have asked about our family’s experience as a Healing the Children host family caring for a 6 1/2-year-old Pakistani amputee for two months while she had a prosthesis fabricated at the Shriners Hospital in nearby Springfield, Connecticut, so we put up the site to respond to some of the more frequently asked questions. Q: Was hosting this Pakistani child so difficult? A: No, Insha was an exceptionally appealing kid — breathtakingly upbeat, in fact, for a girl who lost a leg at the hip to a falling wall and ensuing gangrene in the Kashmir earthquake of October 2005 and who has lived in a tent camp there with her parents and two younger siblings ever since. LITCHFIELD COUNTY TIMES Q: Then what was the problem? A: There was no problem — except Insha and her father Afsar didn’t speak any English and we didn’t speak their Urdu, never mind they wouldn’t even look at our food, nor we at theirs. But what really took us aback was that they were so disgusted by our dogs. Insha holding a photo of her taken at the tent camp in Kashmir where her family lived following an earthquake in 2005. 211 Q: How many dogs do you have? A: We have three Labs: a dumb Chocolate, a lethargic Black, and a smart Yellow, who are an integral part of our family and rural life, along with the three hundred cows on the farm across the road. Q: Did these dogs threaten Insha or her father? A: Only by licking, but it turns out Muslims can’t stand dogs. Q: Insha and her father were Muslims? A: Yes, and Pakistani Muslims think dogs are filthy, despicable creatures, a notch below pigs on the social scale. When one of the dog’s tails brushed Insha, she freaked and had to wash and change her clothes. So we had to lock the dogs out for two months. Q: Was that so bad? A: It was cold outdoors and the dogs weren’t used to it, but that was just the tip of the iceberg. Q: What was the rest of the iceberg? A: The Bents just hadn’t thought about what it would mean to have Muslims in the house. Although the Sunni and the Shia have been the world’s lead story since 9/11 and the insurgencies in Iraq, the Bents had never distinguished one Muslim from another. And now they were in the bedroom downstairs, sending loud Muslim snores up through the floor, praying five times a day, and Insha was hopping around the house on one leg. Q: Didn’t Insha have crutches? A: Yes, but she only used them outside. In the house she hopped — as fast as any other kid can run. The first time the Bents saw her do it, they were stunned. Insha has an athlete’s gift of coordination. Q: And she prayed five times a day? A: No, just her father. He was devout, she wasn’t. Muslim girls seem to have few religious inhibitions until they reach puberty. That’s when the Islamic portcullis inhibiting devout Muslim women notoriously comes down. Q: How did Rebecca get along with Insha? A: Famously, perhaps because Rebecca’s father is an Iranian who left his Islamic faith behind when he came to America, or perhaps because they just both fell in love. As soon as Rebecca heard Insha’s foot hit the floor at dawn, she would race to meet the girl and they would undertake a joint ritual of morning ablutions. It was Ted who lay in bed, wide-eyed, listening to Afsar’s bearded snores, feeling pressed to make sense of it all. Q: What was so difficult to understand? A: The global picture. Afsar had gotten off their 26-hour flight unpredictably wearing a pea-green soccer jersey and carrying all their luggage in a single small shoulder bag, while Insha gamely swung along in his wake 212 on a mismatched pair of cut-down elbow crutches meant for an adult three times her size. Q: So? A: So they had come from an unimaginably remote Islamic city in the foothills of the Himalayas where tens of thousands had been maimed and killed in the collapse of 300-year-old stone buildings, where there had been no accessible medical aid, and where survivors then faced winter with no homes. Q: But didn’t the international community respond to the crisis by bringing in tents and setting up camps? A: Yes, not unlike the Taliban camps in the Pakistani tribal regions a few hundred miles to the west where Al Qaeda trains its fighters and where Osama bin Laden still hides out. Q: What was so complicated? Wasn’t Insha just the lucky girl among tens of thousands who — thanks to the serendipity of her photo appearing in Time in April ’06 and attracting a Shriner’s attention — was getting a prosthesis from one of the best charitable pediatric hospitals in the world? A: That’s what Rebecca understood, but Ted just couldn’t get it. For one thing, Christmas was coming and — at the least — the Bents typically decorate a tree, Rebecca sets up two or three crèches, Rebecca Bent and Insha. and Ted dutifully lights all four Advent candles anticipating the birth of Jesus. So he decided that foregoing some of this paraphernalia of Christmas would be one way to reduce the stress of the Muslims’ visit — an idea, of course, which Rebecca promptly discounted out of hand. Q: Did Ted feel his Christian faith was being threatened? A: No, his experience was more tangible than that. Healing the Children had not just slipped the great religious/political crisis of the 21st century into the bedroom downstairs like a Trojan Horse, but it quickly became clear that our guests expected breakfast, lunch, and dinner to be served to them. Q: What do you mean? 213 LITCHFIELD COUNTY TIMES Q: Did the Bents think Afsar was a Taliban? A: Rebecca didn’t focus on the geography and wasn’t worried, but Ted couldn’t parse the tension he felt at the sudden compression of the “global village” into the single room downstairs. The Bents may have a too-big house, but it wasn’t big enough to contain all these complexities. A: Well, through their 20-odd years of a modern marriage, Rebecca and Ted had satisfactorily negotiated their share of the kitchen chores, but selfrespecting Pakistani men do not typically cook or clean for themselves or even for their disabled children — whatever inconveniences earthquakes and amputations may present. Q: That’s a Muslim thing as well? A: Not necessarily of the faith, but the women in Pakistan keep their counsel and do all the domestic work, which left Afsar sitting expectantly at the kitchen table with Insha right beside him. Q: So how did Rebecca and Ted adjust to this