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Obtain the Property Report required by Federal Law and read it before signing anything. No Federal or State agency has endorsed or judged the merits of value, if any, of this property. This is not intended to be an offer to sell nor a solicitation of offer to buy real estate in any jurisdiction where prohibited by law. This offer is made pursuant to the State Department of Law’s Simplified Procedure for Homeowners Associations with a De Minimis Cooperative Interest (CPS-7).The CPS-7 application (File No. HO16-0007) and related documents may be obtained from the sponsor. This project is registered with the State of New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance CAITLIN COREY ’06 Real Estate Commission. Obtain and read the NJ Public Offering Statement before signing anything (NJ Reg#16-15-0012). AN AFFILIATE OF KIAWAH PARTNERS. KENT, WASHINGTON

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Pinneo Hill Road, Etna, NH ± 150 Acres in Lebanon, NH Convenience, privacy, views and recreation highlight this 14 acre Elevated, Mt. Tug hillside parcel with terrific long-range views west to the Green Mountains, lot on two of the most scenic roads in rural Hanover. Under 10 and great solar exposure. Convenient to Hanover and Lebanon, I-89 and 91. Would provide minutes to the college and 14 minutes to the hospital. Stonewalls, wonderful estate property, or, with 10 acre minimum lot size zoning, several large acreage hiking trails and a nearby brook make this a wonderful setting to estate lots. Access off of Westview Lane already provided. Offered at $595,000 build you dream home. Offered at $339,000 (Agent interest) VIEWS & CONVENIENCE ±33 Acres Overlooking BUILD IN NORWICH, VT Mascoma Lake 3 separate lots, all overlooking Mascoma Lake, one with 41’ of frontage. Approx. 33 acres combined. Public sewer access on Rte. 4A. Some wetlands, but interesting assem- blage of land with development potential, particularly for a large single-family lot with frontage on the lake. Offered at $299,000 Potential for creating a landscape and building a beautiful home, 20.5 acre elevated site, nice local views, 360° solar exposure, convenient location, about three miles from Hanover. Driveway roughed in, cleared house site, state-approved septic design provided, further UPPER VALLEY subdivision may be possible. Offered at $129,500 (Could be Three Plainfield INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY purchased with adjacent 16.4 acre open meadow lot, see below). Building Lots LADIEU RD, 4 Lot Subdivision: Nice land with several potential house sites. Land partially cleared, providing local views and expansive feeling; mildly sloped, with great solar exposure. Access is by shared drives already provided. Convenient to Hanover, Lebanon, Hartford, Rte. 12A y shopping, Kimball Union Academy, Plainfield y h h a p Beautiful open meadow 16.4 acres home site with great conve- Elementary, DHMC, and . a p nience, perfect for horses, about 3.2 miles to Hanover Inn. 2-story Lot B (MLS#4170852) 12.6 acres, $41,250 Small mobile home park close to downtown Lebanon, in the Plainfield school district. Park h o t g r h o t g r garage, power, septic field, drilled wells, driveway already provided. has nine pads for homes, five of which are currently rented. Septic inspections scheduled y

• Lot C (MLS#4170848) 12.53 acres, h Offered at $169,500 (Could be purchased with adjacent 20.5 acre $41,250 • Lot D (MLS#4170843) 5.72 for currently unoccupied pads. Newer well house, built 2011. Could be a good opportunity a p lot, see above). acres, $34,750 for a hands-on investor. MLS#4474475 Offered at $175,000 h o t g r k s K e g a n P k s K e g a n P p a r p a r l e r P e l S e l S e H i l h a h a a i g © M i c © P © M i c

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Carter St, Hanover, NH Low Road, Hanover, NH Kriskarli Drive, Wilder, VT is ’s Most Beautiful Address. Great in-town location and neighborhood, within easy walking Great Hanover location: rural feel with endless woods beyond, but in-town Handsome 1 ½ story Cape, with breezeway-attached 2-car The Woodstock Inn & Resort, one of New England’s most scenic, romantic, and luxurious destinations distance to High and Middle Schools, Co-op, Downtown, Dart- convenience, minutes from college, etc. With 3,200 sf of finished living garage, finished basement and spacious yard, in great Wilder mouth campus and athletic facilities, etc. Classic Cape, needing space, this house has an unexpectedly interesting open interior, which Village location convenient to all the Upper Valley has to offer. for a Vermont wedding, is ready to make your celebration perfect in every way. Our experienced staff will some updating, on a flat lot with room to expand, providing a provides shared and private spaces, surrounded on much of the exterior With two bedrooms & two baths, house appears to be built assist you with every detail — from room reservations to dinner menus, wedding cakes to rehearsal dinners. nice opportunity for the right buyer to add value and create a by trees. It will be a surprise to those who look at it, and a diamond-in-the- with intent to expand into a full second floor. This would be a wonderful home. Offered at $465,000 rough opportunity for a smart buyer. Offered at $549,500 great starter or small family home. Offered at $225,000 PERSONAL WEDDING COORDINATOR • FULL WEDDING VENUE SERVICES EXQUISITE WEDDING CAKES • CUSTOMIZED WEDDING MENUS • BRIDAL PACKAGES AT THE SPA A proudly independent brokerage, licensed and deeply rooted in Vermont and . We promote and protect the interests of buyers and sellers of extraordinary properties, be they residential, commercial, land, YEAR-ROUND RECREATIONAL ACTIVITIES • EXCLUSIVE ROOM RATES farm, estate, or special interest. We look forward to assisting you with your Upper Valley real estate needs! The World’s Best Hotels ~ Travel + Leisure H. “STAR” JOHNSON, ‘70, BROKER Big Green Real Estate is not affiliated with nor 15 BUCK ROAD, HANOVER, NH 03755 • WWW.BIGGREENRE.COM • 603-643-3942 officially sanctioned by Dartmouth College. Woodstock, Vermont | 802.457.6647 | www.woodstockinn.com SKETCHBOOK

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1. Hanover Inn 2. Hanover Inn 3. Town Clock, Gift of Class of 1958 4. Dartmouth Hall ➒ 5. ’s Clock, Rauner Library ➋ 6. ➎ 7. Baker Tower ➑ ➌ 8. Woodward Room, ➏ Baker Library 9. Sanborn Reading Room 10. Hanover Inn ⓬ 11. Tower Room, Baker Library 12. Dean of the College Office CHECK OUT DIGITAL DAM ALUMNI MAGAZINE Editorially Independent Since 1905 VOLUME 112 • NUMBER 4 WWW.DARTMOUTHALUMNIMAGAZINE.COM Sean Plottner EDITOR With the right partner by your side, Wendy McMillan ART DIRECTOR George M. Spencer anything can happen. EXECUTIVE EDITOR Theresa D’Orsi ASSOCIATE EDITOR James Napoli DIGITAL EDITOR Sue Shock EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Woody Simonds BUSINESS MANAGER Sue Jenks PRODUCTION MANAGER

Ishaan H. Jajodia ’20 Annie Phifer ’20 BEHIND THE MIC INTERNS LAURA SIM ’16, AUDIO PRODUCER AND REPORTER AT THE WALL STREET Lisa Furlong JOURNAL’S “THE FUTURE OF EVERYTHING,” TALKS PODCASTS AND SHARES A SENIOR CONTRIBUTING EDITOR FEW OF HER FAVORITE SHOWS. Mark Boillotat Lauren Zeranski Chisholm ’02 ä ä ä ä Ed Gray ’67, C.J. Hughes ’92 Cynthia-Marie O’Brien ’04, Dirk Olin ’81 WEALTH MANAGEMENT INCLUDES “SEEN & HEARD” Silverstein, Julie Sloane ’99 Jake Tapper ’91, Bryant Urstadt ’91 INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT A WEEKLY SELECTION OF ONLINE-ONLY MUST-READS ABOUT Jennifer Wulff ’96, Melissa Yow DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAKING NEWS AROUND THE WORLD CONTRIBUTING EDITORS PRIVATE BANKING Advertising Chris Flaherty (603) 646-1208 [email protected] LEDYARDBANK.COM ADVERTISING MANAGER Heather Wedlake 1.888.746.4562 (617) 319-0995 Director of Operations LUCY KALANITHI ’01 DAVID SOREN ’68 RORY GAWLER ’05 MAGAZINE NETWORK An unlikely cross- A rural Italian Dartmouth’s assistant continental relationship community bestowed the director of outdoor blossoms between the anthropology professor programs bought a fore- Editorial Board grieving spouses of with a unique—and tasty— closed home. You won’t Jamie Trowbridge ’82 (Chair) deceased bestselling honor. believe what he found Justin Anderson, Jay Benson ’90 Helping our neighbors memoirists. hidden inside. Rick Beyer ’78, James E. Dobson lead healthier lives. Proud Julie Dunfey ’80, David Geithner ’88 partner of the American Annette Gordon-Reed ’81, John Harvey ’78 Heart Association. Abigail Jones ’03, Matthew Mosk ’92 BE SURE TO BROWSE THE DIGITAL DAM ARCHIVE Sarah Woodberry ’87 EVERY. ISSUE. EVER. Martha Johnson Beattie ’76 (ex officio) MORE THAN 100 YEARS OF DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE AVAILABLE DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE AT YOUR FINGERTIPS IN A SEARCHABLE, PRINTABLE ARCHIVE 7 Allen Street, Suite 201 When it comes to building a better future, relationships matter. As Hanover, NH 03755-2065 Phone: (603) 646-2256 • Fax: (603) 646-1209 the premier asset management firm in the region, we develop lasting FROM THE ARCHIVE Email: [email protected] relationships that are nurtured over time, predicated on trust and tailored to TIES THAT BIND ADDRESS CHANGES our clients’ unique needs. So don’t be too surprised when we recognize you By C.J. Hughes ’92 Alumni Records: (603) 646-2253 May/June 2013 Email: [email protected] next time you pull up to our front doors. He had wealth, ambition and the right name. Other Dartmouth offices: (603) 646-1110 The only thing Governor and Vice President Dartmouth Alumni Magazine is owned and published by Dartmouth Schedule a personal consultation by contacting John O’Dowd, SVP & Senior Nelson Rockefeller ’30 needed was a College, Hanover, NH 03755, and is produced in cooperation with the little help from his college chums. Dartmouth Class Secretaries Association. The purposes of the Magazine are to report news of the College and its alumni, provide a medium for Wealth Consultant, at 603.640.2690 or [email protected]. the exchange of views concerning College affairs, and in other ways provide editorial content that relates to the shared and diverse experi- ences and interests of Dartmouth alumni. This publication is guided by Dartmouth’s principles of freedom of expression and accepted standards of good taste. Opinions expressed are those of the signed contributors and do not necessarily represent the opinions of the FOLLOW DAM editors or the official position of Dartmouth College. Personal and business banking relationships within the retail bank are subject to FDIC insurance coverage limits. Investment, tax and wealth management services offered by Ledyard Financial Advisors WWW.DARTMOUTHALUMNIMAGAZINE.COM are not insured by the FDIC, are not deposits or other obligations of, or guaranteed by the Bank or any affiliate, and are subject to investment risk including the possible loss of principal amount invested. EQUAL HOUSING LENDER MEMBER FDIC

6 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE HANOVER, NH Adorable post and HAVERHILL, NH This gem of a house beam home. Private setting. 3 BR, 2 BA. is historically correct, totally charming and Open floor plan. 3.9+/-ac. Wood floors. ready for you to move right in. Great light. SOUND BITES DEPARTMENTS Decks. $479,000 3 BR, 1.5 BA. A great buy at $198,500. MARCH | APRIL 2018

10 | YOUR TURN Readers react. Notebook 14 | CAMPUS News and notes from around the Green “Mediocre movies 20 | INTERVIEW We are the hardest to Boston Globe film critic review.” Ty Burr ’80 zooms in —TY BURR ’80 on the current state of PAGE 20 movies. practice BY SEAN PLOTTNER 22 | ON THE JOB Volcanologist Jacob a lost Lowenstern ’85 prepares for the worst—without knowing when it may come. art... BY MATTHEW MOSK ’92 27 | THE PRESIDENT “The Civil War Hands-on research only [asked] the public to come to terms enhances the undergrad with the human cost experience. BY PHIL HANLON ’77 HANOVER, NH Fabulously updated HARTFORD, VT Exceptional one-floor of war.” —PROFESSOR KATIE 44 28 | PERSONAL HISTORY antique. With 5 BR, 4 BA, and a sitting living home. View of NH mountains. HORNSTEIN room with a huge hearth. Great Hardwood and radiant heat. Extra PAGE 44 The threat of poor guest or in-law suite. Close to trails. windows, large deck. Studio space. grades didn’t deter this $995,000 2 car garage. 2 BR, 2 BA. $359,000 student from signing up for courses with history 32 professor J.C. Adams. LYME, NH South facing contemporary. LYME, NH 1785 cape with great old Some Like It Hot BY JOE GLEASON ’77 Views! Wrap around deck. 2 BR 1.75 BA house charm. 4 BR, 4BA, 7+/-ac. Large Five firefighting alums explain what it’s like to be in the on 16+protected acres. 1.5 miles to Lyme barn with finished, heated rec room. Pursuits

Common. $595,000 Fenced pastures. $875,000 heat of the moment. 53 | VOICES IN THE BY RIANNA P. STARHEIM ’14 WILDERNESS America’s first black “People who run female pediatric surgeon companies now 38 Andrea Hayes-Jordan ’87, We see the damage DMS’91, sculptor done by keeping an Andy Moerlein ’77, alleged serial abuser The Impact Investor Cosmos star “Lucky” around.” Can investors make lots of money and save the world Mkosana ’12, Plains listen. —ANN FROMHOLZ ’90 at the same time? Matthew Weatherley-White ’86, a former- Indian Museum curator PAGE 88 Buddhist-turned-investment guru, thinks so. Rebecca West ’91, search- BY JIM COLLINS ’84 and-rescue expert Neil Van Dyke ’76 and more 44 Class Notes 60 | THE CLASSES The Art of War 86 | CLUBS & GROUPS 86 | DEATHS The recently acquired Gardner’s Photographic Sketch Book of the War will educate—and captivate—Dartmouth 88 | CONTINUING ED students for years to come. Employment lawyer Ann “I discovered that Fromholz ’90 on sexual BY SEAN PLOTTNER On The Green history is not about harassment the past. It is about BY LISA FURLONG Lyme, NH 03768 the present.” 603-795-4816 —JOE GLEASON ’77 WWW.DARTMOUTHALUMNIMAGAZINE.COM ON THE COVER: • PAGE 28 Photograph by Ron Wurzer Allen Street Dartmouth Alumni Magazine (Vol. 112, No. 4) (ISSN 2150-671X) is published bimonthly six times a year. Subscription price: $26.00 per year. Printed in the U.S.A. by The Lane LEBANON, NH Quiet country living on a Hanover, NH 03755 ORFORD, NH Beautifully restored and Press Inc., 1000 Hinesburg Road, South Burlington, VT 05403. Periodical postage paid in Hanover, N.H., and additional mailing offices. Copyright © 2018 Dartmouth College. 4.84+/-ac lot just minutes from downtown 603-643-4200 with 3 BR, 3 BA, 4 fireplaces and an POSTMASTER: SEND ADDRESS CHANGES TO DARTMOUTH ALUMNI RECORDS OFFICE, DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, 6066 DEVELOPMENT OFFICE, HANOVER, NH 03755-4400 Lebanon. 3 BR, 2.5 BA, 2 car detached • in-law rental apartment. Separate studio/ garage. Large fenced yard. $399,000 www.marthadiebold.com commercial rental. $535,000 MARCH/APRIL 2018 9

MDiebold.DAM.MarchApril2018.indd 1 1/18/18 9:30 PM YOUR TURN readers react

even heat the place in those rough Hanover gret I did not see the folly of that war long winters. In other words, it needs all the before I arrived in Thailand. All sacrificed financial help it can get. I was appalled by in their own way, some making the those alums who contributed millions, not sacrifice, which I would never equate with to the College, but to fixing up Moosilauke my own sacrifice. The best we can hope for LIVE SCENIC Lodge. What were they thinking? Moosi- is that we learn from our nation’s mistakes lauke Lodge is an expensive disgrace. and produce a more rational, humble and ROBERT WOOL ’55 humanitarian country. DON RIES ’66 Tucson, Arizona Mountain Magic A Rich Life The story on the new lodge [“Welcome to Thank you for your wonderful tribute to Size Matters the Woods,” January/February] was full of Joe Rago ’05 [“No Ordinary Joe,” Janu- Since my first days at Dartmouth, we never wonderful photographs and some welcome ary/February]. I was an avid reader of his compared ourselves with anyone [“Could historical and recent information. work in and was Bigger Be Better?” November/December]. During my 30-year teaching career at stunned to learn of his death. I had no idea We were Dartmouth, period, as strong a the College from 1984 to 2014, I had the about his rich life before he embarked on a brand as any I could imagine. EPIC COUNTRY HOME COLONIAL REPRODUCTION FARMHOUSE HOME OF THE LAKE privilege and honor on two occasions to be career in journalism. He did so much. What Dartmouth cannot and could never Designed by renowned artist, historian, author, and Located on one of the most peaceful roads in Lyme, Enjoy over 400 feet of south facing shoreline of a faculty speaker for first-years assembled a tremendous loss. compete with major research universities. interior designer Gerald Roy. Beautifully detailed with and fitting perfectly into the countryside backdrop. Mascoma Lake. Four bedrooms and four baths for your outstanding artistry, skill and craftsmanship. With 21 acres, the great outdoors is at your doorstep. family to enjoy all that this property has to offer. there at the end of their completed trips. DEBRA BURLINGAME We don’t have the resources or the univer-

The magical, eager expectations in their Hudson River Valley, New York sity culture. More important, why would we WARNER, NH | $2,400,000 | MLS#4625116 LYME, NH | $995,000 | MLS#4671118 ENFIELD, NH | $995,000 | MLS#4626985 PATTY BALBIRNIE | 610.331.7084 EVAN PIERCE | 201.401.4934 JUDY CASHMAN | 603.998.9386 eyes remain vivid in my memory, as do my bother to try? We can’t be all things to all fond recollections of the original lodge. people. We must stay focused on our brand— Dartmouth’s director of campus plan- Integrity an undergraduate, teaching-oriented learn- ning, Joanna Whitcomb, recently invited I was in the Army during the 1960s. I never ing laboratory that trains students to have me to attend a dinner she organized there. left the country. With regard to the member excellent analytical and communication All of its wonders leaped from its astonish- of the class of 1967 who deserted [“Crossing skills. Dartmouth is not a graduate school. ingly realized interior. Those remarkable, the Line,” September/October], I have one It is a developer of outstanding students curving support “tree-columns” invite your observation: For every deserter or civil- ready to conquer the world and be welcomed eyes and tempt your fingers to caress them. ian who left the country during the war, into top graduate schools. The masonry in the fireplace is awesome. someone else went to Vietnam in his place. We must invest our resources in our Before dinner, Joanna gave us a walk- MARSH POTTERTON ’62 undergraduates, improve Dartmouth’s in- about. Her narrative revealed the amazing Northfield, Illinois frastructure, change popular professors’ saga of how she and a dedicated group of schedules to permit two sections of favor- LIGHT-FILLED COLONIAL HOME - A VACATION DESTINATION IN THE HEART OF HANOVER folks in facilities planning, not mentioned All the letter writers in the November/De- ite courses and expand the foreign study Offering peace and privacy on six acres. Featuring This beautiful home offers quality Post and Beam This Georgian offers historical recreation, attention to in the story, undertook this massive project. cember issue gave thoughtful views. I spent programs with additional professors. Fur- four bedrooms including a master suite, this home can construction and ease of living. Just steps to the detail, privacy, an exquisite setting on 71 acres with accommodate groups large and small in every season. Eastman waterfront and access to the walking trails. outbuildings, an extensive trail system and pond. Clearly, she felt profound pride in seeing a four years in the Air Force as a munitions thermore, by concentrating on attracting NORWICH, VT | $525,000 | MLS#4662102 ENFIELD, NH | $539,000 | MLS#4672050 HANOVER, NH | $2,185,000 | MLS#4601444 job well done. Perhaps, if this story appears officer, and I was in Thailand from Janu- America’s best and brightest young people, EVAN PIERCE | 201.401.4934 MELISSA ROBINSON | 603.667.7761 RICK HIGGERSON | 802.291.0436 in book form, her contributions and those ary 1970 to 1971. Great and terrible things Dartmouth will continue to develop excep- of other key players might be spelled out. happened to our wing members. tionally productive graduates. WILLIAM JOHN SUMMERS My best friend from high school point- JOHN E. CLARK JR. ’62 Hanover ed out to me our nation’s basic error in Viet- Hawthorne, New Jersey nam—the , a country born of Thank you for the superb lodge article! Your revolution from a colonial power, was a WRITE TO US words and photographs beautifully show major backer of the French recolonization We welcome letters. The editor reserves the the handsome nature of this new landmark. of Vietnam after WW II. right to determine the suitability of letters I am amazed at the truly sculptural quality He was a conscientious objector, and for publication and to edit them for accuracy achieved by the designers and builders of when I was in Thailand, I wrote a letter of and length. We regret that not all letters the interior structure and how well pho- support for him to his draft board because can be published, nor can they be returned. tographer Trent Bell captured their art. he was the most honest, intellectually bril- Letters should run no more than 200 words in length, refer to material published in the CHARMING WATERFRONT LIVING TRUE VERMONT ESSENCE ELM STREET CAPE Kudos to all and particularly classmate liant person I knew. When it refused to give magazine and include the writer’s full name, Put Blodgett ’53 for his forward thinking. him that status, he starved himself to 104 Situated on over an acre of land and with 100 feet This thoughtfully designed, light-filled Post and Beam Location, charm, and great condition! address and telephone number. of Goose Pond water frontage, this charming is situated on 31 wooded acres. The property provides This in-town property has it all. Patio, gardens, RODGER EWY ’53 pounds to fail his physical. I imagine most Write: Letters, Dartmouth Alumni Cape is a fantastic year-round retreat. year-round opportunities to enjoy the outdoors. barn, and walk to everything convenience! Boulder, Colorado conscientious objectors had the same in- Magazine, 7 Allen Street, Suite 201, CANAAN, NH | $415,000 | MLS#4664785 THETFORD, VT | $598,000 | MLS#4658692 NORWICH, VT | $899,000 tegrity, so we should not slight their stance. Hanover, NH 03755 SUSAN ZAK | 802.359.3641 EVAN PIERCE | 201.401.4934 BERNA REXFORD | 802.291.0479 The College has difficulty raising enough Likewise, I would never condemn soldiers Email: [email protected] EDYE SCHEIER | 802.356.0979 money to pay professors, to provide finan- who followed what they thought were valid Online: dartmouthalumnimagazine.com cial aid to those students who need it, to orders. I was one of them, and I greatly re- HANOVER 603.643.6070 603.643.6400 | WEST LEBANON 603.298.5155 | FAIRLEE 802.333.4701 | FourSeasonsSIR.com Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated.

10 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE SHOP IN THE STORE 21 SOUTH MAIN, HANOVER OR ORDER ONLINE campus 14 interview 20 on the job 22 the president 27 personal history 28

OUTFITTING DARTMOUTH STUDENTS AND ALUMNI SINCE 1919 ON MAIN STREET HANOVER YOUR PURCHASE SUPPORTS DARTMOUTH COLLEGE

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Sounds New A music professor strikes an unusual chord.

Her name says it all. It’s pronounced “fury,” and music professor Ashley Fure creates emotional, startling events. A finalist for the 2016 Pulitzer Prize in Music, Fure premieres a new work this fall at the New York Philharmonic. Expect what art insiders call a “live- action installation.” One of Fure’s recent pieces mixed theater and sculpture to create what she called an “opera for ob- jects” with sounds made by nonstandard instruments. “A reconnaissance mission into an auditory wilderness” is how The New Yorker described this ardent acoustic environment. Fure surfs the edge of what music can be and revels in “the muscular act of music making,” she says. —George M. Spencer

ROBERT GILL ROBERT MARCH/APRIL 2018 13 NEWS AND NOTES CAMPUS notes from around the green “We think of ourselves LOOK WHO’S TALKING

as speed > MORETTI, Collis Café Counter Worker VISITING VOICES cooks.” ▲

Which food station do you manage? “‘America First’ Stir fry. Mainly I’m cooking, flipping ingre- dients in the pan and enjoying conversation Brand New Look is Deutschland with students while trying to whip it all >>> The office of communications unveiled a new graphic identity system through as fast as possible. Sometimes, if and College logos in January. “We need über alles I’m lucky, I’ll get to make some eggs. a consistent graphic identity crafted for the digital age, one that communicates translated How long does it take to make a stir-fry as well on, say, letterhead as it does on order? Instagram,” says vice president Justin into American Anderson. The new identity features If nobody else is waiting in line, one order four main graphic elements: a typo- COLLEGE PARK English. It is nothing else.” takes four minutes from putting it on the graphic treatment of burner to cooking and sending it off. name, a custom-made typeface, a —TIMOTHY SNYDER, YALE HISTORY PROFESSOR AND AUTHOR OF ON TYRANNY AND THE FORTHCOMING redesigned Lone Pine symbol and an Public Observation THE ROAD TO UNFREEDOM: RUSSIA, EUROPE, AMERICA icon that combines the Lone Pine with What’s the most popular stir-fry option? the letter D. An online petition that seeks to “save College Park I always suggest “Steve’s Special”—chicken > and Shattuck Observatory” had garnered more than with smoky sweet spice, teriyaki and Course Correction 1,800 signatures and impassioned comments by the end of orange sauce. Word gets around and then >>> Senior lecturer, Hanover Country January. Signatories include professors, alumni, students everyone’s ordering it. Half the kids don’t Club member and former varsity golfer and astronomers from around the world. even know what’s in it. People put eggs on Charles Wheelan ’88 has been named Physics prof Miles Blencowe started the petition after it too, which has blown up now. It’s a game chair of a committee to advise execu- tive VP Rick Mills about the future of the College last fall announced a “conceptual design process” changer. the golf course. Declining membership to build housing in College Park for 750 students. The Bema and regular deficits have forced the would be undisturbed, but, seeing nothing in the proposal What’s the strangest order you’ve gotten? evaluation. “I would like some help that guaranteed the future of Shattuck, Blencowe and some One kid would get triple chicken with a half as I coalesce around some type of bottle of Thai peanut sauce, no vegetables, recommendation to the president and of his department peers sent a letter of concern to President trustees,” says Mills. Wheelan’s report Phil Hanlon ’77. Professors in earth sciences and chemistry double rice, and then he’d throw six eggs is expected prior to a trustees meeting followed suit as Blencowe launched the petition. sunny-side-up on top. He wasn’t huge, but this summer. He notes that any development would affect public ob- you could tell he worked out. serving, offices, weather observations, efforts to preserve Hanlon Undergoes the observatory (built in 1853) and a seismic monitoring What do you enjoy most about working in Surgery station (New England is one of the most seismically active Collis? >>> President Phil Hanlon ’77 under- areas east of the Rockies). “This whole area up here is a For sure, it’s the kids. I’ve cooked a lot of went a successful hip replacement laboratory,” says Blencowe. He says opponents to develop- food in my life, and what’s cool about Collis procedure at Alice Peck Day Memorial is you’re cooking, grinding, heating, doing Hospital in Lebanon, New Hampshire, ment have been going through a “process of education” about on January 16. Hanlon recovered at what takes place at or near Shattuck. “We’ve learned a lot all you need to do, plus interacting with all home before returning to his office. ourselves,” he says, “and I hope we are educating admin- the students. istrators so that everyone will realize this is not just some Coach Departs underutilized space.” How long have you worked at Collis? >>> After winning four consecutive Ivy Senior lecturer Marlene Heck, an expert on campus About six years. At first, I was nervous here League titles, men’s soccer coach Chad architecture and a signer of the petition, says, “It’s worth because you have hundreds of kids at a time Riley is heading to Notre Dame, his coming in and expecting food on the spot, alma mater, where he’ll take the helm noting that as the College is reportedly making plans to of the Fighting Irish. The three-time Ivy celebrate its 250th year and its remarkable history, senior but I got used to it pretty fast. I worked at Coach of the Year went 51-26-14 during FROZEN | The temperature in Hanover crashed to -24 degrees administrators are seriously contemplating destroying a a Five Guys down south before, and that his five years at Dartmouth, which on January 1. That’s a far cry from the town’s record-low temperature, includes the best four-year stretch in much-loved, historic part of the campus.” (Heck’s short -40 degrees, which occurred on February 16, 1943. place was a madhouse. It was good training. history of College Park, Bartlett Tower, the Bema and the College history. Robert Frost statue, written several years ago, is available What do you like to cook for yourself at Faculty Honors on the DAM website.) home? I just got a fryer for Christmas, so I’ve been >>> Three professors have been Several professors met in January with executive VP CLASS OF 2022 RETURN ON INVESTMENT named 2018 fellows of the Institute of Rick Mills to discuss their concerns. They received no as- making an absurd amount of unhealthy Electrical and Electronics Engineers, surances. Trustees are slated to discuss the potential de- food with my roommates. Fried chicken which calls itself the “world’s leading velopment at their March meeting. “You’ve heard of the and waffles, chicken pesto. I have a crock professional association for advancing 13.5% 7 technology for humanity.” The new ‘College on the Hill’? This is the hill,” says Blencowe from pot, too, so I like to make a beef stew or Increase in early-decision applicants Dartmouth’s rank on the fellows: Paul Meaney (engineering), his office in Shattuck. “Do you want it to be the ‘Dormitory over last year’s pool. This is the first Princeton Review’s list of top chili, something you can just whip up and Rahul Sarpeshkar (chair of the Neukom on the Hill’? This proposal would be the dismantling of the time the College has received more colleges whose grads earn let sit while its aroma takes over the house. Computational Science Cluster) and

LEFT: JOHN SHERMAN; RIGHT: ROBERT GILL ROBERT JOHN SHERMAN; RIGHT: LEFT: historical core of the College.” than 2,000 early-decision applications. the most —James Napoli Hany Farid (computer science).

14 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE illustration by ANDY FRIEDMAN photograph by JOHN SHERMAN MARCH/APRIL 2018 15 CAMPUS EUREKA!

[ NEW FINDINGS AND RESEARCH ] Snowfall Rising Alaska precipitation unprecedented.

Why did she borrow $67,928 for tuition? >>> The Last Frontier’s glaciers are among the fastest melting in the world, yet snowfall has more than ASK THE EXPERT doubled in the region since 1840, ac- cording to a new study coauthored by assistant professor of earth sciences She did it to Erich Osterberg in Scientific Reports. How to Maintain Your Bike Using ice cores drilled at Mount LILY ZHANG ’18 | STUDENT BICYCLE MECHANIC Hunter, Alaska’s third highest peak, Osterberg’s team analyzed more than work for you. It may be a small college, but that doesn’t stop students from zipping across the Green on their 1,200 years of snowfall accumulation bikes to shorten commute times. Heavy use and unpredictable weather can exert wear and tear and discovered a massive increase in the 150 years following the Industrial on a two-wheeler, which is where Dartmouth Bikes (D.B.), a student-run repair and rental shop, Revolution. “We were shocked when comes in. From its small operating space in the basement of Fahey Hall, the outfit helped earn we first saw how much snowfall has Dartmouth its “Bicycle Friendly University” title in 2016. In fall 2017, D.B. rented out more increased,” says Osterberg. The study than 40 bicycles and provided 150 maintenance appointments. Student mechanic Lily Zhang notes that the increased precipitation is directly correlated to the warming ’18 has been fixing bikes since her sophomore year. “I definitely came in not knowing that much surface temperatures of the Pacific about bike maintenance, but once you get going and work with your hands and think on your and Indian oceans. feet, you can do a lot with bikes,” she says. “They’re not really as complicated as most people think they are.” Here Zhang shares some tips. —Annie Phifer ’20

STORE IT INSIDE TUNE UP PARK SMART INFLATE Misinformed Fake news reach may be overstated. “Long Hanover winters “People should get “Bikes getting run over “A simple bike main- can take a toll. We urge their bikes tuned by larger vehicles is a tenance habit would people not to keep their up probably twice a huge problem. Some- be to keep your tires >>> The influence of fake news on bikes outside during year—just like a car, times, when snowplows inflated. They help the 2016 U.S. presidential election winter or any bad simple maintenance. come through, they’ll make riding less tiring has been widely debated, despite a weather, such as rain Some people don’t accidentally plow over and reduce the risk of lack of hard data on the consump- and humidity. The big- realize that every time a bike and destroy it. pinching and popping tion of factually dubious articles. A gest issue is the rusting they ride their rusty We salvage bike parts the inner tubes. You new working paper coauthored by process—water com- bike they don’t need to like a junkyard crew, can find the suggested government professor Brendan Nyhan tire pressure on the bined with exposure punish themselves. It’s and we do our best to presents the first quantitative analysis to the weather and air simple, and there are use most of the parts. edge of the tire. And if just makes all the parts, lots of videos online Snowplows also bury you want to be sustain- of the browsing histories of voting- such as your chains and if you want to learn bikes beneath the able, don’t buy a $50 age Americans in the run-up to the your cables, rust. Any how to do it yourself. snow, so you have that department store bike. election combined with additional sort of pedaling will Oiling the chain and terrible rust problem Invest in a nice bike. survey data to determine demograph- be really hard, and you fine-tuning the gears again. Anyone who A higher-quality bike ics and political preferences. Extrapo- Now there’s a job benefi t won’t be able to brake and brakes so they parks their bike in will last longer, work lating from a sample of 2,500 web or shift your gears.” function as you expect public should be aware better, and you won’t users, Nyhan’s team estimates that that helps your employees be stuck with annoying them to is especially that this can happen.” one in four potential voters visited at important.” maintenance issues.” least one fake news website, which pay off their student loans. the researchers identify as displaying “little regard for journalistic norms or practices.” People over age 60 Gradifi is gratitude. QUOTE/UNQUOTE and Trump supporters were the most frequent consumers of fake news, and “If you know you can eat at just was one of the sites where about any time, you’re not as people were most likely to be exposed Average6 number of to misinformation. “For all the hype calls about bats in likely to overfill your plate at any about fake news, it’s important to buildings fielded by one meal.” recognize it only reached a subset of Safety and Security —Jon Plodzik, head of Dartmouth Dining Services, on plans to provide Americans, and most of them were al- Learn more at gradifi .com or call 1-844-GRADIFI

every winter term students with universal-access meal cards ready intense partisans,” says Nyhan. ISTOCK IMAGES; GETTY FROM LEFT:

16 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE

180308_Gradifi_ivy.indd 1 1/22/18 9:07 AM CAMPUS

NORTH PARK HOUSE WEST HOUSE After a student sug- Working with mem- gested the constella- bers of his family who tion Ursa Minor (a.k.a. have design experi- the little bear, which ence, house professor includes Polaris, the Ryan Hickox (physics North Star), the de- and astronomy) and sign firm created this a team of students bear under stars. “We designed their own thought it should be a logo that depicted the black bear, to reflect elm tree that stands the local population,” in the courtyard of says Melanie Taylor, the four dorms that North Park’s house make up West House. professor (Native OCD took their work American studies). and stylized the tree Color restrictions led to graphically match to a white bear, which the other houses’ Taylor points out is insignias. Seeking great leaders. “not necessarily” a polar bear.

ALLEN HOUSE EAST WHEELOCK A group of students HOUSE suggested three “Many students sug- ideas: the sun, a gested the phoenix mythical griffin and idea independently, a combination of the as it symbolizes our two. The goal was house community to convey bold- being reborn after ness, fearlessness, the 2016 Morton Hall unity and strength. fire,” says house prof The griffin design Sergi Elizalde (math- submitted by OCD ematics). “There was a nearly unani- couldn’t be a better mous choice when house insignia for presented to house us,” says one of those members. students, Alyssa Loyless ’17. “It is very cool to see that I had a part in creating East Wheelock’s lasting image.”

SCHOOL HOUSE SOUTH HOUSE The idea of a fish The fleur-de-lis insignia came from symbol appealed to Kellen Appleton ’20, students for its ties who is on the house’s to nature and as a executive board. “It classic symbol of The Harvard Advanced Leadership Initiative off ers a calendar year of rigorous education and was kind of a joke heraldry. House pro- suggestion at first,” he fessor Kathryn Lively refl ection for highly accomplished leaders in business, government, law, medicine, and other says. “Other people (sociology) says she were suggesting lions likes the band around sectors who are transitioning from their primary careers to their next years of service. Led and more traditional the flowers: It rep- mascot-type animals, resents the and I brought up the bonds that pull the by award-winning faculty members from across Harvard, the program aims to deploy a new fish just for the bad community together, ‘school of fish’ pun.” since its dorms are leadership force tackling the world’s most challenging social and environmental problems. The joke was actually farther apart than a clever concept, and those in the other a logo was born. communities.