apparent affront? A: They didn’t as much as Afsar fortunately did, thanks to the critical intervention of the immigrant Pakistani community in the nearby city of Waterbury which showed him — and Ted and Rebecca — the way. Q: What did these Pakistanis do? A: Speaking Urdu on the phone, they told Afsar that he simply had to do the dishes and clean up or else there would be no meals. So he willingly did, and equity and peace were restored overnight. Q: How had the Bents connected with these Waterbury Pakistanis? A: Healing the Children’s Christina Geary had gone online and found a local bilingual Pakistani college student, Sohair Mahmood, to help with English/Urdu translation, and then Sohair’s mother, Amti Omar, had taken the hapless Bents to an halal market tucked away in a rundown Waterbury mall where they found the meat and rice that Insha and Afsar would eat. Q: So then the Bents were able to buy what they needed? A: No, they were given what they needed — that first week and every week following — already cooked in great flat aluminum trays prepared by Bano, the round-faced, hijab-covered shopkeeper who instinctively saw Insha for the vulnerable Pakistani girl she was, even as she presided over her shoe-string retail operation with a firm hand and without complaint. It was her extraordinary generosity — and that of her muscular, soft-hearted son who pulled a $20 bill from their nearly empty cash register to give to Insha — that cracked open the smug delusion of Ted’s Yankee self-sufficiency, blinding him with tears as he stumbled after Insha on her crutches leaving the store. Q: What was Ted crying about? A: What wasn’t there to cry about? He didn’t know if it was the impoverishment of his own spirit or the manifest generosity of these Pakistanis that was wringing the blood from his atrophied Connecticut heart and forcing him to gasp for breath. Q: But isn’t Ted’s Yankee self-reliance the very backbone of America and 214 at the core of our country’s great contribution to the global process? A: If you ask a Yankee, yes. But Ted found the generosity of these closely knit Waterbury Muslims was so personal, spontaneous, and abundant that it trumped anything he had ever known among the most charitable of his fellow New Englanders. Q: And never mind the Al Qaeda fighters with their Islamic declarations of hate and intent to destroy the infidels? A: From the perspective of Waterbury, the merciless indignation of the Al Qaeda fringe has more to do with the politics, poverty, and injustices of the contemporary world than with Islam. Q: How does anyone figure that? A: It’s what Ted learned reading the crib sheets and crash course in comparative religion fed to him by Marija Stankus-Saulaitis, Canterbury’s Lithuanian faculty member with her own strict Catholic ethic and a Master’s in Islamic Studies. Q: What did she tell him? A: She suggested rereading the stories of Abraham, and to relax. Q: How can anyone relax reading Abraham? Isn’t he the one who God told to slit his own son Isaac’s throat, and who was willing? A: Yes, and he was also the first to identify the non-idolatrous God, and so the monotheistic Big Three all claim him as their patriarch. Q: What Big Three? A: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, depending how Abraham’s God is proclaimed and welcomed. Q: Aren’t you oversimplifying the greatest issues of contemporary theology? A: Maybe not. Q: Then you must be trivializing the Islamic Jihad as just an Abrahamic family squabble? A: Ted certainly wondered about that — and also whether there would be time for a stop at COSTCO — when he drove Afsar to Friday services at Waterbury’s United Muslim Mosque, which turned out to be a two-story, nondescript commercial building in a largely residential neighborhood on the edge of downtown. When Ted followed Afsar into the makeshift, carpeted space and sat in his socks alone against the back wall watching the eclectic assortment of men at their prayers, there seemed far less threat in the air than meets the voracious media eye. These men turning toward Mecca appeared more worried about their souls and the holes in their socks than any Jihad. Q: So there were no women in the room? A: No, but Ted had seen them outside, coming and going with assorted 215 children, many wrapped in the beautiful silks of the lower continent. He could also see them now through an open central corridor gathered in a separate hall, gossiping or praying, he couldn’t tell which. Q: And this segregation didn’t seem to him like a sexist anachronism? A: On the contrary; it felt to Ted like a welcome lull in the fractious gender storms of daily American life. Q: But won’t being set apart be an added problem for Insha back in Pakistan as she grows up? How can a one-legged girl hope to compare favorably among the rest of the female chattel in her country, which is already widely recognized as one of the least supportive of women on the planet? A: It’s a real problem. Listening to the warnings of the Waterbury Pakistanis, men and women alike, Rebecca and Ted had learned that Insha’s destiny back home will be a crushing challenge at best, and they both wondered how to offer her some alternative to the burkha that may await her like another catastrophic earthquake in her beloved Muzaffarabad. Q: Did the Bents have any ideas? A: Sure, everything from adoption to a scholarship at Canterbury, but neither Rebecca nor Ted have been able to speak to Insha’s mother, nor been able to establish any reliable contact with anyone else in her family since she returned. There have been a few chaotically loud cell phone calls in which they have each clearly heard Insha’s cheerful “Hello,” but no communication or exchange of information. In Insha’s displaced-persons camp there is no mail, no Internet access, no phone lines, and no identifiable agency or person — never mind English-speaking — in charge. Q: Then how will the Bents ever see her again? A: As she grows, she will need to have her prosthesis adjusted, and that will require periodic trips to the Shriners Hospital in Springfield. If Rebecca and Ted can facilitate those trips, then she’ll visit with them again and surely snuggle on the couch with Rebecca to watch Free Willy and Cinderella, her two favorite videos among the dozens she and Rebecca brought home from the library. Q: Why those two? A: Probably because both are about beating life’s daunting odds. Rebecca can picture Insha, like Cinderella, dancing at a ball when she grows up. But for Ted, it was watching Insha amuse herself playing with the crèche figures as if they were dolls that arrested his attention. Q: Why? A: The irony of this little Muslim girl casually arranging and re-arranging the Holy Family’s manager scene pulled him up short. He had simply never imagined the crèche tableau could be reinterpreted with such impunity. 216 Q: Was there anything blasphemous in Insha’s doll house play? A: Not if we are all truly cousins in the family of Abraham. Q: And if were not? A: Insha would have us be. She cast Rebecca as Mary, the blessed mother; herself as a transgendered baby Jesus; and Ted as Joseph, God’s perpetually bewildered eunuch but, as Insha had come to trust, the faithful master of his dogs. Ted Bent’s Postscript: Insha, having quickly outgrown her prosthesis, returned with her father for a second visit in the fall of 2007 to be fitted for a longer prosthesis. She got her new leg, but Rebecca and Insha’s father, still not speaking each other’s languages, nonetheless came to loggerheads, and when they left Rebecca told him he was not welcome to come back. So, since Muslim girls don’t typically travel alone, we didn’t expect to see Insha again. But the following November of 2008, an English-speaking uncle of Insha’s got in touch to tell us her prosthesis had broken and ask if she could come alone. She got off the plane from Islamabad the following March of 2009. While her prosthesis was being rebuilt, we put her into the grammar school where our now-grown son had gone, almost as a lark and distraction. But she loved it, the school loved her, and we found ourselves committing to educating her indefinitely in America, while she insisted she needed to return summers to visit her family in Pakistan. A lot of bureaucratic trouble ensued getting her a student visa, but that finally came through in December of 2009, and in January of 2010 she began school in earnest, returned to Pakistan in the summer, and then came back in the fall of 2010 for the fifth grade and her first full academic year, which we’re in the midst of now. Meanwhile, Insha has become perhaps the best 10-year-old, one-legged skier in New England, now spends her own money on treats for our dogs, which we eschew, loves her iTouch, and has become as impertinent as any spoiled American girl. n REBECCA BENT Afsar Khan, Insha Afsar, and Ted Bent shopping for a Christmas tree in Washington, Conn. 217 Tractors and the Farmers Who Love Them By Gary Mount M y father once told me that he had asked my grandfather, whose farm was on Route 1 in West Windsor, New Jersey, what he and his farmer friends talked about when they stood together at different gatherings. “Horses and women” was his answer. I always wanted to ask whether, in my father’s day, it was “tractors and women.” One of the enduring themes of farm life is the farmer’s relationship with his horses and his tractors. One of my uncles sketched out a map of my grandfather’s farm as it looked between 1900 and 1910. It shows the horse barn and lists all of the horses he could remember by name — Tom, Dan, Jumbo, Dick, Pansy, Ned, Charlie, Lester, Stewart, John Bonehead, and Jenny. They did the plowing, planting, cultivating, haying, harvesting, hauling, and transporting people. Horses were even used to pull ropes that hoisted hay into the top of the barns or to power different pieces of stationary equipment. Horses were very important on the farm, and it took quite a number of them to do all of the work. In 1916, my grandfather William M. Mount bought his first tractor, an Avery Model 8-16. The number 8 meant that the tractor was able to exert the same pull as eight horses, i.e., eight horsepower. The larger number was the power of the engine. Almost half of its power was lost in the transmission and gears! Gears were shifted by a hand lever that moved the entire engine assembly forward and back to engage the correct gear combinations. The tractor was powered by kerosene and used gasoline to start it. In addition to the two fuel tanks, a third tank held water, which was added in small amounts to suppress combustion knocking (pinging) of the kerosene and to add power. In short order, my grandfather bought two more Avery tractors, a 6-12 and a 12-25. He liked them so much he became an Avery Tractor dealer. His four sons, including my father, had the job of delivering them. The steel-wheeled behemoths were simply driven along the road to their destination. No driver’s license was needed in those days. They had to return to the farm by shanks-mare (an old saying meaning “on foot”). The first tractors were large and heavy, difficult to maneuver, and had cleated steel wheels that jarred the operator down to his bones. However, everything considered, farmers liked them more than horses. In addition to more pulling power, each tractor had a powered pulley that could drive a flat belt. The belt was attached to a piece of machinery like a thresher or a circular saw. I have actually used one of these saws, powered by a belt 218 Gary with the newest of his many tractors — another John Deere “green.” He’s standing in front of his spectacular new barn at Terhune Orchards, site of the class’s 2010 Reunions dinner. from one of my father’s tractors. Luckily, I survived the experience with all limbs intact. As the use of tractors on farms increased, they became more powerful, easier to use, and began to come with rubber tires. One of my uncles and my father argued about whether steel or rubber would pull better. To settle the matter, they hooked two tractors back-to-back. It was a dead heat. They just sat there and dug holes in the ground. I don’t think my grandfather was too pleased. Along with the coming of rubber tires came the demise of the Avery Company. My grandfather switched to Case tractors, still retaining the same delivery staff. When I grew up, there was only one tractor to have on the farm — Case. However, when I was ten, my father bought a Ferguson. It was quite a radical step, even though the Ferguson had several features that made it more suitable for some farm jobs than the Case. It might seem strange that a better machine