STUDENT LIFE

Signs of Home A white bear, a school of fish, a phoenix rising from the ashes—what do these have to do be inspired at with Dartmouth? They’re part of the new identities unveiled last fall for the six house communities. Proposed by students, and stylized and finalized by OCD, a New York design firm, the new insignias now appear on hats, jackets, banners and water +1-617-496-5479 bottles across campus. Here’s a quick take on how students chose the symbols to represent their houses and the qualities they hope their communities embody. —Sue Shock

MARCH/APRIL 2018 19

2017.11.17_ALI_Ivy_Ad_v1.indd180108_ALI.indd 1 1 11/17/1711/17/17 11:16 1:10 PMAM notebook 20 and explains what it’s like to scribble notes inthedark. Boston Globe filmcritic Ty Burr’80 zooms inonthecurrent state ofmovies “Oscar Night IsaWork Night” overseeing itinproduction, andthenover and then overseeing it in preproduction, those piecestogether duringproduction, casting, hiringtheright director to pullall the production design,theperformances, screenwriting, thescore, the costumes, making equation work together—the of makinggazillions ofpiecesthefilm - The producer. That’s theperson incharge or role inmovie making? What’s themost underappreciated element about theoneguywhodidn’t.” your movie. Don’t get bent outofshape saying, “You know what? Everybody loved panning his art house movie. I responded by Rarely. Onceadirector got angryat mefor reviews? Do you ever hearfrom thesubjects of your green-lit thisthing?” “Who but your jaw’s onthefloorand you’re going, I saw allyear. It’s supposed to bemoving, lieve It’s it. themostbat-shit insane movie as the movie goes on. You have to see it to be child, that gets more demented andinsane called sets out to make a bad movie. There’s one it can be fun to go to town but nobody on it, Sometimes amovie isso badit’s good, and about anawful film you saw recently? Can you make anexception andtell us I have butlife’s inthepast, too short. ever doa“Worst of theYear” list? We’ve listed your Top 10list here. Doyou not themovie. the movie looks dark,it’s theprojection, multiplexes, isabysmal. It’s ascandal. If And thequality oftheprojection, inmost in away that willbringusbackto theaters. ken. I don’t know that going they’re to fix it think themultiplex economicmodelisbro college-aged kidsrarely go to theaters. I people staying home to watch movies. My Theaters are fighting against atideof better? Is themovie-going experience getting any year. I would say it’s beenasurprisingly good How would you evaluate 2017 for movies? DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE

INTERVIEW The Book of Henry,aboutabrilliant

- - -

by SEANPLOTTNER photograph byWEBBCHAPPELL † † † † † † † † † † you can’tcompare eachone.” window into analienplanet— every movie islike atwo-hour betical order, becauseIfeel liked, and thennineinalpha- “I have aNo. whichIreally 1, Burr, aPulitzer finalist last year. to pickaTop 10thisyear,” says “It was harder thanever for me THE MOVIEGOER

The Work The ShapeofWater Raw Jane Good Time A Ghost Story Get Out The FloridaProject Dawson City: Frozen Time Phantom Thread can you comeupwithto say?” to review. What fresh thing “Mediocre movies are thehardest nior, butthere was nobody around to doit job. Itusuallywent to ajust-graduated se- mouth Film Society, whichwas afull-time mouth. Itook ayear off to runtheDart movies. Igot my filmeducation at Dart and spent mostofmy timeinsidewatching I endedupdoinghardly any outdoor stuff where, andIliked thenature. Ironically, the fact that it was in the middle of no I appliedearlydecisionandgot in.Iliked Why didyou goto Dartmouth? know it’s going to bore me.” Whenever amovie iscalled compelling,I said, “Don’t ever use theword ‘compelling.’ When Ifirst started at TheGlobe somebody any actualmeaningotherthanbigness. and “awesome.” These don’t really convey are empty-calorie words suchas“amazing” es around Boston, and I tell students there problem. I teach some film criticismcours You can get over-descriptive, anditcan bea using certain adjectives inyour reviews? Are you always onthelookout to avoid over say aboutsome ofthese products? What fresh thing can you comeupwith to Mediocre movies are thehardest to review. write aboutthanothers? Are some movies more of achallengeto and sometimes can’t read them afterwards. I’m constantly scribbling. Iwrite inthedark Do you write notes inthetheater? the bigscreen, honestly. yeah, I’llget those ondisc. Imuchprefer independent movies anddocumentaries, movies inatheater. Someofthesmaller fied ofpiracy andbecause you should see available at homebecause terri they’re us. They don’t want to make their films and mostofthemajorindiesscreen for 2 andevenings at 7. Allthemajorstudios mon downtown, usuallyintheafternoon at In mostcases I’m at theAMCBoston Com screenings? Do you still goto theaters for advance make itwork asawhole. person who has to hire all those people and is thepoint person, buttheproducer isthe seeing itinpost-production. Thedirector

------When hedid,like with Scent of aWoman, so hejustdecidedto play to thebackseats. bringing to themovies was unappreciated, but Ifeel like whatever arthefelt hewas Sometimes he’s seriously entertaining, funny he turnedinto latter-day Pacino. and he’s so good in that movie, andit’s so Pacino in Every now andthenIgo backandwatch Al to stop making filmsright now? Are there any actors you would encourage sues that a movie deals with. He was solid. write andhow they discuss any larger is What matters ishow a bunch of times, but that’s not the point. 1970s to the1990s. Idisagreed withhim stuff, andhehada good longrunfrom the Yes, andhewas agood critic. I admired his with that. that. with not aplotwriter, andI’m perfectly happy dialogue. I realized long ago I’m an essayist, worst screenplays ever written. Ican’t write when Iwas inmy 20s. They are among the No. Iwrote some withawriting partner take to Hollywood? Have you written any scripts you’ll someday Oscar night isawork night. early editionandthenfor thelate edition. I stare at my computer andwrite for the I’m at theoffice, listening to the TV while My wife hasOscar partiesat home—and What’s Oscar night like for you? as much. anced. doesn’t tell you its metricsmake more sense. It’s more nu- I like Metacritic a bit more, because I think tors suchasRotten Tomatoes? What’s your take ononlinereview aggrega- always watch. something interesting. Ryan GoslingI’ll brothers. Even ifthey misfire, doing they’re Todd Haynes, Richard Linklater, theCoen you, regardless of theproject? What actors ordirectors are must-sees for lionized whenthey were young. it’s tough for thembecause they were so ah. Theactors inthat generation, Ithink he winsanOscar, so hedidmore Hoo- ofit. York Times filmcritic Vincent Canby ’45? Were you aware thenof thework of New at Dartmouthinthe1970s. of thefilmindustryandtaught filmhistory er, whowas present at thevery beginning producer andfilmdistributor] Arthur May screenwriter Maury Rapf’35and[former to have asprofessors [former blacklisted] after my sophomore year. Iwas also lucky The Godfather—he’s just so quiet,

MARCH/APRIL 2018 critics write, what they

21 - - notebook H may come. without knowing whenit prepares for theworst— Jacob Lowenstern ’85 Assistance Program, Volcano Disaster As headoftheAmerican Lava Flows Where the 22 ary geologist Richard Stoiber ’32,whojoined ogy.” At theroot ofthat interest was legend department] was saturated with volcanol- says. he “The culture [inthe earthsciences cause ofthepeople whowere at Dartmouth,” rich connectionto thestudyofvolcanoes. that Lowenstern discovered theCollege’s only after he began taking geology courses lodge crew and chaired Cabin &Trail. It was spent three freshman trip seasons on the only grew whenhelandedinHanover. He the BlueRidge Mountains. That interest ling thedynamictrails that weave through nature, spendinghishighschool years tack grad. volcanoes emerged whenhewas anunder- LOWENSTERN’S FASCINATION WITH nearby volcano was beginningto stir. but hejoinedtheteam, mainlyto observe. stern’s new job wouldn’t start until January, in Colombia killed 25,000 people. Lowen- ternational Development after aneruption logical Survey and the U.S. Agency for In- an effort launched in1986 by the Geo- U.S. confront thedaunting risks ofaneruption, scientists whohelpdeveloping countries Assistance Program—a premier group of as headoftheAmerican Volcano Disaster Now, Lowenstern was aboutto take over national scientists inthistectonic hotspot. trek to confer withasmallgroup ofinter- had for more than a decade made the annual colleagues from theU.S. Geological Survey at what seemed like amoment ofcalm. His university inWest Java, lastfall Indonesia, DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE “The reason Iamavolcanologist isbe- No oneintheroom hadany hint that a

He grew upinVirginia obsessed with ON THEJOB canopied campus ofatechnical Lowenstern arrived at the tree- aving crossed theglobe, Jacob by MATTHEW MOSK ’92

- - illustration byGABY D’ALESSANDRO and pleasingto theeye.” can bemosteducational “The pyrotechnic show ON WEDNESDAY, 24, SEPTEMBER 1986 a 2012MacArthur Fellow. and Columbia University’s Terry Plank’85, a professor at Michigan Tech University, volcanologists suchasWilliam Rose ’66, landscape surfaces thenamesofleading nology,” andascan across theacademic Hawaii, calls it“thepipelineinto volca noes for theircareers. previous size, andblocks andbombs scat- a fountain oflava intheirwake. gested they retreat. Etnacontinued to spit stopped to pictures. His guidesug waves ofhardened lava blocks. Lowenstern Then thevolcano belchedgas andspat out late afternoon, he began feeling tremors. ing south from vents inthevolcano. By enstern noticed plumes ofsmoke drift snaked up through the tree line, Low account ofhisadventure upEtna. the eye,” Lowenstern wrote inapersonal can be most educational and pleasing to at asafe distance,thepyrotechnic show samples from anew lava flow. “If one keeps began anascent ofMount Etnato gather Scienze della Terra in , Lowenstern having earnedaFulbright at L’Istituto di a geology professor at the University of astonishing legacy. Julia Hammer ’93, 1983 tripalonewound upstudyingvolca- ern United States. Three students from the program, whichtakes placeinthewest into what’s now known as“TheStretch” sites—trips ofseven to 10 weeks that grew trekked with him to Central American field describes him as “extremely entertaining.” Williams ’80, now at Arizona State, who were “wet farts,” says geologist Stanley N. ample, to Stoiber, sulfurdioxide emissions scriptions ofgeological For phenomena. ex knownin chalkdust, for hiseccentric de- teacher, sometimes disheveled, covered describe himasaquirky andmemorable taught for more than50years. Hisstudents the faculty three years after graduating and Stoiber’s contagious passion leftan “The lava fountain grew to twice its On a stop for lunch, as he and a guide Generations ofStoiber’s students

------, for Lowenstern and hisguideto safety. of locals on motorcycles, who whisked him fied,” he wrote. Rescue came in the form Iflight offofthesummit, was now petri joyed my little surge ofadrenaline andour on Tuck before Ihaden Mall. “Whereas bonfire while standing a quarter-mile away of an ultra-hot Dartmouth Homecoming about 2,000 degrees—to feeling thefullheat feeling theheat oftheeruptingmagma— down thevalley toward him.He compared landedandbegansummit, to roll, red hot, difficulty grasping enoughofthethinair.” like afull-fledged hurricane.…My lungs had like waves breaking onabeach“now roared wrote. Belchesthat previously sounded tered inachaoticspree,” Lowenstern to Lowenstern lastfall was the situation in A FAR MOREIMMEDIATE CONCERN accuracy. experts inthefieldpraised its scientific consulted on the film, and when it aired, and its apocalyptic aftermath. Lowenstern with frightening realism amassive blast docudrama dramatizedthe BBC thethreat withthe fascination for doomsday fanatics. In2005 have turned Yellowstone into a source of The fears associated with that potential more rapidly than previously thought. suggested a super-blast can emerge far universally shared. Lastfall new studies possibility,” he says. His skepticism is not butit’snot impossible to ruleout, aremote likely asalarge asteroid hitting Earth.“It’s eruption at Yellowstone remains aboutas Heimminent. recently told Time amassive studying, even thoughaneruptionishardly cataclysmic volcanic winters. ash into thesky they threw theearthinto er thanistypical, ejectingso muchrock and the eruptions were thousands of times larg inpartbecausehigh inthissleepinggiant, 630,000 years ago. Butinterest remains big eruptions—2.1 million,1.3millionand lurking underYellowstone hashadthree was sitdoingnothing.Thesuper-volcano dryers so reliable allMaytag repairmen did reference to oldTV adsaboutwashers and made himthe“Maytag Man ofVolcanoes,” a wait for an eruption, he says, it would have Observatory. If his only task had been tist-in-charge oftheYellowstone Volcano prior to hisJava trip, heserved asscien Molten projectiles screamed offthe Fieldwork hasbeenadrivingpassion Lowenstern believes thesite isworth Supervolcano, whichdepicted ever since.For the15years MARCH/APRIL 2018 23 to to - - - -

17-163 AR_Travel Ad18_f.pdf 1 1/12/18 4:52 PM

ON THE JOB

BRIDGE Bali, Indonesia, about 500 miles east of the university where he was meeting with other experts. They were discussing how best to allocate U.S. aid to help Indonesia predict Their Future eruptions, when tremors began to hit Mount Agung, a volcano in Bali that had been quiet since a 1963 eruption killed more than 1,000 people. As the tremors grew more frequent and powerful, tourists there returned with videos showing new steam vents in the cra- ter. Lowenstern knew these signs meant more violence might soon be expected from the volcano. Theoretical planning discus- sions pivoted to address the immediate ac- tion that was needed. Indonesian officials issued an adviso- ry and raised alert levels. By the next day, is a total Tuck Business Bridge the tremors came faster and stronger. The immersion business program designed country’s experts widened their evacuation to prepare top liberal arts, science, and zone. The role of Lowenstern’s team was to interpret fresh data as it arrived. “Everything engineering undergrads for challenging was getting more and more intense,” Lowen- careers in business and beyond. stern says. By week’s end, more than 100,000 people had been moved out of harm’s way. C In just a few weeks, the Tuck Business Lowenstern knows to expect the M Bridge Program®, held at the Tuck School worst but does not know when to expect it. “Nature doesn’t operate on our preferred Y of Business at Dartmouth College, delivers schedule,” he says. It took nearly three CM a comprehensive business curriculum months for a simmering Mount Agung to MY taught by Tuck’s top-ranked MBA faculty, begin throwing huge ash plumes into the at- mosphere and sending mudflows down the CY a capstone team project, recruiting, mountainside. Lowenstern’s official first CMY and one-on-one career guidance, to give day with the Volcano Disaster Assistance K students the tools they need to get a job Program was still a few weeks away, but already he was immersed with the team, and succeed. working through the Thanksgiving holiday. “Overall,” he says, “they are much more Scholarships are available! prepared than three months ago, and cer- tainly more than in 1963” to prevent loss of 2018 Tuck Business Bridge Program life, with much of the threatened popula- Session 1: June 11–July 6 tion already evacuated. “On the other hand, Session 2: July 16–August 10 the population of the region is much higher than in 1963, and it’s difficult to predict the 2018 December Bridge Program exact nature of an eruption or its extent. November 25–December 14 If activity drags on for months, there will be pressure to move people back to their homes. There are a host of economic, politi- cal and sociological variables that will help determine success. Science is only part of the equation.” Mount Agung is just one hotspot Lowen- stern has on his radar now that he has taken Dartmouth College . Hanover, NH over his new office. Iceland’s Bardarbunga volcano belched to life in early November. 603-646-6459 Only one thing is certain about his new post: [email protected] When the next eruption occurs, his number bridge.tuck.dartmouth.edu will be one of the first ones dialed. alumni.dartmouth.edu/travel

MATTHEW MOSK is an investigative reporter for ABC news.

24 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE DM_TuckBridge Fall 2017 Ad_Mech.indd 1 10/16/17 4:20 PM THE PRESIDENT notebook

“I don’t know if donors realize the immediate impact of their gifts. It’s huge! The most meaningful part of Blatt’s Your support really matters. To everyone experience came when she had to exten- sively revise her article before it could be who helped make Dartmouth possible published. For students on the dig, it was for me, thank you.” seeing just how much work—and luck—is involved in making such a rare discovery. Some think Dartmouth must choose —Dominique Dadekian ‘18, Anthropology Major to focus on research or education. That’s a false choice. Undergraduate research, directed by faculty who are pushing the frontiers of knowledge, is one of the most powerful experiential learning opportuni- ties we provide on our campus. It is a way for students to exercise and hone the very skills a liberal arts education seeks to culti- vate. It involves asking the right questions and working independently and as part of a team. It requires being resilient and re- sourceful in the face of setbacks. Students must also build relationships and learn how to draw meaningful conclusions and com- municate those conclusions effectively. I can’t think of a better or more timeless set of intellectual skills to instill in our graduates. Students who have participated in under- graduate research agree, consistently rating these experiences as among the most valu- A Timeless able of their college careers. That’s why a key focus of our efforts and a high priority for our fundraising is Set of Skills to increase undergraduate research op- portunities across disciplines and genera- tions as never before. New institutes are Hands-on research only enhances the undergraduate providing the infrastructure necessary to support such endeavors, and initiatives YOUR SUPPORT experience.. by PHIL HANLON ’77 such as the academic clusters are attract- ing distinguished faculty to campus who n a special evening each spring, you’ll find the Berry Library corridor lined with approach common themes from different undergraduates dressed to impress. Behind them are elaborate display boards fields and deeply involve undergraduates CHANGES LIVES showcasing their senior honors thesis projects. Regardless of the paths these in their work. Ostudents intend to pursue after graduation, all are eager to share their work and extol Students truly soar under the direction Your annual gifts to the Dartmouth the virtues of their undergraduate research experience. of Robyn Millan, an associate professor of Of course, seniors in the honors program aren’t the only students who conduct physics, and not just because she’s involved College Fund make the future brighter research at Dartmouth. in understanding the earth’s atmosphere Our teacher-scholar model affords students at all levels unprecedented opportunities through high-altitude balloon experiments. for thousands of undergraduates like to engage in knowledge creation. They work alongside scholars on some of the foremost Millan oversees student research at the un- issues of our time and pursue their own original research with the support of our distin- dergraduate, graduate and post-graduate Dominique. Today’s deserving students guished faculty. Occasionally, this leads to some truly exciting discoveries. levels. In addition to teaching, she’s led stu- Last fall a group of undergraduates experienced the thrill of a lifetime when it discov- dents on expeditions to Antarctica and has are tomorrow’s compassionate leaders— At work on an amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ered a 2-million-year-old fossil on a dig in with anthropology professors Nate seen, first-hand, what undergraduates take research project in the neurology laboratory. Dominy and Jeremy DeSilva. from the research experience. and you make it possible. Thank you. Charlotte Blatt ’18 experienced a similar feeling. During her Sophomore Summer, “There’s a feeling of ownership inher- she took a seminar with Jeff Friedman of the government department and wrote a paper ent in research that’s different from what critiquing one of the most celebrated military strategies in modern history—the 2007 they can get in the classroom,” says Mil- U.S. troop surge in Iraq. To her delight, it was eventually published in Parameters, the lan. “They’re doing something new that top peer-reviewed journal of the U.S. Army War College. nobody’s ever done before. It’s really re- As monumental as these accomplishments are, the most lasting positive effects of warding for students to know they’re not

dartgo.org/dominique GILL COLLEGE/ROBERT DARTMOUTH undergraduate research lie not in the end result, but in the process itself. just passive learners anymore.”

MARCH/APRIL 2018 27

17-162_DCF_DAMad_MarApr2018_F.indd 1 1/17/18 4:20 PM notebook I 28 courses withhistory professor J.C. Adams. The threat ofpoorgrades didn’t deter thisstudent from signingupfor Awakening , I thought. Whatajoke.us, Ithought. for reading thepaper. He’s going to read to fying glass, thekindmy grandmother used desk. Next came ahuge rectangular magni 3-by-5 index cards andarrayed themonhis and readied myself for a 70-minute snooze. of theclass. Isquirmed inmy wooden seat and wondered ifIstill could transfer out from his chair? I wanted to strangle Jim groaned aloud. He’s going to teach the class to this relic. the class. There was noway Icouldrelate Adams slowly madehisway to thefront of from allsides. wrapped around hisface, blockinglight cataract sunglasses I had ever seen. They shirt andthelargest andblackest pairof wore agray suitwithabuttoned-up black crewcut, aworrisome signin those days. He hair stood straight up from his head in a down theaislewithatripodcane. Hiswhite and Iturnedto see anelderly manshuffling The doorat thebackofroom opened, the auditorium. than 100 peopleeventually crowded into arrived early, whichwas lucky, asmore men who deserved to be in the room. I I took aseat amongthe50upperclass textbook andtrudged to Reed Hall, where tory oftheWorld Since1919,” bought the them.” take bothofthem.” this fall, theotherthiswinter. You should he’s teaching only two more classes. One ‘History 5’withShewmaker.” class. I’m afreshman. I’m supposed to take Baker’s bellssignaledthestartofclass. DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE Adams pulledoutastackofyellowed When Adams sat down, Ialmost My brother is hazingme,Ithought as The room grew quiet as the first of “It would bebetter thannottaking “Adams isgoing to retire thisyear. And I wasn’t convinced. “Ican’t take that So, Idutifullysignedupfor “TheHis- “I’ll take ‘History 52.’ ” Jim ’74, was insistent: “You have to t was thefall of1973, andmy brother,

PERSONAL HISTORY fail both.” - -

by JOEGLEASON ’77 illustration LEETARU byLARS transported usacross time. into hisfirmembrace and Adams swept ourattention explained, “his was a course thatexplained, the se “his his tough grades. He was so tough, Wood students, Adams also was renowned for courses were always filled.” Revered by his Wood when Adams died in 1986. “And his gized fellow history professor CharlesT. discharge asamajorin1945. Bronze Starandonebattle starbefore his intelligence duringWW II.He received the Europe andserved withU.S. Army military 1937 hedidpostdoctoral work inprewar European diplomatic history from Duke. In and received hisM.A.andPh.D. inmodern graduate oftheUniversity ofPennsylvania kan andRussian history, Adams was a Dartmouth for 34years. Anexpert inBal- J.C. ADAMS TAUGHT HISTORY AT would learnweeks later how muchthey did. shadowed the dawning of the apocalypse. I coming from Adams’ mouth,asifthey fore and “reparations” took onanominoustone ed onthealliednations. Theterms “guilt” promised reparations for damages inflict- edge guiltfor therecently endedwar and “the Diktat.” what hisfellow citizens would cometo call rored hall before picking up a pen to sign blinked into theblindinglight ofthemir- German foreign minister, Hermann Müller, in 1919. the Palace ofVersailles justoutsideParis we found ourselves intheHall ofMirrors at transported usacross timeandspaceuntil our attention into hisfirm embrace and Jones andWalter Cronkite, Adams swept tonation somewhere between James Earl every headintheroom lifted. With anin- with such resonance and authority that ing at thecard. had thedistinctimpression hewasn’t look huge magnifying glass andlifted hishead.I carefully arranged stack,drew itbefore his The treaty forced Germany to acknowl “John madehistory comealive,” eulo- We watched asthepaleandnervous His deep voice carried across the room And thenheopenedhismouthto speak. Adams lifted thefirst index card offhis

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niors took in the spring after they had been snapped theirleft armsupward insalute of of theGerman infantry, theWachtruppe, viewing stand,” herumbled, “the elite guard they reached there chancellery: “When down Berlin’s Voss Strasse to theGerman with hisown name. and“goodbye”replaced the words “hello” in hiscountrymen—so pervasive that he We witnessed thefear that Hitlerinstilled politics. AndAdams gave usaringside seat. Violence became thesignature ofGerman country’s resentment ofitsoccupation. menting ahatred for Jews andtappinga spread through thenation’s beer halls, fo- impression that Adams wasn’t joking. you…it isanever-darkening cloud.” but acloudonthehorizon, butletmeassure examination isWednesday next. Itisyet ominous initsimplication. “Themidterm ams’ voice rumbled through the classroom, Nazi Party. Party, or, aswe have cometo know the it, of theNational SocialistGermanWorkers government followed another until the rise mark and the German economy, one weak Ruhr. Despite Alliedefforts to stabilize the reparations, we saw the Allies occupy the the Germansfailed to keep upwiththeir trillion to thedollaradecade later. When from 4.2marks to thedollarin1914 to 4.2 boggan slide”of theGermanmarkasitfell Dresden. the government hadto fleefrom Berlin to putsches flourished,one so successful that ers were assassinated in the street. Violent Centrist candidates andmainstream lead- attacked itfor betraying thefatherland. to assert itself, ultra-nationalist parties wars. AstheWeimar Republic struggled Germany inthewake ofthewar to endall careening through the cataclysm that was wait. “Until Wednesday,” he promised. I couldn’t and Adams putdown hislastindex card. him, theBaker bellsbegan to chimeagain, after Adams hadbegunmy first class with EXACTLY ONEHOURAND10 MINUTES admitted to law school.” procession ofarmsandmen marching throughout the room, we watched the With Adams’ voice reverberating Later in the course, Hitler’s movement A few chuckled,butIgot thedistinct “Ah, Iamreminded by thedate,” Ad We rode what Adams called the“to In the following weeks Adams had us I got aD. MARCH/APRIL 2018 29 - - -

For information on membership PERSONAL HISTORY and all our other offerings, visit www.dartmouthclub.com or call 212.986.3232. 50 Vanderbilt Avenue, Refresh the Way You Travel New York, NY 10017 der Fürher and they commenced the stech- schritt, a march that is mockingly called in Home for the West ‘the goose step.’ ” when you stay in luxury accommodations from Pyramid Hotel Group. Someone in the classroom chuckled. Adams’ head snapped up from his index cards. He frowned. For the first time I The Green could remember, he addressed a student in NYC I discovered that history is not about the past. It is about the present.

directly. “It was not the sight of the goose step that made it impressive,” he said. “It • Just 2 Miles from Dartmouth College • Just 2 Miles from Dartmouth College • NEWLY RENOVATED was the sound of 10,000 boots pounding the with Complimentary Shuttle Services with Complimentary Shuttle Services • Just 2 Miles from Dartmouth College cobblestones at the exact same instant and • New State-of-the-Art Lobby • Spacious, Eco-Friendly Light Filled Rooms with Complimentary Shuttle Services thousands of voices around you shouting, ‘Sieg heil! Sieg heil! Sieg heil!’ ” • Free High-Speed Internet • Fully-Equipped Kitchens • Studio, 1 and 2 Bedroom Suites Adams offered up a rueful smile: “And • 24-Hour Business Center • Free High-Speed Internet • Fully-Equipped Kitchen you are a nice young graduate student do- • Fitness Center • Signature Heavenly® Bed • Separate Spaces for Working, Living ing postdoctoral work in Germany. What do you do?” • Pool • Spa-Inspired Bathroom • Free Hot Breakfast Buffet I felt a trickle of sweat roll down my • A Variety of Breakfast and Dinner • Complimentary Breakfast • Complimentary Evening Reception M-W back. He was there. And he left us to wonder Options at The Bistro • Light Food M-TH Night • Exercise Room what we would do in his place. I, for one, • An Evening Bar • Indoor Saline Pool, Exercise Room, • Free High-Speed Internet wasn’t so sure. • Specialty Starbucks® Beverages • Extended Stay Options, Pet Friendly • Ask About Our Special Rates for AS THE FALL TURNED TOWARD WIN- • Ask About Our Special Rates for • Ask About Our Special Rates for Dartmouth Alumni ter, Adams’ stories drew us forward in time: Dartmouth Alumni Dartmouth Alumni • Pet Friendly the Marshall Plan, the Berlin airlift, the Cuban missile crisis, the assassination of President Kennedy, the Vietnam War, Nixon’s visit to China. As he came closer to the present, I had to reconcile my personal memories with the more worldly account that Adams shared with us. On the last day of class Adams covered the news from that morning’s newspaper, bringing “The His- tory of the World Since 1919” truly up to date. Adams took history out of the books Sin-ying Ho: Past Forward and made it come to life. It was no longer March 30–May 27, 2018 an abstract discussion of sociopolitical movements with little impact on my daily In her ceramic art, Sin-ying Ho shares a worldview that acknowledges the life—it was the precursor to all that defines inherent contradictions and challenges of global culture while also anticipating the world today. For the record, I passed and the uncanny beauty emerging all around us. also took his other class on modern world Sin-ying Ho, One World, Many People no. 2 (detail), 2010, porcelain, hand-painted cobalt pigment, history. I felt lucky to pull down a C in both. high fire under-glaze decal transfer, glaze. Courtesy of the artist and Ferrin Contemporary. And I discovered that history is not about the past. It is about the present. I’ve been trying to keep up with it ever since.

JOE GLEASON is a public relations consultant 10 Morgan Drive 25 Foothill Street 32 Centerra Parkway in Clifton, Virginia, and the author of the historical novel, Anvil of God. 603.643.5600 603.448.5000 603.643.4511 Marriott.com/lebcy ElementHanoverLebanon.com Marriott.com/lebri 30 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE CAITLIN COREY ’06 KENT, WASHINGTON

IT’S SUCH A When Corey arrives at work, the first thing she does is sniff the air in the DYNAMIC JOB, engine bay. “If you walk in and smell smoke, there’s one part of you that’s A PURPOSE- jealous,” she says. “But there’s another big part of you that wants to hear DRIVEN LIFE.” every detail.” Corey is an EMT, rescue swimmer and “provisional engineer”—meaning she operates water pumps and drives a fire engine she calls a “$1-million giant “ tool box.” Across the Kent fire district, patch- es of blackened ground and charred skeletons of evergreens spot the shoulders of the roads. After a summer that saw ash drifting from a Canadian wildfire to Seattle, autumn wildfires in Washington caused the state to declare a state of emergency. The fire destruction was staggering. Even the sky appeared to ignite. Months later, most of the state’s fires have been extinguished, but the black fields and forests won’t fully re-green until spring. Corey’s base station, Station 77, is quiet and clean—a decontamination station where hazardous materials are removed from firefighters’ gear and clothing. It feels a long way from the torrid fires that raged across hundreds of thousands of acres in the Pacific Northwest last year. Such dramatic threats, though, paired with an earnest desire to help, are what brought Corey to the fire service six years ago, and she knows this is where she’ll stay. Fighting fires for a living is “trying to coordinate chaos,” Corey says. “It’s such a dynamic job, a purpose-driven life. It’s easy to fall in love with it.” Of the more than 200 firefight- ers in her department, Corey is one of only nine women—and accustomed to being something of a rarity. “This is a very large, old ship that takes a while and a lot of work to turn,” Corey says of her profession. She’s echoing an ad- age that says firefighting is 150 years of tradition unimpeded by progress. But she’s more concerned with the health risks of the job. Framed pictures of fallen firefight- ers, most of whom died from cancer and heart disease, line the walls of Sta- FIREFIGHTING tion 77. “There are health concerns for ALUMS sure,” says Corey, who is on her third EXPLAIN WHAT IT’S shift back from maternity leave after giving birth to her first child. “When LIKE TO BE IN you’re single, you can take all the risks THE HEAT OF THE in the world—string yourself abso- MOMENT. lutely thin—and at the end of the day it doesn’t cost anyone anything, it’s do- BY RIANNA P. STARHEIM ’14 ing what you want to do.” It’s good to be back, she says, but her perspective has changed: “Things are a little differ- ent now. As far as I’m concerned, I’ve

32 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE photograph by RON WURZER got more than a house fire to live for.” ART HOWE ’76 HARPSWELL, MAINE

A fire is a rapidly evolving instability. A firefighter must both contain the damage of what is hap- pening and predict how a fire will evolve. “When I pull up to a building, I’m less concerned about where the fire is and more concerned about where it is going,” says Howe, a firefighter for more than four decades. Firefighting “is like a Rolodex, and you’ve got about three to five seconds to run to that Rolodex with 100 or 1,000 different factors you’re trying to spin. It’s organized chaos, the fire is changing, the list is endless in terms of what you should be thinking about. You’ve got seconds to come up with a plan and execute it. And you’d bet- ter be right.” In 1974, the Hanover Fire Department recruited Dartmouth students to work fire shifts in exchange for room and board at the station. Howe volun- IT WAS PROBABLY HARDER teered. Forty-four years later, he’s fire administrator for the town of Harpswell and has worked every TO GET INTO THE position from firefighter to chief in eight depart- ments across five states. NEW YORK CITY Through the decades Howe has seen improve- ments in safety standards, building codes and FIRE DEPARTMENT THAN IT firefighting equipment. But the primary materials of combustion have changed from wood and cotton to objects of our “synthetic society,” he says, such WAS TO GET INTO DARTMOUTH.” as polyester, rayon, acetates, vinyl, plastics and petroleum-based furnishings. These materials have “ higher burning points, but when they do catch fire, PHIL GIBBS ’81 they burn hotter and faster than simple com- NEW YORK CITY pounds, producing thicker, more toxic smoke—and temperatures up to 700 degrees hotter than fires “I could never say you look forward to a fire, but itis really exciting,” says 50 years ago. Gibbs, who worked 20 years as a firefighter before retiring in 2010. “Once you With improved gear, firefighters go deeper into get to a fire and it’s really hot inside, or you’re not quite sure where you are, or fires than they did in the 1970s. When Howe first the fire suddenly gets really big, or something crashes near you or bursts into started, he was taught to withdraw when his ears flames or bursts into bigger flames, it’s exciting. I’m not saying I’m not afraid, singed and blistered. Today, firefighters wear thick that’s for sure. There are lots of scary times.” hoods to protect their ears, inhibiting their well- In 1988, Gibbs held a marketing job with Avis Rent-a-Car when he and a honed sense of danger. Howe worries about this fireman friend embarked on a road trip to Alaska. They stopped at firehouses unintended consequence. “We’re not doing a great along the way in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Anchorage and Fairbanks. These job of teaching firefighters to read fire and smoke, northern departments had outdoor hot showers that firefighters used to melt to understand what those signs and symptoms tell frozen hose spray off their uniforms. “The firemen were incredibly welcoming, us about how fast it’s burning and how hot it is gave us places to stay and food, and changed the oil in our car,” Gibbs says. “It inside,” he says. was very different from the corporate world, that’s for sure.” Gibbs quit his job Trends in firefighting mirror other social pat- with Avis and never looked back. terns. The more well-to-do an area is, Howe says, In 1990, he joined the New York City Fire Department, first working as a the more likely its homes will be better built and fireman at ’s Engine 40 station and later as a fire marshal in the have smoke detectors and sprinklers. The National Bronx. “It was probably harder to get into the New York City Fire Department Fire Prevention Association noted in its 2016 than it was to get into Dartmouth,” he says. statistics that states with the highest fire death On the morning of September 11, 2001, Gibbs was working at rates have correspondingly higher percentages of Fire Marshal’s Office, a station built when horses still pulled fire engines. The poverty and adults who did not finish high school. first report of a plane crashing into the World Trade Center led to confusion— “Do people have the financial ability to build a and then a rush of adrenaline. “We didn’t know what was going to happen YOU’VE GOT more fire-resistant home?” asks Howe. “Are they later on. We didn’t know, really, what had happened,” he says. “I don’t want to employed? Do they have children? What are the sound callous, but a crash into a skyscraper—as awful as it is, it’s also excit- SECONDS TO demographics? What does the culture say about ing. You have to go put the fire out and help people, and to see the whole the importance of fire prevention?” thing was unusual but interesting.” New York City firefighters haven’t been the COME UP WITH While identifying patterns and improving same since. “It changed the feeling,” says Gibbs. “It was pretty strange, pretty system response is part of his job, he notes that surreal.” A PLAN.” each call is an intimate, individual event. “There’s When Gibbs brings up his career at Dartmouth reunions, he gets unusual a lot of satisfaction in the small things—squeezing reactions. “Most people aren’t really sure they heard what I said,” he says. someone’s hand in the back of the ambulance or “It’s completely off their radar. They think I was a volunteer fireman once in carrying someone out of a fire,” Howe says. “It’s a a while or something.” Despite the differences between Dartmouth and the very confidential, personal experience. It’s the op- fire service, Gibbs found unexpected commonalities. Both, he says, made him “ portunity to make someone’s worst day a lot better feel “comfortable, happy, part of something good. I’ve always felt the two are or a whole lot less bad.” much more similar than they would seem.”

34 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE photograph by ERIN LITTLE MARCH/APRIL 2018 35 PAT HINES ’93 ALBANY, NEW YORK

Of the three times in his fire career Hines thought he would die, all were by water. “Water is merciless,” says Hines. “It wants you.” As Superstorm Sandy made land- fall in the spring of 2012, his crew was among the last to evacuate Fire Island in New York, driving their rescue utility vehicle against 80 mile-per-hour winds. Ocean waves crashed over the road on an arched steel bridge that normally stood 60 feet above water level. “We were dead,” Hines says. “I was going to drown in the Atlantic Ocean somewhere off the coast of Fire Island.” Hines is a firefighter and com- pany commander in Albany as well as a New York State fire instructor. He also responds to disasters nationally as a member of FEMA’s Urban Search and Rescue team, a task force composed of firefighters, physicians, engineers and other emergency responders. Through I THRIVED ON STRESS, it, Hines responded to the 9/11 attacks in New York City, hurricanes Irene and BUT STRESS CAN Lee, Superstorm Sandy, the 2014 Buffalo Blizzard and two massive floods in Bing- SHORTEN YOUR LIFE.” hamton, New York. In September, Hines responded to Hurricane Irma in . When he saw the Seven Mile Bridge in the Florida Keys, the bridge to Fire JUSTIN SLEPITIS ’78 Island came to mind. “Seven miles,” he VENTNOR, NEW JERSEY thought, looking at the bridge. “You’ve gotta be kidding me.” ““It’s not so much the fire that’s scary, it’s the smoke,” says Slepitis, who earned Hines wanted to be a firefighter from his A.B. in philosophy. “The possibilities are endless when you go into a burn- his earliest memory. He attended college YOU STRAP ing building. You don’t know what’s coming. It’s a situation that you can’t think to please his parents, then joined the too much about or you wouldn’t do it. Being a philosopher, I can rationalize Albany Fire Department. While waiting YOURSELF IN, anything.” for his clearance to come through, he But that doesn’t keep concerns at bay. “I always worried about wasting earned a master’s in counseling psychol- AND YOU my education getting burned up in a fire,” says the firefighter turned mechani- ogy, which he says is indispensable when cal contractor, attorney, entertainment technician and licensed plumber, who it comes to effectively managing 24 fire- DEAL WITH served 20 years as a Ventnor City firefighter before leaving the profession fighters. “I’m not 100 percent like most in 2005. “I should have been premed, but what can I tell you? The people I firefighters,” he says. “I’ve always been THE FRIGHT.” studied—Nietzsche, Watts, Kant—all led me to the realization that this life isn’t kind of trapped between two worlds.” worth anything without respect for others and leading a life of service.” Firefighting is “like being on a big By job description, firefighters meet people on some of the worst days of rollercoaster, like getting on the Cyclone “ their lives. Trauma and death are all in a day’s work. Most often, firefighters are at Coney Island,” Hines says. “You strap called out for medical incidents or traumatic injury emergencies. “Dealing with yourself in, you know you’re going to be death day-to-day is very difficult, there’s no doubt about that,” Slepitis says. scared, you know you’re going to feel a “If somebody gets hurt, if you see somebody die, you can’t let that get to you. little nauseous. You’re going up to the It keeps you from being able to do the most rewarding part of being a fireman, top of the hill, and you want to close your which is being able to help people who are in distress.” High-stress calls are eyes, but you throw your hands up in the particularly difficult, but the trouble with trauma is that many low-stress calls air.” An adrenaline rush. “You deal with have an additive effect and can be as damaging over time to the body as a the fright.” high-stress call. “Going to work doesn’t feel like work Constant vigilance makes for a weary heart. “I had my first ‘heart attack’ for me,” he adds. “Most people I know are two hours after being signed in,” says Slepitis. He means he responded to—not going to work. But me, I’m not. I’m going suffered—his first cardiac call shortly after becoming a fireman. But firefighters to go do this great thing that I get to do. do have a disproportionately high incidence of cardiac problems, stemming There’s nothing that compares to that, from years of stress and adrenaline, which wear on body systems over time. that—intensity, that’s the word,” he says. Heart attacks are the leading cause of line-of-duty firefighter deaths, and a “It’s a level of intensity. Once you’ve lived 2017 report in the American Heart Association’s journal, Circulation, found that at that level, it’s hard to keep the engine the physical and emotional stresses of fighting fire increase the risk of car- on idle, on normal.” diovascular disease among firefighters more than tenfold. “I thrived on stress, but stress can shorten your life,” Slepitis says. He recently had his aortic valve RIANNA P. STARHEIM, a former DAM intern, replaced. “I don’t know if it’s shortened mine yet. We’ll find out.” is an EMT, yoga teacher and freelance writer.