would be so radical, but just as with their horses, farmers are particular about their tractors. Even today, many rural towns divide their farmers according to the equipment they use. People are identified by their brand of tractor. “He’s a John Deere man.” Or, “He’s a Case man.” Part of the identity is the paint color. “They’re all green (John Deere) over there,” is a comment I heard only last week. Another part of the identity is passion. No farmer who believes in his tractors is lukewarm about them. Several years ago, I traveled to Biglerville, Pennsylvania, to look at a new sprayer for my orchards. The dealer took me to see a particular model on someone’s farm. When I asked the farmer how he liked the sprayer, I was sternly told that it “worked good, but only if you have something green (John Deere) to put in front of it.” It wasn’t at all clear whether this farmer would even let me look at the 219 sprayer if I wasn’t going to pull it with a John Deere. Red (Case or International), orange (Allis Chalmers), or blue (Ford) just wouldn’t do. So, you really can’t separate farmers and their tractors. Actually, for any self-respecting farmer, it is a case of the more the better. (This truism doesn’t usually apply to the farmer’s spouse.) One year before Thanksgiving dinner at our house, my younger brother Tim walked around the farmstead, sort of looking things over. At dinner (keep in mind, this is my own brother), between mouthfuls of turkey, he asked, “Gary, why do you need 13 tractors?” The dead silence that followed was broken by Pam’s question, “We — have — 13 — tractors?” That’s why farmers never, ever park all of their tractors in a row: too easy to count. As I write this, I am thinking about getting a new tractor. It is something I desperately need. The more, the better! Or as my two-year-old grandson, Becket, said recently, “I need more tractors every day.” *** The writer thanks his brothers Bill and Lee for information for this article. Gary and his wife, Pam, are the owners of Terhune Orchards, in Lawrence Township, New Jersey. For more of Gary’s stories about life on the farm, go to http://www.terhuneorchards.com/our_articles.html.—Ed. 220 Three Men Out Fantasy baseball camp with the Mick and Enos Slaughter By Henry Von Kohorn L “ ive your fantasy. Be a big-league ballplayer for a week.” So goes the brochure for the Mickey Mantle-Whitey Ford Fantasy Baseball Camp. In 1992, in an uncharacteristic surge of togetherness, three Von Kohorn brothers — Ken, Jeff, and I — decided to enroll for a week of bonhomie at the New York Yankee spring training facility in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The camp, held at the beginning of November, brought together 84 male menopausers, whose linkage was a love of pinstripes and an uncommon devotion to Mickey Mantle. The opening cocktail party is held Sunday night at our hotel-the posh, though somewhat nouveau, Palm-Aire Resort. Booze and beer flow (Is this how the real big-leaguers train?), and scatological humor is the order of the evening. Together with Mantle and Ford, other camp staffers include such legendary Yankees as Hank Bauer, Bill Skowron, Enos Slaughter, Johnny Blanchard, and Jake Gibbs. The ex-Yankees are master storytellers and regale us with stories that seem as fresh as if the events had occurred that morning. Prior to coming to camp, we had been advised to bring with us at least a dozen official American League baseballs to be signed by the Yankee luminaries. In addition, many of us brought with us all manner of old programs, uniforms, hats, magazines, baseball cards, and photographs in hopes that a member of the camp staff would favor us with an autograph. At the cocktail party, however, we were darkly informed, “No autographs.” It later turned out that most of the ex-Yankees were more than willing to sign anything shoved in front of them. Mickey and Whitey, however, were a different story. We were specifically warned that “Mickey Mantle doesn’t sign bats.” As we learned through the week, getting any kind of autograph from the Mick could be hazardous to your health. What was I going to do with a dozen official American League balls? Day One — Monday: We arrive at the ballpark. The locker room has cubicles with our names prominently displayed above each and our genuine Yankee pinstripes hanging spotlessly within. After suiting up, checking the mirror, and taking pictures of one another, we head out to our field of dreams to meet the head counselor, Mike Ferraro. Mike’s principal claim to immortality is that as third-coach for the Yankees at a crucial moment in the World Series, he ill-advisedly sent a runner home. The runner was nailed at the plate, the Yankees lost the game, and Ferraro was summarily dismissed by George Steinbrenner. 221 Mike tells the assembled ballplayers, “Gentlemen, this is as good as you’re going to feel all week.” We are told that we will be playing two full games each day. The camp supplies pitchers and catchers. We play all the other positions, and we get to play with four outfielders. At the end of the week, the team with the best record will get trophies. He goes on to tell us to take it easy and not to run everything out or slide into bases because, in the past, campers who have extended themselves don’t last through Wednesday. Finally, no bunting is allowed and “the hit sign is always on.” “We’re here to have fun, fellas.” Ken, Jeff and I are assigned to the same ball club managed by Enos “Country” Slaughter, a 76-year-old pepper pot whose competitive juices haven’t begun to evaporate and who still lives on the same North Carolina farm on which he was raised. Enos is a veteran of the old St. Louis Gas House Gang and fits in with modern ballplayers about as well as a Sopwith Camel would with NASA. Slaughter says, “To hell with having fun, we’re here to win.” Batting practice clearly demonstrates that none of the Von Kohorns is a home-run threat. Line drives up the middle become our goal. But in the field we look great. I line up at third base, Ken at second, and Jeff, seeking a low profile, is in right. Our first game is against the team managed by Jake Gibbs. It is clear from the beginning that we have good hitters but a leaky defense. The first pop-up hit to me is high and comes down like a banana. Naturally, I muff it and Slaughter yells, “Put some grass in your hat.” This I translate to mean, “If another pop-up is hit in your direction, you may want some cushioning in the likely event that the ball hits you on your head.” Ken inadvertently plays in the field with his batting glove on his throwing hand and attributes a couple of errant throws to this oversight. Jeff pulls a muscle running out a grounder. Fortunately for our team, both Ken and I share our position with other teammates — alternating innings. Our left fielder, Howard, from Mississippi, actually homers to right. The Von Kohorn brothers eke out a couple of hits, including a triple to right center by yours truly, and somehow we go on to win 10-3. Between games, we head to the clubhouse, where a real big-league “spread” is available for lunch. Dining on roast beef, cole slaw, and rice pudding while dodging 80 sweaty, dirt-covered bodies is an experience to be savored. I notice one fellow camper on crutches with his foot in a cast. Could this be our first casualty? It turns out that he broke his foot three weeks before camp, but there was no way he was going to miss living his fantasy. For the entire week, he employs a pinch runner and gamely hobbles around right field. On Monday afternoon, we beat Johnny Blanchard’s team 14-11 with a rally in the top of the ninth. I get a hit but manage to drop another popup at third. I also make an error on a bad throw. Well, at least I’ve gotten 222 through the first day. We’re undefeated, and I’m healthy, but as we leave the field I hear my skipper in a stage whisper saying to anyone within earshot, “We cain’t be missin’ no easy pop-ups.” We see Mickey Mantle in the clubhouse following the game. He’s pulling on a Miller Lite. It begins to dawn on me that we have yet to see the Mick without his hand wrapped around a beer or a highball. I’m beginning to get the impression that Mickey’s bloodalcohol level has been above the legal limit since he left Oklahoma. That night, Ken, Jeff, and I take in the Steven Segal thriller, Under Siege, Henry Von Kohorn’s memento photo of him and Mickey a real male-bonding film for Mantle, who hit better than he spelled. three real big leaguers. Day 2 — Tuesday: Part of the thrill of being a big-league ballplayer is having big league trainers. Gene Monahan, the official Yankee trainer, is in residence during our camp, and the line to the trainers room is already perceptible. Muscle pulls and blisters are the most common ailments, although Gene claims to be able to replace teeth and do a heart transplant if necessary. His talents may be needed because one of our teammates, Larry, from New York City, actually underwent a triple bypass within the past year. This is the morning is for photo opportunities. Each of us jockeys for position next to his favorite Yankee. Film is flying through cameras at warp speed. As I shake hands with Slaughter, he says, “We cain’t be missin’ no easy pop-ups today.” Game 1 — Mike Ferraro’s team scores two runs in the ninth to beat us 6-5. I go 0-3 and fail to charge a grounder, but at least nothing hits me on the head. Ken begins to complain about sore quadriceps. Game 2 — I miss another easy pop-up. Well, I didn’t think it was so easy, but Slaughter did. I go 2-4 and am robbed on a long fly to dead center. In the eighth inning, we’re holding on to a narrow lead against Bill Skowron’s team. With the bases loaded and one out, an ersatz Cecil 223 Fielder smashes a hard-hit two-hopper to me at third. I drop to one knee, field the ball cleanly, step on third and throw to first base — double play. Bill Skowron, coaching third for the opposition, calls it a “back-breaker.” We go on to win easily. Our record is 3 and 1. Unfortunately, I now have a badly bruised knee from fielding the hard-hit grounder and somewhere along the line have scraped my arm. Because we are the only brothers in camp and because we are not exactly playing like the DiMaggios, we are beginning to be known as the Three Stooges. Tuesday evening is spent at the hotel for what is called B.S. Night. (No autographs, please. What am I going to do with all my balls?) The ex-Yankees are seated at a table with microphones, and we groupies get to drink beer and ask them questions — such as “Mickey, who was the toughest pitcher you ever faced?” Answer, “When you strike out 1,710 times, they’re all tough.” Think maybe he’s heard that one before? Mickey allowed that his biggest nemesis was Dick “the Monster” Radatz of the Boston Red Sox, who struck him out 44 times in 66 trips. Asked about his biggest thrill in baseball, Mickey said it was going into the Hall of Fame with Whitey. On the subject of Billy Martin, Mickey was eloquent. “Billy was the only guy I ever met who could hear somebody give him the finger.” Mickey tells us that the Yankees traded Billy because he was a bad influence. At the time, Mickey was hitting .390 and the previous year he had won the Triple Crown. Each of the ex-Yankees could stay off food stamps strictly on their abilities as after-dinner speakers. Country Slaughter remembers every one of the eight thousand or so at-bats he had in the big leagues (his career ended almost 40 years ago) and most of those in the minors as well. He also remembers every salary negotiation. According to Enos, he never saw a pitcher he couldn’t hit, and all the owners were cheapskates. Day 3 — Wednesday: A tropical downpour hits Fort Lauderdale. Moe, Larry, and Curley have left the top down on their rented LeBaron convertible. Three inches of water is on the floor of the car and the seats are soaked through. Fortunately, there’s room in the camp van to the ballpark. The field is very slippery, but we play anyway. We lose 20-15 to Hank Bauer’s team. Defense is nonexistent. Because of the rain, no one can stand up in the field. The infielders get no traction, and mud begins to cover our uniforms. It’s funny if you’re watching, but not if you’re playing. After the game, the line at Gene Monahan’s door is at least an hour long. Bruises, cramps, charlie horses, and strains may be attributable to the bad field conditions, but most are the result of having played five more baseball games in three days than most of us have played in 20 years. Monahan explains to me while working on my charlie horse that baseball running is different from, say, tennis