36 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE photograph by MITCH WOJNAROWICZ MARCH/APRIL 2018 37 CAN INVESTORS MAKE LOTS OF MONEY AND SAVE THE WORLD AT THE SAME TIME? MATTHEW WEATHERLEY-WHITE ’86, A FORMER-BUDDHIST-TURNED-INVESTMENT GURU, THINKS SO. BY JIM COLLINS ’84

38 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE illustration by MARCOS CHIN MARCH/APRIL 2018 39 That promise of a capitalism fueled by geon father and American artist mother, Two events in 2007 changed the way S&P 500. The “Clean 200” had beaten the impact investing is at the heart of Weath- had happily provided for his private educa- Weatherley-White went about his busi- Carbon Intensive Index every year since erley-White’s optimism. He describes tion, but they refused to support him once ness. At a conference in Albuquerque, 2004. He found instances of organic farms impact investing as the cross-pollination he was on his own. “I asked my father for a New Mexico, he met the founders of B Lab, outperforming conventional farms, green between activists who want to see progres- $2,000 loan toward a down payment on a a nonprofit that was promoting a new type of buildings returning higher rates than con- sive change and capitalists who want to $52,000 house,” Weatherley-White recalls. corporate structure called benefit corpora- ventional ones, of sustainable forestry e has been make money. And he believes that intersec- “My dad said, ‘You know the rules. Find a tions, or “B Corps.” Now legally recognized practices producing more durable re- called “The Philosopher King of Impact tion—simply because of the sheer size of house you can afford.’ Two thousand dollars in 33 states, B Corps commit to meeting a turns across longer periods of time than Investing” and “The Most Fascinating Im- capital markets and their ability to reward was a rounding error for a surgeon. I was so set of standards of social and environmental conventional forestry. He was looking for pact Investor You’ve Never Heard Of.” His and scale innovation—will succeed where angry that I didn’t talk to him for years. It performance along with accountability and proof—acknowledging, he admits, his own Hpublicist calls him “a bad-ass visionary.” philanthropists, nongovernmental organi- was only later that I realized how important transparency to both stakeholders and em- confirmation bias—and he found it. Here he is on a panel at the European Com- zations and governments have failed. “That that lesson was.” ployees. Inspired, Weatherley-White guided At Caprock, Weatherley-White put his mission’s Social Innovation Competition. evolved form of capitalism is not only our He decided he needed a plan beyond his firm through the stringent B-Corp audit, money where his growing confidence was There he is, presenting a radically innova- best hope for solving the seemingly intrac- Sun Valley. earning Caprock the designation as one of and created a separate platform dedicated tive take on capitalism to global financiers table problems of our time,” he says, “it is He applied to business school, but his 40 founding B-Corp companies—a group to investing in so-called impact funds that in Costa Rica. Here he is speaking in the our only rational hope.” heart wasn’t in it. He deferred admission that has grown to include Patagonia, Ben finance companies and projects delivering British Parliament. And there he is at the CAPITALISM IS to Tuck twice, once because the start of & ’s, Etsy, New Belgium Brewing and social or environmental benefits. Those im- Vatican, meeting with the Catholic church’s EATHERLEY-WHITE’S EMER- school conflicted with a climbing trip he’d almost 2,400 other companies. pact funds, now encompassing more than financial advisors about how they might AMORAL, BUT IT gence in the financial world is an planned in Canada, and ended up scrapping That same year, at an investor gather- $1 billion of Caprock’s total portfolio, have align the church’s enormous capital with EVOLVES IN STEP Wunlikely one. He took no college his plans for an M.B.A. Finally, in 1993, with ing called Zero Tradeoff in San Francisco, generated enough solid, market-competitive its values. economics classes. He studied oceanog- a growing curiosity about the mechanics of Weatherley-White was introduced to a returns that Weatherley-White believes the Thinking and talking about how capital WITH SOCIETY’S raphy, classics, stage design and sociology, the global economy, he managed to arrange question that took his principles of running long-accepted convention is simply no longer might better align with values is how Mat- CHANGING MORALS. learned how to sculpt metal and wood, and an interview in Boise, Idaho, with Smith a business and extended them to the way he true: Investors don’t have to choose between thew Weatherley-White spends most of ended up majoring in English. “I was full- Barney, and a path opened before him. invested his clients’ money: Is it possible making a profit and making a difference. his time. “It’s not that capitalism doesn’t IN 50 YEARS, PEOPLE tilt liberal arts,” he says. “I was broadly curi- For more than a decade, Weatherley- to invest in socially and environmentally His conversation at the Vatican had work,” he tells people. “It’s that capitalism WILL LOOK BACK ON ous but had no clear path.” White was a mainstream stockbroker, responsible companies and consistently centered on just that point. Commenting in its current iteration doesn’t work. But He found his passion in the physically jetting between Boise and New York City. earn a market rate of return? “For me,” says on his blog afterward, Weatherley-White capitalism evolves.” MANY OF TODAY’S and mentally demanding sports of row- After years of reading about how capital Weatherley-White, “that was a Jeffersonian said he’d gotten the sense that the church Weatherley-White is the managing di- ing and Nordic skiing. As a sophomore, he flowed through the system, he saw the ma- question with profound implications. I be- was totally behind the concept of impact rector of Caprock, a privately owned firm PRACTICES THE briefly held a world record on the indoor- chinery in motion from the inside. gan to explore it not out of any conviction investing—it just couldn’t lead it. He said, with 30 employees in five Western offices, SAME WAY WE LOOK rowing machine known as the “erg.” During Almost from the moment he started, but out of curiosity.” “I think the financial advisors were looking with some 115 families and $3 billion under a year away from Dartmouth, he won an when he was put in a room with other rook- for somebody to provide air cover for what ‘BACK‘ NOW ON advisement. He’s been a professional inves- Australian national championship with a ies to make hundreds of cold calls, he was KEPTICS DISMISS CORPORATE could be a transformative shift in the way tor for more than two decades. Capitalism, COLONIALISM, Melbourne-based rowing club. Recruited disillusioned. He saw pressured, volume- social responsibility as public rela- the church manages its money.” he likes to point out, is a powerfully efficient out of Phillips Academy as an alpine ski- based incentives, intentional obfuscation, Stions or idealistic nonsense, a distrac- An example of one of the funds in economic system, but it’s not monolithic: SLAVERY AND CHILD er, Weatherley-White instead walked on insider information being used inappropri- tion from a company’s more vital business. Caprock’s impact portfolio is Fresh Coast Its principles of self-interest, free markets LABOR. ALL WERE to Dartmouth’s Nordic team, where his ately, conflicts of interest—all of it regarded Followers of the modern portfolio theory Capital, which is financing the planting of and maximizing profit all adjust to changes stamina and self-taught proficiency in the as business-as-usual in a culture where get- believe that anything reducing the universe hybrid poplar trees on swaths of brown- in social and legal environments—chang- ACCEPTED emerging technique of skate-skiing made ting rich seemed to be the primary goal. of potential investments—such as excluding fields and abandoned manufacturing prop- ing, in the process, how profits are distrib- PRACTICES IN him one of the team’s fastest skiers. He had His work became, he says, “a soul-crushing companies because of social or environmen- erties across America’s Rust Belt. Building uted and how businesses relate to society. an unusually high tolerance for pain and, experience.” By the end, he was so embar- tal factors—leads to lower returns. Others, green infrastructure costs less than hard “I’ve staked my reputation,” he says, “on THEIR TIME.” in his words, “a highly functioning obses- rassed about the practices of his employers such as University of Michigan’s business landscaping with pavement and cement. the conviction that in the future it will be sive-compulsive disorder, something that’s that he felt he needed to protect his clients school prof Aneel Karnani, believe that According to Fresh Coast’s prospectus, its unacceptable (and unacceptably risky as really useful if you want to succeed as an from them. healthy markets inevitably support the urban forestry projects remediate contami- an investment strategy) to deploy capital endurance athlete.” In 2005 he walked away—down West public good. “If markets are working well nated sites while reducing crime rates and with disregard for the environmental and Weatherley-White’s passion for endur- Idaho Street, into a new office in Boise. then private profits and public interest are increasing property values. The fast-grow- social consequences of doing so.” ance sports led him, after graduation, to Sun With five like-minded partners and no aligned together.…Shareholder pressure and ing trees begin generating income for bio- Weatherley-White asserts that capital- Valley, Idaho, a gorgeous spot to be a ski- clients, Weatherley-White set out to open competent managers will more effectively mass, paper and lumber products in just four ism’s invisible hand eventually integrates ing and climbing bum. There, he pieced to- “the kind of investment firm I would trust lead to firms maximizing profits, which will years. Along the way, they also sequester new understanding through the millions of gether what he calls “a classic dirt-bag life,” with my own money,” he says. To reduce the simultaneously increase social welfare,” he carbon from the atmosphere and, crucially, business, pricing and investment decisions scraping money from odd jobs to fund his opaqueness and conflicts of interest he’d wrote in his 2010 study, “Doing Well by Do- absorb a significant amount of storm water. made every day. “Capitalism is amoral,” he adventuring. He waited on tables, cleaned seen, he created an advisor-client model ing Good: The Grand Illusion.” Cities are required to pay Fresh Coast a por- says, “but it evolves in step with society’s resort toilets, coached skiing, folded towels based on providing expertise and informa- But without agreed-upon metrics or tion of the savings in storm water manage- changing morals. In 50 years, people will at a local athletic club, wrote for the local tion, not on selling financial instruments methodologies, Weatherley-White found ment costs. Those payments increase its look back on many of today’s practices the paper, sold some short stories, cooked meals and not on charging fees for transactions. definitive information hard to come by. He return on investment to attractive returns. same way we look back now on colonialism, for a wealthy family and scrounged free The partners persuaded 40 high-net-worth learned that the KLD 400 Social Index— Caprock has invested in net-zero en- slavery and child labor. All were accepted lodging. He also competed in endurance families to allow them to manage and invest which tracks 400 socially responsible com- ergy housing developments in Seattle, re- practices in their time. Through time, some sports at an international level. a collective pool of assets totaling $250 mil- panies across a range of industries—was newable energy projects in South America, things simply become unacceptable.” His parents, a prominent British sur- lion, and Caprock was under way. consistently performing in line with the agricultural projects in Africa, and other

40 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MARCH/APRIL 2018 41 HOW YOU CAN MAKE AN initiatives where, Weatherley-White says, time poet. He’s confident he can talk to both IMPACT investments are helping solve problems of Woodstock and Wall Street. FIVE TIPS FROM resource depletion, income inequity and Part of his appeal may be the unconven- MATTHEW WEATHERLEY-WHITE access to public services. In many cases, tional figure he cuts in the buttoned-down the return on investment is bolstered by a world of high finance. At 54, Weatherley- ➽ IGNORE ESG AT YOUR PERIL. WEATHERLEY-WHITE “ESG means environmental, social and suite of credits, tax breaks and incentives White is perpetually tanned, perpetually BELIEVES THAT A LONG- that reward the social benefits of the proj- jazzed, with a dazzling smile, a swept-back governance factors. The largest asset ects. Weatherley-White points to a recent mane of graying hair and the physique of manager in the world, BlackRock, ACCEPTED CONVENTION IS has integrated it into its investment large timberland sale in which the wetlands an elite athlete half his age. He shows up at decision-making process. ESG is why SIMPLY NO LONGER TRUE: mitigation payments and carbon credits formal events in jeans and an open-collared the largest sovereign wealth fund in were worth more than the actual standing shirt. He has the wings of the Greek god the world, Norway’s Sovereign Wealth INVESTORS DON’T HAVE timber. Some argue that such government- Hermes tattooed on his ankles. He begins Fund, identifies as a material risk TO CHOOSE BETWEEN enhanced returns on investment aren’t pure each day with four hours of “white space”— ‘stranded carbon’ (assets whose values capitalism. Weatherley-White sees them a block of unstructured, unscheduled time may plummet as a result of green MAKING A PROFIT AND through a less conventional lens: as exam- that allows him to proactively think and regulations). And ESG is why the World ples of “capital stacking.” He contends that write, respond to email, draft blog posts Bank has stopped financing new oil and MAKING A DIFFERENCE. using different types of capital at different and conference talks and op-ed pieces. He coal projects. If they are all intensely points in a deal structure can optimize the lives with his girlfriend (he is divorced, focused on ESG, it would be wise for individual investors to pay attention.” efficacy of each—to the benefit of investors. with a 7-year-old daughter) in a modest, “This isn’t about purity,” says Weather- sparsely decorated, mid-century ranch ➽ SEEK MISPRICED RISK. “It’s your ley-White. “It’s about direction. My orien- house in Boise and bikes to his office. He friend. The wise investor spends an tation is toward better. Now, the evidence schedules his work and travel around run- entire career looking for mispriced on market return is still somewhat anec- ning and surfing and skiing and competitive risk. When money runs from a deal, sometimes the best thing to do is dotal,” he says. “But the outlines are clearly cycling. He holds nonresident memberships run toward it. So, for example, when emerging. We’ve moved from the hope stage at rowing clubs in six cities. financing for a renewable energy into the proof stage. The next stage is scale.” Financial gurus such as Jed Emerson, project isn’t trending, opportunity may The scale part is what excites him. The a strategic impact advisor and senior re- be knocking. And when an entire field recent creation of Bain Capital’s $390-mil- search fellow at the Center for Social In- flashes yellow for no reason beyond lion Double Impact Fund (led by former vestment, and Joel Solomon, author of The unfamiliarity bias, sometimes it pays to Gov. Deval Patrick) and Clean Money Revolution, see Weatherley- be a contrarian.” TPG’s $2-billion Rise Fund signal that im- White as an up-and-comer with the back- ➽ UNDERSTAND WHAT “SUSTAIN- pact investing has already begun shifting ground to back up what he preaches. Both ABILITY” REALLY MEANS. “This term into a new scale of capital markets. The of them say you can tell he’s on to some- has been tainted. It isn’t merely about Ford Foundation has announced its inten- thing because he gets critiqued by the main- greening the economy. It means tion to convert $1 billion of its $12-billion stream financial lords on one side and by improving operating efficiency and endowment to impact investing during the small-scale activists on the other, neither minimizing extractive footprints. Find next 10 years. side buying the premise that investors can the companies that understand that, and you may find some real gems.” During the past two years, Weatherley- have it both ways. White has turned most of his attention to As venture capitalist Marc Andreessen, ➽ DISTINGUISH BETWEEN VALUES raising awareness of impact investing to cofounder of Netscape, famously put it, AND VALUE INVESTING. “Some inves- accelerate the shift. He grudgingly hired “[Impact investing] is like a houseboat; it’s tors often confuse values investing (aligning their capital with their a publicist. He created a account. not a great house and not a great boat.” Bar- personal values) with value investing He paid his own way to speak at any con- ry Ritholtz, author, columnist Bloomberg (seeking to invest in a solid company ference that would have him and talked to and chairman of Ritholtz Wealth Manage- at a reasonable valuation). This can any reporter who would listen to him. He ment, says, “I hope Matthew’s right. I fear cause paralysis and thus be a pro- racked up more than 100,000 miles the first there’s a little wishful thinking on his part.” found mistake because the two can be year, flying coach. “This isn’t about market- “I don’t know that I’m right,” says contradictory. On the other hand, some share capture or promoting Caprock,” he Weatherley-White. “I suspect that I am fantastic value-oriented opportunities says. “This is about moving the markets.” right. But more to the point, the question also happen to be wonderful values- Within a remarkably short time, he’s needs to be asked: Can capitalism do better? oriented opportunities.” developed a national and international plat- Can capitalism internalize these hereto- ➽ BE NIMBLE. “ ‘The perfect is the form, and, suddenly, finds himself in demand. fore externalized environmental and social enemy of the good,’ said Voltaire. So Part of his appeal may come from his costs? If it can—and if we as a society decide don’t be intimidated or paralyzed by stance straddling two worlds. He consid- that it should—then it will. It just will. If it the ideal of perfection. The markets ers himself a forward-looking, pragmatic can’t, then, well, we have a very different and are the most powerful optimization environmentalist. He is a former practicing difficult set of challenges. What I want is for mechanism ever created. Instead, let’s seek to orient capitalism toward better Buddhist (“I think that’s made me more people to just start asking that question.” rather than the status quo. Do that, and mindful, more willing to sit in contempla- imagine what the future might hold!” tion in a fast-paced industry”) and some- JIM COLLINS is a former editor of DAM.

42 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE photogragh by ROB BOSSI JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2018 43

~ 8

The recently acquired

~ 7

GARDNER'S PHOTOGRAPHIC

SKETCHWILL BOOK EDUCATE— OF ANDTHE WAR

CAPTIVATEFOR YEARSDARTMOUTH< TO COME. STUDENTS Q

BY SEAN PLOTTNER

MARCH/APRIL 2018 45 “AS MEMENTOS OF THE FEARFUL STRUGGLE through which the country has just passed, it is confidently hoped that the following pages will apossess an enduring interest.” So wrote Civil War photographer Alexander Gardner in the preface to his two-volume 1866 collection of 100 photographs, Gardner’s Photographic Sketch Book of the War. The book was a bust. The public winced at its $150 cost (about $2,200 in today’s dollars), and most of the 200 printed copies went unsold. In 1869 Gardner, a Scottish immigrant and protégé of the war’s best-known photographer, Matthew Brady, offered to sell his negatives to the U.S. Congress. Again, no interest. But true to Gardner’s hopes, his photographs have endured. The Library of Congress finally came to its senses and purchased a stash of Gardner’s negatives in 1942. His iconic images—“the most extensive collection of Civil War photography that exists,” according to Bob Zeller, cofounder of the Center for Civil War Photography in Washington, D.C.—now define the great American conflict. Last spring the College purchased one of the original Sketch Books. Students can carefully ex- amine the volumes up close at Rauner Library. This winter a course called “The Arts of War” used the book, along with other works, to delve into such questions as, can the experience of war be com- municated artistically? Should it be? To what ex- tent can art intervene in war? Is art central to the understanding of the historical experience of war? Art history professor Katie Hornstein led the cross-disciplinary class and was joined by English professor Colleen Glenney Boggs and theater pro- fessor Laura Edmondson. “The Civil War consti- tuted a major shift in terms of asking the public to come to terms with the human cost of war,” says Hornstein. “We ask students to contend with these shifting sensibilities.” The photos are not “snap- Q P

SHOOTING HISTORY

“It becomes evident immediately to students that this book was an artistic undertaking that was trying to provide answers to the relationship between war and the arts,” says English professor Colleen Glenney Boggs. “To see the size, composition, layouts and artistic license transforms students’ understanding of materials they otherwise see only in digitized and fragmented form.”

46 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE shots,” she adds, and the course delved into how Gardner labored to capture and compose his images, deciding “what to include and what to leave out.” (He rearranged corpses for some of his photos, a standard practice in those early days of photogra- phy.) The sketchbooks marked the first time the public viewed images of dead American soldiers. The professors also guided students through less graphic photos of landscapes, military per- sonnel and the ruins of cities such as Richmond, Virginia, as well as the captions for each photo, which were most likely written by Gardner. Many historians consider his blend of text and imagery the earliest example of what may be his most lasting

legacy: the birth of photojournalism.

Q P

HOW THE COLLEGE GOT THE GOODS Special collections librarian Jay Satterfield had a hunch. He’d been flipping through a catalog of the William Reese Co., a rare book dealer in New Haven, Connecticut, when he came across a listing for Gardner’s Sketch Book. “This would be perfect for us,” he thought. But, glancing at the $200,000 price, he became dispirited and turned the page. Then Satterfield recalled a bequest for special acquisitions that had been made by Hans Penner, a former religion professor and dean of the faculty during the early 1980s. “Hey, wait,” thought Satterfield. “This is ex- actly what Penner had in mind, a high-impact item we wouldn’t normally be able to afford.” His next move was to ask faculty and colleagues what they thought of the potential purchase. The overwhelming response assured him the cost was well worth it. “This is the kind of thing that will impact Dartmouth students for genera- tions,” Satterfield says. Adds English professor Colleen Glenney Boggs: “The value of this ac- quisition for our teacher-scholar institution is immeasurable.” —S.P.

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D

F T I F R N I K R C S E S T T B A M L D E O O K AY I R O F R E T B B E U S D F T S I R S T K I D F I I N R S I O WORK T R E U N

SPOTLIGHT F B I R S T J O What’s the easiest way to join ANDREA HAYES-JORDAN ’87, DMS’91 the Bartlett Tower Society? Lifesaver America’s first black female Name Dartmouth as a beneficiary of your 401K. pediatric surgeon delivers a therapy to treat a rare cancer. When you do, you make a powerful commitment to support by HEATHER SALERNO Dartmouth and its students for generations to come. AS LONG AS SHE CAN REMEMBER, Hayes-Jordan knew she wanted to be a doctor. She recalls being fascinated by the Your planned gift to Dartmouth is your legacy of leadership. game Operation and looking forward to her annual checkups, when she got to use her pediatrician’s stethoscope. “My mother To learn more, visit dartgo.org/bts, call 800-451-4067, tells me that when I first started talking, I said I wanted to be a ‘baby doctor,’ ” says or email us at [email protected] the L.A. native. Hayes-Jordan has realized that dream and more: In 2004 she became the nation’s first black female pediatric surgeon and one of a handful of pediatric surgical oncolo- Hayes-Jordan’s ground- breaking technique has gists in North America. Now the director of boosted survival rates Dartmouth | Gift Planning pediatric surgical oncology and an associ- by 40 percent. <<<< ate professor at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, she’s helped extend the lives of more than 100

UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS MD ANDERSON CANCER CENTER MD ANDERSON OF TEXAS UNIVERSITY children in the last decade by pioneering photograph by MARK MAZIARZ SEPTEMBER/OCTOBERMARCH/APRIL 20182013 53

17-164 GP_DAMad.indd 1 1/11/18 11:43 AM PURSUITS voices in the wilderness

a surgical technique that treats a rare, aggressive cancer ANDY MOERLEIN ’77 known as desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT). She also heads a research laboratory working toward a potential cure. “No one knows where this tumor comes Nature’s Way from. No one knows how it spreads,” she says. “But we’re SCULPTOR MOERLEIN CAN OFTEN BE FOUND getting close to figuring it out.” foraging in forests. That’s where he finds materials such There have been challenges for Hayes-Jordan along as tree limbs or rocks for his sculptures, which range from the way. When she tried to enter a training program for small gallery pieces to outdoor installations up to 50 feet pediatric surgery, not a single institution accepted her. I’m a happy soul, and I love tall. Moerlein, with his wife and fellow artist Donna Dod- She tried again—and again—with the same results. “You helping people any way I can,” says son, builds large-scale public art projects that reflect the never want to blame it on your race, but when you can’t sensibilities of a place. For his larger works at museums the New York Cosmos star. find another explanation, that’s what you’re left with,” she and art centers around the world, Moerlein uses his found “ says. “I had done everything everyone who was accepted materials and pliable maple or bamboo saplings that he had done.” Confounded, her mentors made calls to find cuts by hand and bends, ties and weaves on-site. His “Avian out why she had been rejected. One surgeon at a Southern Avatars” installation in Manhattan in spring 2015 featured hospital replied that bringing in the first black woman was five mythical bird sculptures made of branches, yellow cau- too much of a risk for his tion tape and plastic grocery bags towering over plazas in program. “I kept saying “All we need to do is the Garment District. Artnet named it one of “New York’s I know this is what I’m 10 Most Beautiful Public Art Shows.” meant to do, and I’m not save one child, and we’re Last year Moerlein organized volunteers in Taiwan to going to give up,” Hayes- saving generations.” create another bird sculpture—the 20-foot-tall Intrepid Jordan says. She refused Albatross—with bamboo, recycled rubber and mirrors on to choose another specialty, and in 2000 secured a slot at a village shoreline. “It was a great give-and-take with ideas the University of Toronto. and time and energy,” he says. The outdoor installation, Six years later, Hayes-Jordan became the first surgeon like many of Moerlein’s works, can withstand the forces in the United States to successfully use hyperthermic of weather and last from three to five years. “It’s very Zen,” intraperitoneal chemotherapy, or “heated” chemotherapy, he says. “You build something. It stays for a while, and on a child, a protocol that has significantly boosted survival then it’s gone.” rates for children with DSRCT. In a 12-hour operation, she Moerlein developed an appreciation for nature as a removes all tumors before pumping a chemotherapy drug child in Alaska and gravitated toward natural materials heated to 103 degrees throughout the abdominal cavity. as a visual studies major at Dartmouth. Recently, he has This destroys any remaining cancer cells and reduces the explored the ancient Chinese art form called scholars’ rocks, risk of recurrence. It allows for a more intense dose of che- which are sculptures built from textured stones. Later this motherapy and, because most of the drug stays within the year he will have a solo show at the Boston Sculptors Gallery abdomen, decreases the toxic effects on the rest of the body. and coordinate a national exhibition of artists interpret- The treatment was developed for use on adults, and ing this tradition. Moerlein’s philosophy is one of organic colleagues initially had concerns the procedure might not change: “As an artist, you’re never one thing for very long. be appropriate for pediatric patients. Yet Hayes-Jordan Otherwise it becomes boring—like work—and I do this kept thinking about a 12-year-old boy she’d operated on because it’s not work.” —Lauren Zeranski Chisholm ’02 years earlier while training at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital (and was unable to help). “We go into surgery be- cause we like to fix things immediately, and not to be able LUCKYMORE “LUCKY” MKOSANA ’12 to fix his condition was a horrible feeling. I had to tell his can develop their soccer and life skills.” parents their child was going to die,” she says. “I thought, It’s a strategy Mkosana followed as a teen. After catching the ‘I never want to have to do this again.’ ” So she obtained eye of a Dartmouth coach during a soccer showcase in Zimbabwe, approval from the hospital’s internal review board to con- Playing It Forward he attended Kimball Union Academy in Meriden, New Hampshire, duct clinical trials. The trial results—to be published in a MKOSANA IS ONE OF THOSE FORTUNATE PEOPLE WHO before joining the College team, where he earned All-Ivy League forthcoming Annals of Surgical Oncology—show survival found his passion early. Since age 5 he chased the dream of playing First Team honors all four years and was named the 2011 Ivy rates jumping from 30 percent to 70 percent across three soccer—and now this New York Cosmos forward wants to share League Player of the Year. He ended his Big Green career as the years with the addition of the surgery. that opportunity in his hometown of Plumtree, Zimbabwe. With College’s all-time leading scorer with 34 goals. Mkosana then “Innovator.” That’s how she is described by Dr. L.D. Bridging Youth through Soccer Academy (BYS), which he started played for the Harrisburg City Islanders and the Tampa Bay Britt, a former president of the American College of Sur- two years ago, Mkosana is building a mentorship program for his Rowdies before signing with the Cosmos. geons and the American Surgical Association who was country’s youth that emphasizes athletics and education. Even as he seeks his third championship season in four years first impressed with Hayes-Jordan’s clinical acumen when His game plan: Develop fields and facilities in Plumtree as well with his team, he remains focused on developing the next genera- she was a general surgery resident at the University of as partnerships with schools and international organizations to tion of talent. “The next step for BYS is to get one or two players Davis. “She is the consummate role model,” help players use their soccer skills to win academic scholarships. scholarships to study in the United States. I’m currently talking to a says Britt. “Her star will continue to rise.” “BYS seeks to instill a high sense of discipline, responsibility and few high schools that can help with that,” he says. “I’m a happy soul, Moerlein says he commitment,” he says. “This prepares its graduates for life at the “carved a lot of wood” and I love helping people any way I can. It’s given me a drive to play HEATHER SALERNO is a freelance writer based in the New at Dartmouth. >>>> highest level of , promotes soccer throughout Zimba- my part in giving back, not only for Plumtree, but also in communi-

York City area. COSMOS NEW YORK MOERLEIN; RIGHT: ANDY LEFT: bwe and builds a supportive learning environment where children ties that have helped me get where I am today.” —Annie Phifer ’20

54 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MARCH/APRIL 2018 55 PURSUITS voices in the wilderness The first thing we always stress is prevention,” says the JESS PETERSEN ’02 search-and-rescue veteran. Mothers of “ Invention AS A MOTHER OF TWO CHILDREN AND VETERAN of Boston-area tech firms, Petersen knows how hard it can be to juggle a growing family and a full-time job. That’s why she cofounded Pepperlane, an online network that enables mothers to both find and offer services.

NEIL VAN DYKE ’76 Lost and Found West draws VERMONT’S FIRST SEARCH-AND- 170,000 visitors rescue coordinator, Van Dyke draws on annually to the Wyoming decades spent outdoors managing the museum. >>>> state’s response to backcountry emer- gencies. As an undergraduate, he headed the DOC’s Cabin & Trail and trained in REBECCA WEST ’91 first aid and emergency response with the Hanover Fire Department. He then The Plains earned a master’s in recreation resource management with the intention of work- ing for the U.S. Forest Service. Instead, Truth he was drawn into the hospitality busi- AS CURATOR OF THE PLAINS INDIAN MUSEUM IN ness, joining wife Carole Hillmann Van Cody, Wyoming, West manages a collection of more than Dyke ’78 to help run her family’s busi- 10,000 Native American objects and oversees outreach to ness, the Golden Eagle Resort in Stowe, Users can browse online profiles to hire a mother to cook, Native audiences and scholarly research. One of her great- Vermont. While there, several backcoun- walk the dog, or provide accounting help. Would-be entre- est discoveries occurred a decade ago, when she stood in a try accidents prompted Neil to develop preneurs can also find resources to launch their small busi- gallery surrounded by steamer trunks, garment bags and a specialized service for complex rescue nesses online and showcase their skills. “A lot of reasons boxes. The museum had just received this sizeable collec- situations. In 1980 he cofounded Stowe people don’t start a business are just in their heads,” says tion, and the staff had donned lab coats and white cotton Mountain Rescue to respond primarily Petersen. “We try to make it easy.” gloves to comb through the 2,000 new items. West and a to mountain and ice climbing emergen- Since launching last May, Pepperlane has drawn colleague were unpacking a trunk when they discovered cies in the area. more than 2,000 users in 300 communities—mostly in “this large something” in a plastic bag, she says. The call to develop a similar service Massachusetts—who seek the skills of 850 mothers who “We finally got it out of the plastic, stepped back and across the state came in 2012, after a have signed up as service providers. Pepperlane also helps looked at each other. We were in awe,” says West. They’d 19-year-old hiker died of hypothermia mothers starting a business to develop ideas, network and stumbled upon a rare woman’s eagle-feather bonnet a few miles from a trailhead. Van Dyke connect with potential customers. And it’s free—although from the Motoki Women’s Society of the Kainai Nation has since worked with the Vermont De- Petersen expects to charge a fee eventually. “It makes me of Canada, dating to the mid-1800s. “You may know it as partment of Public Safety to improve the happy and fulfilled to make life better for moms,” she says. a headdress, but headdresses encompass a wide variety equipment and training of state police Petersen is a self-described “startup junkie.” Among of regalia, from a single eagle feather to more elaborate and better coordinate the state’s patch- the first employees at computer backup service Carbonite feather bonnets,” West says. “There are not a large number work of local rescue operations. and travel app Hopper, the computer science major became of women’s feather bonnets in museum collections.” “I’d much rather receive a 2 a.m. call Van Dyke advises a freelance consultant after having her first child. She West, who arrived as an intern in 1994, focuses on col- for a missing hiker than for a broken wa- hikers to pack a launched Pepperlane at the urging of cofounder Sharon lecting art from contemporary Native artists. “My role as ter pipe in a full hotel,” says Van Dyke, map and compass and turn off their Kan, whose earlier endeavors were acquired by heavy- curator is not only to ensure we care for these materials who led state trooper teams in their re- phones. <<<< weights such as Barnes & Noble and Microsoft. “I had no and provide relevant, accurate information on timeframes sponses to 36 of the 110 search-and-res- intention of starting a company,” says Petersen, who was and cultures, but also to represent contemporary cultures— cue calls the state received in 2016. “I’m six months pregnant with her second baby at the time. not according to what we as historians want to say,” she still getting middle-of-the-night calls, “Now I can’t imagine doing anything else.” explains, “but how cultures want to represent themselves.” but now I find them much less stressful.”

—Heather Salerno —Abigail Drachman-Jones ’03 WEST REBECCA HALL GARY —Lauren Zeranski Chisholm ’02

56 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE illustration by ROBERT NEUBECKER MARCH/APRIL 2018 57 the classes 60 clubs & groups 86 deaths 86 @CBLifestylesRE 603.643.6406

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HANOVER | EASTMAN | NEW LONDON | SUNAPEE | WARNER Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated DARTMOUTH COLLEGE LIBRARY COLLEGE DARTMOUTH MARCH/APRIL 2018 59 CLASS NOTES 1938-1950