or squash. He describes it as straight224 leg running vs. bent-knee running. In other words, even though you’re in decent shape, you can still be out of shape for baseball. After lunch, we are permitted to get two items autographed by Mickey and Whitey. I’m down to ten balls. That afternoon we play Blanchard’s team again and win. On my first trip to the plate, Mickey Mantle, Jr., who helps out at the camp by catching, says to me, “Remember, this is the first inning of the rest of your life.” Deep thought. I go 2-4 again. We are 4 and 2 and tied for first place with two other teams. I begin to notice that we’re all starting to run like Walter Brennan. Good news! I catch a high pop-up. So does Ken. Jeff remains comatose in right field — a low-risk position. We arrive back at the hotel and our car is still soaked. We decide to put the top up for the night (something about barn doors and horses), and more water (from where the top is stored) pours into the car. Sitting on towels from our room, we drive to the movies and catch Mr. Baseball (what else?) with Tom Selleck. Day 4 — Thursday: I have just learned that one of our campers has attended over 60 fantasy camps, and I’m having trouble getting through the week. While attendance at 60 camps is noteworthy (and expensive), the most egregious example of wretched baseball excess is probably another fellow camper who has attended the Mantle-Ford Camp numerous times. Three years ago, he was remarried. The ceremony took place at home plate in Fort Lauderdale. Mantle was Best Man. Each year, the happy couple celebrates their anniversary at the Mantle-Ford Camp. Fealty to Mickey apparently knows no bounds. We beat Jake Gibbs’ team 7-3. Each of us looks as if he is running in yogurt. Some hitters have pinch runners standing next to them in the batter’s box who take off at the crack of the bat. I get a couple of hits — grounders through the hole. (According to Slaughter, I “killed a lot of snakes out there.”) It’s an ugly day in the field, and Jeff lets an easy one go under his glove (right field is a low-risk — not a no-risk — position). Ken comes up lame with sore quadriceps and blisters. Finally, the ultimate insult. I am benched in the ninth inning because Enos is afraid that we may blow a four-run lead. I am struck by the irony of having my rear end chewed off by my skipper “Country” Slaughter and paying a small fortune for the privilege. I am beginning to understand why Slaughter has run through five wives (so far). At lunch, we line up to get autographs from the Yankees. We are told specifically that Whitey and Mickey will sign only two objects each and nothing will be personalized. (Down to eight balls.) In the afternoon, we manage to blow an 8-1 lead and lose to Ferraro’s team, but at least it’s not my fault. I go 3-4, including a shot over the center fielder’s head. Another great moment — as I am coming to the plate 225 after getting hits in my first three at bats I overhear someone on the other team say, “Move back, he’s a good hitter.” Go ahead, make my week! Jeff unfortunately drops an easy fly ball. As he returns to the bench, Slaughter says, “Lost it in the Moon, huh?” Ken has an ugly game at short. The Three Stooges soubriquet seems to be sticking. Thursday night is autograph night — four items each, and we can get things personalized. Some innocent soul decides to bring a bat, not for Mickey to sign, but for others. Wanda, the camp director, hides the bat under the table, quaking in fear over what might happen if Mantle were to catch sight of the bat. Mickey clearly has an attitude problem. One camper asks him to re-sign a glove on which the existing signature was rather faint. Mantle throws the glove back at him and tells him never to come back to camp. Ken asks Mickey to sign their joint photo as follows — “To Ken, a great money manager.” Mickey adds a question mark. Fortunately, Ken is able to doctor the photo to his satisfaction. I am now down to four balls and can see light at the end of the runway to the dugout. Day 5 — Friday: I greet the morning in more pain than I have experienced since Basic Training. Gene Monahan wraps me up and wheels me onto the field. I go 0-4 but hit two hard shots which are caught. We win 18-7 over Blanchard’s team. Even Slaughter says its hard to blow an 18-1 lead. Everyone but two of our younger players are walking wounded. We go into our last game leading the league. If we beat Bauer’s team, we go home with the trophies. We lose 9-1 and drop into a three-way tie for first. The tie is to be played off using three-inning games. Jake Gibbs’s team get a bye, and we go up against Bauer’s team again. I manage to strike out for the first time all week and go 0-3, but hey, I didn’t boot anything. However, in what is clearly an act of divine retribution, in my last at bat I rap a hard grounder right at my third-base coach — you guessed it — Enos Slaughter. He tries to dance around it, but it hits him somewhere on the leg. True to his country hardball heritage, he doesn’t rub it off, but I know it hurts. For the briefest of instants, I was glad to have hit a 76-year-old man. We win the first playoff game and prepare for game 2, but the rains come and we reschedule for 11 a.m. Saturday. Sadly, we lose 4-1. Ken and Jeff get key hits but not I. Slaughter reacts as I imagine he might if the Cardinals had lost the World Series. Finally, on Saturday afternoon, the memory to be treasured. We play against the real ex-Yanks, including several who live in the area and come by just for the game. I actually get a single off Stan Bahnsen, a former Yankee from the 1960s. Ken actually catches a pop-up. One of baseball’s top pitchers from the 1950s, Pedro Ramos, is also pitching against us. During his stint, I happen to be standing in foul territory and pick up a stray foul ball. While throwing it back, I notice a 226 lengthy slice in the ball. I show it to Mickey. Mickey can’t believe it. It is apparent that 60-year-old Pete Ramos is cutting the ball to keep us ersatz ballplayers from making him look bad. We are leading in our two-inning game 3-0. (Each team plays two innings against the ex-Yanks.) It’s the bottom of the second, and, in all the years the camp has existed, the real Yankees have never lost one of these games. With one out and the bases loaded, Mickey Rivers slaps a lazy liner to left. Howard, our left fielder, settles under it and — horrors — drops it. Two runs score. The next batter, Elliot Maddox, singles and we lose 4-3. After the game, Howard remains deep in foul territory, refusing to return to the dugout. Hey, Howard, this was supposed to be fun! That night at the closing dinner, Mickey redeems himself. In a very gracious speech, he thanks everybody for participating, apologizes to all those he has offended, and then tells a story about once dropping a fly ball in center that cost Whitey Ford what would have been his first 20-gamewinning season. “Howard,” he says, “If I could’ve just stayed out in center and never come into the dugout, that’s what I would’ve done.” We loved our fantasy and found out what its like to be a real big-league ballplayer. It was tough, but as time passes, I have begun to realize that all my hits were line drives, all my errors were bad hops, and on all those pop-ups — hell, I had stars in my eyes. n 227 Remembering Chuck Merlini Reflections on a classmate who marched to his own drum By Rich Reinis A massive aneurysm claimed the life of Chuck on Wednesday, August 26, 2009. His family and friends gathered during the last few hours, after the decision had been made to free him from the mechanical life-support systems that had sustained him. Despite surgical efforts a week earlier, the damage caused by a vascular rupture in his brain was too great. Chuck and his older brother, Bill (of Erieville, New York), were raised in Great Neck, on Long Island. The Merlini home was filled with the loving affection of Chuck’s parents, Angelo and Charlotte, who welcomed many of the boys’ friends. Chuck excelled as an athlete and scholar at Great Neck Junior and North High Schools. His close friend Paul Lapidus describes him as “very impressive: great guy, great student and athlete, incredibly good looking. Everyone liked him. He was so obviously good“ that he could get away with things Paul could not. He was a superstar football player and member of the swim team and one of the best track teams on the Island. Chuck went on to win an undergraduate degree from Princeton. He was a religion-philosophy major and a star cornerback on Princeton’s 1964-65 football team, the university’s last undefeated team. A teammate, Bruce Gates, introduced him to the “beautiful, smart and popular” Leigh Ross (of Palm Beach, Florida) in 1963. The two immediately fell in love and were inseparable. They married in 1964 and settled on Pine Street, in the heart of Princeton. Their son, Richard, was born at the end of the year. Chuck went all-out in grueling practices and games as the team went on to national ranking and two Ivy League championships. He was a critical factor in its success, not only as someone willing to make high-speed impact with opponents, but also as a spirited embodiment of what is good in college athletics: he was a good sport, taking defeat and victory with equanimity; he gave every practice and every game complete effort — nothing less; he encouraged teammates; he studied his opponents carefully and used his extraordinary understanding of the game to great advantage; he was determined to win by the rules; he shared his knowledge with everyone, including those with whom he competed (successfully) for a starting role; he did not let injuries stand in his way and fought adversity vengefully; and, he earned the admiration and respect of every player, coach, and staff person who was fortunate enough to know him. Those traits were not left on the football field. Chuck was a scholar. Not too many football players, then or now, are religion-philosophy 228 majors, and at Princeton, a bridged major required special faculty attention. It took great determination to earn a degree in this unusual major. What made him stand apart was his introspection. He was analytical and he applied his skills to a level of self-awareness few achieve. He could be very serious about ideas and dissect complex notions, but he never strayed too far from laughter. His success as a student and as a friend was helped along by a hearty sense of humor in a good natured and naturally good man. Chuck was genuine and sincere above all. He had well-worn smile lines on his face and a twinkle in his eye that made you suspect he might be planning someChuck Merlini turned his back on thing to make you giggle. a lucrative career in the corporate After graduation, he and Leigh moved to world to work as a landscape Cambridge and he earned an M.B.A. at Harlaborer and mentor young people. vard. Kate was born there in 1967. During the years at Harvard he began to have some doubts about the pursuit of material wealth, but he kept these thoughts close to the vest. In 1968, he became an account manager at Foote Cone & Belding in Manhattan, and he and Leigh moved to Westchester County. Chuck was assigned to the General Foods account, where his outstanding work caused the company to hire him away and assign him to the new products division. For six years, he worked on developing the market for a vegetable form of bacon. General Foods offered him an executive career path that would have quickly moved him up the corporate ladder, along with a substantial increase in salary. Chuck asked himself if his purpose in life was to pursue such endeavors, figured it out with Leigh, and quit. They sold their home and moved to South Salem, New York. Chuck had half of the equation: he knew what he did not want to do for the remainder of his days. It took a few years to figure out the other half, how to express himself joyfully in his work. During that phase of his life, he learned the real estate business developing a condominium project in the Berkshires, achieving a level of success that might have lured others to stay with it. Not Chuck. Shortly after the project was completed, he and Leigh decided to move their family to the Ross Farm at Stevens Glen in Richmond, Massachusetts, which became their home for the balance of his life. There, Chuck made up his mind to align his working life with his evolving sense of who he was. As a developer, he had hired Tom Farley’s landscaping company. Shortly after settling into his new home, he asked Tom if he had any work. Assuming Chuck was asking on behalf of someone else, Tom was dumbfounded