What a year! So much news, but, alas, straight and in the process elegantly debunks a host for including his second book, Sea Salt II, in a previ- Burlington, Vermont, has died. He is survived by Alexandria, Virginia, where he lived. Ralph received not much from you. I reported about the of trade policy myths.” ous Class Notes column. It is a fascinating story of his wife, Janet, two children and their families. He his Ph.D. from Columbia in cultural anthropology, The Classes 75th reunion. Although that was the last We should all be congratulating ourselves over Stan’s exciting and dangerous experience as a scuba served in the Marine Corps in WW II. Robert Craig and spent 26 years with the U.S. Information Agen- 42 diver beneath the sea as well as a description of his died on June 17 in , Pennsylvania. He is cy’s office of research and intelligence. Upon retiring official reunion, several of us felt we should work the good help our 1943 class fund provides for needy toward an 80th or to be more frugal with time, maybe students. This year three students, from California, significant contributions to the study of undersea survived by his four children and their families. He he became a professional cellist, playing at Carnegie Greetings and very warm wishes on a every year from now on. Volunteers are needed. In Oregon and Virginia, were the beneficiaries. life. Stan reminded me about having joined with was in the Navy V-12 program and then spent 40 Hall and the Kennedy Center. Ralph is survived by very cold day (-7 degrees). We are on the late October I called Jon Mendes to find out if he We are sad to report the deaths of Allen W. Phil- other ’46s who met for several evenings in Baker years with Bell Telephone. Melvin Nelson died on sons Mark and William. verge of welcoming in a new year—2018. would be competing in the November New York lips, Harry C. Sayre Jr. and Roy Watson. Our condo- Library with Robert Frost in a small group. July 10. He leaves his wife, Paula, three children and Willard Dean Merrill died on October 12, 2017, at 38 Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. After gradu- Lest I forget, I wish all of you a very happy, healthy Marathon. His reply—emphatically: “I retired!” I was lences to their families. Angela Stafford, our class representative from their families. A lawyer by trade, he was an active and blessed new year. looking forward to a photo op at Mile 17, where I live. This is my last issue as your class secretary; the alumni relations office, tells me that a new intern player of golf and tennis. ation Dean spent 21 years as a Marine Corps officer, Letters of a freshman (circa 1935-36): “The Our scholarship support is a great gift, and we late middle age is catching up with me. I hope an- will be assigned to her office after the first of this —Joseph D. Hayes, P.O. Box 697, Rye Beach, NH 03871; retiring as a lieutenant colonel. During the Cuban festival is well underway. Early this morning a have sponsored some wonderful students. Of the other classmate, or the wife or widow of a classmate, year who will work with our class in putting out a (603) 964-6503 missile crisis he served under the joint chiefs of bunch of us went out to Moose Mountain, where 1,217 admitted to the class of 2021, nearly half the will take over our column so we don’t lose our place newsletter under the guidance of the Alumni Asso- staff. In 1968 Dean moved to Woodstock, Vermont, the downhill race was held on a steep, narrow trail. class qualified for a total of more than $27 million in DAM’s Class Notes. Please contact me if you’re ciation. Please send me your Green Cards with any Warren Daniell had a successful hip where he managed the new Woodstock Inn and We took shovels and rakes in a futile effort to make in scholarship aid—an all-time high—with an av- interested in the job—it’s not a hard one and is a info for the newsletter. Information from families replacement and an operation to un- other properties for Laurance Rockefeller’s Rock a few scratches in the glacier that the boys had to erage scholarship of nearly $50,000. We have two wonderful way to keep up with college news. and friends is welcome. tangle his prostate and says he is “Back Resorts. He established Felicity Farm as a home and ski over. We had some mattresses also to put around new scholars—Abubakar O. Kasule from Riyadh, Thanks for your support and kind words It is always difficult to express our condolences 48to normal except for the use of a cane, which will, I a business for raising Angus cattle. In recent years the trunks of certain crucial trees, but inspite of it, Saudi Arabia, and Emily J. Zurcher from Elkins through the years. God bless! to the families of our deceased classmates as well hope, stop before the end of 2017.” With that behind Dean played a leading role in our class activities and one poor lad was taken off on a toboggan. Now don’t Park, Pennsylvania—and we will share their letters —John M. Jenkins, 80 Lyme Road, Apt. 304, Hanover, as those dear to them. At this time, I have to report them, he and Dot, encouraged by a long overdue was my predecessor as secretary. He is survived by get the idea, Mother, that all skiing is like that. No with you as they report about themselves. NH 03755; (603) 643-2757; [email protected] the death of my beloved wife, Susan, on November Alaska Airlines direct flight from Boston, last August his son Frederic and daughters Janet and Laurel. one would think of skiing on this tree-lined sheet of The class of ’42 has a marvelous legacy en- 29, 2017. She courageously fought cancer for the visited their daughter, Beth ’77, outside of Portland, Alfred Thomas Quirk also died on October 12, ice unless it were a competition. Dick Durrance won dowed to keep on giving for a long time. “The Col- It was incumbent on me to make it to past year. Susan attended every 1946 class reunion Oregon. They then drove down to their annual fam- 2017, at his home in Hanover. Al was a three-year the race. When I saw him he was going fast with lege has done very well with this endowment during Harvard Stadium last October 28. As with me, including our last big reunion in the fall of ily gathering of some 20 relatives in Ashland, a pleas- star pitcher on the team, which captured feet wide apart, ‘stemming like hell’ with flexible the fiscal year ending June 30, 2017, as the portfolio your class secretary, I was eager to de- 2016. She enjoyed meeting and sharing in the warm ant college town just north of California and home of the 1948 Eastern Intercollegiate Championship. He knees and throwing a spray of ice from his biting 45 companionships of returning classmates, families the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, where they have was the face of Dartmouth’s admissions office from experienced an investment return of 14.6 percent. liver an on-the-scene report about the Big Green edges. Ted Hunter was second, more graceful and During the longer term Dartmouth’s endowment has breaking the curse of 13 straight losses to the Crim- and friends, especially going off with the women on met since 1982 and almost feel as if it were a second 1963 to 1995, becoming director in 1979 and dean in seemingly faster, turning by a sort of swaying mo- generated an annualized return of 6.4 percent for the son. Alas and alack, it wasn’t to be, and we lost a shopping trips and Hopkins Center events while our home. They are near the top of the list for a retire- 1982, while overseeing the entrance of 28,000 stu- tion. In the afternoon I volunteered to be an icicle 10 years ended June 30, 2017, out-performing the heartbreaker 25-22 despite being favored with a classmates were attending to official class business ment home in Concord, “but the move is going slow.” dents and Dartmouth’s first women in 1972. Some in the woods—i.e., a checker in the cross-country 3.7-percent average annualized return for the MSCI much better record. We’ve now been humiliated in or watching the football games. Our class sympa- Foxy and Helen Parker have stayed close to home the of our classmates were happy with Al’s selections; ski race. One man didn’t see the fence, fell all over All Country World Index,” according to the endowed 20 of the last 21 games with Harvard. Most younger thy to the family of Ralph Garfield Slighter Jr., who last two years. Foxy was pretty well immobilized and others, disappointed legacy fathers, not so much. it and blocked the path for two other runners who fund report. From time to time Mary Lindstrom alumni would not be aware or remember that we had died July 16, 2017. While at Dartmouth Ralph was had orthopedic back surgery with vertebra fusion In retirement, Al became a fine artist. He leaves his wound themselves up in the saplings trying to stop. Swenson and I compare notes on the weather, which a similar drought playing Yale from the very start in a member of the Dartmouth Christian Fellowship in late 2016 from which he continues to recover. daughters, Judith and Louise. Warren Chivers was the first I recognized. He almost as I write, has turned very cold; the wind chill is 2 1884, when we tried to contest with an intramural and Navy V-12. He was an Alumni Fund volunteer Helen has had a heart problem, which with rehab —John Adler, 1623 Pelican Cove Road, BA123 Sara- had to make the trail as there were scarcely any degrees. In New York we have already had several squad and lost to the 113-0. The games were class agent (1960-70). has been brought under control. At this writing they sota, FL 34231; (203) 622-9069; (941) 966-2943 (fax) marks in the ice to indicate where the course was; small snowstorms. much closer after that, but it wasn’t until the 20th —John L.E. Wolff, M.D., 860 Knollwood Road, White are planning to resume their annual Christmas visit he was too big to get between the trees—man, he has As you read this, I hope you had a happy Val- encounter that Dartmouth finally prevailed, 14-6, Plains, NY 10603; (212) 772-1700; (212) 772-9933 with their two daughters living in Vail, Colorado. Nineteen of us greatly enjoyed our 2017 a useful vocabulary. Then Howie Chivers came like a entine’s Day—and in a few weeks it will be spring. in 1935. It’s been almost even-steven since, with (fax); [email protected] Helen and I both observed how family who move to mini-reunion during the weekend of white ghost through the trees and won the race by Please send your news. Dartmouth holding a 40-39 edge. the western mountain area tend to stay there. Foxy, October 6-8, drizzly weather notwith- 50 Jack Harned two minutes; Dave Bradley took a second, ploughing —Joanna Caproni, 370 East 76 St., Apt. A 406, New John H. “Jerry” Holdridge passed away in July Last June we lost our longtime Class a superb skier, is hoping to get on the cross-country standing. Dramatis personae included his way along with a good deal of damage to the for- York City, New York 10021; (212) 988-6012; (212) 2001 and is overdue for well-earned recognition. Notes and obit editor Don Page. He had boards. Historic regulars, they expect to attend our and Jilly, Jaques Harlow and Rusty, Bob Kirby and est. I’m darned tired! Let others fight their way into 988-6715 (fax); [email protected] He and I teamed up at 401 North Mass dorm for just been doing a great job for almost 20 big 70th, where, I’m told, we’ll be guests of the Ha- Brownlee, Joel Leavitt and Vida, Joe Medlicott and 47 Pete Foster Stephanie, Doug Smith and Meredith, Dave Taylor tuxedos and clamor for a dance with Avilla Brooks, the wartime speedup summer semester of 1942. He years. At our 70th reunion we were not able to come nover Inn. and Anne have moved to a the recently crowned Queen of the Snows—I’m for Should Dartmouth expand its number left after that term for West Point, graduating there up with anyone to take his place, the net result being retirement home in Haddam, Connecticut. Their and Karen, Tom Ruggles, Joan McIlwain, Marge Nich- a quiet bed!” of undergraduates? A task force has in 1945. He then switched from the Army in 1948, no column in the November issue. As your newly new phone number is (860) 345-0954. Similarly, Bud ols, Molly Scheu and Alex Hoffman. Smiley Ruggles Oh, yes, these were, indeed, the “good ole days.” been appointed to study the possibil- spending two years at the Foreign Service Institute, elected class president, succeeding John Trethaway, Munson’s new number is (603) 442-5782. Everyone and his banjo led our singers on a flatbed truck in Blessings to all! 43 I will attempt to wear two hats. As of this writing we at the mini liked his new condo. I am pleased not the Friday night parade before the bonfire on the ity of expanding the number of students from 10 to Cornell and Harvard to become fluent in Mandarin —Jean M. Francis, 2205 Boston Road, O-139, Wilbra- 25 percent; from the present 4,300 undergraduates, Chinese. After foreign postings at several Far East have close to 150 members of the class. to have seen those black football uniforms worn Green. At the class meeting Saturday morning ham, MA 01095 the smallest in the Ivy League, to as many as 5,400. embassies and advancing to director of Asian af- We received five Green Cards! George Cohn at the Penn game last year. The Indian symbol and treasurer Harlow reported that, after making our New dorms would be required—one possible loca- fairs at the U.S. State Department, he was brought writes from Edgartown, Massachusetts, and all is were fun, but a problem; the Big yearly $2,500 contributions to the Dickey, Collis Sally Coombs Leahy has written a note tion might be College Park, near the observatory. to the national security staff by Henry Kissinger. well. Ev Nordstrom’s widow, Mary Elizabeth, writes Green, blah, but okay; “Go Black”—come on. I would and athletic foundations, we’ll have a balance of about her father, Albert Coombs, who con- Would this change affect the College’s identity? A Jerry then sat with President Nixon and Kissinger of a new patriotic hymn she wrote, “Land of the much appreciate hearing what’s going on with you about $22,000. Though down a bit in 2016, our class tinues to enjoy his residence at Mayo report from the task force is expected by mid-March. during the conference with Premier Zhou Enlai in Free.” It can be viewed on YouTube. David Squire or your progeny. Contacting me at the email below still ranks first or second in lifetime giving to the 41 College. In the absence of challengers, you’re stuck Healthcare in Northfield, Vermont. He finds that “A larger student body would lead to more graduates, the 1972 breakthrough trip. Jerry held ambassado- writes that he still plays tennis a little. He and Pat is the easiest way. there are lots of Dartmouth connections in the area. which would amplify our impact on the world,” says rial positions in and Indonesia later on. now have two great-grands and have just returned —Dave Kurr, 4281 Indian Field Road, Clinton, NY with incumbent class officers. If he wears his Dartmouth hat, people will approach President Hanlon. When he passed on in July 2001, he left behind wife from a trip to Morocco. I, too, visited Morocco when 13323; (315) 853-3582; [email protected] On Saturday afternoon the football team fell him, as did the alum in the elevator in a doctor’s Congratulations: Tuck School is ranked No. Martha, a daughter, two sons and six grandchildren. my daughter was in the Peace Corps. She spoke flu- behind 17-0 before beating Yale 28-27 in the closing office or a Harvard rival in a restaurant. Folks see- 5 in Forbes’ list of the best business schools in the —Bud Street, 99 Locust Lane, Barnstable, MA 02630; ent Arabic, and you should have seen the faces on As our class youngsters (who matricu- seconds. That evening we had our own room for a ing the Dartmouth banner in his room will stop by, country. Dartmouth is one of the top 10 “Best Value (508) 362-3780; [email protected] men when this white, female, non-believer spoke lated at age 16) enter their 10th decade, convivial dinner at the Norwich Inn. After the meal such as the recent graduate or the woman whose Schools in America” (determined by academic qual- to them! Ken Kelly writes that he is now taking care there are still 125 of us on this side of the we shared reflections on events and actions in our 49 long lives that have meant the most to us and both daughter currently attends the College. She brought ity and cost) in a list released by U.S. News & World Seasons greetings to all ’46 classmates, of his wife, Gloria, who is in hospice care. He remi- grass. I hope that will lead to a good turnout at our him a Dartmouth mug! The Dartmouth camaraderie Report. Former New Jersey Congressman Frank J. families and friends. Our peripatetic nisces of their time living in Wigwam Circle while 70th Reunion next year. the pleasures and problems of this late stage of our can’t beat that. I continue to heal from a miserable Guarini ’46 has doubled his original gift of $10 mil- classmate Dave Chalmers is showing finishing at Thayer. They lived 13 years overseas Paul Woodberry reported that he had a nice lives. Our next mini-reunion will be on the weekend fall and now am living my normal life of activity. 46 while working construction projects in Greece, chat with Ed Clogston: “After Ed retired from his of October 26-28, Homecoming 2018, with football lion to promote foreign study in hopes of improving he still has a lot of gas left in the tank as he follows Today I will do chair yoga and tomorrow it will be a students’ understanding of the world. Thayer School his self-organized, commercial flight travel bucket England and Scotland. One child born in Rome, insurance company, he moved to Vermont, where vs. Harvard. Put it on your calendars. “mumba” class. I am living where I belong and hope professor Eric Fossum received the 2017 Queen list—he had visited more than 100 countries as of one in London, one in Yonkers, New York. Back he eventually became the oldest ski instructor in Kayla McFarland has informed me of the pass- many of you feel the same! Elizabeth Prize for Engineering—presented to him early last year for business or leisure. Last I heard in the United States, Ken spent his career with the state. Ed, Jay Evans and I enjoyed skiing together ing of her grandfather, J. Leo Appel, on September 5, Dum vivimus vivamus! by Prince Charles. lists Professor from Dave, this fall he was off to Chile, a new country IBM as project manager for various buildings and many times at Sunapee, New Hampshire.” Ed now 2017. The College has informed me of the passing of —Jane Hanks, 2630 Kings Crown, Fort Myers, FL Douglas Irwin’s book, Clashing Over Commerce, on his itinerary. skyscrapers. lives in Wilmington, Massachusetts. Parton Crane Keese on August 25, 2017. 33908; [email protected] as one of the best books of 2017—it “sets the record Stan Waterman expressed his appreciation to me We received word that George Dwenger of South Ralph Greenhouse died on February 20, 2017, in We live now in a parlous and unprecedented

60 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MARCH/APRIL 2018 61 CLASS NOTES 1951-1959

time which has drawn attention to a seldom con- stories of other activities that were reported in the classmates Charles Jacob, David Lewis and John Bruce became editor of the Fort Monmouth Military —Joel D. Ash, P.O. Box 1733, Grantham, NH 03753; ing, be advised that two equally enticing ancillary sidered aspect of the U.S. Constitution. The 25th class newsletter. However, as you might expect, last Dodge. We offer our condolences to their families. News. He attributes his two years in the Army as (603) 863-3360; [email protected] reunion events are also well along in the planning Amendment empowers a majority of the president’s year we also lost a number of our good friends and —Mark H. Smoller, 4 Schuyler Drive, Jericho, NY giving tremendous insight into how lucky we all process. Prior to the reunion, there will be an over- cabinet to remove him from office if they judge him we hope you will agree they deserve special men- 11753; (516) 938-3616; [email protected] were to have the parents and the support system that The year’s great pendulum keeps swing- night visit to the newly renovated Moosilauke Ra- to be unfit to fulfill its duties. When one of the White tion, not just the formal reporting in the usual man- allowed us to go to Dartmouth. During a long career ing: Bob Copeland writes that Monk Ban- vine Lodge in Warren, New Hampshire, for which House staff mentioned the 25th Amendment to him ner. From mid-2017 through year-end, classmates The antitrust division of the U.S. Depart- in insurance, he served for 41 years on the hospital croft and Bob Shirley have passed. “I don’t you must make separate arrangements (apart from Harry Heap, Robert Schuldt, Elliott Cates, Charles Weed, 57 recently, the president said, “What’s that?” Does ment of Justice announced the estab- board at Beth Israel. Bruce now is volunteer director know how well you knew these guys,” Bob says, “but those for the reunion itself). Call (603) 764-5858 this frighten you? Robert Adams, Charles Allen, Robert Morris, William lishment of the James F. Rill Fellowship, of Milton’s 110-acre park system, which includes they were among the best characters our class pro- for details or contact the aforesaid class officers. Alex Hoffman Zaphiris, Curtis Richards, Edwin “Ted” Rice, Andrew 54 Ralph Manuel — , 96 Stickles Road, Hudson, NY 12534; which is designed to provide elite candidates of the largest swimming pool east of the Mississippi. duced.” We speak often of our losses, but let’s talk of According to Hanover-based , who [email protected] Aishton and Alan Davis passed away. Of course, you the honors program with a special opportunity It holds 1.2 million gallons, with its own dock, and significant gains as well.Steve Swayne and Matthew attended last fall’s reopening of the Ravine Lodge know these 12 men better by their nicknames and to participate in antitrust enforcement actions had to be declared a pond to comply with zoning. Marsit are important new additions to our class. after a year of reconstruction, the lodge is “beyond Our class executive committee is explor- their friendships. There are many stories, but we’ll and in the development and implementation of Had a good chat with Tom McGreevey. He and Steve, as chairman of the music department, was re- spectacular and well worth a visit.” Or words to that ing ideas for new opportunities for mem- mention just two here as examples. Bob Adams was antitrust policy. James was already considered one Sharon are building a new home in the same com- sponsible for selecting the winners of the Eric Kun- effect. Doubtless by then theSound & Fury newslet- bers of the ’51 family to gather and recon- a long-time friend with Ed Clark, Nels Ehinger and of the greats of the antitrust bar. The list of Jim’s ac- munity as Betsey and David Miller and Coyla and Ed zel music award. Extremely close to our class, Steve ter will have conveyed some photographic evidence 51 Steve Parkhurst Barry nect. One possibility: leisurely lunch get-togethers in and each year, through many years, complishments as associate attorney general alone . Tom has an article in the Foundation jour- has also received the John Rassias faculty award to back up Ralph’s enthusiasm. areas of the country where there are large concen- they would have their own personal reunion, keep- is daunting—issuing the 1992 horizontal merger nal of the Naval Aviation Museum about the USS for exceptional outreach to alumni. Mike Lasser and In addition, Admiral Hal Bernsen has stepped to trations of ’51 classmates and widows. Such areas ing the bond fresh. Our last reported loss was Alan guidelines, the first version to be issued jointly Langley (CV-1) and 1924 “Fleet Problem IV” (and Randy Aires strongly supported Steve’s adoption. the helm and taken command of organizing a post- could include greater Boston, Connecticut, Florida Davis, who comes from a family of several genera- with the Federal Trade Commission; negotiat- continuing exercises), when four aircraft launched Matthew, director of bands at Dartmouth, has been reunion trip, something on the order of the memo- and California. Hanover, of course, continues to be tions of Dartmouth graduates, including a son and ing the landmark U.S.-European Union “Positive from Langley marked the introduction of carrier leader of the Dartmouth Wind Ensemble on two rable visit many of us made to the Trapp Family a magnet for many. two grandsons. In recent years he and Terry Malone Comity Agreement,” raising corporate fines for operations to the Navy. Tom is awaiting acceptance trips to Costa Rica attended by our classmates. He Lodge in northern Vermont after our 50th reunion Speaking of clusters of classmates, it turns out became close friends, and they and their wives have Sherman Act violations from $1 million to $10 and publication of his book, Preparing for Victory: has also received numerous awards as a conductor in 2008. In making your reunion plans you will want there are eight ’51s living in Tucson, Arizona. They traveled widely together, joined forces at reunions million. One of Jim’s most important contributions U.S. Carrier Operations in the Era of Isolationism. and a clarinetist. Matthew was strongly supported to set aside a couple of extra days to enjoy that added are Aram Chorebanian, Pete Crowe, Ace Mueller, Joan and otherwise found reasons to keep their contacts to the division is perhaps the hardest to capture— Sadly, we report the passing of Bill Wilbur and for adoption by Bruce Bernstein and Pete Carothers. A opportunity, as Larry Weltin’s punchy reunion motto Person (Hap’s widow), Janet Rutstein (Bob), Al Tarlov, strong. Alan and Terry both attended our 65th last that is, Jim’s crucial role in fostering a bipartisan Paul Zimmerman. most sincere welcome to both from the great class of puts it, to “Relax! Reconnect! Reminisce!” Patricia Weare (Mase) and Bob Wilbee. year. In spite of these losses, as we move toward the consensus for how the government should enforce —John Dinan, 20 Gardiner St., Richmond, ME 04357; 1957! Jay Greene shares with us that plans are firm- —Steve Quickel, 411 North Middletown Road, For- Carl Glassberg has been honored as a Lightning fall of 2018, we will remember how this all started, the antitrust laws. Bill Pierce notes that Bob Oxford (207) 252-7442; [email protected] ing up for a spectacular California mini-reunion, est-310, Media, PA 19063; [email protected] Community Hero by the Tampa Bay, Florida, NHL 70 years ago, and we still represent some 38 percent two years ago had an incident that resulted in a most likely April 27-May 2, with three days in San hockey organization. The Lightning Foundation of the 715 members of the class of 1952. Take good variety of issues: the onset of Parkinson’s disease Bill Loyer recently reported on a lun- Francisco followed by three days in Napa Valley. Jay Some of us have kept a copy of the made a $50,000 contribution to the Gulf Coast care of yourself and stay in touch. and memory-cognitive issues associated with cheon attended by a number of 1956 and Paulina are planning the valley fun and, signifi- program for the Commencement exer- Jewish Community Services Holocaust Survivor —William Montgomery, 11 Berrill Farms Lane, Ha- dementia. Since June 29 he has been living at classmates held in the Denver area on cantly, Tom Ely’s widow, Cinda, is planning the San cises held in Hanover on June 14, 1959. Bruce Sloane 59 program in Carl’s name. Carl and his late wife, Irene, nover, NH 03755; (603) 643-0261; wmontgod52@ an assisted living community in Franklin, New 56a monthly basis—every month except December. In Francisco activities. reports that, after Among other information, it lists the names of 591 herself a Holocaust survivor, have been very active aol.com Hampshire, called the Golden Crest and seems addition to Bill, four other classmates attended the some 30 years of declining hearing, he decided on a classmates who that day received with this organization over many years. to enjoy having visitors. Just an early reminder November 13 luncheon. This included Bill Droege- cochlear implant, which now gives him near normal degrees. Although not explicitly noted in the pro- Kendalights is “a magazine of humanities and With the usual end of the year frenetic that our 65th reunion (June 2019) coincides with mueller, Bob Montgomery, Noel Sankey and Martin hearing, literally changing his life. Bruce adds that gram, more than 100 of those classmates receiving sciences” published by the Kendal retirement com- energy, 2017 has rushed to its conclu- Dartmouth’s 250th anniversary. The New York “Lucky” Shore. Ken Fortin, who often attends, missed the implant has also changed wife Joy’s life. Bruce bachelor’s degrees were also in the midst of pursuing munity in Hanover. Pete Martin, who knows a thing or sion. Hanover is quiet. The air is clear class holiday luncheon was held at the Dartmouth the November affair. All are in relatively good health is busy giving talks, writing articles and counseling postgraduate degrees from one of the three graduate 53 two about journalism and lives in Kendal, is an active and crisp, adding a calm to the stillness of the place. club on December 7.Attending were 27 classmates for our age group and several continue to work at folks with hearing loss. If your hearing aids are no schools (in the case of about a dozen classmates, contributor and member of Kendalights’ editorial The tone is set for family gatherings, class reunions and wives and guests—with the highlight being the their profession. Noel Sankey still practices medi- longer giving you the help you need, Bruce suggests joint degrees from Tuck and Thayer schools). Al- board. News from Art Worden in Florida: “I am still and Christmas parties. We have reached the con- class award to Don Brief. The Boston holiday lun- cine and Lucky Shore still practices law. Bob Mont- evaluation for a cochlear implant. Check out his blog most all of those who had begun their postgraduate crawling around the tennis courts and traded in my clusion of another year, and it is a time to reflect cheon attendees were Rick Hartman and Anne, Tom gomery is a retired attorney, and Bill Droegemueller on this website: acialliance.org/blogpost/1644925/ studies (pursuant to the now long-defunct 3/2 pro- old motorcycle for a newer beauty. I call it my time on the past year and look ahead to the next. It’s a Kelsey and Liz, Dick Page and Jane, Dick Barker and is a retired M.D. and medical professor. An-Octogenenarian-S-CI-Journey. gram) went on to obtain the advanced degrees from machine; all I have to do is sit on it and I am 40 years time for reminiscing and for winding down and for Barbara, Dan Neiditz and Arlene, Phil Cooke, Shelly The sounds of the Barbary Coast band Now back to that yearly pendulum swing: It’s either Tuck, Thayer (or both) or the then two-year younger.” Art and Ruth’s kids refer to them as “low- enjoying the company of our friends and family. In Woolf, Dick Gorsey and Ellen, Gary Zwart and Cynthia marching up Main Street remind us that not ev- New Year’s resolution time as I write to you. One of Medical School. One of the exceptions was Jerry maintenance parents.” Andy Pincus is still active the mid 1960s Bob Callender, John Kingsland, Paul Sunderland, Mort Haefitz and Roz, Dick Bracer and eryone in the class is as active as the Denver group. my most important is to contact more of you from Allyn, who, having started the 3/2 program with the as a music critic at Tanglewood after 42 years. He Paganucci and Fred Whittemore organized our first Jane, Dave Thielscher and Mary, and Bob Fanger ’55. Sadly, I have to report on the passing of two class- whom we have not heard recently. What are your Thayer School, switched schools in mid-stream and recently wrote an op-ed piece on military service. Christmas luncheon in New York City, with the We note the passing of classmates Bob Osmond, Paul mates, John Kramer and Merritt Clarke. All remaining hopes for 2018? finished his master’s program in engineering at Yale. Ten percent (61) of our entering class in 1947 had one in Hanover following later. Under the aegis of Wisdom, William Derwood, William Norcross, Edwin class members bow their heads in silent tribute as —John W. Cusick, 251 Sabal Palm Lane, Vero Beach, Being a three-year Dartmouth, one-year Thayer and served in the military before matriculating. Two- Cathy Callender and Bob Malin we met as usual at the Jarrett and Walter Anderson. the procession marches around the Green. FL 32963; (772) 231-1248; [email protected] one-year Yale engineer is not the only way in which thirds of us served following graduation. Yale Club for lunch last week. In attendance were —Wayne Weil, 246 Ridge Road, Rutherford, NJ 07070; Several months ago I had a call from Harry Jerry stands out as a rara avis among classmates. Buck Scott enjoyed lunch in Beverly Hills, Cali- Cathy Callender, Jean Vitalis, Liliane and Ron Lazar, (201) 933-4102; [email protected] Nutting in which he mentioned that he has been REUNION | JUNE 11-14 He was also one of only three (to the knowledge of fornia, with Mish Cohen recently. Mish is retired as Vivian and Dick Cahn, Sue Corcoran, Dick Blum, Lu writing limericks—standard limericks, not poetic As our 60th reunion year dawns, and your scribe) who married the sister of a classmate. dean of the humanities at the University of Southern and Jack Morris, Charlie Buchanan, Shirley Cobb and I found Sigma Nu brother Larry Freier and limericks as I do. He suggested that I encourage our girdled earth faces many challenges, Jerry was introduced to his future wife, Fran, by California. Tracey Cobb Sheppard, Connie and Ben Clery, Dave Elizabeth in Lexington, Massachusetts, other classmates writing limericks to send them we can take both pleasure and solace in her twin brother—and Jerry’s sophomore-year Ted Florence Ed Wood Gus 58 Sam Werner Three more of our classmates have died: , and April Cooper, Mabel and in the same house for 50 years. Larry to me for publication. Good idea, and Harry should reporting the latest attendance figures for our June roommate— . Jerry and Fran vacationed Hazen, Irwin Lonschein Bill Michener Allen Len Gochman, 55 and . We send , Marilyn Paganucci, Marita and went through the Marine platoon leaders program follow through and send in one of his own. 11 to 14 get-together in Hanover. Slated for the Mon- with Sam and Laura Werner in Nag’s Head, North condolences to their families. Phil Beekman, Renee and Michael Zarin, Bill Freedman, at Dartmouth and served in the Mediterranean. I got a nice email from Tony Carleton saying that, day through Thursday period following the hectic Carolina, about a year ago in celebration of Jerry’s —Pete Henderson, 450 Davis St., Evanston, IL 60201; and Gail and Bob Malin. Following his service, he returned to Thayer for his “My wife and I were quite energetic in taking our Commencement week, the reunion’s early-stage and the twins’ 80th birthdays. Jerry reports that he (847) 905-0635; [email protected] An equally enthusiastic group enjoyed a lun- M.S. in electrical engineering in 1958. For several recent cruise along the Rhine.” Tony now lives in attendance figures look very promising indeed. In and his brother-in-law and fellow science maven cheon at Kendal of Hanover. Those who attended years he worked at MIT. The department spun off Wake Robin, Vermont, and the scenery is quite dif- the latest conference call of our class officers and were intrigued by the changing nature of the Outer Exactly one year ago we opened our Class were Harlan Fair and Granthia Preston, Cynthia and a unit that became the Charles Draper Lab, where ferent from Germany—lovely but unchanging. Tony, a dozen committee chairs convened by president Banks and, while browsing in a bookstore in Kitty Notes with this comment, “We normally Dave , Ross McIntyre and Helen Whyce, Mar- Larry was involved in the Air Force missile guidance sitting in a deck chair and drinking a nice libation, John Trimble in mid-December, reunion co-chairs Hawk, serendipitously found a book that described use this space in the alumni magazine to ilyn Paganucci, Mitzi Carleton and Dave Colt, Seth system development. In retirement he goes to the is not that tired. Gersh Abraham and Frank Gould reported the latest in expert detail the natural processes that they had 52 Carpenter, Allen Collins Dan focus on news our classmates have submitted or to , Drewry and Frank Logan gym six days a week and is active in the Lexington Now, in honor of all those who still travel the numbers. According to the attendance chief observed and wondered about. The book, published report on past events that would be of interest to our ’52, Chuck Reilly, Lois and Adolph Franz, Marjorie Community Center. He and Norm Fine, who moved world, the following is the fourth stanza of a six-stan- O’Hara, no fewer than 70 classmates and 72 guests, in 1995 and titled The Nature of the Outer Banks, class and our friends in other classes. Too often in and Russ Cook, Anne and Dana Low ’54, Betty and from Concord, Massachusetts, to Virginia to pursue za Dartmouth poem titled “Stimulation of Minds.” or a total of 142, had indicated that they will attend was written by Dirk Frankenberg, then a professor of recent years we have also noted the passing of our Roger Gilmore ’54, Liz King, Herb Hillman ’54, Put his equestrian dream, keep in close touch. World travel with scholarship bent, the 60th, with 44 others saying they hope to be on marine science at the University of North Carolina, long-time classmates.” In the meantime, 2017 was Blodgett, Elsa Lukin, Ben Gilson ’54, Deb and Dave Bruce Alexander and M.J. claim they live in Mil- Understanding new things the intent; hand in Hanover. That puts the attendance goal of whose distinguished career was cut short by his a very successful year for our class, and we hope Horlacher, and Lillian Goss. Both luncheons were ton, Massachusetts, but often liven up the Hanover Perusing strange sights, 225 classmates and guests well within reach, with death about five years after the book’s publication. individually for you as well. Our 65th reunion was successful and enjoyed by all who attended. scene from their hideaway in Eastman. Though a Great artistic delights, six months still to go. —Dick Hoehn, 845 Union St., Marshfield, MA 02050; the highlight of the year, and we had several good With sadness I announce the loss of our dear private, first class, having enlisted after Dartmouth, Much enjoyment with time so well spent. If you are still sitting on the fence about attend- (781) 834-4113; [email protected]

62 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MARCH/APRIL 2018 63 CLASS NOTES 1960-1965 A Great Place To Live For the Dartmouth Family All right! We are the first class ever Richard “Rich” Dojny writes from retire- Dan and Lee Matyola (Branchburg, New Jersey), Joel line) international relations at American Military to reach 100 members of the Bartlett ment in Maine, where he reconnects Werbel (Warren, New Jersey), Steve Kurland and University. Pete retired in 2000 and has been active Tower Society and we have the most with Bill Carpenter, Dick Maynard and Erica Goldberg (Framingham, Massachusetts), Bill in many areas of giving back to his community with Roger Smith became a part of the Dartmouth 60 Phii Peter Knight Harry society members of any class ever; that from 62other “Mainiacs” at ’s annual micro- and Petie Subin (Margate, New Jersey), and Habitat for Humanity and SCORE, the nation’s larg- Department of Pharmacology Faculty in the Kron, who has worked tirelessly to achieve the re- reunion on Deer Isle, Maine. After graduation and Nicole Zlokower () and Paul Binder and est network of volunteer, expert business mentors. and Toxicology in 1960, and has lived in cord for our class. Meanwhile, Nick Muller reports two years of service in the Army, Richard began a Shelley Doctors (New York City). Even though Pete was a Vietnam combat veteran, he Hanover ever since. Raising 3 children that as he becomes more venerable, folks encour- long and accomplished career in publishing with In addition to the Binder-Subin performance, was for many years unaware of the help that veter- throughout those 49 years, the Dartmouth age him to do a little self-promotion but so far he McGraw-Hill, becoming president of the college the upcoming 55th reunion in Hanover will be filled ans needed. However, since 2015 his focus has been community and Hanover have become an has been too modest. However, the Upper Valley textbook division after 15 years. He later ran the with activities, including dancing to a Motown band, on helping veterans in eastern Oklahoma. He was a important part of his and his wife Rena’s lives. ’60s luncheon club met just before Christmas for TradeBook operation and college publishing opera- Gordy and Susan Weir speaking on the latest diabetes delegate to the Governor’s Symposium on Veterans oining the Dartmouth faculty in 1960 a “Festivest” celebration drawing some 30-plus tions for Macmillan Publishing. Retiring at age 60, research, a special program for women, Dr. Sam Service in 2016 and 2017. In his spare time Pete J gents, their wives and lady friends. he now enjoys marine carving courses, duties as Smith ’58 on “Sex and Aging,” an address by Presi- plays golf, and he and Jane are very involved in their wasn’t exactly the plan, but after serving in Gordon Starkey reports that Comcast’s server head of the board of trustees of the Blue Hill Library, dent Hanlon, tours and great dining and socializing, church. John and Kimbra have a daughter who is a the army at an Army Medical Hospital appears to be overloaded and slow to respond so volunteer work, spoiling grandchildren, traveling culminating with a class banquet on the Alumni freshman at the University of Oklahoma, and Pete Laboratory in Germany I wouldn’t change a he has changed the end of his computer address and his wife’s superb cooking. Brooke is an award- Gym lawn. There is also an optional pre-reunion and Jane between them have five children and 10 thing. My work in Medicinal Chemistry and to “@gmail.com.” Our Tony Roisman, who heads winning food journalist and cookbook author whose Saturday and Sunday Moosilauke Ravine Lodge grandchildren. Although John had a heart attack and Pharmaceuticals kept me at Dartmouth as an up the public service department in Vermont, is 20 books on New England cooking are available on overnight stay and a special post-reunion extension six bypasses, he is involved with competitive race active Faculty Member until 2000 and then fielding complaints about service from Comcast Amazon. I can personally attest to the excellence of June 15-16 at the Lake Morey Resort in Fairlee, walking and has participated in the National Senior users and Comcast is suing the state, he reports. her chowder recipes. Vermont, featuring a New England clam bake, Texas Games. Pete and Jane have found themselves spend- as an adjunct until 2009. —John M. Mitchell, 300 Grove St., Rutland, VT Good news from another Mainiac, David Laing, barbecue, boating, swimming, hiking and golf. ing more time with our 1964 classmates. John serves After full retirement Rena and I decided 05701; (802) 775-3716; [email protected] reporting encouraging progress in his recovery from As of December, 60 classmates were pre-reg- as president and as a vice president of the local and that it was time for us to move to a facility recent cancer surgery—the latest treatment in a long istered for the 55th, including Doug Bell, Ted More- state chapters of the Military Officers Association of that offered us the comforts of home, The calendar year 2017 has come to a bout with the disease first diagnosed in 2012. He at- house, Steve Spahn, Vaughn Skinner, Alan March, Mike America, respectively. Pete and John have recently without the concerns of owning our own close, and the class of ’61 has much to tributes “pulling through” to several factors: positive Losee, Joel Jutkowitz, Dick Ahlstrand, Bud Bruggeman, agreed to collaborate on giving a six-week, 12-hour home. We wanted to stay in the area because be thankful for—many classmates still mental attitude; wife Margaret’s support helping Dennis Eagle, Richard Edelson, Bill Hindle, Freeman class on the Vietnam War at the Oklahoma State 61 Ford, Randy Fields Jim Ferguson we consider it home, and The Woodlands very much alive and active, several classmates with juicing, Jamaican herbs and diet changes; the and . For further in- University campus in Tulsa. John has taught such a still achieving, a finalist nod (under the leadership uplifting distraction of the 1960s TV sitcom I Dream formation go to the Dartmouth class of ’63 web page. class on the Vietnam War on a regular basis for four was a wonderful choice. Since moving into of Don O’Neill, class president) for the coveted of Jeannie; keeping busy writing novellas and non- The annual Tanglewood on Parade is scheduled years at the University of Oklahoma. The Woodlands our needs for care have Class of the Year award and the recipient of one fiction books on sailboats and contrarian views of for August 6-7, according to mini-reunion chair Sam Speaking of Vietnam, Phil Schaefer asked me changed and we were accommodated right of only three special commendation certificates climate change (which, after extensive research, Cabot. The event includes performances of works by to tell our class that the Vietnam vets panel dis- here on the same campus by moving into the granted by the Class Officers Association execu- he attributes to chlorine for CFCs). David should Ravel, Gershwin and Tchaikovsky, reserved rooms cussion of October 23, 2017, during professor Ed assisted facility Harvest Hill where we also tive committee for fiscal year 2016-17. However, be back on the slopes this winter, according to his at the Seven Hills Inn and class dinners both nights. Miller’s course, has made it to YouTube (/ have a deluxe apartment with our own unfortunately, we again lost several classmates radiologist. Check the class website for details. aK63hJ46Tto). We hope that you’ll have both the this year, deceased classmates who were some- Bill Pierce writes: “Sad to report that our class- Having served as class vice president and or- interest and the time (about two hours) to view this (603) 442-5970 (603) 448-7458 furnishings. Having the comforts of your INDEPENDENT LIVING ASSISTED LIVING one’s roommate, teammate, fraternity brother, mate, Richard Norman, of Fairlee, Vermont, died on ganizer of many successful mini-reunions, Sam recording. It is particularly significant because for own place in such a caring community gives classmate, friend. November 29. He was only with us for one year be- Cabot was nominated by the executive committee the first time there is a woman on the panel. Jane us a sense of freedom and independence. apdlifecare.org I don’t usually cover a classmate’s passing fore moving to UNH. He was second string catcher in December to be our next class president, suc- Griffith has significant Dartmouth connections and The Woodlands and Harvest Hill is a within our DAM Class Notes column, as our allot- our freshman year, unfortunately having to play be- ceeding Larry Bailey, who served so well these many a fascinating experience in Vietnam during the war. Located in New Hampshires’ beautiful Upper Valley on the Campus of Alice Peck Day Memorial Hospital place that we have now called home for ted word count is now too limited and obituaries hind Jim Murar. He was a longtime math teacher and years. Other approved officers areEd Mazer and Dan We have led interesting lives. I encourage you to almost 8 years, and we couldn’t be happier. are better and more timely presented by Harris baseball coach, finishing up at Hanover High. I had Muchinsky, vice presidents; Bill Russell, treasurer; and share your recent experiences with your classmates. McKee on our class website and Tom Conger in our gotten to know him again in recent years as he was Harry Zlokower, secretary. The nominees would —Harvey Tettlebaum, 56295 Little Moniteau Road, class newsletter. Once in a while, however, a high- a neighbor at Lake Morey. He was often seen with take office, subject to approval of the entire class California, MO 65018; (573) 761-1107; dartsecy64@ achieving classmate passes away without having his wife, Muriel, walking around the Lake Morey membership, at the conclusion of the 55th reunion gmail.com received adequate public recognition by Dart- Golf Club when he wasn’t playing golf.” in June. mouth or by the class while still alive. Ed Victor was Gentle reminder: Send in your news—activi- I regret to report the deaths of Robert Wagstaff, Greetings! just such a classmate. Ed was not very active while ties, accomplishments, life changes—to david@ Alex Bass and Jon Loomis, which marks 172 class- Now that the wolf-wind is wailing at Dartmouth or as an alumnus. However, within davidlsmith.com. mates reported deceased, according to numbers at the doorways, David L. Smith Dave Schaefer 65 the literary world, Ed had become a renowned and — , RR4 Box 225B4, Galveston, TX provided by newsletter editor . And the snow drifts deep along the road, “colorful” literary agent in London who counted 77554; (775) 870-2354; [email protected] —Harry Zlokower, 190 Amity St., Brooklyn, NY 11201; I hope you’re defying frost and storm and have rock stars, famous actors and actresses and well- (917) 541-8162; [email protected] your heart’s desire. known authors among his clients. Ed’s crowning REUNION | JUNE 11-14 (How’s that for trashing a fine song’s scansion?) achievement occurred in 2016 (he died in June A cold, snowy night in Hanover? No, Surprisingly, we have only two members Winter is upon us, except for those who have discov- 2017), when he was appointed Commander of the it was on New York’s Upper West Side of our class living in Oklahoma. They are ered warmer climates, such as Bob Murphy, who is Order of the British Empire by the Queen for his 63a week before Christmas—but it may 64John Fishel and Pete Luitwieler. John lives playing baseball in Florida (more on that below). services to publishing and literature. The New as well have been Hanover when 13 classmates, with his wife, Kimbra, outside Norman (home of Here in Minnesota the winter is…meh. Not enough York Times probably stated it best in an exten- spouses, and guests climbed the small staircase to the University of Oklahoma) and Pete with his wife, snow to ski on yet. sive postscript to an earlier extensive obituary, the Triad Theater to the intimate cabaret, where Jane, in Tulsa. After graduating from Dartmouth So, to business. As mentioned earlier, we are where it printed that Ed Victor “made his own the indefatigable circus impresario and ringmaster- John obtained his doctorate in political science moving to a new way of delivering the newsletter. myth a reality.” turned-entertainer Paul Binder performed duets with from University. Pete entered Tuck after (Pardon me—a new platform.) Mike Gonnerman is John King reported that he was now the chair three vibrant, talented female singers, including his third year at Dartmouth and was graduated with the leader in this, and Stu Keiller maintains a fine of the board for Golf Fore Africa, a nonprofit foun- Petie Subin, wife of Bill Subin, providing a preview his M.B.A. Both John and Pete served in the Army. website that figures strongly in the new design. dation that assists in providing clean water to of what to expect when she and Paul will perform John had a notable career in the Army, active and Instead of a printed letter, Mike hosts quarterly villages in Zambia. The organization was founded during our 55th reunion in Hanover June 11-14. The reserve, and in academia. Prior to ending his career, conference calls. The calls are anchored by slides, by LPGA Hall of Fame golf player Betsy King (no ’63 contingent occupied tables in front of the stage, he worked at the National Defense University Cen- which go up at biggreen65.com after the meetings. relation to John) more than eight years ago and, and after the performance we descended to Sevens ter for Hemispheric Defense Studies. Pete worked in The first meeting took place in November and was according to John, has since improved signifi- Turkish Grill below to talk about our lives and family the petroleum industry, first with Gulf Oil and then followed by an email newsletter in December. Gon- Hampton Inn by Hilton- White River cantly the lives of the men, women and children and reminisce about the Dartmouth days over wine, with Citgo. John is “retired,” although he continues nerman led the meeting. Bruce Jolly, John Rogers, of those African villages. baba ganoush, hummus, chicken Adana, homemade to teach three courses each year at the University Joel Sternman, George Wittreich, Murphy, Keiller, —Victor S. Rich, 94 Dove Hill Drive, Manhasset, NY gyros and other delicious plates. Diners included of Oklahoma, while Kimbra participates in piano Roger Hansen, Brian Porzak, Bruce Wagner, Peter Fred- 11030; (516) 446-3977; [email protected] Tom and Connie Clephane (Stamford, Connecticut), and photographic competitions and teaches (on- erick, Bill Webster, Bob Blake and Dave Beattie joined