to realize that his former client wanted 229 to work on one of his landscaping crews. Thus began a relationship of 22 years in which both prospered, in considerably different ways. As grounded a human being as has ever walked the earth, Chuck blossomed working with his hands in the soil of the Berkshires. This continued until the day he died. Chuck worked as a crew member side by side with folks many years his junior, who probably never knew he was an Ivy Leaguer. The widowed mother of two of them, Roni Barrett, remembers Chuck as the father her sons never had. When he picked them up in the early morning he would honk once. To be sure these teenagers were out of bed, she would say to them, “You’ve been Chucked.” In the years they worked together, “Mr. Merlini” showed them by example. When obstacles frustrated them, he was there, with his friendly mini-sledge, “the Persuader,” and they got the job done. Gently he guided them to accomplish goals — and become men. Using his incredibly strong arms and back, coupled with his grandfather Caesar’s earth-caressing fingers, Chuck moved the unmovable, beautifying homes and parks while discovering himself and a peace one can only envy. Considering his educational and professional pedigrees, this took enormous courage; but, of course, he had it. He and Leigh spent the next 30 years imbedding themselves in and endearing themselves to the community. During that time, Chuck developed long-lasting relations with his neighbors and maintained old relationships. Ingrid Richardson, a Stevens Glen neighbor, remembers that all the neighbors loved Chuck. If any snow removal, towing, or other chores were required, they knew whom to call. In this life he focused on the essentials. He found joy in being disentangled from things and the pursuit of manna, and pride in doing an honest day’s work. He went to great efforts to make things grow, and he told Leigh that when his time came, he wanted his ashes to be mixed with the soil nurturing his plants and his favorite tree. If you visit their home, check out the tomatoes. Leigh will show you the tree. When you were lucky enough to be Chuck’s friend you had his complete attention. His memory was long and the slot into which you fit in that vulnerable brain of his was not erased until the end. He could recall things you might have said to him many years earlier. For those who knew him, Chuck’s attentiveness was a privilege. If you asked Chuck for advice, it was given willingly. But only rarely did he volunteer it. He had boundaries, and if you were lucky enough to be within them you had an incredible ally. It gave you comfort knowing he was much more than a friend. He was on your team, and your back was covered. When troubled friends called him, he listened and offered more than solace because he had more to offer. He was a man of action and he helped the troubled compile a practical to-do list. Chuck would be the first to insist that the seminal event in his life was 230 his marriage to Leigh. She was the sun at the center of his universe, and the family rotated largely in orbit around her. Leigh, in no small part, contributed to his successful search for his core values. She cleared the way for him to find himself. When you witnessed how they interacted, it might have appeared that he was the driving force in choosing such an unusual path, but it would not have been possible without her endorsement. Theirs was an unconditional commitment of love for one another that lasted every day of their marriage. The profound love they shared was proven by genuine sacrifice. They set aside customary spousal demands to make each other happy. The two of them met many challenges together, as all long-term marrieds inevitably do. The solutions were always rooted in their core values, and number one was their commitment to each other and to Richard and Kate. Those two were recipients of blessings beyond number. Chuck was an attentive parent, not afraid of discipline, but always supportive of their individual freedom. He listened to them and responded with understanding, at times in the face of real tests of parental will. He urged them to find themselves as he had. He followed them to Europe, the Caribbean, and elsewhere to help them on their own journeys of self-discovery. His love for them was unremitting, as unconditional as his love for Leigh. His work choice was in no small measure a function of wanting to be there for them. When Richard went off to Atlanta and Kate to Nantucket, he missed them terribly, but he understood they were doing what he had done. It was clear they had learned his lessons. Chuck confronted issues of death with remarkable clarity. If he were given the choice, he said, he wanted the end to be quick. That wish was granted the morning of August 19, when he felt ill, got in his truck, and drove almost an hour home to Leigh. The aneurysm was having an immediate effect, and one would like to imagine that a less-determined man might not have had one final glimpse of his beloved. Not Chuck. He made it to Stevens Glen and willed his truck up the knoll to their home. Leigh yelled to him and he yelled back. When she reached him, he collapsed and never regained consciousness. Quick, without prelude, unburdened and — true to the way he lived his life — without being a burden. On August 31, 2009, in Atlanta, Richard Merlini’s wife, Laura, gave birth to Charles Lawrence Merlini, just five days after his grandfather’s passing. Chuck was looking forward to the arrival of his first grandson. He is also survived by granddaughter Anna, age 3, and Kate and Gordon of Nantucket. n 231 From the Archive THE WAY WE WERE: June 11, 1966 Paul Corcoran emailed us the above shot shortly before this 45th reunion book went to press. He wrote, “I’ve been attempting the endless task of trying to sort out boxes full of old photos and slides, and I came up with this photo taken during what must have been our very first P-rade, showing off our stylish pre–Overall Class costume.” Paul couldn’t recall who took the photo but recognized several people around him — on the far left “I can identify Ken Thompson in the shades, then I’m not sure but I think it’s Fred (??) . . . (last name escapes me), then Jim Bartholomew pointing, then me, then David Harwi partly cut off on the right.”— Ed. 232