64 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MARCH/APRIL 2018 65 CLASS NOTES 1966-1972 the call. Plan to dial in on February 20 for the next interpreter under contract with the U.S. Depart- “from the top of Moosilauke at night, with a full effort. With more than 70 responses (about 10 per- not only attended but graduated, unlike my one day, Please send Class Notes contributions to me meeting. Speaking of Gonnerman, he finished the ment of State, accompanying French-speaking of- moon lighting the rocks at the summit.” Similarly, cent of the class), almost 89 percent of classmates which convinced me it was not where I belonged. at the addresses below. 2017 Marine Corps Marathon in a time that would ficial guests of the international visitor program of Bruce Pacht wishes he had “a photo of all the guys are married, in their first (70 percent) or second (19 Had I known then, I could have crashed on his floor —Gary Miller, 7 E Hill Road, Canton, CT 06019; ga- have pleased a 40-year-old. It was his 24th mara- the State Department and interpreting for them in crammed into the bunkhouse on our first night at the percent) marriage. Including classmates who have instead of the YMCA and the Hotel Arlington in the [email protected] thon. Mike’s wife, Betsy, ran the 10k and won her their official meetings and unofficially in everyday base of Moosilauke.” Bill Yaggy wants a photo from no children, we have an average of 2.15 children per Tenderloin while I was looking for work. Please keep class—by eight minutes! Continuing the class ac- situations. At the same time Tom taught French at a weekend on Cape Cod with Ben Moore and fam- classmate and 2.71 grandchildren. If adjusted for sending information about your activities to Peter This from Pete Webster: “This past sum- tion, Murphy writes, “I still play baseball. Hard ball, a number of schools—the universities of Iowa and ily after the Interfraternity Play Contest, “walking only classmates who have children or grandchil- Elias for the website, Allen Denison for the newslet- mer our class kicked off a four-year ‘men- not softball. I play tournament ball: Wagner Wood South Dakota and Wartburg, Grinnell and Cornell along the beach for miles on a stormy evening.” An- dren, we have, per classmate, 2.55 children and 3.98 ter and me. toring’ program with the class of 2021, a Dave McMahill Steve Larson 71 Bat Classic, Roy Hobbs World Series and Legends college–until he finished his Ph.D. in 1990 and came other thespian in that year’s contest, grandchildren. Except for the growing number of — , 837 Wildcat Trail, 10328 Big Canoe, relatively new tradition called ‘Class Connections.’ of Baseball.” Murph plays center field, first base or to rest at Eastern Michigan University in 1991. Now wants the photo of him when he “played ‘Death’ in grandchildren (it was 3.40 per classmate when we Big Canoe, GA 30143; (360) 770-4388; wheat69@ We met and interacted with about 120, or 10 percent catcher, depending on the team. He batted nearly retired as a professor after a quarter-century run Tri-Kap’s entry. The Daily D said I was ‘convincing.’ began the survey), the figures are generally similar outlook.com of the class of 2021, in the College Grant during their .500 and was named a team MVP. In a quite differ- at EMU, Tom and Michele live in Iowa City, Iowa, Never quite knew how to take that.” Steve Guch and across the survey time. And now time for a new first-year trips. Hard to believe in three and a half ent honor, Cheshire Health Foundation honored where they met during his Ph.D. studies. Rob Kugler want a photo from Hums—Rob wants Survey Monkey class survey: What do you think These notes were written during the years we’ll be marching with these young people Dr. Roger Hansen’s years of service in orthopedics Dr. William Viar reports that he is “still enjoying one with the “guy on the motorcycle riding up to the about the possibility of Dartmouth expanding its week running up to Christmas. Deb- at their Commencement while we celebrate our at the Keene Clinic, his leadership in founding Mo- life” as a retired general surgeon, spending the sum- steps of Dartmouth Hall as Phi Gam sang ‘My Hog undergraduate enrollment? The survey can be found bie and I will be headed south to Baton 50th reunion. These ’21s were fortunate enough to Sam Ostrow 70 nadnock Sports Medicine and many contributions mers with wife of 33 years, Barbara, in the North is Bigger than Your Hog.’ ” But spoke for at https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/7ZVD2CL. Rouge, Louisiana, for a Cajun Christmas with two be assigned trips in the Grant, and we were there to medicine in the Upper Valley. The peripatetic Carolina mountains and the fall and winter in his many when he said, “I am very certain of the images —David Peck, 16 Overlook Road, Plymouth, MA of our five grandchildren. The Class Notes mailbox to man the grills, cook and prepare dinners each Hansen also represented us at the 215th Alumni hometown of , Alabama. Bill is into I am glad don’t exist.” Meanwhile pay your dues (!), 02360; [email protected] has also been a bit sparse lately. Like many of you, I evening. There were 10 groups of 12 trippers during Council, which was prefaced by a visit to the new, hunting, fishing and the Crimson Tide, with a little join the crew for CarniVail in Vail, Colorado, March became a septuagenarian in February. When your a two-week period who came through, and we had renewed Moosilauke Lodge and included a reading golf and tennis mixed in, and is most proud of his 2-4 (contact John Lobitz, [email protected]) For the next several columns I will start age has a name, you must be really old. a great contingent of ’71s perfecting their culinary of Green Eggs and Ham. Presumably this was the five grandchildren, one of whom is Will Synnott and come to the Washington, D.C., dinner March by reminding you all of the importance Hicks “Tex” Morgan, 50th reunion chair, has done techniques each evening as we set up in Sam’s Cabin. scholarly basis for the discussion of “the fusion of a ’21 (not a typo!). 24 (contact John Isaacs, [email protected], or Bob Burka, of our upcoming 50th reunion and the a marvelous job of putting together the reunion com- Willis Newton and Pete Webster were the coordina- 69 Don Eberly, best-in-class undergraduate college and a dynamic Take a quick look back to 2017 to what certainly [email protected]). many interesting items about the class, your class- mittee with an ambitious set of goals. Tex intro- tors for the program, ably assisted by with research university” that followed. must be considered a once-in-a-lifetime class mini- —Larry Langford, P.O. Box 71, Buckland, MA 01338; mates and the planning progress toward that event duced the plan at the first planning teleconference Willis taking the first week and me handling the Finally, we have learned from Linda Wa- reunion. Don Graves has reported that he joined a [email protected] available to you on the ’69 website. Please visit www. in mid-November. He has assigned the 19 committee second week. The class of ’69 gave us great advice, terhouse that Steve Waterhouse passed away on group of ’66s, including Steve Abram, Rob Cleary’s dartmouth69.org, register your intent to attend and members to 14 subcommittees, with specific tasks loaning us much of the gear they’d purchased two December 8 after a brief battle with brain cancer. widow, Judy, Greg Eden, Josh Grindlay, Caleb Lor- REUNION | JUNE 8-12 check out those who have already indicated they to coordinate over the next two and half years. Tex years previously. Also helping out, usually for two to “He embodied the spirit of Dartmouth from his ing, Tony Muller, Kevin Trainer and Steve Zeller in Midwinter and June is that much will be in Hanover in June of 2019. Norman Jacobs will be working closely with his two vice chairs, Tim four days each, were Bernie Wysocki, Mark Totman, days as our Indian mascot on through his many Ketchum, Idaho, last August to revel in a full 64 closer. As I write these notes, we have reported on the mini-reunion for Dartmouth-Brown Welch and Liz Tarlow. Jeff Demerath, class president; Peter Pratt, Steve Hoverman, Ron Harris and niece class projects,” Keiller said. “Working with him on seconds of total darkness during the solar eclipse. 243 classmates on board, and only a few football at Fenway. Twenty people gathered for a pre- Mark Heller, VP; Dave Noyes, treasurer; Gary Miller, Ana Perdita ’09, John Hanley and wife Deb, Jeff Ash- 68 Dave Masselli, Denny Brown Stu worth Norm Webster, Tony Owens, Passion for Skiing was a revelation. His tireless ef- Our sympathies are extended to the family and months to go to June 8-12. And a reminder: Be sure game dinner at the Lansdowne Pub next to Fenway secretary; and and and wife Bonnie, forts to research and build the story of Dartmouth’s friends of Dr. Walter Harrison, a revered pediatrician to participate in the Dartmouth 1968 “Who Are You” Park: Ann and Mark Bankoff, Delly and Peter Beekman, Zuckerman make up the balance of the steering com- Dave Ruml, Sheldon Perry, Parke Rublee, Jack DeGange, contribution to skiing made us all dig deeper.” Hank in Lynn, Massachusetts, for 35 years, who passed experience. The results of this should be fun and in- Karen and Clark Doran, Hilary and Dick Glovsky, Meg mittee. The committee and subcommittees will be Martha Shanahan, Don Cutter ’73, Chuck Sherman Amon recalled Steve’s energy and dedication to away December 9, 2017. formative. Log on at www.D68WhoAreYou.org. Reg- and Clint Harris, Mike and Dona Heller, Paul Tuhus, holding teleconferences periodically to keep the ’66 and Dolly Cordin, an exchange student from our Dartmouth, and Jim Griffiths noted, “There is no —Larry Geiger, 93 Greenridge Ave., White Plains, NY istration number is “1968.” You have until March Pat, Bay and Frank Wille, Joan and Rick Willets and timeline on track. We haven’t had a reunion book undergraduate years. We had the better part of each member of our class who has contributed as much 10605; (914) 860-4945; [email protected] 31 to participate, and could save up to 20 percent of Norman with Irene. Following dinner the group since our 25th. Dave Masselli and Bill Wilson are day to recreate, hike, canoe, mountain bike, fly fish personal time and creative energy to the betterment reunion fees. Speaking of 1968, the Smithsonian just moved to Fenway to watch Dartmouth beat Brown. the 50th reunion book committee chairs. Our re- or just veg out. Totally off the grid, no Internet or of the College. Steve will be sorely missed.” For this issue we asked, “What mo- named our year “The Year that Shattered America.” The most repeated comment about the game was: “It union will be closely tied to the class of 2020. We will cell phones, a superb break from our too-connected —John Rogers, 6051 Laurel Ave., #310, Golden Val- ment do you wish you had a photo of, For the second column in a row, the California fires was cold.” Leaving Canada to visit relatives in Ohio, march with them on graduation day in June 2020. I’ll modern lives. We’ll have many more opportunities ley, MN 55416; (763) 568-7501; johnbairdrogers@ but don’t?” As Richard Chu put it in his are a part of our story: Hugh Boss wrote noting his David Prentice had the opportunity to spend time be using this column and e-newsletter for updates to interact with this class prior to its graduation.” 67 Nick North Nels Armstrong comcast.net reply, “We are so flooded with digital images now, family is relatively close. “Not sleeping much, but with and encourage him to sign up for on reunion planning. On behalf of Tex and the whole writes, “Each day is a blessing. I even ones that should be meaningful to us become still okay. Fire is a few miles away and quite a light our 50th. In the same vein of visiting old friends, Dud committee, I invite you to join in the planning. Two cross paths with John Orange and his lovely wife, David Tucker may represent our quint- so repetitive and transient; very few seem to have show at night. All depends on the wind. We are Kay wrote an article for the webpage describing his of our class authors, John Morse and Dave Muller, both Elsa, from time to time and look forward to catching essential classmate. Dave enjoyed a lasting value.” So many of you responded with un- packed and ready to leave if we need to.” We do not interaction with some Phoenix fraternity brothers fellow NROTC members and career naval officers, up soon with Samuel Webster. Serving as president successful career—30 years as an documented memories that this topic will span two want a Gone with the Wind story there. Chuck Adams at Homecoming. A brief version of that gathering is were recently reunited. After learning about each of the Hampton Road’s Dartmouth club keeps me 66employee benefit legal expert at Cooper, White & issues. Chu went on to say he wished he had images shared an update as well: “Having returned in Janu- that Dud discovered some bros hidden in the crowd other’s books via this column, they have agreed to feeling connected as well to our alma mater.” I was Cooper in San Francisco. He’s an active volunteer, of “breakfast with at Cutter and of an ary 2017 to Geneva from my U.S. ambassadorship to at the football game, including Dave Maier and Paul exchange books. Dave’s book, Knowing the Enemy, pleased to receive a letter from Craig Robelen, my providing pro bono services to change the labor evening session with Allen Ginsberg.” Phil Curtis and Finland, I am now a partner and worldwide head of Sindelar. He also met Skip Auten post game at the An Intelligence Officer’s , 1966-2014, detailed freshman roommate in Gile Hall, who reports: “My practices of the local Catholic archdiocese. He’s Wayne Byer each want an image of their meeting as international arbitration with the global law firm of Hanover Inn bar. During the summer, on his way his years at Dartmouth and subsequent career. John, wife, Lisa, and I have been living in Breckinridge, a budding author with an historical novel, a book freshmen at matriculation with President Dickey in Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe.” Great article from to the Mets mini, he and Jill stopped and picked up author of Half Staff 2018, has offered to make a simi- Colorado, for three years now. What a great place to on how to negotiate mortgages and a paean to his the Tower Room. Dave Sides wishes he “had a photo the University of Arizona on David Soren. Based on Peter Schenck and Marion, spending the night with lar reflection for a future issue. live. Like Hanover, but higher and lots more snow. long-gone Westy all coming along. He has strong of me receiving my diploma. My folks were too far a recommendation from the Umbria region, where them before they all continued on to the Mets game. Bill Wilson wrote, “Don’t know if you respond- We are good friends with Tom and Lola Hancock, who Dartmouth connections, including a 35-year friend- away from the stage to get a picture.” Jock Gill wants David has spent decades doing archeology, the Ital- Our mini-reunion chair Arthur Fergenson had ed to the Alumni Council’s request for input on the live in Denver, and have run into many fellow alums ship that started as soccer dads with classmate David a picture of students being blocked from physically ian government has authorized the naming of a new his own mini when he attended a performance of College’s proposal to increase enrollment by 10 to from other classes on the ski mountains. The class of Spring. And, most significantly of all, he has a won- disrupting George Wallace’s presentation in May of strain of olive after him. In addition to that unique Farinelli and the King at the Belasco Theater on 25 percent, but here is mine. My freshman room- 1965 runs an annual CarniVail Dartmouth gathering derful family—three healthy kids, two healthy grand- 1967. John Isaacs would like to have “a photo of our news, the article outlines some of the significant Broadway with George Stauffer and their wives. mate, John Stern, also weighed in, and I will send of skiers in Vail each year that is lots of fun. We lived children and a 50-year marriage with Pat, whom he stunned reaction and gloom when we heard that archeological investigations David has led or con- George is still dean of the Mason Gross School of you his response. Bottom line is that this topic could on a 51-foot sailboat based out of Jupiter, Florida, met in 1964 on Cape Cod, about 500 yards from the President Kennedy was shot and then learned that tributed to, including excavations in Cyprus at the the Arts at Rutgers University in New Jersey. The provide input for ’70 communication for months for four years prior to moving to Breckinridge. That Tuckers’ Woods Hole vacation home on Cape Cod. he had died.” Warren Cook wants a picture of “my site of a 365 AD earthquake, how malaria contrib- two are fraternity brothers of Foley House. Phil Bush to come. By the way, you are doing a fantastic job was a blast. We have two married daughters who Another couple marking their 50th anniver- commissioning at the Bema.” Gary Atkins wishes he uted to the fall of the Roman Empire and how water provided an article on the Polka Dot Diner, which has as class secretary—I mean it—and know that posi- also live in Colorado and three grandchildren so sary, Anne and Steve Warhover, celebrated with still had the photo taken with Congressman James from the springs at Chiusi may have cured Emperor not served an early morning, post-party breakfast tive (or any) feedback is not easy to come by. On a far!” On a sad note, our classmate, Robert Uhlmann, some friends on a safari in Tanzania (where else?) , who was impressed by the election data Augustus of stomach pain. Dave Dibelius shared his to hungry students since 2015. The town is trying personal note, Ann and I are about to become first- passed away on October 23, 2017. and have the Serengeti photos to prove it. The now- trend analysis his BASIC program had created. Like- answer on the most valuable course at Dartmouth: to place the building on the National Register of time grandparents in January. It could happen on —Bob Lider, 9225 Veneto Place, Naples, FL 34113; retired couple splits their time between Vero Beach, wise, Ron Fagin “would love to have a photo of myself a required but non-credit machine shop project at Historic Places. If successful there is no word on my 70th birthday. What? 70? I thought that only had [email protected] Florida, and Gloucester, Massachusetts, enjoying with John Kemeny.” Bill Judd would like to have Thayer. The class had to construct a doodad made whether we will be able to dine there during our 50th to do with when I graduated from college.” golf, bridge, pickleball, travel and “partying (still).” “pictures of those faculty and staff who were ‘special’ of half a dozen metal parts fabricated on a variety reunion return, but we can always hope! We end on a sad note. Jeffrey Dow passed away As this column goes to press, it will be Tom Vosteen is also celebrating a 50th—50 years during my five years on campus, not just portraits of milling machines. This experience, along with While communicating with Bruce Hamilton in Newberry, Florida, on December 3 after being early spring in Hanover and the seniors of teaching French at Midwest colleges. For a while but in their work environments.” Nick Mason wants computer programming and a high school drafting about our postgraduate activities in San Francisco, diagnosed with cancer. Jeff came to Dartmouth 72will be dreaming of graduation and of Tom led kind of a double life. After college he spent the image of “when we ‘won’ the tug-of-war with class, helped support his career in mechanical engi- he mentioned that I was not the only ’69 attending from Belfast, Maine. He had a 47-year career as an the next phase of their lives. If you were asked to be 25 years working intermittently as a French-English about 2,000 seniors.” Dick Clapp would like a photo neering. Final report from our little Survey Monkey Hastings Law School in the fall of 1969. Jim Sheldon educator following graduation. the Commencement speaker this year, what would

66 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MARCH/APRIL 2018 67 CLASS NOTES 1973-1976

your core message be for the class of 2018? I de- will always—hold a special place in my heart, even Dartmouth from her father, Jeffrey Stoermer. This show up as well. I guess I had better start planning. cided to ask some of our classmates to share their though I have been a small contributor in money past summer Jeffrey mentioned that his Kappa Don’t forget your class dues! thoughts on this. Here are some of the responses (not in spirit). I used to love the Big Green and the Kappa Kappa would celebrate its 175th anniversary Vox clamantis in Tejas, that I received. Fuzzy Thurston: “The world is built students who went (t)here. Today? Well, they are in the fall. That became the catalyst for a visit to —Stephen D. Gray, 3627 Avenue M, Galveston, TX on compromise. Intransigence only builds walls super bright, far beyond my level of street-smart New Hampshire. Amanda formulated the plans 77550; (650) 302-8739; [email protected] that will ultimately have to be removed, and at great and down-right educated. I just hope that they are while Jeffrey reached out to classmates and frater- intermediary cost.” Jim Caplan: “Integrity, character well-rounded, as we used to call them/us in our day. nity brothers. Amanda and Jeffrey traveled to New Our class is impossible. Just when I and civility matter the most.” Ken Jacobs would talk I thought a few of my classmates might like to know Hampshire in October. They caught up with Dana make a pact not to repeat any names about “the ever-changing world that surrounds a what me, my wife and three children have been up Bisbee in Manchester, New Hampshire. Jeffrey and 76that have appeared in this column wizened institution and how, and if, the Dartmouth to. I have retired from the educational publishing Dana had overlapped at Georgetown Law in D.C., within a year, our dang superstars are overachiev- community affects it or is affected by it.” Ed Wisneski world, having served there for more than 40 years, when Jeffrey was pursuing an LL.M. in taxation ing again. Louise Erdrich, who graced our reunion would like them to know that “Truth matters. Moral and I am now a substitute teacher in just about every and Dana was earning his J.D. In Hanover Jeffrey women’s breakfast with a fabulous recommended apathy is its most dangerous foe.” Bill Price: “Be hon- conceivable class and at all levels imaginable on the and Amanda participated in the Dartmouth Night reading list (posted on our class Facebook page), est, be true. Respect how others think and, better North Shore of Boston. I was voted Massachusetts Homecoming parade and bonfire with Bob Baumann has a new book that is, per usual, slaying reviewers. yet, seek them out to find out how to improve the Substitute Teacher of the Year after my first year of and Gary Wells. They enjoyed the football victory Future Home of the Living God is being praised as a way that you think. Finally, in the words of one of my service. My wife just retired as a full-time teacher, over Yale. They visited the 1902 Room in Baker Li- tense, dystopian thriller that “stands shoulder-to- mentors, ‘If it’s not broken, break it,’ since you need and my children live across the globe. I am proud brary and climbed Baker Tower and celebrated the braced-shoulder right alongside The Handmaid’s to challenge yourself all the time.” John de Regt: “In of them all. I can be found at stephen.h.quigley@ Tri-Kap anniversary with Dave von Loesecke, Bruce Tale,” according to NPR. Don’t miss David Shrib- these times, who are you? How do you want to show gmail.com. My only advice would be for the College Williamson, Keith Shenberger and Steve Larmon. Al- man’s New York Times op-ed from December 11, up, be seen and experienced by those around you? to continue to be small and exclusive, to engage in though this was Amanda’s first visit to Dartmouth, a heartfelt, characteristically articulate appeal to How do you want to be known and remembered? education and not politics, to value the alumni more her older brother, Adam, had visited the campus our best selves about why truth matters. But my Embody self-respect, dignity, humility and honesty. than ever and to matriculate students who love the with Jeffrey when Adam was touring schools on his favorite piece of writing I’ve read in a long time is Be yourself and follow your own North Star.” Mike three E’s: environment, education and enlighten- college search. In the end, Adam attended South- David’s address to his late father’s 70th Dartmouth Rieger: “As future leaders use the critical thinking ment. God bless to all. May the fair winds bring ern Methodist University in . Today Adam reunion class last June: a tender tribute to the no- skills you sharpened at Dartmouth to help counter warm weather and calm seas! Wah who wah!” is a teacher, coach and campus minister in Tulsa, bility of his father, his friends and a time gone by. the epidemic of fact-free political dialog. Stress the Rick Sheppe lives in Post Mills, Vermont, where Oklahoma. He is married, has three daughters and Then there’s larger-than-life Reggie Williams hon- importance of data and numeracy. Speech could he is involved with the Post Mills Soaring Club. In is a world-class triathlete. Amanda attended De- ored in November at halftime at Cincinnati’s Paul be spiced up with contemporary examples from January 2017 he served as the president of the jury Pauw University for her undergraduate studies and Brown Stadium for his record-breaking Bengals both ends of the political spectrum.” Chris Brews- at the 34th World Gliding Championships in Bena- earned a master’s in social work from Washington linebacker years as well as his devotion to com- ter: “Whatever you choose to do in life, character lla, , the highest level of sport competition University in St. Louis, Missouri. Amanda lives in munity as a Cincinnati city councilman. matters. How you treat people matters. Integrity for pilots of sailplanes. The Mount Washington St. Louis and works for a nonprofit organization in Those of us not honored in a halftime show or matters. Ethics matters. Kindness matters. Leo Soaring Association recognized Rick for a flight the healthcare field, where she manages safety-net appearing in the Times had time for coffee with our Durocher was wrong. Nice guys don’t finish last.” above 25,000 feet. Suzanne and Thad King hosted programs and trains medical students to provide old pal Copa Cavanagh, who has recently moved to Impressive answers, don’t you think? These the Dartmouth Club of Georgia’s 2017 holiday party compassionate healthcare to the underserved. Jef- Boston with wife Madelynn after raising great kids are words that all of us can live by. Thanks to all who at their Atlanta home. In November I visited a Half frey is in private law practice in Tulsa, focusing on in San Diego followed by a stint in New York, all the responded; my apologies to those whose responses Moon Bay, California, art gallery where Steve Toll estate planning, trust and probate law, tax and busi- while keeping his French drill instructor worthy CamdenWriters.com did not make it in. We are restricted in the word was displaying his stunning photography. Check ness organization. He is an avid runner, a volunteer with business and pleasure travels to France. He count that we can submit for each issue, so some out stevetoll.zenfolio.com. and board member emeritus of the Parent Child kept Julie Miner and me laughing with reminis- answers could not be used. March 14 is the 73rd day of the year, and class Center, an organization dedicated to the preven- cences of their term in Toulouse as well as the story In other news, Andy Harrison reports that his of ’73 celebrations are planned that week in major tion of child abuse and neglect through education, of the look on Professor Jamie Angell’s face when dear brother, Dr. Walter Harrison ’66, passed away metropolitan areas such as New York and Boston. treatment and advocacy, and an adult Sunday school he realized Copa’s son was in his theater class at in early December. Walter was a respected pediatri- Check to see if there is an event near you! For history class teacher. Jeffrey has been married to his wife, Occidental College. Ted Scheu is still loving his work cian who practiced in the Boston area, where he buffs, co-existed with Dart- Deborah, for 41 years. as a poetry and writing teacher visiting elementary served a diverse patient population that included mouth College from June 1816 to February 1819, Be safe and send news. schools (100-plus days last year) but says the “r” many middle class and blue-collar patients. His so 200 years ago there were two Dartmouths. The —Rick Sample, Retreat Farm, 1137 Manakin Road, word is whispering in his ear. “Robin and I want to his year, kindness and skill will be greatly missed. university had a sordid, albeit short, history: https:// Manakin Sabot, VA 23103; [email protected] volunteer more locally in Vermont and also travel.” Sadly, I must also report that our classmate en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dartmouth_University He checks in with our class Patch Adams, Dr. Peter T Matt Goyette has passed away. Bill Schur tells me that —Val Armento, 227 Sylvan Ave., San Mateo, CA Short and sweet. I think I had a bad Gergely, beloved pediatrician and noted painter, Matt was part of a very special core group of Cleve- 94403; [email protected] case of year-end (sophomore) slump. whenever he’s in the Hudson Valley, for doses of give someone landers who lived in Gile Hall. Our condolences go Despite that, word arrives that Judy laughter and reality. “Pete’s self-effacing brilliance out to Matt’s family and friends. Fred Wearn reported from Oregon on 75Geer has been named to the board of trustees of keeps me sane.” Ted invites classmates to visit Mid- you love Be well, my friends. Let me know how you’re the marriage of his daughter, Colleen the Vermont Nature Conservancy. The Vermont dlebury anytime. Peter Gilbert and his wife, Cindy doing and what you might be up to. Just drop me a Wearn ’06, to Joe Horrell ’04. The wed- Nature Conservancy is a non-partisan conserva- Char, enjoy living in Montpelier, Vermont, where note at the email address below. 74ding, a real Dartmouth event, took place in the fall tion organization dedicated to conserving lands for the last 15 years he’s been the executive director the gift of —David Hetzel, 5 Chestnut St., Windham, NH 03087; on Mount Hood. Fred sent along a group picture of and waters. In Vermont it has helped conserve of the Vermont Humanities Council. It’s a treat to [email protected] the more than 50 Dartmouth alumni who celebrated more than 300,000 acres of land and 1,200 miles of catch him on Vermont Public Radio discussing the occasion. Included in the picture, in addition to shoreline and owns and manages 55 natural areas everything from Robert Frost to the importance of a lifetime! March-ing on…. the bride and groom, were Fred’s brothers, George that are open to the public. optimism. Having worked for 10 years as senior as- In November former class scribe Wearn ’76 and Dick Wearn ’64, and Fred’s daugh- John Alex Owen has written an espionage sistant to President James Freedman, Peter stays Steve Quigley sent this missive from ter, Anna Wearn ’12. Also in attendance were the thriller novel, Schweres Wasser (Heavy Water), in close contact with many Hanover area classma- 73 Sean Gorman Jan Marblehead, Massachusetts: “It’s been a long time groom’s siblings, Emily Horrell Templeton ’02 and based in an accurate historical setting at the end tes, including . He and Cindy miss since Captain Quigs communicated with his old Chuck Horrell ’00. Paul Sunde, director of admis- of WW II. The book is available through Amazon. Sorice, “a dear and inspiring friend.” We honor the alma mater. Not because he hasn’t been alive and sions at Dartmouth and Colleen’s former boss when com among other sites. Looks like a good read. memory and contributions of Christopher “Kip” well and living where he wants to be, but because he she worked at the College, was the officiant for the Maybe Paul Parsons can review it on Goodreads. Hall, our class Rhodes scholar, Masters circuit ski Histories & memoirs for families and family businesses lost a little bit o’ faith in the place we call Dartmouth. wedding. Fred’s best friend, Sam Robertson ’67, com. Be nice, Paul. racer, international sailing racer, brilliant lawyer I miss the place and the people, but I do not miss also attended. Fred and Sam met after Dartmouth I also had a nice chat with Walter Evans, who and adoring and adored father and husband (more the politics. It is sad to see the institution drop in while in medical school. got wind of a possible mini-reunion-cum-bike ride at dartmouthalumnimagazine.com/obits). References from Dartmouth alumni available on request. ranks. I also thought it sad to learn of Bill Slesnick’s Amanda Stoermer grew up in Oklahoma in the Texas Hill Country this coming October. —Sara Hoagland Hunter, 72 Mount Vernon St., Unit Camden Writers 207.542.9392 [email protected] and John Rassias’ passings. It has always—and hearing stories about the wonderful place that is He assures me he is in and that Larry Johnson may 4B, Boston, MA 02108; [email protected]

68 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MARCH/APRIL 2018 69 CLASS NOTES 1977-1982

To rustle up news, we called roving re- Kintzinger, 2400 M St. NW, Apt. 914, Washington, The 79th day of 2018 falls on Tuesday, Wide receiver and returner Len Rob- 33611; (813) 835-7722; [email protected]; Frank [email protected]; Emil Miskovsky, 77 Bates porters on both coasts, Don Wiviott and DC 20037; [email protected] March 20. Please mark your calendars inson caught last fall’s football thriller Fesnak, 111 Arbor Place, Bryn Mawr, PA 19010; St., Suite 202, Lewiston, ME 04240; (802) 345- Edy Ullman. Don has moved from Santa and send news and photos to celebrate while visiting his daughter at Penn. “I (610) 581-8889; [email protected];Wade Herring, 9861; [email protected] 77 79 80 Greg Henry, Tony Taliaferro Paul Fe, New Mexico, to New York City. (He still has a In the waning days of 2017 I asked class- our “class day of the year” mini-reunions, both live watched with and 1 Verdell Drive, Savannah, GA 31406; (912) 944- place in Santa Fe. If you attend our 65th birthday mates to share highlights of the year. and virtual! Speaking of news: Anna Wilson shared Stephens. Greg is retired FBI, Tony is general coun- 1639; [email protected] REUNION | JUNE 14-17 extravaganza, you can see his real-life green ma- The resulting deluge was too much a syndicated column with the sel for BCBS and Paul is a pediatric cardiologist at I hope to see all of you in Hanover June 78 Tyra Bryant-Stephens chines, courtesy of John Deere!) From his urban to squeeze into one column, but here are a few class of ’79 Facebook group when she saw that Penn. Paul’s wife, , is a national Greetings and best wishes for 2018! Lots 14 to 17 for our 35th reunion. Save the vantage point, he solicits investors who want to headlines. Etta Pisano, a radiologist at Boston’s Beth Israel leader in prevention and treatment of pediatric of news this month—keep the updates date and please encourage your Dart- Chris Hughes 82 make a difference, and a profit, through an organic was one of many who ranked the Deaconess Medical Center, is chairing a major asthma. I met up with Coach Teevens ’79 and play- coming! mouth friends to attend. Our reunion theme is Jim Friedlich 81Robert (Robin) Webb Mary Thomson farming cooperative. The farms avoid chemical reunion as one of the year’s highlights. study undertaken by U.S. health officials to de- ers. I’m staying busy with my internal medicine reports from Boulder, “Greater Together!” Reunion chair pesticides and fertilizers, decreasing the need for reconnected there with his Butterfield neighbor and termine if new 3-D mammogram technology is an practice and family’s nonprofit foundation.” Colorado, that the highlight of his business travels Renner has assembled a diverse and dedicated team the fossil fuels from which these substances are freshman advisor David Shribman ’76. They had improvement over traditional 2-D X-ray screen- Lenny’s teammate John Clark retired to Graf- as director of the physical science division of the of classmates to make this reunion the best one yet. derived. Minimizing chemicals helps soil to regen- plenty to discuss, since David is now editor-in-chief ing for breast cancer. “The most important thing ton, Vermont, after 30-plus years with EDS and suc- National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association Rosi Dupre Littlefield, J.J. Hanley and Chris Caravette erate. The result is a double whammy of healthier of The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and Jim is CEO of about this study,” says Etta, “is that it’s moving us cessor Hewlett Packard Enterprises, including two is the opportunity to connect with old classmates, will be overseeing the food. Philippa Guthrie is han- food and enhanced carbon sequestration. Don the Lenfest Institute for Journalism, parent com- to individualized screening as opposed to what we years in New Zealand, a “terrific family experience including Brian Alpert, an attorney in Washington, dling communications. Ann MacAffer is directing posits that if one out of three farms worldwide pany of The Philadelphia Inquirer. Drew Rockwell have now, which is one-size-fits-all screening.” in a truly beautiful place.” John returned to Greens- D.C., and Pete Clinton, who works in the investment our social media outreach, including Facebook. Jim used this technique, we could stop global warming. and Bartlet Leber enjoyed hosting the reunion party Jeanne Straus is also doing great work. A burg, Pennsylvania, and ended up in Kansas City, industry in San Francisco. Robin also recently en- Vahey is our reunion treasurer and Amy Warner is You can read all about this venture at alumni.hbs. at their beautiful Norwich, Vermont, home. They founding board member of New York Cares, Kansas, managing information technology out- joyed catching up with Thaxter Sharp, whose daugh- handling registration. Cynthia Hall McCraven and Tee edu/stories/Pages/story-bulletin.aspx?num=6411. also hosted the wedding of Ben Gifford (son ofRob Jeanne was honored at the organization’s winter sourcing. “My wife of 35 years, Becky (Colby Sawyer ter attends the University of Colorado in Boulder. Lotson will be organizing the memorial service. Mike Don recently saw Mac Taylor, Nicole Lewis- Gifford and Claire Sokloff) to Sydney Thomashow. benefit for her “30 years of involvement and the ’81), has a family home in Grafton. After her mother He travels east periodically to visit his daughter, Sapers is coordinating athletics and special events Oakes and her husband, Jeffrey, in the Big Apple. He Travels abounded. Jackie Kaiko visited Ice- power of volunteerism to make a difference” in passed away last year, we decided to retire and move who is an ’18, and his son, a sophomore at Colby. and Tom Burack and Kevin Peterson are in charge of reports that Alan Wolf and his family have moved to land with 29 Dartmouth women from a range of the lives of New Yorkers whose aspirations go in with her father. We have connected with Frank Thaxter lives in Marin, California, and works our Moosilauke adventure. Matt Norton is our DJ St. Louis, Missouri. On Don’s last visit to California classes. Sharon Cowan traveled to St. Petersburg unrealized due to pressing social issues. Congratu- Leddy, Pete Scannell and Richard ‘Boomer’ Acker- in San Francisco. He started his own fund man- extraordinaire and music coordinator. Sue Elliott he missed Peter Mills, who was biking in Mallorca, for the 50-year anniversary of a study-abroad pro- lations, Jeanne! boom. The funeral for Michael ‘Benny’ Startt ’79 agement business five years ago after stints in the and Gray Reisfield Horan are in charge of swag. Beth but did see John Storella, a biotech patent lawyer in gram there. Carol Van Dyke made it to the Pyrenees Alexandra Spalding turned 60 in November and triggered an avalanche of correspondence among private equity and hedge fund world. “It’s either Johnston Stephenson and Sarah Riddle Lilja are orga- Oakland. By the way, John needs a hero or heroine. and Provence, then biked the 200 kilometer Petit responded to our birthday greeting with news of lodge boys who loved Benny. Times like these, we making me old fast or keeping me young depending nizing a panel of speakers. Crashy Zacher Brown and He initiated a planned giving program for our class. Train du Nord through Quebec. Ralph Blanchard, her fulfilling life change along a road less traveled. realize accomplishments, money and possessions on the day, but I’m having fun and still learning. I’m Ann MacAffer are our late-night fun gurus. Other You just agree to leave money to Dartmouth in your who has already run a marathon in all 50 states, “I am now firmly situated in a highly satisfying are not important; instead, we value most the rela- also lucky to spend a remarkable amount of week- classmates stepping forward to help include Brian will, whatever amount feels comfortable. (Okay, made progress on his goal of running one in every second career as a massage therapist at the Wood- tionships we have nurtured over the decades. The end and vacation time with Dartmouth friends, in- McDonough, Herb Hardwick, Barry Caldwell, Meg John would prefer ginormous.) John’s goal was possible continent, ticking Asia, South America stock Inn Spa,” writes Alex. “I am actually good investments we make in time, laughter, tears and cluding Pete Clinton, Sue-Moon Paik, John Madden, Singer Huffman, Jack Oakes, Martha Solis-Turner, commitments from 40 classmates for our 40th and Oceania off his list. “All that’s left is Africa.” at it, too, which is nice! And so is getting to work love sustain us in the long run.” Lee Carson, Searl Vetter, John Westerfield and Robin Emily Bakemeier, Jeanie Witte Bina, Cathy Judd- reunion. He is one measly person short. Now is Class authors were busy. Brooks Clark wrote with the trainer at the inn, classmate Rick Reno.” Laura Prescott has moved to Lebanon, New Webb. For me it’s the gift that keeps on giving.” Stein, Laura Murray Dobbin and Linda Bornhuetter your chance to save the day. Join the Bartlett Tower Sally’s Genius. Valerie Steele came out with a revised Another welcome response came from Su- Hampshire, and earned the Association of Profes- Marcia McCrea Braden (whose cousin is mar- Gridley. If you would like to help out, please contact Society! You’ll get a cool pin. edition of her book, Paris Fashion: A Cultural His- san Drury, who shares a birthday with the day sional Genealogists Award for Exemplary Service. ried to Thaxter!) has been living in Hawaii for the Mary at [email protected]. At the end of Edy’s first year of law school, stu- tory. Jim DiNardo, chief of cardiac anesthesia at Bos- Dartmouth received its charter in 1769. Like She accepted my humble request for notes on past 20 years, working as a middle school science At our reunion we will select class officers who dents were advised to seek outdoor summer jobs, ton Children’s Hospital, published his fifth textbook Alex, Susan has followed a somewhat alternative more important topics. “Christmas 2017: attempted teacher. She shares that she is adjusting to a new life will lead the class for the next five years. If you are something less demanding than the intellectual on pediatric anesthesia. I wrote Rivals Unto Death. career path. She writes, “I’ve been living in Van- to be normal for three days—ate, drank, baked, vis- phase after tragically losing her husband of 10 years, interested in getting more involved in class leader- rigors of the law. Edy decided bright red trucks Millard Coffin authored his first art catalog essay, couver, British Columbia, for almost 30 years. I ited family and overindulged. I suffered because I’m Wythe Braden ’77, last year to leukemia. Marcia ship, please email class president Cathy Judd-Stein and blasting sirens would be fun. “I could become arising from taking five artists on a two-month, am a homeopath with extensive training in vari- fighting cancer, rather, putting up with cancer. And writes that she is nevertheless grateful for the many at [email protected] and she can go over the a firefighter.” One part of the final exam was to sub-Antarctic research voyage. And Richard Hoeg ous eclectic methods of helping people who are ‘normal’ doesn’t work anymore. good things in her life and would welcome contact different roles and responsibilities and time com- “throw” a two-story ladder singlehandedly against joined the ranks of the published by contributing looking for something outside the box.” Susan’s is “July 2015 I was living in Utah and working with classmates who might find themselves in Ha- mitment involved. a building. Edy’s first throw was disqualified. She photos to a children’s book, But That Is Not Me! an inspiring story of a transformational physical for Ancestry when I was diagnosed with Stage IV waii. We are so very sorry for your loss, dear Marcia. Richard Pinkham spent his November birthday got so mad that she nailed the second throw. She Russel Petter launched a biotech startup. Steve and spiritual healing journey that began when she stomach cancer. Breast cancer had converted my Linda Gundal has reduced her work hours as a skiing in Loveland Basin, Colorado, with Pete Co- finished law school and joined the California De- Ceurvorst started a green energy investment fund. was diagnosed with a debilitating medical condi- stomach into an inoperable wreck. With treatable software engineer in Braunfels, Germany, to dedi- gan. Richard writes, “Always good to get on snow partment of Forestry and Fire Protection; they Geoff Crew continued to work with other scientists tion half a lifetime ago. To learn more, please visit melanoma a decade earlier, I completely freaked cate more hours to her musical passions. She is on the birthday. Especially with old Dartmouth are the folks who fight the big, bad wildfires. Edy on getting the first ever photo of a black hole. healinglifehomeopathy.com. out. The stomach cancer thing hardly fazed me. a choir director for a small mixed-voice church friends! Pete Moran was there in spirit. We called rose to become a battalion chief, distinguished by Anne Bagamery celebrated her daughter Cait- Jim Geller is firmly situated in Devens, Mas- Yes, it scared me and my family knowing I might be choir and also sings in four other choirs, includ- him from the lift.” Congratulations to Bill Cole on their white helmets, a huge accomplishment in lin’s master’s from University College London. Rick sachusetts, but he has also felt right at home hiking dead in six months. Already a lost cause, I drew on ing a mixed chamber choir. “On November 25 the his election as mayor of Billings, Montana. Bill is the fire world. Now retired, she travels and sees Kimball’s daughter Jacki earned her master’s in com- in the White Mountains ever since he climbed my innate optimism and morbid humor. chamber choir performed the wonderful oratorio an attorney and one of his campaign themes was Dartmouth friends. puter science digital arts at Dartmouth. Peter Kele- his first 4,000-plus-foot peak as a 6-year-old. Jim “Chemo makes it hard to walk. I’m emaciat- ‘Annelies’ by James Whitbourn. The oratorio takes “building a Billings that will retain and attract young In October she and Kathy Phillips donned eve- men’s daughter graduated from Reed College and is and his son, Hugh, had summited all but four of ed, with four ‘Borg’ tubes keeping me close to 120 short excerpts from the English edition of the dia- people.” His election makes wife Anne Remmer Cole ning gowns to join Cathy Burnweit in celebrating working and teaching on an organic farm. Jim Lattin New Hampshire’s 48 tall peaks prior to 2017; now pounds. Good news: Treatment options have mul- ries of Anne Frank to capture her fears, hopes and first lady of Billings. A shout-out also toAl Dotson, the marriage of Cathy’s daughter in Coral Gables, had hip surgery on his 35th wedding anniversary, they’re a perfect 48-for-48, having ascended the tiplied, so I can linger longer on the cusp of living. even whimsy in breathtaking music. Anne’s ability who was named managing partner of his Miami Florida. “Neither hurricane nor firestorm can stop which he and his wife, Marilyn, now refer to as the final-four together this past summer. Talk about “Carefully worded Facebook updates to be thankful in the worst of times is inspiring and law firm, Bilzin Sumberg. Al is a government re- these three from attending a good party!” Edy did “titanium anniversary.” the perfect 60th birthday gift! The granite of New smiles and ‘thoughts and prayers.’ I appreciate all heartbreaking.” Linda also performs occasionally as lations attorney and serves as chair of the firm’s manage to locate Peter Mills, as well as Al Hen- Audie “Tod” Lenagh Bakewell sent greetings Hampshire is clearly in their muscles and their the support from my ‘genealogist family,’ ’80s, ex- a mezzo-soprano and has started playing the organ land use and government relations practice group. ning, Carol Muller and Jill Shaw Woolworth at the from the heart of the Alaska Range with perhaps brains. tended family and coworkers. regularly in church services at three different small Al is also chairman emeritus of 100 Black Men of annual Julbord Festival in Palo Alto, California. the most joyous news item of the year. After years We are saddened to note the passing of Mi- “I avoid pity with a vengeance. I just want churches. Wow! America. Jack Zaremski went to Harvard Law School That’s a Swedish Christmas celebration. Everyone of heartaches and disappointments, he and his wife, chael Elston Startt on November 17. Mike, a be- people to laugh, live, love, explore, learn, hope and And finally, give a rouse for Michael Simon and clerked on the supreme court of Israel before consumed “a lot of stinky fish.” (And they do this Jenny, have had their first child: Augustus Audubon loved brother of Theta Delta Chi, is remembered even cry with me. I’ve outlived my expiration date and Lydia (Herman) Lazar. Michael was appointed founding Hanover Legal Personnel Services, a legal every year?) Rodina Lenagh Bakewell. “We’re way at the nether by classmates for his intelligence, quick wit and by two years. Each day is challenging, sometimes chief executive officer of Finally Light Bulb Co., a staffing and attorney recruitment company based Our new head class agents are Betsy Fauver end of the bell curve for parents’ ages for their first- loyalty to friends. He will be greatly missed. boring. If I didn’t turn to friends, family, laughter Boston-based technology startup, after two decades in Manhattan—in the Empire State Building. Jack Stueber and John Ogden. They will be contacting born. But as good health and good genes run in both We wish you all a happy, healthy new year and and positive thinking, I’d sink into giving up. The in senior corporate positions. Lydia, an attorney, splits his time between New York and Israel, where you, but their letters will be composed by class families, the two of us are expecting to shepherd extend our thoughts and prayers to those who may thought crops up more often than I’d like to admit: lecturer and global strategy consultant based in he started a business brewing and distributing a line ghost writer Anne Quirk. Now you know. this, our last best hope against the darkness, well be suffering from illness or the loss of a loved one. Wouldn’t it be easy just to let go? Maybe it’s the Chicago, recently published her first book,Dean of craft beer using freshly squeezed pomegranate —Robin Gosnell, 31 Elm Lane, Princeton, NJ 08540; through his formative years. Wish us well!” —Stanley Weil, 15 Peck Road, Mt. Kisco, NY 10549; granite in my muscles and my brain that makes Lazar’s Golden Guide: Pragmatic Advice for Smart juice. Hilda Wang lives in Hong Kong, where she [email protected]; Eric Edmondson, Signal Hill We shall! Send news! (917) 428-0852; [email protected]; John Cur- me persevere.” Young People. writes for a variety of newspapers. Hilda is looking Capital LLC, 425 California St., Suite 19, San Fran- —Rick Beyer, 190 Bridge St., #4409, Salem, MA rier, 82 Carpenter St., Norwich, VT 05055; (802) Thank you, Laura. —Veronica Wessels, 224 Buena Vista Road, Rock- forward to the reunion and promises to tell me all cisco, CA 94104; [email protected]; Drew 01970; [email protected] 649-2577; [email protected] —Rob Daisley, 3201 W. Knights Ave., Tampa, FL cliffe, ON K1M0V7, Canada; (613) 864-4491; about eating snake soup.

70 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MARCH/APRIL 2018 71 CLASS NOTES 1983-1985

—David Eichman, 9004 Wonderland Ave., Los Ange- interactions with soot particles through laser-in- most complete and accurate history of this fascinat- small reunion gatherings. Let’s highlight a few of Tom McKay on a regular basis as he and his wife, Seems Glenn’s intramural success in Hanover les, CA 90046; [email protected]; Robin Shaf- duced incandescence, absorption and scattering, ing ship. Joan is living in the Netherlands and we these groups here. Word has it that the ’84 Phi Delts Erin, come to Boulder, Colorado, from Davenport, as part of the Richardson Rapiers uniquely pre- fert, 5044 Macomb St., NW, Washington, DC 20016; and using laser-induced incandescence to assess hope she comes to see us at reunion! Shelley Drake gathered at Jamie Resor’s ranch near Jackson Hole, Iowa, to visit their son, Will, at the University of pared him for dual success in the fields of checkers [email protected] environmental impacts of carbonaceous particle. Hawks has also published a book. The book is about Wyoming. While I can’t confirm this, I’ve been told Colorado. And in July Derek lunched with Bill Con- and pickleball, a likely unprecedented double. In “It is an opportunity for me to remember and ex- private art by Chinese painters during the Cultural by a reputable source (not Eric Grubman) that the nolly and Scott Sipple in Boston. Scott was recently November in Hartford, Connecticut, Glenn and REUNION | JUNE 14-17 press gratitude for all of the great people I’ve worked Revolution (1966-76) at a time when they were following brothers were there: Rich Durante, John appointed president of Great-West Investments his partner successfully defended their Atlantic First and foremost, our reunion is al- with in developing the optical diagnostics for soot forbidden to paint. The title is The Art of Resistance: Penrose, Paul Bonucchi, Rick Bayless and Ed Tolley. from his former role as head of Putnam Global In- Regional Men’s 50-plus doubles pickleball title in most upon us! It’s June 14-17, and we’ll and black carbon that have brought me this honor. Painting by Candlelight in Mao’s China, published Derek Chow and Jan Gordon, our illustrious vestment Strategies. Your faithful class secretaries the 4.5 bracket. Emerging from Pool 2 and surviving 83be clustered with the ’82s and ’84s I have also been very fortunate to have stable fund- by University of Washington Press. former class secretaries, have also been training do not want to lose the reunion challenge with the five match points before winning their second game again, just like the old days. By the time you read ing through the U.S. Department of Energy’s basic See you in June, and let it be green! for reunion. Since their daughter plays volleyball ’82s and ’83s. Make your travel plans now! See you 21-20, Glenn beat a team from the 35-plus age group this, you should have received a mailing and an energy sciences program to accomplish this work,” —Maren Christensen, P.O. Box 9778, Rancho Santa at Brown, they’re often in Providence. They dined in Hanover June 14-17. in the finals, making a statement for us baby boom- email about reunion, but if you haven’t, please let she said. Her research program focuses on develop- Fe, CA 92067; [email protected] with Dr. Albert Chaker and learned that after 30 years —Juliet Aires Giglio, 4915 Bentbrook Drive, Manlius, ers. Last year in Portland, Oregon, they won the 4.0 me know! Also, if you aren’t receiving emails from ing and using optical techniques for studying the in the Navy, he’s relocating from Newport, Rhode NY 13104; [email protected]; Eric Grubman, 2 bracket. Can anyone (besides Pat Riley) say three- the class, please either change or add your email chemistry of combustion-generated particles inside REUNION | JUNE 14-17 Island, to Charlottesville, Virginia, to practice medi- Fox Den Way, Woodbridge, CT 06525; (203) 710- peat? As for checkers, here’s what happened in June: address to the College database by going to alumni. the combustor and their impact on climate when The great class of 1984 will host its 35th cine. And Derek visited Dartmouth in October to 7933; [email protected] pressherald.com/2017/07/01/a-checkered-legacy. dartmouth.edu and updating your info in the alumni released to the atmosphere. Her research experi- reunion June 14-17 in Hanover. The watch the Dartmouth volleyball team host Brown. Aside from pursuing sporting glory, Glenn has directory. Susan Monagan would like some visitors: ence includes gas-surface scattering experiments, 84way to really enjoy a reunion is to get in- While at the match he ran into Stephen Block and his Happy March-April everyone! Say these been a sports writer at the Press Herald for 23 years “After 12 years in the theater department at Ithaca atmospheric modeling, soot-formation studies, volved. Lucky for you, the class officers are currently wife, Jenny Gabler, with their children in tow. And two words and smile: spring break! Re- and worked at the Hartford Courant, Concord (N.H.) College, I have taken the plunge and moved from combustion-diagnostics development, atmospheric looking for volunteers! If you’re interested, please to be honest, Derek has taken this reunion training 85member the sunscreen! Monitor and Claremont (N.H.) Eagle Times previ- theory to practice. I’m now the executive director black-carbon measurements and greenhouse-gas email your class secretaries. And you’ve probably in overdrive. Last winter Derek joined his Alpha Chi Watching sports on TV has certainly changed ously. His youngest kids (twin boys) are at Midwest of the 1,400-seat Smith Opera House in Geneva, source attribution. She completed a National Sci- done the math and realize it’s too soon for us to Alpha brothers for their annual ski trip. The bros over the years, with programming often focused on colleges, one playing right guard for the Grinnell New York. It has been a wild ride so far, program- ence Foundation postdoctoral fellowship at Har- celebrate our 35th—unless we all slept through 2018 went to Park City and Alta, Utah. Doug Burke and many of our greatest two-sport heroes. Who can (Iowa) Pioneers and the other a student manager ming Rocky Horror Picture Show one week and vard University and worked at Atmospheric and and it’s actually 2019! This June will actually be the Dr. Ilyssa Golding were gracious hosts at their lovely forget Bo Jackson (does Bo know beer pong?) and for the Northwestern football team. His daughter, Steve Earle the next. Please come visit! The Finger Environmental Research Inc. before joining Sandia 34th year since we graduated, but the College has home in Park City for an evening. Those who joined Deion “Prime Time” Sanders, still the only ath- an MIT junior, plays intramural , took Lakes are a spectacularly beautiful (and relatively Labs in 1999. grouped us together with the ’82s and ’83s. Since on the trip were Dr. Richard Jelsma from Dallas; Marc lete to play in both a Super Bowl and World Series. pickleball for PE (at her dad’s behest) and squeezes inexpensive) region with a top-notch food and wine Joan Martelli is excited to have just published it’s an Olympic year, I’m going to throw down a Devorsetz from Dallas; Ray Wood from New Jersey; Though some may include Michael in that group, in a little math on the side. As Gatorade should have scene (40-plus wineries on Seneca Lake), outdoor her first book,The Law of Storms. It’s a nonfiction challenge to all the ’84s here: let’s beat those ’82s Tom Parker from Boston; and Ricardo Worl, who came despite his marginal baseball career, I think it’s time said, be like Glenn! adventure and, of course, great entertainment!” narrative about a luxury passenger steamship, the and ’83s by outnumbering them at reunion! That down to the lower 48 from Juneau, Alaska. Ad- to pay homage to perhaps the greatest two-sport Cool news arrived from the College about Hope Michelsen was elected a fellow of the Op- Rhone, that sank in a hurricane in the British Virgin means everyone must show up! Any great challenge ditionally, Rick Bertasi joined from Weston, Con- Jordan of our time, our own Glenn Jordan! Thanks classmate Chris Hunt, who was in the media recently tical Society for pioneering contributions to the Islands in 1867. The Rhone is one of the most popu- requires some training. And I’m happy to report that necticut, having recently returned stateside after to Glenn for sharing some much needed and very when he helped quadruplets who wrote in their fundamental understanding of laser-radiation lar dive sites in the Caribbean and this book is the some classmates have already started by having nearly 13 years in London. Derek and Jan see Dr. impressive updates. college essays they wanted to go to the same col- Steps from Dartmouth

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72 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MARCH/APRIL 2018 73 CLASS NOTES 1986-1989 Ohana Family Camp Create lifetime memories for your family this summer on peaceful Lake Fairlee in lege (accepted numerous places, they decided on of DAM. Amy McCormick has launched a YouTube as the powerful common bonding experience it is.” basis and being able to experience Dartmouth in Vermont. Cozy cabins with Yale). Chris is now writing a book about the Wade channel called Financial Freedom for Real People. As Scott aptly expressed: “Dartmouth is a special all its seasons has been a life experience for which fireplaces. Farm-fresh meals. quadruplets and their family and has been featured It gives basic, common sense financial advice and place not bound by geography. It is a worldwide I feel exceedingly fortunate. Not only do I get to see Swimming, sailing, canoeing, in stories appearing in , NBC information, extreme frugality tips, couponing tuto- community with its heart in Hanover.” Look for Dartmouth friends all year long, but we also became kayaking, fishing, hiking, Nightly News and The Today Show. Chris previously rials and information, and cheap recipes. She writes, a full account of Scott’s observations in a future much more engaged in day-to-day Dartmouth life worked at such publications as The Economist and “I would be very appreciative of any support from class newsletter. while our son, Sam Merrens ’17, was on campus. biking, tennis, crafts, and The Wall Street Journal. Chris also works pro bono the Dartmouth community—please subscribe and —Laura Gasser, 746 17th Ave., San Francisco, CA He’s now an alum and has moved on to San Fran- more. Delighting generations on college essays for Access Opportunity, which give thumbs-ups and leave comments and pass the 94121; [email protected] cisco, where a bunch of other Dartmouth alumni of families since 1905. helps low-income, high-potential students in the channel onto anyone you know who is interested in live and work. I look forward to seeing friends old Imagine your family right here. greater Denver area and was founded by Susie saving money and getting out of debt. Many thanks!” REUNION | JUNE 14-17 and new at our reunion in June!” Hayes ’88. His career change began when another In beauty, it is finished. In the run-up to our 30th reunion —Jere Mancini, 34 Wearimus Road, HoHoKus, NJ www.OhanaCamp.org Dartmouth alum, Mimi Ward, asked him to help her —Mae Drake Hueston, 624 Poppy Ave., Corona Del (please save the date: June 14-17), our 07423; [email protected] son, who was applying to the Dartmouth class of ’20. Mar, CA 92625; [email protected] tour of first-year dorms continues. Next 88 Tom Kollmorgen Fiona Bayly He got in early decision, told his friends about Chris up, the River Cluster. has been in wrote in to let me know and things kind of took off. Chris has a website, Phone calls with old friends are too few Eugene, Oregon, since finishing his urology resi- she is the 2017 National Masters Do you need Are you CollegeEssayMentor.com. Well done, Chris! Any and far between these days, so I am es- dency at the Mayo Clinic in 1998. “I am a founding in the USA Track & Field a lawyer? a lawyer, interest in helping write this column? pecially grateful that Laura Korfmann and member of the Oregon Urology Institute, the larg- 8915k Championships that were held in sub-freezing —John MacManus, 188 Ringwood Road, Rosemont, PA 87I were able to take time out from our work days to est single-specialty private urology practice on the weather in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in late October. Fiona Find a but not a 19010; (610) 525-4541; [email protected]; Leslie A. recap the fun we had at our 30th reunion and wax West Coast, and I practice urology with a focus in finished the year undefeated in her age group and Davis Dahl, 83 Pecksland Road, Greenwich, CT 06831; a bit nostalgic about Dartmouth in general. Laura urologic oncology. I remarried in 2010 to Julie An- turned 50 this summer, “trying to keep at it, as so Dartmouth alum member of the (203) 552-0070; [email protected] and I have been friends since we lived on the same dries. Both of my sons, Thayne (21) and Max (20), many of us are, with just normal life stuff too!” Fiona Dartmouth floor in the River Cluster freshman fall, and we for- attend Santa Clara University in California. Thayne remembers a tradition from Dartmouth fondly that in the Jayne Daigle Jones writes, “2017 has ever will be “Korfmann” and “Gasser” to each other. will graduate this year (unfortunately, the same she misses—“the daily ‘run’ to the Hinman boxes!” Dartmouth Lawyers been a year of celebration for us! Laura, her husband, Brian, and their three children weekend as our reunion), and Max is a sophomore. I I’ve been in bands since grade school—actually DARTMOUTH Back in the spring we celebrated the (all of whom came to reunion) live in northern New also have three stepchildren: Tyler (24) works in Se- in eighth grade with Eric Berlin. We still play out in Lawyers Association? 86graduations of our daughter, Meaghan, and our son, Jersey in the town neighboring my hometown. An attle; Alyssa (22) is moving to L.A.; and Megan (19) is bars and are always looking to add songs to our list LAWYERS Join today Brendan, from Rochester Institute of Technology associate general counsel at Bessemer Trust in New a sophomore at CU Boulder. Our German shorthair that could make people get out on the dance floor Association and Wheaton, respectively, and daughter Renee’s York City, Laura is cheerful as always and said she pointer Lucy completes the household. We love and have fun. So without further notice, here’s some directory at at high school graduation. In July Meaghan married “has no complaints.” all that Oregon has to offer, including snow and picks from the ’89s who responded to the question, ASSOCIATION her college friend, Stephen Johnson, here in New Diana (Headley) Saunders loves teaching fourth water skiing, hiking, golf and hunting. We also enjoy “What three songs would you want to hear a so-so bit.ly/dlafi nd bit.ly/dlajoin Hampshire; in August we dropped off Renee to grade at the Wilmington Friends School in Dela- relaxing at our lake cabin on the Oregon coast. We cover band playing in a bar?” Coincidentally, this UNH; and on October 21 our son, Drew ’12, mar- ware, where she has been for the past seven years. are looking forward to a ‘once-in-a-lifetime’ trip to gives us a head start on the playlist for the tent for Are you a lawyer, but ried Susan Hakes ’12 in California—so we had a Her older daughter is a sophomore at Duke and her Africa next fall. I continue to keep in touch with sev- our 30th reunion in June 2019! Alex Selby picked wonderful family vacation out in sunny, southern younger daughter will attend Colgate this fall. But eral Dartmouth friends, including Brent Frei, Steve Black Sabbath’s “Iron Man,” Van Halen’s “Run- not a member of the California! While our family life is always full, it’s probably the most exciting news is that, after being Dettelbach, Alan Moss, John Rajala, Dave Geithner, ning with the Devil”; Anne Boardman Rohnert, Billy Weddings Dartmouth Lawyers not always so full of joyous celebrations and travel. single since her daughters were toddlers, Diana Bob Fitzpatrick, Ish McLaughlin, Dave Youker, Andy Joel’s “Downeaster Alexa,” Dexy’s Midnight Run- Graduation Celebrations While attending Brendan’s graduation in Illinois, is engaged! She met her fiancé online and will be Russell and Eben Frankenberg, and we all manage to ners’ “Come On Eileen,” Steve Earle’s “The Galway Association? we were fortunate enough to stay with Dick ‘Art’ married this summer. Congratulations to Diana! get together every year or two.” Girl,” Eric Clapton’s “Lay Down Sally” and “I Shot Family Reunions Krissinger, which is always special. Now we are back In the online world, sports media website SB- Chris Mehl’s River Cluster experience lasted the Sheriff,’ Paul Simon’s “Graceland” (Anne was gatherings of all kinds Join today at dla.org home and enjoying the fact that we have two new nation (www.sbnation.com) consulted our very four years, as he also roomed in nearby apart- on vacation and heard a great band playing and family members—and that we have entered the own resident wine aficionadoMeg Houston Maker ments as an upperclassman. “Being close to the sent more suggestions mid-vacation); Bob Jaffe, season of life of being in-laws—yikes! I now have and asked her to opine on whether NBA basket- river, and a bit away from town, was just right for Grateful Dead’s “Bertha,” Steve Miller’s “Dance the potential of being the dreaded mother-in-law. ball star LeBron James has good taste in wine. In me. And classes were still only a short bike ride or Dance Dance,” The Band’s “The Weight”; Bridget (Praying I avoid that!)” I asked, and received replies: a November 2017 article, Meg and several other walk away.” After many years in Washington, D.C., Hust, anything NRBQ; Carolyn Allen, The Replace- Bill Wright’s oldest son, Cameron ’21, is a frosh this experts examined six wines James identified in an Chris moved to Bozeman, Montana (“to hike, ski, ments’ “I’ll Be You,” Weezer’s “Buddy Holly”; Chris year. “The whole family is very excited and gives us a Instagram post and concluded—big surprise!—that canoe—then repeat”) in 2001, where he soon met Baldwin, INXS’ “Don’t Change,” Rick Springfield’s great excuse to visit Hanover frequently. We will be the answer is yes. Meg described James’ selections his wife, Laura Hoehn. Bozeman’s been a great fit “Jessie’s Girl”; Chris Drew, Journey’s “Don’t Stop there for Homecoming!” Phillip Marchal writes, “My as “exquisite and luxurious but not ostentatious” and in November Chris was elected as the city’s next Believing,” Steve Miller’s “Jungle Love”; Eddie Bark- wife and I did indeed drop off our daughter, Isabella, wines that “are made by people who are driven by Mayor. Finally, an update from a local, Ed Merrens: er, Dire Straits’ “Sultans of Swing,” Earth Wind & a few weeks ago. Bella ’18 was herself amazed that a clear vision about what their wine, from their “My wife, Peg Lamb Merrens ’87, and I have been Fire’s “September,” Steve Miller Band’s “Fly Like An she is already a senior. She is an art history major place, should be.” For more of Meg’s insights into here in the Upper Valley for the past 18 years, since Eagle”; Eric Berlin, “all the songs our band played in who is also completing the premed requirements. wine and food, check out her always entertaining completing my medical training in Seattle. I’ve held eighth grade, plus a lot of Led Zeppelin”; Ken Horton, I cannot believe that her four years is shooting by Facebook posts. a variety of roles, and in addition to a continued Foo Fighters’ “Learn to Fly,” Jimi Hendrix’s “Little just as fast as mine did. And while I may not have Scott Sodokoff, the proud father of Justin Sodo- clinical role as a hospitalist, I’ve taken on a number Wing,” Spencer Davis’ “Gimme Some Lovin’ ”; Le- the chance to visit her in Hanover after this year, koff ’21, shared his thoughts on the similarities and of administrative roles and currently serve as the nora Brown, Deep Purple, Journey’s “Stone in Love”;    I will at least have a buddy who will be as eager differences between our Dartmouth experience in chief clinical officer for the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Martha Boss Bennett, Old Medicine Show’s   as me to visit!” Kevin and Laura Lindner Sankey also the 1980s and Justin’s experience now. Scott noted system. I’m thrilled to work with our new CEO, “Wagon Wheel,” Tears for Fears’ “Shout,” Three have a son, Nolan ’21, who is loving his first term in how Justin and his classmates are more collabora- Joanne Conroy ’77. I’ve continued my commitment Dog Night’s “Shambala”; Meg Sommerfeld ’90, Joni Hanover. “His favorite place to study is the second tive and “work closer together than our generation to skiing and have been fortunate to work with Max Mitchell’s “Big Yellow Taxi,” Pretenders’ “Middle of floor of Berry. He had a great time on first-year trips; did.” Based on his observations, Scott believes that Cobb ’87 and Max Saenger and a host of Dartmouth the Road,” Tom Cochrane’s “Life is a Highway”; Todd  ' '  " ' #!" it happened to be the same trip that John Marchiony “school is just harder today and the students have alumni and athletes in my work with biathlon and Timmerman, Billy Joel’s “Piano Man.” and I led when we were trip leaders.” Greg Lesko raised the bar on working hard and effectively man- the U.S. Olympic Committee. After serving as a Thanks again to everyone who gave me sug-  #'  dropped off Emma ’21.Bill Ruhl writes: “My wife, aging time.” Still, some things do stay the same: team physician for the past 15 years and going to gestions. There are some songs on the suggestion  "" "'$ Kimberly Klimek Ruhl ’87, and I were back to the “As ’87s we enjoyed the same incredible DOC trip the past four winter Olympic Games, I’ve transi- list we already do, and others, well thank you for Hanover Plain with our son, Ryan. We had a great experiences as matriculating ’21s. I get no sense tioned from being the team physician to a seat on the thinking more of our abilities. And now I’m curi-  ' ! '  ' " time seeing all the new buildings on campus, tak- from my son or his teammates and friends that board of directors for the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, ous what your three songs are—are they ones still kithkinstudio.com   ' %'' &' " ing the tour and he, particularly, enjoyed seeing my anything has changed. Like many of us, after their where I can continue my commitment to fair sport around from when we were at Dartmouth? Are they   picture in the Zeta Psi house composite photos!” final night of the trip at Moosilauke, which they first on a national and global level. Living in Norwich, ones you’ve picked up since then or from your kids? 802-649-9096 G LF   More about Bill’s new adventure in the next issue described as kind of ‘silly,’ they soon appreciated it Vermont, driving through the campus on a daily I’m finally realizing my girls know more about new

74 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MARCH/APRIL 2018 75 CLASS NOTES 1990-1993 A family operated all-season, 20 room Bed & Breakfast, Tavern & Event Center music than I do, which is great. I teach them about another 31 km to go. Checkpoint four was supposed I hope I am doing nothing but running. Just finished subjects for your research, may I volunteer? And the classics (anything pre-2004), and they keep me to have hot water, so I was going to eat a full, hot meal a stretch of day shifts in the ER. Recovery today. I finally, some news of the weird. I was watching a up to date on the new stuff. Here’s to continuing to on the run. The hot chocolate was hot but, sadly, took my oldest to college last weekend. I also have public-television documentary about dogs with Just 8 miles North of Hanover learn, whether it’s from family, friends, classmates the water to rehydrate my meal was not hot. Huge a junior in high school and a seventh-grader. I’m my family, and one of the sponsors was “The Plu- or any other sources. bummer! I scarfed down about a third of my dinner, heading to Hanover to tour with my junior this fall!” tonium Foundation: Archimedes Plutonium.” After tossed the rest and was off again. The rest of the race Feel free to email me, snail mail me, Instagram Ben Blackburn: “I’m knocking off early today to my husband, Thies Kolln, and I uttered many excla- Proudly hosting Dartmouth was progressively colder and wetter, and I slogged meet my wife, Anne, and some friends in Center me your news, updates or even top three song picks. mations, we confirmed that Archimedes Plutonium Families for 29 years! I can’t promise I’ll be able to play them, but will it in to arrive at 11:45 p.m. The race organizers had City (Philly) for drinks and dinner. Anne starts her is, indeed, the same person we knew on campus as definitely take them for a spin. set up a super-heated tent, and I warmed up and school year (she teaches), my son starts high school Ludwig Plutonium (or Ludwig van Ludvig). As you –Ned Ward, 2104 Graham Ave., #B, Redondo Beach, dried out for 30 minutes. Then I stumbled into Tent and my daughter starts seventh grade on Tuesday.” may remember, he worked as a dishwasher at the Our Offerings 7, crawled into my sleeping bag and slept the sleep Emily Nielsen Jones: “I dropped kid No. 2 at Duke. Kid CA 90278; [email protected] Hanover Inn and rode around on a bicycle, wear- ~ 20 cozy rooms with private baths of a finisher!” Give a rouse for Nate! And read his No. 1 is a sophomore at Dartmouth, so we will add ing an orange hunting cap and carrying a metal ~ Full country breakfast David Clark, who is head of school at full race blog at http://bit.ly/2AIbEWt. a blue D to the green D on our car. I just enjoyed a briefcase. Christopher Walker once dressed up like Pinecrest School’s Boca Raton cam- —Rob Crawford, 22 Black Oak Road, Weston, MA beautiful backroads biking-hiking-wine-tasting trip Ludwig for Bones Gate Tea. Around the time we ~ Afternoon tea with homemade scones pus in Florida, writes: “The process of 02493; [email protected] with husband (’87) to mark our 25th anniversary.” graduated he began posting in Usenet groups on ~ 80 seat tavern 90turning 49 has inspired me to get back into my 1990s Mike Parham: “I’ve got two in college (Cal Berkeley his way to Internet fame (or infamy). I remember ~ 18 craft beers on draft and Santa Ana Community College) and two in pre- physical shape. See attached.” (He included a weight Here’s some—slightly edited and con- him always being a welcome sight in the offices of ~ Full tavern menu room selfie that looked like the David Clark who densed—’91 news shared on Facebook. school. I’m preparing to present my shoe company The Dartmouth; we relied on advertising, and he ~ Warm country setting for meetings, weddings, donned a Cincinnati Bengals uniform in the early com/Dartmouth1991 in September! Post Telic.com to the Dartmouth Entrepreneur Forum. took out many full-page ads expounding upon his 91 Terry Stillman is cofounder.” reunions & receptions of all kinds 1990s). David continues: “Nicole (Smith ’89) and I again on April 1, the 91st day of the year! theory that the universe is based on the structure just celebrated our 26th wedding anniversary. Our Katherine McConville McGaugh: “I celebrated our —Deb Karazin Owens, 166 Colonial Drive, Fairfield, of the plutonium atom. ~ Personalized event & catering services oldest, Amber, graduated from Bates College and 20th wedding anniversary at the summit of Mount CT, 06824; [email protected] Please send along your own weird and wonder- ~ 150 seat banquet room is now a faculty member at our school. Our middle Washington—the same trek I hiked 26 years ago ful news for future inclusion in this column and daughter, Autumn, is a sophomore at Wagner Col- with ’91 track and cross-country friends—this time Along with the class leadership change- our newsletters. As I did a few years back, I will be lege, playing soccer and doing well academically, in 70-mph winds and minimal visibility!” Jeffrey over last June, we approved a new featuring classmates with leadership positions in and our youngest, Ashleigh, is in her junior year Spencer: “I had knee surgery yesterday, fixing what 92structure, adding more vice presidents. nonprofits, so if this describes you, please let me Free WiFi & Telephone at Pinecrest School, running track and planning I broke in my first karate class after achieving my As vice president for communications, I’m fortu- know about your organization and why you have to be a psychology major. Nicole and the girls have first-degree black belt. My youngest started middle nate to have Liza Herbst Knapp on board to produce decided to devote your time to it. our class newsletters. You should receive them via inspired me to take on a few new habits: flavored school this week—which cannot be possible.” Shara —Kelly Shriver Kolln, 3900 Cottage Grove Ave. www.dowdscountryinn.com www.lathamhousetavern.com Java cigars with a nice boardwalk port as a new pas- Khon Duncan: “[My youngest] started at Virginia email, and you can also view them archived on our SE, Cedar Rapids, IA 52403; (920) 306-2192; 800-482-4712 time, weekly beach walks, daily meditation and date Tech in the engineering program this week. My website. Alex Shepard Spiegel has also stepped up [email protected] nights. Those beautiful Florida days (without hur- husband, Joe ’78, started his 40th year of teaching to serve as our class steward and has reinstated the ricanes) have made us realize how fortunate we are at the same school. I am deep into planning for the birthday emails. REUNION | JUNE 14-17 to have gone to a great place such as Dartmouth and first week of classes next week. I teach Spanish in As I write this, it’s late December and our new While it’s late for talking about Home- to have maintained friendships with those people the lower school at a kindergarten to eighth grade vice president of community, Elissa Aten, is host- coming (yesterday—Christmas—we from the College on the Hill!” In November Nate Em- private school.” Rebecca West: “I’m going fishing in ing a virtual class reunion in our Facebook group: got eight inches of snow), it does get us erson the Wind River area—taking time off from Curator she’s called for people to post their holiday photos, 93 , who was previously best known for his Aires ready for reunion, so I will proceed. I took my kids solo in “Shamma Lamma Ding Dong,” completed a duties at the Plains Indian Museum.” (Read about and I’m enjoying seeing everyone’s festive greet- to Homecoming for the first time this past October, Handcrafted 250-kilometer race (that’s about 155 miles) during her on page 56.) Anu Kirk: “I’m living in San Fran- ings! Even if you’re not a huge Facebook fan, please which is not that commendable given the fact that a six-day period in Argentina’s Patagonian wilder- cisco. I am the director and GM for PlayStation VR, consider getting an account just to see what’s going I live 12 miles away. There I briefly bumped into ness. All competitors ran self-supported, meaning having left the digital music business behind. I still on with many (more than half!) of your classmates MaryBeth Keiller, who lives outside Boston. Excellence they carried their sleeping bag, clothes, food and all write, record and perform music regularly as Sid who participate in the group. We’re gearing up for I also marched in the parade alongside Sarah required safety paraphernalia on their backs. Nate Luscious and The Pants and more.” Kerrin Talty Pratt: my second-favorite Dartmouth season, spring von Maltzhan, who I spent a term in Budapest with in A gift as unique as your kept a blog, and the report he wrote at the end of “I just started working as a hematology-oncology (as opposed to when I was a student and spring 1992. She was spending the Homecoming weekend Dartmouth experience the fifth day (74 kilometers) is epic: “Well that was nurse at the Mary Hitchcock Hospital.” was by far the worst; of course, nothing beats fall). on campus with her oldest daughter; Sarah lives in difficult. I probably would have had to drop out had Andrew Field: “I’m on an Asia student recruiting March Madness always begins during my kids’ Manhattan and has four kids. During the foreign Order your personalized gifts it gone longer. We started off nicely enough—over- tour for Duke Kunshan University in China. Flew spring break week, and this year is no different. study program Sarah and I took a 12-hour, overnight cast, high winds. Unfortunately, the course had a from Singapore to Hanoi to join a workshop on Matt Caldwell will run the class of ’92 bracket again. bus from Budapest to Istanbul, where we were eas- simonpearce.com | 800 774 5277 500-meter vertical climb to the first checkpoint board governance and leadership for international We’ll send info about joining soon, giving you plenty ily the only people in said bus who weren’t smoking and then a 700-meter vertical climb to the second schools in the region (I’m a board member of Shang- of time to sign up so you don’t get caught submitting the entire 12 hours. (My kids informed me when I checkpoint. Now, as many of you may have noticed, hai American School).” Becky Smith Owens: “Today your picks the day the tournament begins (when all told them the story that it’s much funnier to say we I am not exactly leading the pack. This means that in Saratoga, California, it was 107 degrees. Went the servers crash). Then our annual virtual online took a bus from Hungary to Turkey). Anyway, we by the time I got to the climbing, 180-plus pairs for a hike with a friend, out to dinner with our son, reunion takes place on the 92nd day of the year, marched in the alum parade together. At the start TROUBLED BY MEMORY PROBLEMS? of feet had stomped all over the trail, and it was Peter. Our eldest, Andrew, started his freshman year which falls this year on Monday, April 2. Post what all the athletic teams passed us in their floats, which The Seasons at Summercrest is THE right memory care community. muddy, slippery and technical. After checkpoint at George Washington University! David Owens ’88 you’re doing that day in our Facebook group or email gave me a primer on the athletic teams we have. Did • Specialized Programming two it started to get rainy and windy, but I hadn’t and I celebrated our 25th wedding anniversary in [email protected], and we’ll include you know we have an ice skating team? • Experienced Staff July.” Richard Rinkema: “I’m making pancakes for your update in an upcoming class newsletter. Our changed into my warm-weather gear. I arrived at Last year the powers that be within the town • Intentional Design a very exposed checkpoint three ( force winds my daughter and her friend after a sleepover on a Engage ’92 month of service event also happens of Hanover felt that the bonfire situation was too and horizontal rain) and did the full ‘’ humid and high-pollution day here in Beijing (yes, each April, leading in to Dartmouth’s annual day dangerous, with drunk freshmen careening toward Expert memory care; it’s why people call us first! clothing change in record time. Literally stripped jealous of everyone posting beautiful pictures of of service in early May. it, trying to touch the flames. So the town demanded out of all my wet stuff, donned every piece of dry the crisp Northeastern autumn). Getting rested for I received some classmate news that had me that a six-foot chainlink fence be built around the clothing I had and my (already) soaked rain coat a heavy travel schedule doing antitrust and artificial dreaming of warmer climes. Jennifer Chun was re- bonfire, and it was. This didn’t stop a first-year and put on rain pants. The Patagonia Nanopuff intelligence law in-house for Microsoft.” cently appointed director of tourism research at student wearing a cape from jumping said fence, down jacket was the race saver, and I warmed up Tim Reynolds: “I’m working for a startup ad the Hawaii Tourism Authority. Jennifer grew up running right toward the fire, scaling the fence again by running down the hill. That was just in time agency in Nashville called Autoflyte. I’m also heavily on the island of Oahu and began preparing for this and promptly getting tackled by campus security. 169 Summer Street | Newport, NH 03773 | www.summercrest.net for a series of river crossings. After a day of heavy involved in the music scene—working with about 15 job in (winter wonderlandish) Hanover, majoring I hope to see some of you on campus in June. Call Leigh Stocker at 603-863-8181 to arrange a visit. rain these puppies were roaring! No option—I just unsigned artists—helping them with their market- in Asian studies. She then earned a master’s at the In the meantime, send me your news. (even less tropical) school of hotel administration concentrated on crossing and not falling in. I arrived ing. Check out Mandy McMillan, Hallie Long Music —Suzanne Spencer Rendahl, 224 Route 120, Plain- Independent Living | Assisted Living | Memory Care at checkpoint four cold and tired and 43 km in with and Lacey Caroline.” Stacy Weeks Jandreau: “[Today] at Cornell. Jennifer, if you ever need any tourist field, NH 03781; [email protected]

76 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MARCH/APRIL 2018 77 SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION CLASS NOTES 1994-1997 WHERE TO WHERE TO SHOP Hello there, fellow classmates! As you Did you know that more than one in 10 a more socialized model. In terms of my career, I a new adventure: Big Picture Research and Con- DINE move out of the winter doldrums with of our classmates work in some aspect am in a clinical practice with responsibilities to sulting (BPRAC). BPRAC is a new organization LEAGUE OF NH CRAFTSMEN GALLERY the first suggestions that sun and spring of healthcare? Brian Spence practices at a fellowship. A busy clinical practice while also focused on using data, research and big-picture THE WOODSTOCK INN & RESORT 94 95 Farm-fresh cuisine, carefully harvested ingre- Gifts that inspire and delight. Jewelry, pottery, are imminent, please consider setting some time Dartmouth-Hitchcock, where he is an anesthesiolo- teaching doctors in training has made my profes- strategy to keep children, youth and families safe glass, home décor, prints, something for aside on April 4 to reconnect with Dartmouth and gist and elected physician trustee of DHMC. “It has sional career fulfilling.” and supported in their communities. Our goal is dients and regional recipes inspire the seasonal everyone. Classes for adults, teens and your favorite classmates. April 4 is the 94th day been a real privilege to help steer a $2 billion-a- Keep your news coming! to help clients produce better data insights, bet- menus at the Woodstock Inn & Resort’s distinct children in clay, metal and mixed media. of the year and an opportune time to pause and year healthcare system through a very tumultuous —Kaja (Schuppert) Fickes, 2 Bishops Lane, Hingham, ter decision-making and better outcomes. You can restaurants. The talented culinary team prepares Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. reflect on Dartmouth and the people who have and disruptive period. It astounds me that as the MA 02043; [email protected] check us out at www.bprac.com or follow us on creative entrées and innovative cocktails, resulting 13 Lebanon St., Hanover, NH; made its memory so special. And, in that vein, I richest nation in the world we still fail to provide Twitter at @bpractweets.” in exceptional Northeastern cuisine that showcases (603) 643-5050, gallery shop; invite you to consider joining our 25th reunion quality healthcare to all. It is the national enigma As we jump forward into a dynamic —Garrett Gil de Rubio, 1062 Middlebrooke Drive, Can- the essence of Vermont. Call (844) 545-4178 (603) 643-5384, classes. www.hanoverleague.org. planning committee. It’s hard to believe that our that our generation will need to solve if we are to new year, I hope everyone in the class ton, GA 30115; [email protected] or visit www.woodstockinn.com. reunion is coming up in just over a year. From remain the democratic and humanitarian society of ’96 had a wonderful end to 2017 and 96 REUNION | JUNE 15-17 LATHAM HOUSE TAVERN AT DOWDS' personal experience, I can assure you that being we claim to be. There are personal and emotional a happy, healthy holiday season. I look forward to ROBERT JAMES WALSH & COMPANY part of the committee requires a modest time costs associated with the medical profession; how- relaying more classmate adventures and life devel- In exciting education news, the College COUNTRY INN Antiques, Art, Modernism, Appraisals. commitment, literally five to 10 hours during the ever, I have never regretted my decision to enter the opments as they unfold. Please keep those updates recently became the first institution of Good food. Good beer. Good times. Across from Simon Pearce Glass, Quechee, VT. course of the year. Here’s another baiting point: practice of medicine. The clinical care of patients coming in the year ahead, but for now I’m leaning higher learning to partner with a pro- Full menu for lunch and dinner with 18 draft beers. (802) 356-7112; RobertJamesWalsh.com. 97 A great location for class reunions, weddings You can plan one aspect of the reunion—such as a is a joy and a privilege for me that cannot be easily on our illustrious newsletter editors for some of gram that connects volunteer travelers with a na- dinner or afternoon family activity—with a fellow erased by legislation, bureaucracy or technology. their recent class news. Drew Brady wrote: “My wife, tionwide network of K-12 schools. Reach the World and gatherings of all sizes. PRO SHOP ’94 classmate, dividing the time commitment and The healthcare provider-patient relationship is Evelyn (Waters) Brady ’95, and I are pleased to is a nonprofit founded by Heather Halstead and Marc 9 Main Street, Lyme, NH; Get your golfing gear with the Dartmouth using the planning as an excuse to connect with the fundamental core of healthcare, and it is that announce that our daughter, Ashleigh, has been Gustafson in 1998 to make the benefits of travel (603) 795-4712; www.dowdscountryinn.com; College logo. The Pro Shop has a wide variety of a good friend. For one of previous reunions, Kelly relationship that keeps me engaged and what I find accepted into the Dartmouth class of 2021. She digitally accessible to classrooms and to inspire www.lathamhousetavern.com. shirts, jackets, umbrellas and golfing equipment. Bell Lytle and I planned an EBAs dinner and late- most fulfilling in my daily practice.” will be attending in the fall. Hopefully the legacy students to become curious, global citizens. After night snack. I spent more time talking with Kelly Becky Liddicoat Yamarik, internist and palliative will continue when Nicholas joins the Dartmouth graduation Heather and five other young educators Need something special? We do special orders! RAMUNTO’S BRICK & BREW (603) 646-2000; www.golf.Dartmouth.edu. than actually required to make the arrangements care physician, writes: “I’m currently working at the class of 2028. Family is doing well. I have just been took a highly publicized two-year sailing trip around Hanover’s only real New York pizza, featuring with EBAs. Please consider this opportunity as a Long Beach Veterans Hospital as a hospitalist and appointed chief of orthopedic trauma at Christiana the world, using satellite communication to share traditional, Sicilian and brick-oven specialty chance to reconnect and give back. If you are in- clinical ethicist. I’m also involved in a randomized Care Medical Center in Newark, Delaware. We look their adventures with thousands of classrooms in COGWORKS pizzas, salads, subs, calzones, the biggest Wooden cutting boards, Lazy Susans, home terested, reach out to me or Deme Navab Taleghani, controlled trial looking at telephonic vs. in-person forward to many more trips up to Hanover in the underserved communities. “That’s where it all be- beer in town and much more. accents, bookmarks and fine Dartmouth gifts. our class president. palliative care for patients in the last one to two next few years.” Congratulations, Drew and Evelyn! gan, and Dartmouth was really helpful from the start Casual atmosphere, deliveries. Antrim, NH; (603) 588-3333; www.cogworks.com. I heard from Johnny Jones, who writes, “I years of life. These patients need a lot of support You have the first Dartmouth legacy child we have with seed money and advice,” Heather told Dart- Open ’til midnight 7 days. just want to say hello and wish everyone well! I and assistance as they enter this final phase of life, heard about. Woohoo Ashleigh, and go Big Green! mouth News. Reach the World identifies and trains 9 East South Street, Hanover; am working in Maryland at a regional tutoring so it’s wonderful to be able to try to improve their Jacqueline Chappel wrote, “So inspired by ev- volunteer travelers, manages web-based content (603) 643-9500. company, PrepMatters, as director of quality as- lives. Medicine has been a wonderful career for eryone’s hard and good work. I am off in Hawaii posted weekly by the travelers and connects trav- franklin_gothic_book_abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz`1234567890-=[]\;’,./ ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ~!@#$%^&*()_+{}|:”<>? åç´ƒ©˙ˆ˚¬µ˜øœ®ß†¨¥`¡™£¢§¶•ªº–“‘«…æ÷ ÅıÇÎ´Ï˝ÓˆÔÒ˜،‰Íˇ¨„˛Á¸`⁄‹›fifl‡°·‚—±”’»ÚƯ˘¿ surance. In 2015 I married Rachel MacKnight, me. I majored in history and was very ambivalent finishing up a Ph.D. in education (while working elers and students through its interactive website. 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I am looking at the challenges to interna- Students in the College’s foreign study programs franklin_gothic_medium_abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz`1234567890-=[]\;’,./ AT THE LYME INN franklin_gothic_book_abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz`1234567890-=[]\;’,./ ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ~!@#$%^&*()_+{}|:”<>?ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ~!@#$%^&*()_+{}|:”<>? franklin_gothic_book_abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz`1234567890-=[]\;’,./åç´ƒ©˙ˆ˚¬µ˜øœ®ß†¨¥`¡™£¢§¶•ªº–“‘«…æ÷åç´ƒ©˙ˆ˚¬µ˜øœ®ß†¨¥`¡™£¢§¶•ªº–“‘«…æ÷ ÅıÇÎ´Ï˝ÓˆÔÒ˜،‰Íˇ¨„˛Á¸`⁄‹› fifl‡°·‚—±”’»ÚƯ˘¿fifl‡°·‚—±”’»ÚƯ˘¿ ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ~!@#$%^&*()_+{}|:”<>?Á¸`⁄‹›fifl‡°·‚—±"'»ÚƯ˘¿|áéíóúâêîôûàèìòùäëïöüÿãñõÁÉÍÓÚÀÈÌÒÙÄËÏÖÜŸÁ¸`⁄‹›fifl‡°·‚—±"'»ÚƯ˘¿|áéíóúâêîôûàèìòùäëïöüÿãñõÁÉÍÓÚÀÈÌÒÙÄËÏÖÜŸÑÃÕÂÊÎÔÛÑÃÕÂÊÎÔÛ ”“’‘ ”“’‘ '" '" åç´ƒ©˙ˆ˚¬µ˜øœ®ß†¨¥`¡™£¢§¶•ªº–“‘«…æ÷ ÅıÇÎ´Ï˝ÓˆÔÒ˜،‰Íˇ¨„˛Á¸`⁄‹›fifl‡°·‚—±”’»ÚƯ˘¿ Zachary. Rachel is also a tutor and has contributed working in palliative care, I use a lot of the com- tionalizing the American high school curriculum. I now participate in the program. Debora Hyemin Á¸`⁄‹›fifl‡°·‚—±"'»ÚƯ˘¿|áéíóúâêîôûàèìòùäëïöüÿãñõÁÉÍÓÚÀÈÌÒÙÄËÏÖÜŸfranklin_gothic_medium_italic_abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz`1234567890-=[]\;’,./franklin_gothic_medium_abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz`1234567890-=[]\;’,./ÑÃÕÂÊÎÔÛ ”“’‘ '" ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ~!@#$%^&*()_+{}|:”<>?ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ~!@#$%^&*()_+{}|:”<>? 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I’m turning my a rich reserve of knowledge and understanding to (802) 295-1470; SimonPearce.com. orTo visitreserve Marriott.com/leb your room,Fairfield call Innfi 1.802.291.9911&and Suites Suites by Marriott ® convenienceTo reserve your and room, comfortWhiteFairfield call River you1.802.291.9911 Inn Junction and and your Suites family or deserves! visit summer and possibly the holiday season, why not constantly learn about my field and myself in the skill from a personal pastime to work that I love be found in the world outside their own and feel a or visit Marriott.com/lebfi ® Marriott.com/lebfiTo reserve your your room, room,Fairfield102White call Ballardvale River call1.802.291.9911 Inn Junction 1.802.291.9911& Drive Suites by Marriott or visit consider a trip back to New England to stay at the process. Medicine is a field where some of the most and will be paid to do. We’re headed to Texas and yearning to explore it for themselves. And I hope it orMarriott.com/lebfi visit Marriott.com/lebFairfieldWhite102 Ballardvale River Inn Junction,fi and Drive SuitesVermont To reserve your room,White call River 1.802.291.9911 JunctionJunction, Vermont or visit Von Trapp Family Lodge? CNN recently featured basic American values play out on a daily basis. Florida to help with all the work there to be done. will be the first step in their journey to becoming RatesMarriott.com/lebfi are per room, per night, based102 on Ballardvaleavailability, not Drive available for groups of 10 or more rooms. ® classmate Sam Von Trapp and his family’s Stowe, Many of us want quick, external solutions to rela- We’d love to have people keep us in mind for work active members of the global community.” To learn Rates are per room, per night, basedWhite on Fairfieldavailability, River Junction, not Inn available Vermont & Suites for groups by of 10Marriott or more rooms. Fairfield Inn &and Suites Suites by Marriott ® Vermont, resort. The resort just celebrated its 50th tively small sufferings. Simultaneously, we expect here in Colorado as well as for you personally or more, visit www.reachtheworld.org. Rates are per room, per night, based on WhiteFairfieldavailability, River not Inn Junctionavailable and for Suites groups of 10 or more rooms. ® year of operation in January, and Sam has been the most vulnerable of us to pull themselves up by family and friends in those states. I’m really good In entertainment news, Variety recently re- MAKE Fairfield102White Ballardvale River Inn Junction & Drive Suites by Marriott FairfieldWhite102 Ballardvale River Inn Junction, and Drive SuitesVermont instrumental in the resort’s modernization. If you their bootstraps, even if their shoes are worn and at this work, and my brother is very good at taking ported that Media Res, a television and film produc- White River JunctionJunction, Vermont ® visit the Von Trapp Family Lodge, you’ll not only lack laces.” directions. I hope everyone is doing well and hope tion venture with Bron Studios launched in June FairRates arefield per room Inn, per & night, Suites based102 on by Ballardvaleavailability, Marriott not Drive available for groups of 10 or ® Michael Kang Michael Ellenberg moreFairRates rooms. arefield per room Inn, per & night, Suites basedWhite on by availability, River Marriott Junction, not available Vermont for groups of 10 or be treated to the expected picturesque snow and Finally, writes from Manhat- if you have home repair, refurbishing or remodeling by , landed a two-season, 20-epi- Fairmore rooms.field Inn and Suites ® skiing in winter, but also the unexpected summer tan, where he is an orthopedic surgeon special- needs, you’ll give us a call! More to come!” sode order for a new scripted Apple series starring FairRates arefield per room Inn, per &and night, Suites basedSuites on by availability, Marriott not available for groups of 10 or moreWhite rooms. River Junction mountain biking trails, glorious morning fog (that izing in hip and knee replacement affiliated with Sara Paisner and her husband, Howard Mend- Jennifer Aniston and Reese Witherspoon. Media FairWhitefield River Inn Junctionand Suites 102 Ballardvale Drive Maria herself enjoyed when she lived here) and NYU-Langone Medical Center. He is married to lovitz, visited Eliza Barry and her husband, Andrew Res, Aniston and Witherspoon are the principal 102 Ballardvale Drive NEWS White River JunctionJunction, Vermont the outstanding culinary options with a bierhall Gina and has two children, Griffyn (16) and Sydney Riker ’97, at their home in Bermuda for the Amer- owners of the show, which will draw background 102White Ballardvale River Junction, Drive Vermont and farm-to-table, refined dining. (14). Michael’s take “Healthcare is at a crossroads. ica’s Cup (sailing) race. Besides having an overall material from CNN correspondent Brian Stelter’s WhiteRates are River per room,Junction, per night, Vermont based on availability, Please send updates and news about yourself In terms of orthopedics, we are going down the great time, they got to stand next to the Auld Mug. 2013 book Top of the Morning, a recounting of the Rates are per room, per night, based on availability, CONTACT YOUR not available for groups of 10 or more rooms. (or your friends) to be featured in the next issue. road of medical advancements that must be cost Lastly, I have an update from Jesse Russell. “Af- recent rivalry between NBC’s Today and ABC’s Ratesnot available are per forroom, groups per ofnight, 10 orbased more on rooms. availability, CLASS SECRETARY TODAY. —Laura Hardegree Davis, 1664 Cambridge Court, responsible. Due to increased costs, we will have ter four years at the National Council on Crime and Good Morning America. The show is described as not available for groups of 10 or more rooms. Bethlehem, PA, 18015; [email protected] to change our healthcare model. It may become Delinquency, I am now excited to be starting on an inside look at the lives of the people who help

78 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MARCH/APRIL 2018 79 SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

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Exit 1 off I-89 in VT three miles amazing reunion—good food, activities for every and Mike is an application developer at mortgage Sixteen acres with swimming pond, trails and on Route 4 West. (800) 732-4376; age group, opportunities to see all your favorite insurer MGIC Investment Corp. gardens. 40 Etna Road, Hanover, NH 03755. ELEMENT HANOVER-LEBANON www.qualityinnquechee.com. old haunts and discover the College’s new ones. On the professional side, Anne Mullins accepted (603) 643-2370; (800) 651-5141; Discover the Upper Valley from the comfort of And if you need some financial assistance so you a new role as an associate professor at the Stetson [email protected]; Element Hanover-Lebanon. Our open-flow guest THE SUNSET MOTOR INN can attend, our new Granite Coalition can help you University College of Law in Gulfport, Florida. She www.trumbullhouse.com. rooms meet all your needs with the signature Serene. Most rooms have river view. Cable, Wi-Fi, out. Look for more information in the newsletter will be joining its nationally ranked legal writing Heavenly Bed and fully equipped kitchens. a/c, free local calls, continental breakfast. AAA. and in separate reunion emails and letters. If you’re program and relocating with her family from their BREAKFAST ON THE CONNECTICUT State-of-the-art fitness center and healthy food Two miles south on Main Street (Route 10); not getting any of that, reach out to me so we can get current home in Grand Forks, North Dakota, this Sits on 23 acres in Lyme, just 12 miles from options help you be at your best. (603) 298-8721. you sorted out. See you in June!” Looking forward summer. Anne wins the prize for “most dramatic Dartmouth and overlooking the Connecti- 260 Route 120, Lebanon, NH 03766. to hearing from some of you, and seeing even more change in climate” in this issue. Sarah Stroup recent- THE NEW LONDON INN of you, in June! ly published a book, The Authority Trap: Strategic cut River. Completed in 1997, we have 15 spacious (603) 448-5000; Historic Main Street charm in the beautiful bedrooms replete with amenities, each with private www.elementhanoverlebanon.com. —Jeffrey Beyer, 25 Aspen Way, Morristown, NJ Choices of International NGOs. It’s a discussion of Dartmouth Lake Sunapee region, we capture the 07960; [email protected] the challenge faced by leading non-governmental bath, TV/VCR and thoughtfully appointed. Some spirit of yesterday with the luxuries of today. Our bedrooms have gas fireplaces, skylights, romantic THE LYME INN organizations such as Greenpeace and Amnesty inn-house fine dining restaurant, The Coach REUNION | JUNE 15-17 International, which must balance their willing- Jacuzzi tubs and a stunning view of the river. The Lyme Inn has welcomed travelers to the House, along with our beautifully renovated tavern Bicycles, canoes and kayaks are complimentary, as Upper Valley for over 200 years. Just minutes from Happy spring, ’99s! In just two months ness to take radical positions against accumulated and charming 23 guest rooms are minutes from many of us will be gathering in Hanover authority and ongoing power. She is an assistant is the 8-person Jacuzzi spa. Open year-round. For Dartmouth College, our 9 guest rooms and 5 suites year-round events and venues. Complimentary to see old friends and celebrate our lives professor at Middlebury College, where she teaches a virtual tour, see our website. Our gracious B&B is reflect a careful harmony between historic elegance breakfast, flat-screens, wi-fi, pet-friendly rooms, 99 since graduating. It’s hard to believe nearly 20 years coursework in political economy, international or- the perfect place to escape for a weekend, a vaca- and contemporary luxury. Our restaurant tantalizes private parking lot, Jacuzzi suites. tion, a retreat or reunion. A hearty New England your palate, while our warmth and hospitality (603) 526-2791; thenewlondoninn.com. have passed! In the meantime, we have great up- ganization and other topics. Ryan Smerek also has breakfast with house specialties and real maple invite you to return. 1 Market Street, Lyme NH; dates to share. First, photographer James Kaiser written a new book, titled Organizational Learn- syrup makes getting up each morning a treat. 651 (603) 795-4824; WOODSTOCK INN & RESORT writes that he made the cover of the November 2017 ing and Performance: The Science and Practice of River Road, Lyme, NH 03768; www.thelymeinn.com. Located in idyllic Woodstock, Vermont, the issue of National Geographic magazine. His beauti- Building a Learning Culture. Ryan is an assistant (603) 353-4444; (888) 353-4440; Woodstock Inn & Resort defines country sophistica- ful photo of a waterfall in Costa Rica is for a story professor at Northwestern University, where he is www.breakfastonthect.com. HOTEL COOLIDGE tion in one of New England’s most charming and that explores why people living in Costa Rica, Den- also assistant director of academic affairs.Steven Vintage railroad hotel with country inn ambiance popular year-round vacation destinations. The mark and Singapore are the world’s happiest and Fox has been named the new director of the Ca- THE NORWICH INN in the heart of revitalized White River, five miles 142-room, AAA Four Diamond Resort and member what this means for the rest of us. After graduating thedral Choral Society, the symphonic chorus in Experience historic New England charm just from campus. Excellent value; full service for of Preferred Hotels & Resorts, offers award-winning from Dartmouth James returned to Maine and self- residence at the Washington National Cathedral 1.5 miles across the river from Dartmouth. reunions, luncheons and parties. dining in two restaurants, a Robert Trent Jones Sr. published a guidebook on Acadia National Park. in Washington, D.C. The 140-voice chorus is the The Inn features 40 rooms and Jasper Murdock’s (800) 622-1124; www.hotelcoolidge.com. 18-hole golf course, Suicide Six Family Ski Resort, The book sold well and led him to pursue his passion oldest symphonic choral group in the capital. Steven Alehouse Restaurant & Microbrewery offering a Athletic Club and a LEED-certified Spa, creating a for travel and photography. He has since written is still the director of the choral group Clarion in variety of ales, hand-crafted on site. All free: COURTYARD BY MARRIOTT luxury resort getaway. three more books describing travels to Yosemite, New York, as well, and he was married in October. Parking, Wi-Fi and Fitness Center. HANOVER/LEBANON (844) 545-4178; www.woodstockinn.com. the Grand Canyon and Joshua Tree, as well as to Congratulations all around, Steven! Located just minutes from Dartmouth College. Costa Rica. James says: “I believe travel should be Thanks for all of the news, and I hope to hear 325 Main Street, Norwich, VT 05055; THE JACKSON HOUSE INN (802) 649-1143; Shuttle service, high-speed Internet, fitness center, fun, affordable and enlightening—especially in na- more for my next column! Peaceful blend of casual elegance and comfort on 3 tional parks, where there’s so much to experience.” —Kate Ryan Stowe, 849 26th Ave., San Francisco, www.norwichinn.com. breakfast café and dinner menu. acres just beyond Woodstock. Suites with fireplaces, 10 Morgan Drive, Lebanon, NH; More information on James’ travels and books can CA 94121; [email protected] massage tubs. Unforgettable breakfast featuring be found on his website, which is www.jameskaiser. 506 ON THE RIVER INN (603) 643-5600; local organics. Easy access to Dartmouth, skiing, Minutes from Woodstock Village, this award- www.courtyard-hanoverlebanon.com. com. In other news, Damali Rhett, executive director Hello, ’01s! Not much news to report but attractions. 43 Senior Lane, Woodstock, VT 05091; of the Energy Cooperative Association of Pennsyl- what we do have sounds pretty awesome. winning boutique is recognized for its beautiful (800) 448-1890; www.jacksonhouse.com. balance of casual elegance and rustic charm. The KILLINGTON TIMESHARES vania (the Energy Co-op), was elected to the board After spending 18 months living in Hong 01Amanda Cook 45-room & suite hotel offers a country breakfast, Enjoy a weeklong ski vacation at a Killington RESIDENCE INN BY MARRIOTT of directors of the Philadelphia Area Cooperative Kong, and her husband, Zak Mazeika, indoor pool, hot tub & sauna, game rooms, spa- timeshare resort located just under an hour from The preferred all-suite hotel in the Upper Alliance (PACA). PACA brings together coopera- are returning to London. They are not flying as one cious grounds, as well as the 506 Bistro & Bar, Dartmouth College! Rental rates start at Valley. Easy access off I-89 and just 3 miles from tives in food, housing, energy, schools and other might expect. Instead, they are taking the train or, serving a locally inspired & seasonal menu, and $103/night, units also available to buy for Dartmouth College with shuttle service to campus. sectors with the aim of growing the cooperative to be more precise, many trains. They will spend selection of microbrews and crafted cocktails. affordable annual trips. Complimentary breakfast buffet. Guest access to the economy and building a movement for economic a month moving through China and then take the 1653 West Woodstock Road, Woodstock, VT; www.sellmytimesharenow.com/timeshare/ River Valley Club and a pet-friendly hotel. justice. This builds on Damali’s extensive experi- Trans Siberian train north before heading west (802) 457-5000; www.ontheriverwoodstock.com. Killington/city/rent-timeshare. (603) 643-4511; www.residenceinn.com/lebri. ence in the energy sector and, more recently, her across Russia to St. Petersburg. They will then community engagement program at the Energy head through Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Co-op that helped residents learn more about en- Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium. From America wake up in the morning. Michael will also union June 15-17. Visit our all-new class website great chance to connect with some old friends on ergy and how to use it in a more sustainable way. there, Amanda and Zak will complete the journey serve as executive producer. “This is a great moment at 1997.dartmouth.org for more information. Hope long training runs.” Brook also shared the great Damali started her three-year term in December. to London on the Eurostar. If you are intrigued, you for creatives with a lot of television being made for to see everyone in Hanover in June! news that he and his wife are expecting their first Congratulations, James and Damali! That’s all the can follow their journey on AndOurOtherAdven- a lot of new distributors,” Michael told Variety. “We —Jason Casell, 10106 Balmforth Lane, Houston, TX child in early 2018 (in fact, the child may have ar- news for now. I hope you’re all making the most of tures.com. The plan is travel from January through want to work with artists to push boundaries and 77096; [email protected] rived by the time you are reading this!)—so Brook spring and that you’ll be able to make it to our 20th March, so by the time you check out the website, it help people realize their most provocative, daring has promised to take a break from racing, “at least reunion that takes place on June 15-17. For more should have a lot of good content. Enjoy! vision.” Michael previously worked at HBO, where REUNION | JUNE 15-17 for now.” In the last several months Brook has also information, visit our class website, which is www. Also in Great Britain, Jennifer (Gill) Didondi he developed such hits as Westworld, The Leftovers, Hey, ’98s! Happy 2018! I got a recent caught up with Rachel (Bogardus) Drew and Jon Drew, dartmouth.org/classes/99. Best regards. and her husband, Alberto, welcomed their second Big Little Lies, True Detective and The Deuce. The update from Brook Detterman, who as well as Carter Jackson, among others. According —Tony Perry, 24 Purssell Close, Maidenhead, Berk- daughter, Delia, on October 6 in Redding, England. company’s name, Media Res, comes from the Latin reports that he and Baxter Wasson ran to Brook, Carter has “recently escaped N.Y.C. with shire SL6 3XU, United Kingdom; tony.j.perry@ She joins big sister Lucia. phrase “in medias res,” describing a story that opens 98 his family for the greener pastures of Westchester,” the Ragged 50K last summer in New Hampshire’s gmail.com Finally, I have a note from the class of 2001 in the middle of the action, challenging its audience Sunapee region. Brook reports that “while the which, according to Carter, is a “great change of executive committee. Our class officers are always to figure out the context as the narrative unfolds. 50K itself was a brutal course—with about a 6,500 pace.” On that note, allow me to share some words First, some baby news. Mike Holmes and looking to increase the quality and quantity of how “It’s the kind of storytelling I really enjoy,” Michael vertical over 35 miles—Brian managed to from our class president, Jo (Weingarten) Golub, his wife, Lindsay McHenry ’98, wel- we engage with each other as a class and with Dart- said. “It’s about having a fundamental respect for an complete the entire three-day course, with 15,500 about the class of 1998 20th reunion, which, in- comed their first child, Arthur Gareth mouth. We host a variety of activities and are look- audience that wants to be challenged.” credibly, is coming up in just a few months, June 00 feet of climbing across about 80 miles. It was quite McHenry Holmes, in September. Mike and Lindsay ing to increase our scope. Last year we sponsored Finally, here’s another plug for our 20th re- the challenge, but enjoyable in its own way and a 15-17 in Hanover. Jo reports that, as with the past have been living in the Milwaukee, Wisconsin, area a mini-reunion in Boston as part of the Dartmouth

80 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MARCH/APRIL 2018 81 CLASS NOTES 2002-2010

football game at Fenway Park. The executive com- bos plant. At the end of November I caught up with is a great place to pay class dues, organize a mini- classnotes to see more. Thanks to all who contribute pology department on archaeology in Madagascar. alums in the area! Lindsay Maitland Hunt’s cookbook, mittee is eager to sponsor similar events in various Rebecca (Meyers) Galemba when she was in town for reunion and share updates about your life! Our to our Class Notes and talk to you soon! George Oh has moved to Atlanta! At the recent Healthyish, came out in January! Lora Johns has locations across the country (or anywhere really… an anthropology conference. I was excited to hear 15-year reunion is just 16 months away, so now is —Cindy Tsai, Synchrony Financial, 10840 Ballantyne Dartmouth Club of Georgia’s holiday party he was been in New Haven, Connecticut, since 2011 and the British Isles seem popular) in the coming year. If that her first book (now published) was scheduled to a great time to reconnect with the class of 2004! Commons Pkwy., Charlotte, NC 28277; cindaaay@ able to reconnect with Renee Johnson, Sonia Sim- received a J.D. from Yale Law School in 2014. Since you are interested in planning or hosting a mini-re- debut in December. She’s the author of Contraband —Cliff Campbell, 10001 Venice Blvd., Apt. 215, Los gmail.com mons ’06 and Jesse Jacobson ’04 and looks forward then she clerked for Judge Ralph K. Winter Jr. on union, please reach out to the executive committee Corridor: Making a Living at the Mexico-Guatemala Angeles, CA 90034; [email protected] to seeing many more of you soon. Julia Bernstein and the Second Circuit and practiced law for a while. at [email protected] to get started. Border, which she tells me was begun before either Roses are red, violets are blue, the ’07s her husband, Robert Schwartz, welcomed Miri- Now she is finishing her master’s in library and —Rachel Milstein Sondheimer, 143 Branchville Road, of her daughters, Lanie (7) or Lexi (4), were born. Hi, ’06s. Hope you all had a wonder- are the best class ever, and we love hear- elle Simone Schwartz on November 20, 2017. Baby information science while settling into a new ca- Ridgefield, CT 06877; (203) 645-693; rachel.sond- Rebecca and Dan Galemba and their family reside ful holiday season! This issue’s Class ing from you! Brian Meyers’ and Evan Mi- Miri and her parents live in San Francisco, where reer as a law librarian back at Yale Law School. She 07chals [email protected] in Denver and welcome visits from anyone in the 06Notes will take a look back at some up- ’ video collaboration startup, WavePost was she looks forward to meeting other members of would love to hear from old classmates if they’re area. I also heard from John Burr, who premiered dates from the end of 2017. The month of November recently acquired by the media asset management the Dartmouth family. Naomi Heindel and Jordan ever in the New Haven area! Marcy (Van Arnam) Hello, ’02s! Just a few happy notes in a feature film he wrote and directed in L.A. in No- saw the Dartmouth vs. Brown football game and, of company Evolphin. They write that, “It was an ex- Nobler welcomed their son, Asa Heindel Nobler, Saltaformaggio and her husband, Robert, bought a my inbox this time around. I heard vember. The film,Muse , is a psychological thriller course, Fibonacci Day for all you math lovers out citing journey, and the Dartmouth entrepreneurial on November 16 in Jackson, Wyoming, and are row house in the Capitol Hill East neighborhood from Nathan Fidel: “Sarah Hicks and I and will continue at festivals this winter and spring, there (3, 5; 4, 5; 6, 7; 8, 8; 4, 9)! The football game network was a great part of that. We look forward to looking forward to Asa’s first winter in the Tetons. of Washington, D.C. She now gets to enjoy running 02 was held at Fenway Park in Boston, and loyal Dart- remaining involved in the entrepreneurial commu- Ali (Levine) Nuger Christine are pleased to announce the birth of our daughter, followed by art house theaters and digital platforms and her husband, Jon, wel- around the National Mall with neighbor Clémentine Marthe Fidel, on October 9. Sarah and in 2018. As I perused a newspaper from my home mouth fans from across the country bundled up to nity.” Sam Beattie just started a new job at PopCap comed a baby girl, Charlotte Helena Nuger, into Wells. Jordan Sedlacek had a small ceremony in Fort baby are doing great.” Yvette Nameth got engaged to state (Connecticut), I was delighted to read a story cheer on the Big Green to a 33-10 victory. Many ’06 Games, where he was previously a contract designer their family on November 3. Everyone is doing great. Collins, Colorado, to celebrate marrying her wife, Jeremy Fransene while traveling in Iceland. The about Kiki (Frantz) Carlson, who will be assuming the friends reunited and the game served as its own but is now a full-time employee. He shares that Their son, Andrew (2), is loving his role as a big Chris Harris. Courtney Davis attended via FaceTime. wedding is set for May. They live together with role of director of the college counseling office of mini-reunion. It was great to catch up with Jen Bor- he recently completed a 10-week course in user brother. Patricia (Inman) Taratuta, her husband and Joe Wood and his wife, Kara, welcomed their first their three pups in Seattle. Our class vice presi- Hamden Hall Country Day School (a private school deau, Jamie Coffin, Rob Cowden, Sarah Emel, Katie experience design at General Assembly, which he their daughter welcomed Paul James Taratuta on child, Emma Rose Wood, into the world on Novem- dent Eric Powers shared his happy news, “Liz and I in Hamden, Connecticut) after 11 years at the school Fahey, Ryan Fuselier, Brad Heritage, Dan Kovler, found incredibly rewarding and considers to be a September 19, 2017. He weighed 7 pounds, 4 ounces, ber 13, 2017. They could not be happier (unless they are thrilled to announce that Rebecca Pearl Powers teaching math and serving as co-chair of the math Jess Magidson, Mike McClincy, Alex Payne, Bill Quirk great addition to his design skill set. and was 19 inches long. He was also nine days late! were sleeping more). came into the world on October 26 at 3:49 a.m. after department. and Dwayne Rabalais. Paul Huelskamp married Reny Nicole (Mahr) Cannizzaro recently started a job Danny Hundert is still living in Colorado. He shares —Liz (Doolittle) Kahane, 7 Chatmoss Road, Hender- a short labor. She clocked in at 7 pounds, 6 ounces Finally, I heard from Yungsheng Wang, who Preussker on October 27. Yin Zhao married Michael at American University, so she and her husband, that he has been spending too much time with the son, NV 89052; (617) 909-7669; elizabeth.d.kahane@ and was 19 inches in length. Sam is excited to be a announced his September 3, 2017, wedding. Many King in Joshua Tree National Park in September. George (Fordham ’03), are moving back to Wash- bison and other local wildlife and invites any and gmail.com big brother and is learning how to be gentle—it’s a Dartmouth folks were in attendance to witness the Her bridesmaids and officiant includedSophie Hut- ington, D.C.! Kristina (Guild) Douglass shares that all visitors! work in progress.” “nerdy book-themed night,” including Jon Kartt, son, Cathy Mao, Amanda Prentice and pastor Willa her husband, Scott Douglass, will soon be leaving —Jaime Padgett, 1837 W Patterson Ave, #109, Chi- Hello, ’10s! I’m writing this column dur- —Anne Cloudman, 315 West 99th St., Apt. 2D, New John Lawrence, Meredith (Schwartz) Beuchaw, Rose Johnson. In baby news, Hans and Betsy Reuter his position as director of orchestra at St. John’s cago, IL 60613; [email protected] ing the last days of 2017. I hope you’ve all York, NY 10025; [email protected] Lindsay (Hirschfeld) Guzowski, Jessica Sharkness, welcomed a baby to their family very recently, as did College High School in Washington, D.C., to begin had a wonderful start to 2018 and that Travis D’Amato Lynda Tricarico Daniel. Cici Cruz-Uribe and her hus- a Ph.D. in music education at Pennsylvania State in Abi Ashcraft 10 , John Burr, Darren Thomas ’04, Rob is graduating from a family you’re still going strong with your New Year’s reso- Greetings, ’03s! First, a moment to in- Hayward ’04, Jeff Beardsley ’04, Jayson Remmelts band, Greg Harkay, Th’08, welcomed their daughter, State College, Pennsylvania, where they currently medicine residency in Montana and lutions. I’ll start this column off with engagement troduce myself before we dive into my ’04 and Ben Philips ’04. Sofia, in August. Jesse Brush and his wife, Liza, had reside. They are visiting Dartmouth in February, moving to Madison, Wisconsin, for announcements. Donnie Surdoval got engaged last first column forDAM . I’m Megan (Riley) Please continue to send in your news! their first child, Nathan Alden Brush, on November when Kristina will give a guest lecture in the anthro- 09an ER fellowship. She would love to see any fellow summer to Bianca Zlatea ’12 while on a hiking 03Kenney Megan (Riley) Kenney 11. Nathan is looking forward to scoping out his and I live in D.C. with my husband, Matt — , 3408 Quebec St. NW, Wash- Kenney ’04, and our two children. I hope as you pass ington, DC 20016; dartmouth2003notes@gmail. freshman dorm at Dartmouth when he visits his through the area you contact me so we can catch com grandparents’ new house in Quechee, Vermont. up or become acquainted. Next, a great thank you Michael Mina is now living in Boston, work- to Kellee (Harper) Hanigan for her tireless work on Thanks for submitting so many updates ing at Brigham and Women’s Hospital-Harvard our Class Notes column for the last two and a half to this column in 2017! With so many Medical School in clinical pathology and continu- years. I have big shoes to fill before we elect a new babies, marriages, moves and career ing research on infectious diseases, vaccines and 04 immunity. James Seidman and his wife, Lia, live secretary at our 15-year reunion in 2019! changes, there’s just so much to celebrate in the As always, the Dartmouth family is growing. ’04 class. Fingers crossed that 2018 is not the year in Seattle. He works on business partnerships for Jennifer Casler-Gonclaves and her husband, Chris when all of our good news dries up. This column is Google, where he has worked since June 2006. Gonclaves, announced the arrival of their first son, short and sweet, so please keep the updates coming His family recently welcomed their second child, Devin Ezra Casler-Gonclaves, on June 17, 2017. this year! Have no fear: I will continue to stalk you Walter “Wally” Henry Seidman, on November 19. Jen says the late nights at Dartmouth, law school all via email and Facebook for any updates. A few Wally’s 20-month-old sister, Ida Ruth Seidman, was and her firm Latham have prepped her well for the updates follow. thrilled to gain a brother, but she was disappointed GLOBAL SCHOLAR sleepless baby nights. Meanwhile, Sonja (Tonnesen) Marina McClure has been busy directing exciting he wasn’t delivered by a Dartmouth alum doctor like Davies and husband Andrew Davies welcomed their theater pieces. Some recent directing projects in- she was. (Thanks to Dr. Allison H. Kay ’09 for doing second child, Cole Franklin Davies, on August 6, clude Kalean Ung’s solo show, Letters from Home, at a great job with their firstborn)! PROGRAM 2017. Cole joins big sister Mariel (1 1/2). Jill (Carr) Independent Shakespeare Company in Cary Fortin’s first book was published this Dudley wrote in with the news that she and husband and Fill Fill Fill Fill Fill Fill Fill, which just opened in winter. The book, New Minimalism: Decluttering Bert welcomed baby boy No. 3! Luke Wylie Dud- February at the Flea Theater in New York City. Janis and Design for Sustainable, Intentional Living, is Develop a deeper understanding of the ley arrived on October 5, 2017 (shares a birthday Hui Ozaki and Riki Ozaki gave birth to a beautiful published by Sasquatch and distributed by Penguin with mom!) and joins big brothers Blake (3) and baby boy, Nathan Bodhi Ozaki, on April 6, 2017. He Random House. Cary cowrote the book with Kyle world through a combination of experiential Chase (18 months). Finally, Hilary Alvarez shared loves avocado and kicking! The Dartmouth Alumni Quilici (Boston College ’07), and the two cofounded education abroad, interdisciplinary that she and Alex Streeter finalized the adoption of Magazine team came across some exciting achieve- New Minimalism (www.newminimalism.com). their daughter, Aurora (2). They have been Rory’s ments in the news for some of our classmates. Eileen Cary and her husband, Cam ’05, also welcomed coursework at KUA, and a senior foster family since the fall of 2015. Rory joins big Carey, who currently coaches the U.S. Nordic skiing their first human baby, joining them and their sweet capstone project that synthesizes sister Bryanna (9). The family calls Concord, New and biathlon Paralympic teams, was recently named pup Bodhi. In November Patrick Biggs presented Hampshire, home (easy access to Hanover for early the U.S. Paralympic Coach of the Year by the U.S. his first solo art show at the Jane Ross Gallery in all you have learned. installation of a love of Dartmouth), where Hilary is Olympic Committee! Way to go, Eileen! Anna Hra- Toronto. Patrick is an Olympic skier whose talent a family physician and Alex is an engineer at DEKA. chovec created the GIF “Love Gnome,” which was has transitioned from slopes to canvas, and his show Our classmates are accomplishing big things named by GIPHY as the top GIF of 2017! Keep up ran for the second half of November. Patrick’s art in their professional lives. I recently had the op- the awesome design work, Anna! and portfolio can be seen on his website, patrick- Independent boarding school for grades 9–PG. portunity to read Sarah Ive’s new book, Steeped in If you haven’t checked out our class website biggsdesign.com. Heritage: The Racial Politics of South African Rooi- recently, please head on over to 2004.dartmouth. Many of these updates include photos that you bos Tea, a fascinating look at post- race org. We’ll be working on some exciting initiatives can check out on our class website under the “Class Meriden, NH • Only minutes from Dartmouth relations via the connection to the indigenous rooi- this spring. The site (as well as our Facebook page) Notes” section. You can visit 2006.dartmouth.org/ 603.469.2100 • www.KUA.org 82 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE CLASS NOTES 2011-2017

trip in Switzerland. In December Sophie Green Jennifer Robinson got married to Dan what’s up her sleeves next. safer and sturdier. But every so often, something got engaged to Tal Sztainer. Also in December, Mott ’12 in October, and Jenny Zhao was In other boss lady news, Alix Peabody recently brings me back to the old lodge for just a moment: Michelle Liu and Chris Riederer got engaged while one of her bridesmaids! launched her brand, the Alixir Co., to “bring together a song, a sunrise, the smell of fresh baked bread. on a trip in Hawaii. Congrats to all of you! 11Mike Lewis recently published a book, When to and empower millennial women.” Be on the lookout The memories will last as long as the mountain,” While working on a Tuck-sponsored Decem- Jump, and he writes in: “I sketched a book cover for Bev, a canned California rosé, this spring! Cheers Claire Pendergrast. ber project for the Design Museum in London, five years ago after reading an alumni update in the to our classmates near and far doing cool things “One of my favorite lodge memories was dur- Abbe Cart made the Dartmouth rounds. Meet-ups winter 2013 DAM issue of a banker who turned into and leaving a Big Green impact on the world. Email ing Lodgeween, when it was freezing cold outside included Eli Mitchell, currently doing double duty an Olympic cyclist. It’s been a Dartmouth-heavy and snail mail below—don’t forget to share the love and we threw a huge costume party inside, dancing M.B.A. studies at Columbia and London Busi- project with tons of help from alums and many when you’ve got news to announce! and singing on top of the fireplace mantle until I ness School; Jessie Stefanik, a lawyer at Latham & fellow ’11s—Tom Mandel helped edit the first story, —Liz Sullivan, 1444 Rhode Island Ave. NW, #603, could barely stand or speak. Another was the food Watkins; and Amy Dance ’07 (freshman under- Emily Hirshey helped me start the publishing process Washington, DC 20005; [email protected] fight I started at 15X lodge prom when I threw a graduate advisor to Abbe, Mark Heller, Alex Knapp, and Kyle Battle and Abigail Holden are featured in dessert pie in a friend’s face,” Adam Schneider. Tom Callahan, Shaun Stewart, Frances Dales, Rob the book, sharing their own jumps. If anyone has a REUNION | JUNE 15-17 In College news 2,270 students applied for ear- Hoffmanand others). James Cart landed after the jump they want to share, send me a note at mike@ Save the date for our five-year reunion in ly decision admission to the class of 2022, setting final presentation and the two spent the holidays whentojump.com!” Hanover June 15-June 17! Laura McFeely a new record number of applicants, 13.5 percent castle-hopping in Scotland. Daryl Concha competed in the 2017 Women’s 13and Lee-Or Ankori-Karlinsky ’11 got en- higher than last year. On December 14, 565 students Some (more) of our classmates are now par- Flat Track Derby Association International Cham- gaged in August while hiking in the White Moun- were admitted. According to The Dartmouth, 13 ents! Rebecca (Davidson-Wolf) Burkoff and husband pionships in Philadelphia on November 3-5, 2017. tains. Joanna Schneider and Brannon Cavalier ’12 got percent of early-decision admits will be the first Nik welcomed daughter Eve in October. They are She is a member of the Gotham Girls engaged on a beautiful snowy day in Boone, North in their families to attend college, 10 percent are delighted, as are grandma Judi Davidson-Wolf All-Stars, based out of New York City. The Gotham Carolina, in December. international students and 33 percent are students STUDENTS AIMING FOR ’82 and great-grandpa Richard Davidson ’60. Mi- All-Stars finished its season third in the world. Da- —Emily Fletcher, 822 South Main St., Apt. 4, Ann of color. In classmate news Kelsey Stimson and Sasha caela Klein and husband Josh Pudnos welcomed ryl will also compete in the Roller Derby Arbor, MI 48014; [email protected] Dudding are currently attending Yale Law School. TOP COLLEGES: a baby girl on Halloween. Her name is Jax Cady. on February 1-4, in Manchester, United Kingdom, —Samantha Webster, 665 Washington St., Apt. 711, Jan Gromadzki and Lily Chesnut welcomed a baby as part of Team Indigenous. Reid Duke also wrote in: In the last issue of the DAM I asked our Boston, MA 02111; (484) 356-3678; samwweb15@ girl, Rose Emmeline, on December 12 at 11:59 “I play Magic: The Gathering for a living and—at the class to share memories of the Ravine gmail.com Receive strategic advice, tools, and guidance from p.m. Doug Zarbock and Kelley (Weed) Zarbock wel- time of writing—I’m the No. 2 ranked player in the 15Lodge in light of the new lodge being the nation’s premier college consultants, helping comed a daughter, Madeleine Blakely Zarbock, on world. Magic is a collectible, strategy card game that completed. The lodge is near and dear to so many, Hi, ’16s! We have only a few quick updates December 21. The family moved from Dubai back I’ve played since I was 5 years old. The professional and each person had many memories to share. As for this issue, so I’ll get right to them! students for over 20 years. to Madison, Wisconsin, in February. circuit has me traveling nearly every weekend and such, keep an eye out for more stories in the next After graduating from Dartmouth Michael Wood 16 wrote in to let me know that competing against players from all across the world. issue and send me anything that you would like to in 2016 and from the Thayer School of Engineering Ben Peters was in a ski movie! Here’s the sum- In December I’ll be representing the United States add! Thank you to everyone who contributed their in 2017, Matt Wheeler accepted a year-long fellow- • Unparalleled success rate mary from the Backcountry Film Festival: “In at the World Magic Cup in Nice, France, as captain stories. “Dear Lodge, thank you for all the water- ship with Grid Alternatives. Grid Alternatives is a this short expedition skiing piece, Noah Howell of the national team. Wish me luck!” works. At your hearth is where I fought back tears of non-profit solar installer that provides access to • Advising and facilitating every step of the way and Ben Peters head into Alaska’s Ruth Gorge to We also had a fun mini-reunion here in L.A. both joy and sadness as I addressed my final section solar power and job training to underserved com- see what they can find. With great weather, good with the classes of 2008 to 2013 in December. Quite of trippees. You witnessed me ugly-cry many tears munities. Since beginning the fellowship, he has • Lessen stress and increase college choices preparedness and a ton of luck they tick off two a few ’11s showed up—it was great to see you all! of pride and gratitude as I thanked my amazing trips had the privilege of working all over California incredible steep skiing lines in one of the most —Hillary S. Cheng, 16013 Legacy Road, #304, Tus- volunteers one last time. During my last weeks at installing solar panels in low-income communi- beautiful settings on the planet. Shot in light and tin, CA 92782; (603) 546-8452; hillary.s.cheng@ Dartmouth I snuck a few tears of love as I sat on ties. Matt wrote in to say that he’s in the process Join us for personal admissions counseling. fast guerilla style, these two ski mountaineers dartmouth.edu your porch holding my best friend’s hand under of making a video with a fellow Dartmouth alum Call now for information. provide a well-documented epic adventure the light of a full moon. And on your 75th birthday about his work with Grid Alternatives; it’s still in sharing what they love to do most.” Hi, y’all. This month’s notes are short I was moved to tears by the stories that illustrated the process of editing, but he encourages you all to Finally, I’d like to share two seriously impres- and sweet, much like the holiday break the spiritual connection that humans can have to check it out here: https://youtu.be/pjqW0fH3AgM. sive stories of athletic feats by our classmates. On I enjoyed while writing them up. With a place. Dear Lodge, you make me cry in the best As I’m writing this in December, Laura Stacey TopTierAdmissions.com Katie Bono 12 June 14 set a women’s speed record the summer months approaching, write to us with of ways, and I’m excited to stain your shiny new will be playing for Canada’s women’s hockey team ascending Denali in Alaska, with a round-trip your breaking news, summer plans adventurous or floors with many more of my salty tears,” Peety Kaur. in the Winter Olympics in February! I hope that we 781.530.7088 time of 21 hours and 6 minutes. At 20,210 feet tall, languorous and memories of 10X past. “After four years of studying, researching, in- are all able to tune in to cheer her on! Denali is the tallest mountain in North America. First, our usual roundup of Dartmouth kids in terning and traveling as an undergrad, I graduated Thanks for reading, as always! And please feel [email protected] Katie’s time was the third fastest time ever, and love: Jasper Hicks and Carrie Ryder tied the knot back from Dartmouth and drove up to Moosilauke for free to send any news and updates my way. I love she made the trip in -40 degree weather and far- in September, in case you missed it. And over the the first day of summer lodge crew. I signed on to hearing about the exciting things you all are up to! from-ideal conditions. Katie also set a women’s winter break Katie Gonzalez and Doug Nelson ’10 got work at the lodge because I wanted to be present, —Feyaad Allie, 202 Running Farm Lane, Apt. 201, speed record for Mount Rainier in 2012. (You can engaged out west. Congratulations, all! to be patient, to be peaceful—at least for a summer. Stanford, CA 94305; [email protected] read more online about her Denali ascent; it’s an While his days on Burnham Field may be in I wanted to spend just a few months focusing on incredible story!) the past, ’s success continues as a beautiful, tangible, practical and nourishing work. Hi, ’17s! I hope you’re ready to fling right Chris Zablocki set a world record (guys, a world forward for the New York Cosmos, a team in the Well, the lodge is not always peaceful, as I soon into spring! Here’s some updates on what record!) for the indoor marathon on March 27 in North American Soccer League. He’s now ex- learned. That summer I baked hundreds of loaves our classmates have been up to the last 17 Edom Wessenyeleh New York City. The race consisted of running 211 panding his impact by developing Bridging Youth of bread. I helped rescue a hummingbird from the few months. Back in September laps around a 200-meter track. Chris clocked in a through Soccer Academy in his Zimbabwe home- lodge kitchen. I vacuumed cobwebs off the antlers began classes for her master’s at the London School time of 2 hours, 21 minutes and 48 seconds, break- town. The academy’s goal is to help youth develop of a taxidermied moose. I played piano on quiet of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, which is part ing the previous world record by eight seconds. their skills and gain the kind of exposure that can afternoons while guests drank hot cocoa by the of the University of London. During Edom’s first Instruction using the Rassias Method® of Wow. Oh, Chris also won the Hartford Marathon lead to scholarships and other valuable opportuni- fire. I plunged into the freezing water of the Baker term she took a wide variety of courses spanning Prof. John Rassias of Dartmouth College in October and probably has a lot more amazing ties while also providing a mentorship program. River after long nights spent washing hundreds from extended epidemiology to health economics. wins under his belt that I don’t know about, as I’ve (Read more about him on page 55.) Daraiha Greene, of dishes. I drank coffee with strangers at 6 in the Edom enjoys her courses because the curriculum is High School and Gap Programs: just been doing a bit of Internet stalking over here. head of computer science in media multicultural morning, listening to their memories of the lodge interdisciplinary, and she looks forward to solidify- Language immersion in Arles, France, Katie, Chris, I’m so in awe of both of you— strategy at Google, was recently profiled inThe Root and the mountain. I heard about falling in love, rais- ing her thesis topic during the upcoming months. Gijón, Spain and Trujillo, Perú. congratulations on these incredible achieve- for her work developing the CS+X program, which ing children, elaborate pranks, lifelong friendships, After she completes her studies, she hopes to stay in ments! You make us proud. introduces a diverse set of students to careers in with the mountain and the lodge as the backdrop for London either doing research or working in health FIND US ON FACEBOOK —Jennifer Chong, 7A Marine View, 19 Middle Lane, computer science and coding by showing how the every story. Moosilauke is thousands of miles away or medicine. Although her academic program is TEL: 603-643-3007 Discovery Bay, Lantau, Hong Kong; jenniferashley field intersects with more approachable passions now, and the majestic, crumbling lodge that I called extremely rigorous, Edom stays active outside of [email protected] www.rassias.com [email protected] such as music, fashion and dance. Can’t wait to see home for a summer has been replaced by something the classroom. She began working at a migration

84 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MARCH/APRIL 2018 85 CLASS NOTES Clubs & Groups-Deaths

collective, where she and a few other Londoners day parties and end-of-year get-togethers. Thank ated group have organized! Newsletters and other Alan Edward McQuiston ’58 • Oct. 7, 2017 Andrew Wells Lewis ’65 • Oct. 24, 2017 mesh art and activism. Along with her counter- you to all of those who contributed updates from email updates are also welcomed. Henry Carleton Milton Jr. ’58 • Nov. 29, 2017 Stephen Lee Waterhouse ’65 • Dec. 8, 2017 parts, she coordinated a six-day film festival in these great events. David Dietze ’78 and Tara Gulla —Stina Brock ’01, P.O. Box 9274, Jackson, WY John Morgan Ryan ’58 • Oct. 16, 2017 Richard Lynn Worland ’66 • Oct. 8, 2017 London focusing on migration. ’95 co-hosted the annual holiday reception for 83002; [email protected] Peter Morrow Collins ’59 • June 10, 2017 Brian Loyd Patterson ’67 • Oct. 14, 2017 Also across the pond is Shivam Chadha, who the Dartmouth Club of Suburban New Jersey at Richard Risley Finlay ’59 • Oct. 25, 2017 John Robert Pearsall ’67 • Jan. 28, 2017 moved back to his hometown of London to pursue David’s home in Summit, New Jersey, on Decem- James B. Pinkerton Jr. ’59 • Nov. 16, 2017 Dirk William de Roos ’68 • July 1, 2017 a job in asset management at JP Morgan. Shiv ber 18. More than 60 alumni, current students Deaths Conrad Earl Gardner ’60 • Oct. 29, 2017 Jeffrey Laurance Dow ’70 • Dec. 3, 2017 feels fortunate to work on his team because nearly and newly admitted early-decision students par- David Carl Ketchen ’60 • Dec. 13, 2013 Robert Uhlmann ’71 • Oct. 23, 2017 everyone holds a senior level position, so he feels ticipated in the holiday gathering with alumni of The following is a list of deaths reported to us Charles McDonnell Radigan Jr. ’60 • Nov. 9, 2017 E. Matthew Goyette II ’72 • Nov. 30, 2017 motivated to produce higher-quality deliverables. all ages. The group enjoyed great conversations since the previous issue. Full obituaries, usually Richard Owen Norman ’62 • Nov. 29, 2017 James Francis P. Canny ’74 • Jan. 20, 2016 When not at work Shiv works closely with the and fun, with sounds of the Aires and Decibelles written by the class secretaries, may appear on the Charles Vincent Applegate ’63 • Feb. 3, 2017 Frederick William Ledbetter ’74 • Oct. 30, 2017 Dartmouth Club of London. Recently he got din- in the background. Young Alumni of Dartmouth DAM website at www.dartmouthalumnimagazine. Robert James Haubrich ’63 • June 17, 2017 Christopher P. Hall ’76 • Oct. 23, 2017 ner with Edom Wessenyeleh and Hannah Solomon, Activities (YADA) and Women of Dartmouth also com, where friends and classmates may post their Jonathan Edwards Loomis ’63 • Oct. 15, 2017 Michael Elston Startt ’79 • Nov. 17, 2017 also studying London. From their seats at the res- co-sponsored the event. own remembrances of the deceased. Please con- Robert Hall Wagstaff ’63 • Oct. 8, 2017 Donald Scott Coombs ’83 • Nov. 10, 2017 taurant, they watched a fire-throwing group that The Dartmouth Club of Maryland held its an- tact alumni records at (603) 646-2253 to report Daniel Joseph Garnett ’64 • Nov. 1, 2017 Bobby Craig Jones ’84 • Sept. 26, 2017 performs on the Thames embankment every full nual holiday party at the Mt. Washington Tavern alumni deaths. James Francis Pfau ’64 • Nov. 2, 2017 Hunter Blake Foraker ’14 • Sept. 17, 2017 moon. Before the winter holidays Shiv decided to in Baltimore on December 19. Alumni in atten- Richard Holt Wakefield ’36 • Sept. 13, 2017 Norman Lawrence Leach ’65 • June 4, 2017 Caleb Edward Ladue ’14 • Oct. 22, 2017 start learning Hindi with Rosetta Stone to enhance dance welcomed home current students and met Eldon Eugene Fox ’40 • Oct. 12, 2017 his knowledge of the language. local early-decision admits. After a cocktail recep- Roy Watson ’43 • Sept. 10, 2012 In October Karen Jacques began work as an tion and dinner buffet, attendees were treated Arthur Ellsworth Summerfield Jr. ’44 • Oct. 8, 2017 CLASSIFIEDS English teaching assistant for two primary schools to Dartmouth updates from district enrollment Ralph Garfield Slighter Jr. ’46 • July 16, 2017 in Grenoble, France, which is in the southeast by director Dave Stephens ’75 and current Dartmouth Marvin Gerard Cline ’47 • July 3, 2017 REAL ESTATE LUXURY TUSCAN VILLA. Set high in the Chianti countryside, this exquisite, recently restored villa the Alps. Karen is a part of the program called students Regan Gore ’19 (daughter of Kyle Gore ’84) Joseph R. Kincaid ’47 • June 1, 2017 THIS IS AN EXCEPTIONAL PROPERTY located has 8 bedrooms and 8.5 bathrooms. Perfect Teach Abroad Program in France (TAPIF) and John Lawrence Mansfield ’47 • Sept. 17, 2017 and Megan Mounts ’18. The keynote speaker for the just outside Woodstock, VT, and a short walk to for large families or groups of friends, the works with children ages 7 to 10 years old in 12 event was Maryland state delegate Brooke Lierman Joseph Browning Paul ’47 • Nov. 18, 2017 pristine Silver Lake, the Barnard General Store beautiful vistas, large pool and outdoor different classrooms. Her responsibilities differ ’01, who spoke about how Dartmouth helped shape William Forest Rogers ’47 • Dec. 19, 2013 and the very popular Barnard Inn and Max's fireplace all make for the vacation of a lifetime. among classes; sometimes she works alongside the who she is today. The Dartmouth Club of the Gulf Charles Edward Schofield ’47 • Aug. 30, 2017 Tavern. Property features two 1-acre swimming/ Private chef available. [email protected] schoolteacher to produce lessons and assist with Coast hosted the Dartmouth Glee Club for dinner Cyril Emmett Shea ’47 • Nov. 10, 2017 fishing ponds connected by a stone waterfall or (860) 651-0010. D’82. and surrounded by expansive lawns, stone walls pronunciation, whereas in other classes she man- in New Orleans in late November at the home of Marvin F. Axelrod ’48 • Nov. 2, 2017 FRANCE, PARIS-MARAIS. Exquisite, sunny, quiet and a myriad of white birch trees. 84+/- total ages small groups and teaches the lessons herself. incoming club president Ann Koppel ’94. A great Richard A. Bennett ’48 • 2014 one-bedroom apartment behind Place des Vosges. acres connected to miles of trails; 5200+/- sq.ft. In Karen’s free time she explores Grenoble with time was had by all. The Dartmouth Club of the Walter A. Friend Jr. ’48 • April 29, 2017 King-size bed, living/dining room, six chairs, full home with three wood-burning fireplaces, five various other teaching assistants from TAPIF. James Joseph McLaughlin ’48 • Aug. 9, 2017 kitchen, washer, dryer, weekly maid service, Wi-Fi. Gulf Coast also held its annual holiday party and bedrooms and a view from every window. Large, Dartmouth 1/6 Vert SPA Ad 2016.qxp_Layout 1 9 $1,350 weekly; [email protected]. Like Shiv, Karen has spent ample time with other business meeting on December 9 at the home Sanford F. Smith ’48 • Oct. 28, 2017 bright master suite on the main living level. A ’17s in Europe. Tegwyth Alderson-Taber visited Kar- of John Sinnott ’88 and Ann Sinnott. In addition John Bernard Daukas ’49 • Nov. 19, 2017 very expansive insulated and heated barn built SUMMER RENTAL. 2 hrs. from Hanover. Private, en in November and then in December, Karen met to usual annual business items and end-of-year John Frederick Goodrich ’49 • Sept. 21, 2017 in 2008 perfect for: shop area and car collection exclusive lodge; sleeps 8. Double fireplace. Porch up with Jessica Link and Josephine Cormier (who socializing, the party also focused on thanking and Charles Randall Gilmore ’50 • Oct. 20, 2017 storage, horse facility, recreational vehicle or overlooking lake; magnificent view. Includes dock, boats. No pets/no smoking. bit.ly/nhlodge. is working in Lyon) in Annecy, France. Although Kenneth Austin Harvey ’50 • Jan. 30, 2014 camper storage. The barn is also perfectly celebrating outgoing club president Ken Klemm ’86 (202) 320-8268; [email protected]. he’s spent the majority of the recent months in for his 15 years of dedication as club president. Joseph Sherman Caldwell III ’51 • Oct. 21, 2017 suited for indoor 12 month hydroponic farming. PARIS, ILE SAINT-LOUIS: Elegant, spacious the United States, Jeff Lang has kept himself quite Meg Blakey Lyons ’98, from London, and Vic- Edward E. Hazen Jr. ’51 • Dec. 5, 2017 A beautiful property in every respect and in a perfect location complete with newly installed top floor skylighted apartment, gorgeous busy as well. The week after Commencement Jeff toria Gonin, parent of a ’12 and deputy director Irwin Lonschein ’51 • June 26, 2017 25kW automatic whole house backup generator. view overlooking Seine, 2 bedrooms sleep 4, and many other ’17 Frisbee players rented a cabin William M. Michener ’51 • Sept. 28, 2017 of alumni relations, recently teamed up to host a Call the owner at (781) 266-7598 or email 2 baths, elevator, well-appointed, full kitchen, on the Grant. The group thought it would be a Women of Dartmouth career breakfast workshop Robert E. Adams ’52 • Nov. 6, 2017 [email protected] for more information Wi-Fi. (678) 232-8444 or [email protected]. good idea because David Klinges’ father and his in London on December 6. Meg and Victoria are Andrew W. Aishton ’52 • Nov. 16, 2017 or to schedule an appointment to see your dream PROVENCE. Delightful five-bedroom stone Dartmouth classmates used to go to the Grant Charles G. Allen IV ’52 • June 29, 2017 both certified coaches and the breakfast work- home. $1,250,000. farmhouse, facing Roman theater. Pool, vineyard. to reconnect. While at the Grant, Jeff, Klinges shop was a supportive, collaborative and fun Robert R. Morris ’52 • Oct. 18, 2017 (860) 672-6608, www.frenchfarmhouse.com. 90 and their friends grabbed dinner with Klinges’ way to connect alumnae in London who were Edwin Thomas Rice ’52 • July 12, 2017 FOR RENT father and his friends. In the fall Jeff moved to curious about how to gain greater fulfillment in Curtis H. Richards ’52 • July 22, 2017 UMBRIA, ITALY: Luxuriously restored medieval CLOTHING Boston to work at Bain & Co. He enjoyed the firm’s William J. Zaphiris ’52 • Dec. 23, 2016 their careers. This event followed the successful tower with addition. Historic charm, all modern DARTMOUTH TENNIS/SQUASH SWEATERS holiday party at the Boston Public Library, which weekend workshop in Hanover in March, when Richard A. Conn ’53 • Oct. 14, 2017 comforts: chef’s kitchen, a/c, Wi-Fi, lap pool, Handmade in England, classic all-over cable was filled with Dartmouth alums. Since moving to alumnae gathered to explore strategies for gain- John B. Dodge ’53 • Nov. 6, 2017 outdoor kitchen/pizza oven, gym. 3 large, en- 100% winter white (bone cream) wool v-neck Boston Jeff’s weekends have been filled with play- ing clarity and purpose in their professional and Charles H. Jacob ’53 • Nov. 28, 2017 suite bedrooms, possible 4th (4 ½ baths). Nestled sweaters and vests with Dartmouth green trim. Delight in olive grove near Spoleto, with gorgeous views. ing board games with Chris Loughlin and numerous personal lives. The London breakfast provided a David G. Stanley ’53 • Nov. 28, 2017 Call or e-mail: (802) 296-6634; [email protected]. [email protected]. all your senses. other ’16s and ’17s. They started with Settlers of chance for attendees to think about their values Walter Edwin Anderson ’54 • Nov. 30, 2017 www.grasscourt.com. Catan, which ended up being a gateway to a lot of and strengths and to consider steps to explore Edward Henshaw Hobbie ’54 • Nov. 21, 2017 Restore your Mind and Body! weirder and lesser-known games. They’ve become new areas or make contact with new people in Edwin Bosley Jarrett Jr. ’54 • Oct. 27, 2017 THE LAKE SUNAPEE AREA... so invested that board games were on the top of target areas of possibility. It was a wonderful op- Paul Eugene Wisdom Jr. ’54 • Oct. 10, 2017 Has activities for every season ~ boating, Bliss... Connect with nature through their Christmas lists this year. portunity for both Dartmouth and Tuck alumnae John Pelham Bailey Jr. ’55 • Sept. 28, 2017 swimming, golf, tennis, biking, hiking, Bliss... unique seasonal treatments —Dorian Allen, 117 West Grant St., Apt. 123, Min- to meet and share more about their respective Charles Dunbar Pulis Jr. ’55 • Nov. 11, 2017 downhill and X-C skiing, snowshoeing and more! Bliss... that capture the essence neapolis, MN 55403; (973) 986-5988; dorallen@ career paths and goals. A key takeaway for the William Murray Wilbur Jr. ’55 • Nov. 6, 2017 And great vacation rentals for your enjoyment. Luxury Barge Cruises of Vermont. Also available are year-round rentals from small apartments comcast.net M. Paul Zimmerman ’55 • Nov. 20, 2017 group was that, regardless of the stage any of us to executive homes. All an easy commute to the Upper Luxury Barge Cruises Massages & Body Treatments may be at in our careers, our networks are power- Merritt Charnley Clark ’56 • Nov. 2, 2017 Valley and Concord. Luxury Barge Cruises Skin Care ful sources of inspiration, support and connec- Thomas Carl Fead ’56 • Nov. 6, 2017 Bridal Services The Sunapee Area is a tion. If you are interested in hosting a Women of John Eichholtz Kramer Jr. ’56 • Nov. 28, 2017 great place to live or Manicures & Pedicures Clubs & Dartmouth community event in your local area Alfred Coe Bancroft Jr. ’57 • Dec. 10, 2017 vacation! Hair styling, Makeup & Waxing or have a topic that you’d like to share online via Gordon Blair Evans ’57 • Oct. 27, 2017 Call Joan Wallen, Day Packages Groups webinar, please contact Victoria Gonin at victoria. Robert Lawrence Shirley ’57 • Nov. 27, 2017 Rental Manager Walter C.H. Stocker ’57 • June 28, 2012 [email protected]. (603) 526-4116 Happy 2018! Dartmouth clubs and groups wrapped Don’t forget to send me updates about the Donald Condon Angell ’58 • July 24, 2014 P.O. Box 2195, Duxbury, MA 02331 P.O. Box 67 P.O.800 Box -222 2195, -1236 Duxbury, 781-934 MA -2454 02331 up the end of 2017 with annual receptions, holi- great events that your club, association or affili- Chester Crawford McGuire Jr. ’58 • Oct. 13, 2017 224 Main Street New London, P.O.800 Box -222 2195, www.fcwl.com-1236 Duxbury, 781-934 MA -2454 02331 888.364.6110 NH 03257 800 -222 -1236 781-934 -2454 86 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE www.fcwl.com www.woodstockinn.com CONTINUING ED what i’ve learned since graduation

Ann Fromholz ’90 44 South Main Street, Hanover, NH An employment lawyer on sexual harassment 603.643.4900 [Offi ce] 603.277.0067 [Cell] Interview by LISA FURLONG [email protected] | LindeMac.com Denise Dame, Linde K. McNamara, Barbara Heyl “The Harvey Weinstein accusations opened a floodgate because his A Real Estate Team With Proven Results! Over 25 Years Experience in Real Estate Sales behavior was such an open secret—and because the people who complained about him are not anonymous. I’m hopeful another reason is that people are just sick of such behavior.” “When those who’ve been assaulted or harassed began to think, ‘People are going to believe me,’ it allowed more people to come forward.” “Legally, conduct that can be prosecuted is unwelcome and it’s severe or pervasive. The only person whose perspective matters in deter- mining ‘welcomeness’ is the recipient. Intentions don’t matter. One joke that is unwelcome to the recipient would not be sufficiently pervasive to be deemed unlawful sexual harassment.” “Courts have recognized more and more over the years that employers are responsible for taking affirmative steps to prohibit harassment. That falls into two areas: training and expansion of protection.” “The vast majority of companies have anti-harassment policies that set the bar much higher than the law. Typically they say one incident is enough for discipline—that could mean termination, training or counseling.” “If you go to a lawyer with a complaint, the first thing out of that lawyer’s mouth will be, ‘Did you complain internally?’ ” “There is no clear standard that establishes what amounts to unlawful sexual harassment. The burden continues to fall on those harassed to show that the conduct was severe or pervasive. The way that judges or juries determine whether an abusive working environment exists is through individual testimony.” “I do a lot of work in academia and honestly don’t know where it falls on the spectrum. As with doctors, there are some professors who are considered superstars who somehow believe they are exempt from the rules. This has held true for many of the men we’ve seen accused of assault recently.” “I urge people who are interested in this issue to read the 2016 book Because of Sex: One Law, Ten Cases, and Fifty Years That Changed American Women’s Lives at Work, by Gillian Thomas. It details 10 groundbreaking cases that have defined sex discrimina- tion and that have changed the workplace for women for the better.” “I’d like to think employers are taking swift action because they all of a sudden realize how bad harassment and assault are, but I doubt that.

I think people who run companies now see the damage done by HER STORY keeping an alleged serial abuser around.” “The courses I took with history professor Bruce Nelson pointed me Notable: Conducts investigations into allegations of workplace misconduct toward my career: the history of civil rights and the history of the from harassment to discrimination and conducts campus investigations labor movement. He was a phenomenal teacher.” under Title IX “We do have a tradition of lawyers in my family—not only my dad, who Career: Founded her own firm in 2015 after working at Seyfarth Shaw, became a judge. His mother graduated from George Washington Kaiser Permanente, ConocoPhillips and Caesars Entertainment Corp. Law School in 1927 and was admitted to the Supreme Court in Education: A.B., history; J.D., University of Southern California, 1994 A beautiful tree-lined approach brings you to an extraordinary estate, with sweeping views of Lake Morey and the 1934. A few years later she was fired because she had a baby.” Personal: Lives in Pasadena, California, with daughter Alden, 8; daughter mountains beyond. Situated in the midst of 81 acres of open and wooded land, the location is private, but just a short of Haley Fromholz ’60 “If shining a light on the problem results in a spike of complaints, that’s a walk to the lake. The home offers abundant space for family gatherings, with 6 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, large dining and good thing, because there will be fewer harassers in the workplace.” living rooms with fi replaces, eat-in kitchen, offi ce, den, rec room and a fabulous game room with a stone fi replace. As an extra bonus, there is potential for a rental unit, and a 5-car garage with workshop. Fairlee, VT. $839,000 88 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE illustration by JOHN CUNEO If life is but a dream, THIS IS LIVING.

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